Tag Archives: previous

Justin Bieber Song “Believe”

Here is a clip of a new Justin Biebe r song called “Believe.” No word yet on whether or not this song will appear on Justin’s upcoming album set to release this year, or if the song was meant for one of his previous albums, but never made the cut. Be sure to listen to the song below and let us know what you think of it! Also, let us know if you plan on buying Justin’s next album when it arrives in stores!

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Justin Bieber Song “Believe”

Brett Favre Makes Annual Retirement Speech

It’s official. Brett Favre has retired from the NFL. The quarterback legend made the announcement at a press conference Sunday. He is currently listed as questionable for training camp in August. “One season does not define me,” said Favre, referring to a lackluster final year with the Vikings, and possibly the Jenn Sterger scandal as well. Asked how this is different from his previous nine retirements, he cited his myriad injuries, adding “I know it’s time” and “I have no regrets.” Watch Brett Favre’s retirement speech here: Brett Favre Retirement Speech (2011)

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Brett Favre Makes Annual Retirement Speech

Watch a Montage of 2010 Movie Montages

Jennifer Connelly and Paul Bettany baby

Jennifer Connelly and The Tourist star Paul Bettany, 39, are already parents to son Stellan, 7, as well as Kai, 13, from her previous relationship with David Dugan. Jennifer Connelly and Paul Bettany are expanding their family. The actress, 40, is pregnant with her third child, her rep confirms to us. “Becoming a mother has made all the difference in terms of learning to take more responsibility for myself and my life,” she has said. “Parenthood changed the way I do everything. The biggest

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Jennifer Connelly and Paul Bettany baby

The Most Fascinating Person of the Year is…

… General David Petraeus?!? Look, Barbara Walters, you can’t make a fluff-filled list of people who simply made headlines in 2010 – asking Sarah Palin about her daughter dancing and Justin Bieber about a photographed kiss – and suddenly then ask us to take you seriously as a journalist. But that’s the exact transition Walters tried to make on last night’s 10 Most Fascinating People of 2010 . J. Lo was one hit single away from out-fascinating David Petraeus. She prattled us about American Idol with Jennifer Lopez and talked fist-pumping with the cast of Jersey Shore , only to then name the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan as the Most Fascinating Person of 2010. “In life, it seems, there are people who break things and people who fix them. This man is a fixer,” the host said of Petraeus. Still, as much as we respect and admire the General, based on the previous guests that ranked immediately before him, we can’t help but wonder: if The Situation had hooked up with one fewer grenade, might he have earned the top spot?

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The Most Fascinating Person of the Year is…

Aretha Franklin Leaving Hospital

On Dec. 2, the singer Aretha Franklin said she was doing well after having an operation for an unspecified ailment. “The surgery was highly successful,” Franklin, 68, said in a statement. “God is still in control.” The surgery followed a community prayer vigil in Franklin#39;s hometown of Detroit the previous day. Aretha Franklin, who has been suffering from a previously unknown illness, is “doing better than doctors expected” and should be released from the hospital this weekend, a cousin says

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Aretha Franklin Leaving Hospital

Have we found the universe that existed before the Big Bang?

The current cosmological census is that the universe began 13.7 billion years ago with the Big Bang. But a legendary physicist says he's found the first evidence of an eternal, cyclic cosmos. The Big Bang model holds that everything that now comprises the universe was once concentrated in a single point of near-infinite density. Before this singularity exploded and the universe began, there was absolutely nothing – indeed, it's not clear whether one can even use the term “before” in reference to a pre-Big-Bang cosmos, as time itself may not have existed yet. In the current model, the universe began with the Big Bang, underwent cosmic inflation for a fraction of a second, then settled into the much more gradual expansion that is still going on, and likely will end with the universe as an infinitely expanded, featureless cosmos. Sir Roger Penrose, one of the most renowned physicists of the last fifty years, takes issue with this view. He points out that the universe was apparently born in a very low state of entropy, meaning a very high degree of order initially existed, and this is what made the complex matter we see all around us (and are composed of) possible in the first place. His objection is that the Big Bang model can't explain why such a low entropy state existed, and he believes he has a solution – that the universe is just one of many in a cyclical chain, with each Big Bang starting up a new universe in place of the one before. How does this help? Well, Penrose posits the end of each universe will involve a return to low entropy. This is because black holes suck in all the matter, energy, and information they encounter, which works to remove entropy from our universe. (Where that entropy might go is another question entirely.) The universe's continued expansion into eventual nothingness causes the black holes themselves to evaporate, which ultimately leaves the universe in a highly ordered state once again, ready to contract into another singularity and set off the next Big Bang. As alternative theories go, it's not without its merits, but there's no evidence to support it…until now. He says he's found evidence for his ideas in the cosmic microwave background, the microwave radiation that permeates the universe and was thought to have formed 300,000 years after the Big Bang, providing a record of the universe at that far distant time. Penrose and his colleague Vahe Gurzadyan have discovered clear concentric circles within the data, which suggests regions of the radiation have much smaller temperature ranges than elsewhere. So what does that mean? Penrose believes these circles are windows into the previous universe, spherical ripples left behind by the gravitational effects of colliding black holes in the previous universe. He also says these circles don't work well at all in the current inflationary model, which holds all temperature variations in the CMB should be truly random. Here's where the fun begins. If the circles are really there and are really doing what Penrose says they're doing, then he's managed to overthrow the standard inflationary model. But there's a long way to go between where we are now and that point, assuming it ever happens. The inflationary model has become the consensus for a good reason – it's the best explanation we've got for the universe we have now – and so cosmologists will examine any results that appear to disprove it very critically. There are also a couple key assumptions in Penrose's theory, particularly that all particles will lose their mass towards the end of the universe. Right now, we don't know whether that will actually happen – in particular, there's no proof that electrons ever decay. http://io9.com/5694701/does-cosmic-background-radiation-reveal-the-universe-befo… added by: pjacobs51

Floyd Mayweather Accused of Misdemeanor Battery

Floyd Mayweather is in trouble with the law again. The boxer, who has been barred from seeing his children and is awaiting a hearing on multiple felony charges, has been accused of misdemeanor battery against a security guard. As first reported by TMZ, an employee inside Mayweather’s gated Las Vegas community approached the athlete late yesterday afternoon and inquired about a parking situation. Mayweather allegedly responded to the question by poking the man in the face with his finger. Police were called to the scene, but Mayweather did not answer their knocks on his front door. The case has now been turned over to the DA, who will decide whether or not to pursue it further.

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Floyd Mayweather Accused of Misdemeanor Battery

Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt Renew Wedding Vows, World Groans

This time it’s not for reality TV, just reality. Or something. Yeah, right. Weeks after confessing they faked their divorce proceedings, and days after calling his own made-for-TV Hills marriage ceremony a contrived nightmare , Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag have said “I do” in their first “real” wedding. Third time’s the charm, right? WEDDINGS PAST AND PRESENT : This time, Speidi swears, it’s legit . Before The Hills aired their union to end its fifth season in the spring of 2009, the couple staged a bogus wedding in Cabo the previous winter. So this is #3. Finally, the gruesome twosome says, it was for love. “It’s just me and my bride on a little secret beach with nobody else, and it’s just about her,” Spencer Pratt told ET of their Sunday vow renewal . “Last time it was about everything else, it was about drama, it was about ratings.” How terrible was that? The poor, victimized couple. Echoes Heidi Montag : “It was about everyone but us, so this is our first wedding about our love. I can finally just be Heidi. I’m just really enjoying every day.” Indeed. How can we possibly argue with such heartfelt emotions from two genuine people deeply in love with publicity each other? Congratulations, we guess.

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Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt Renew Wedding Vows, World Groans

O’Donnell In 2006: Homosexuality ‘An Identity Disorder’

Here's another goodie from Christine O'Donnell, the conservative activist who has asked voters to look past her previous right-wing statements on sex: As recently as 2006 — the first time she ran for Senate, losing the Republican primary — she declared that homosexuality was an identity disorder. As Greg Sargent reports, O'Donnell said in an interview for the Wilmington News Journal in 2006 that homosexuality was a disorder. Greg has obtained the original quote from the reporter's notes: “People are created in God's image. Homosexuality is an identity adopted through societal factors. It's an identity disorder.” The TPM Poll Average gives Democratic nominee Chris Coons a lead of 52.2. added by: TimALoftis