Tag Archives: racing

Paris Hilton’s Ridiculous Stage Performance of the Day

Seeing Paris Hilton in her racing suit wasn’t enough Paris Hilton for one day….you know since she’s disappeared the last couple years from being burnt out from being famous for nothing…but more importantly, because we lost interest in her. Paris Hilton is like a tranny, addicted to cock, addicted to being the center of attention, not worried about being tacky or trashy, acting all glamorous and glittery, while looking hard faced and cheap, only I know she has a vagina because I have seen it a bunch of times from various states of getting penis inside her to just casually getting out of her car….so being a tranny can’t be the explanation behind this embarrassing low budget burlesque show she’s putting on in Spain….but being cheesy, mainstream, boring and obvious probably clearly can…..and the worst thing in all this is that I’d totally tongue fuck her during an outbreak cuz I’ll stick my mouth in anything…I just can’t understand how Paris Hilton isn’t a gay man..It really fucks with my head..but not as much as her bloated 30 year old coke body…. If you want to see the shitty videos of the shitty event – you can check out youtube HERE , I did the work for you already… Here are the pics of her in some drugged out party monster disco bullshit that isn’t hot, but that is very very funny….

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Paris Hilton’s Ridiculous Stage Performance of the Day

Paris Hilton’s Ridiculous Stage Performance of the Day

Seeing Paris Hilton in her racing suit wasn’t enough Paris Hilton for one day….you know since she’s disappeared the last couple years from being burnt out from being famous for nothing…but more importantly, because we lost interest in her. Paris Hilton is like a tranny, addicted to cock, addicted to being the center of attention, not worried about being tacky or trashy, acting all glamorous and glittery, while looking hard faced and cheap, only I know she has a vagina because I have seen it a bunch of times from various states of getting penis inside her to just casually getting out of her car….so being a tranny can’t be the explanation behind this embarrassing low budget burlesque show she’s putting on in Spain….but being cheesy, mainstream, boring and obvious probably clearly can…..and the worst thing in all this is that I’d totally tongue fuck her during an outbreak cuz I’ll stick my mouth in anything…I just can’t understand how Paris Hilton isn’t a gay man..It really fucks with my head..but not as much as her bloated 30 year old coke body…. If you want to see the shitty videos of the shitty event – you can check out youtube HERE , I did the work for you already… Here are the pics of her in some drugged out party monster disco bullshit that isn’t hot, but that is very very funny….

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Paris Hilton’s Ridiculous Stage Performance of the Day

‘The Hills’ Recap: Kristin Tells Brody How She Feels

‘Now is kind of too late,’ Brody responds when she says she’d give a relationship a try. By Amy Wilkinson Kristin Cavallari Photo: MTV After Kristin’s attempt to make Brody jealous by shamelessly flirting with bartender Will went nowhere in Costa Rica, she decided to take a more novel approach this week by telling Brody how she truly feels. But Brody didn’t exactly return the sentiment on Tuesday night’s episode of Stephanie met up with Lo and Holly to catch them up on all the Costa Rica gossip, including the Brody/Kristin drama. “I think she acts like it’s a game, but it really means more to her,” Lo observed. “Because he knows she’s really in love with him.” Talk then turned to the impending arrival of Holly’s mom, Darlene. “I don’t know what I’m going to do if she wants to see Heidi,” Holly said. “But does she know none of us talk to them?” Stephanie asked. “I haven’t told her yet because I didn’t want to make things worse,” Holly replied. But after picking her mom up at LAX, Holly wasted no time telling her what was going on (or not going on) with Heidi. “I tried to call Heidi, but I don’t know how to get a hold of her anymore,” she told Darlene. “I would love to see her while I’m here,” Darlene replied. Holly told Darlene that they’ve written Heidi and Spencer off, but Darlene said she doesn’t believe Holly can completely rid her life of Heidi. Holly is, after all, Heidi’s protector. Later that night, the gang convened at the Colony, where Brody ignored Kristin. Though to be fair, it didn’t look as if Kristin was making much of an attempt to talk to Brody either. Stephanie caught the eye of Brody’s motorcycle-racing friend Josh, who began chatting her up. Brody made it plain to Josh that Stephanie was a bit of a handful. “She’s got some issues,” he told him, but that didn’t stop Josh from walking Stephanie back to her car and asking for her number. The pair met later for a date at Angels & Kings, where Stephanie nervously ordered a soda, as did her date. He divulged that he’d heard about Stephanie’s problems, including her estranged brother and the DUI, and said that he didn’t drink too often because of his racing, which Stephanie found quite reassuring and charming. The next day, Stacie and Kristin met to talk about Brody’s cool reception toward Kristin, and Kristin divulged that Brody had called to say he wanted to talk. “This is the perfect opportunity to get it all out there,” Stacie advised. “But Stace, what else is there to say?” Kristin replied. “But that’s the thing,” Stacie countered. “You really haven’t said it. You haven’t made it clear at all. If you don’t talk about it … you’re going to regret it.” One couple that was on the right track was Lo and her BF Scott, who went out to dinner to celebrate their one-year anniversary. Scott asked when Lo’s lease was up, because he wants to move in with her. But Lo was hesitant to agree to anything for sure because she doesn’t want to move in with a guy unless she’s engaged. Meanwhile, Brody and Kristin met for their chat. “I’m glad that you came over and that you want to talk,” Kristin started. “I feel like things are weird between us now.” “I think things are different,” Brody said cautiously. “What do you want?” Visibly flustered, Kristin let it all out. “I guess I kind of want to give things a shot with you,” she said. “I want a boyfriend. I’d be willing to really try.” “Well, now is kind of too late,” Brody responded. “Part of the reason I’ve been so distant is because I’ve been hanging out with somebody else. And I kind of want to see where it could go. And I think we’ve already been down that road and it didn’t work out. I’m sorry it had to be like this.” It may have also been too late for Darlene to reach Heidi. When Darlene and Holly met for lunch, Holly had tracked down Heidi’s number but couldn’t get a response. The distance from her daughter left Darlene shaken. “I just feel like she can’t live in two worlds, and she feels like she has to choose between us and Spencer,” Darlene said. “I haven’t slept for months. I had to get a prescription for sleeping pills. I’ve been mourning the loss of a child.” Kristin was also in a state of mourning as she met with Lo to discuss her talk with Brody. “You can’t let Brody Jenner make you feel like an idiot, ” Lo advised. “He’s the guy that yells in bars. C’mon.” “I completely put myself out there and he doesn’t want me,” Kristin said. “The guy I love doesn’t want me. It’s done.” Related Videos The Hills (Season 6) | Ep. 11 | ‘Loves Me Not’ The Hills: Live After Show (Season 6) | Ep. 11 Related Photos The Hills (Season 6) | Ep. 11 | ‘Loves Me Not’

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‘The Hills’ Recap: Kristin Tells Brody How She Feels

E3 2010: Highlights From The Show Floor

Nintendo 3DS, Microsoft Kinect and PlayStation Move took center stage at this year’s event. By Russ Frushtick The Nintendo 3DS Photo: Nintendo Another E3 is in the books , and it seems the theme of this year’s show was more about breaking new technology barriers than innovating with new games. The three console manufacturers — Microsoft, Sony and Nintendo — each offered a new piece of hardware designed to enhance the gaming experience, with some more impressive than others. Microsoft’s Kinect, a motion-capture camera meant to sit below the TV, tracks a player’s body movements without the need for a controller. It’s a remarkable piece of technology, due in November, but does it make for better gaming? My time with Kinect was focused on a handful of games. The first, “Kinect Adventures,” was incredibly fun, with me flailing my real (and digital) arms as I raced down white-water rapids in an inflatable raft. Microsoft also enlisted the help of Turn 10, the developers of the racing title “Forza Motorsport,” to make a Kinect version of their game, which allowed me to steer an invisible wheel and direct a high-powered roadster down a serpentine track. There were some sensitivity issues, but for the most part, I was impressed by the fidelity of both experiences, with no part of me missing a controller in my hands. Sony’s E3 offering was PlayStation Move, also coming this fall. First revealed at the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco earlier this year, Move is another motion-sensing gaming experience, but this one has you holding a wand to track your movements, similar to the Wii. Of the big hardware offerings, PlayStation Move seemed the most underwhelming. Playing through one of Sony’s mini-game collections, “Sports Champions,” I couldn’t help but feel like I was just experiencing a retread of Nintendo’s “Wii Sports Resort.” Certainly, the graphics looked better, but in terms of accuracy of motion capture and the fun factor, Move didn’t feel like it was breaking any new ground. There are dozens of titles coming to Move in the next year, so the success of the product is based on the quality of the software, but the current state of the device is a bit worrying. Nintendo’s focus for this year’s E3 was on its brand-new handheld, the Nintendo 3DS , planned for release sometime after fall 2010. The concept is that players will be able view 3-D images on this handheld screen without the need for 3-D glasses. That pitch seemed a little outrageous and out of the realm of reality but somehow Nintendo managed to pull it off. Videos and games on the device had visible depth to them, as if the screen went back several more inches. It doesn’t — I checked. This is the real deal. While playing through a technology demo of “Metal Gear Solid” for 3DS, I was able to watch the game’s hero crawl through thick jungle, surrounded by alligators, bees and other nasties. Despite this all taking place in my hands, I couldn’t help but jump when a snake snapped out at me from the screen. It’s unfortunate that there’s no way to capture the 3DS experience on video, and words hardly do it justice. It’s a truly remarkable piece of technology, unlike anything I’ve seen before, and it’s safe to say that it was the highlight of this year’s show. For more impressions from the E3 show floor on games like “GoldenEye 007,” “Portal 2” and “The Legend of Zelda,” head on over to MTV Multiplayer . Check out the Multiplayer blog , updated daily, for even more gaming coverage. Related Photos Eminem, Usher, More Perform At Activision’s E3 Party

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E3 2010: Highlights From The Show Floor

Bookies claw their way back after dreadful start to Royal Ascot

• Opening day was worst day for a generation for layers • Gold Cup winner Rite Of Passage a 20-1 blow for punters After an opening day at the meeting described in one quarter as the worst for a generation, the bookmakers have inched their way back into the Royal Ascot struggle. Fast summer ground is generally held to lead to more predictable results, but Rite Of Passage’s 20-1 Gold Cup win meant the layers finished the third afternoon ahead, though some insisted that the profit was only marginal. “The Norfolk Stakes [which opened the card] was pretty good with Approve winning at 16-1,” George Primarolo, Totesport’s spokesman, said, “and the Gold Cup was obviously a very good result. “Ransom Note [the winner of the Britannia Handicap] was well backed this morning, but we’ve clawed some back today. Overall on the three days, I’d say that the punters still just have their noses ahead, which means there’s all to play for. The card on Friday looks very tricky, and the racing here is so competitive that we could easily be behind after four days and then get it all back on the Saturday.” William Hill also reported a small profit on the day, while there was a significant reverse for one Betfair betting exchange punter, who managed to lay Ransom Note, the 9-1 winner of the Britannia Handicap, for £15 at their ceiling price of 999-1 just as the stalls opened. The bizarre bet, apparently a result of clicking the wrong button at precisely the wrong moment, cost the punter £15,000, and also contributed to a freak Betfair starting price about Ransom Note of 24-1. Betfair’s technicians were believed to be investigating the precise circumstances of the bet. In addition to Hibaayeb in the Ribblesdale Stakes, the other winning favourite on the day was Luca Cumani’s Afsare in the Listed Hampton Court Stakes, who got up to deny the Queen’s runner Quadrille in the final stride. The Queen, watching the race from the Royal Box, seemed unsure whether her runner had held on, but managed to raise a smile of sorts when the result of the photograph was announced. Dandino, who took the closing event, the King George V Handicap, was also among the market leaders for his race, but he denied a significant gamble on John Dunlop’s Berling, who finished unplaced after coming from a very poor position in the 20-runner field. “The first two days were dreadful for the layers,” Simon Clare of Coral said , “but there was a really good spread of bets in the Gold Cup, so to get all of the horses that attracted money beaten was a real result. We would have made about £300,000 on that race, which probably equates to between £2m and £3m for the off-course industry as a whole. “That said, it’s still been a very good meeting for the punters. We’ve been relying on the World Cup to come to our rescue, and Spain’s defeat by Switzerland was a particularly good result. Nearly every day, in fact, there’s been a bookie-friendly result which helps to knock out all the doubles and trebles in the shops.” Horse racing Royal Ascot Greg Wood guardian.co.uk

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Bookies claw their way back after dreadful start to Royal Ascot

Royal Ascot: How to get thrown out of the Royal Enclosure

Could it be the cheese roll and lack of a hat that gives our intrepid journalist away among the posh people? When you imagine Ladies’ Day at Royal Ascot you may visualise a hat – the largest, most absurd hat you can imagine, a hat that looks like a suicide-bomber chicken after its glorious auto-martyrdom. And this is true. I am standing at the entrance to the Royal Enclosure, interviewing a woman with a Lego Palace of Westminster on her head. The photographers snap away, gasping, “Lego hat!” Her hat is indeed made of Lego and, to labour it, the Lego press office will later email me a document entitled Lego – Ascot hats. But Ascot is more than that. Ascot, as far as I can see with my middle-class eyes, is the British Class System in a grandstand. It is a world of barricades and badges and net veils and is thus the most terrifying place I have encountered since I last went to South Kensington by mistake. But that is for later. For now, the hats. Ah, hats! It is only when you watch British women dress up en masse that you realise we cannot dress at all; we dress like cats trying to learn algebra. I love us for this, because we look, to a woman, vulnerable and terrible. I have sunburn and a hole in my stocking. The woman beside me is wearing a 3ft-wide papier-mache teapot on her head and is already planning her Phantom of the Opera-themed hat for next year. But we are in denial; Jeff Banks is on the loudspeaker, praising the hats. “The hat,” he is saying, “is an exclamation mark.” In the tiers of things that matter at Ascot, after the hats come the enclosures or, as I prefer to call them, the pens. There is a strict apartheid system here. If you do not have a badge to a particular pen, you cannot go in and you probably cannot vote either. And, to enforce it, there is an army of Group 4 security guards, all in grey. And they keep us in our respective pens. On the far side is the Silver Ring. It is cheap and packed and it has women holding babies and eating sausage rolls. People have brought their own furniture and it is full of bins. The bins, it seems, are the focal point. Then, slightly nearer the action, is the main grandstand, which, from the inside, looks like Peter Jones. It has giant internal escalators and repulsive carpets. It houses the Middle Classes and Jeff Banks. Then, further over, and bang in front of the finishing line, is the Royal Enclosure, the pen of the toffs. I do not have a ticket but I walk in anyway. I am carrying a large cheese roll. This is my plan. If I do not succeed in getting in, it will be the fault of the cheese roll. The security guard waves me in – victory! I am now in the Royal Enclosure. But, because it is still early it is empty apart from a woman wearing a washing machine on her head. So, although I have arrived at the apex of British Society, everyone else has left. I now have an important contribution to make to Marxist theory. If you want to demolish the British aristocracy, admit me to its pen. I also have a cheese roll. The Royal Enclosure has benches instead of bins because everyone knows that posh people do not drop litter and, even when they do, it’s not litter, it’s the free market. “Do not bring a gazebo into the enclosure,” says a sign. (Nor hot tubs.) I sit and nibble my cheese roll, wondering whether to call g2. “I’m in the Royal Enclosure illegally,” I plan to say, “But everyone else has left. And, if I am caught, will you send a Social Democratic Swat Team?” But the cheese roll that screams “Outsider!” is, as I have always suspected, a time bomb. A man in a bowler pounces. “Madam,” he coughs discreetly, “DO YOU HAVE A BADGE?” I wave my press pass at him like a crucifix. “I am sorry, madam,” he replies, “but you will have to move.” But I am a friend of Ronnie Corbett, I say. He is on the front of the Official Royal Ascot Magazine and I am with him. He is in the toilet with Cilla Black. But they will be back soon and then – then – I can guarantee you will be on the eastern front by Christmas! The man gives a gently fluttering gesture away from the benches and towards the bins . I think briefly of the Exorcist and Max von Sydow roaring, “I CAST THEE OUT!” I am, in the end, glad I am thrown out, not because I am an egalitarian but because I get to see The Arrival of Joan Collins. The photographers, who have grown tired of photographing hats disguised as zebras, are restless. So, when Joan Collins appears dressed, as ever, as a transvestite outreach programme, they lunge like a confused centipede. Er, Joan, I say, hoping she will not remember all the times I have called her a transvestite outreach programme in print, what do you like about Ascot? “Not this,” she says, regarding me, as ever, as if I am a badly accessorised Matalan dress. Then comes Charlie Watts in a grey suit, thin and ghostlike. He tries to smile, fails and walks away. The photographers hurl themselves on Louise Redknapp and someone from Strictly Come Dancing instead. I leave. But the apartheid follows me. I approach one of the escalators. But a Group 4 employee plants herself in front of me. Think Rosa Klebb. “You cannot go down there because you are not wearing a hat,” she says. I long to say that this is the stupidest thing anyone has ever said to me. That I am wearing a microscopic nanorobotic hat designed and sponsored by the China Nanchang Aircraft Manufacturing Corporation and, just because she cannot see it, it does not mean it isn’t there. But of course I do not because I am British. I know my place. I long for Trotsky and walk away. Eventually, the Ascot PR rings to say I can sit in the Royal Enclosure grandstand to watch the racing. (I complained earlier that all I can see in the press room is the back of the Sun reporter’s neck.) So I slink back to the Royal Enclosure and sit down. I smile and murmur at the people around me but I am blanked with thin smiles. Reader, they know. They know about the cheese roll. Why am I not by the bins, where I belong? We applaud the Queen as she comes past in her carriage. (I do this unwillingly but I am outnumbered.) The Queen looks, as ever, like an angry sweet sitting on her rage. She waddles to her box to watch the show. There’s not much left to do but sit down, eat the cheese roll and wait for it all to die. Fashion Horse racing guardian.co.uk

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Royal Ascot: How to get thrown out of the Royal Enclosure

Horse racing: Win a £50 bet in our Royal Ascot tipping competition, plus the latest news and best bets on Ladies’ Day

The latest news and best bets from Ladies’ Day at Royal Ascot, plus our tipping competition 1.20pm Waiting for Beckett Chris Cook: Having looked at the jockey stats earlier, it seems only fair to mention a trainer who seems to have his own struggles with Ascot. Ralph Beckett, a highly capable trainer whose strike-rate is 13% in all turf races over the past five seasons, is 0 from 34 at Ascot during that time, according to Racing Post statistics. Beckett runs Layline in today’s Britannia and Puff in the Coronation tomorrow. As I pointed out earlier, Dane O’Neill has a 2% strike-rate at this track (one win from 55 attempts). He rides Dinkum Diamond, favourite for today’s Norfolk Stakes, the first race. The horse is trained by Henry Candy, whose own Ascot strike-rate is 3%. Dinkum Diamond should have no chance on those figures. Seasoned followers of stats will be aware, however, that this probably makes him a certainty. 12.40pm The inside dope on today’s royal procession Will Hayler: So far this week, we’ve had Richard Fahey and Mark Tompkins appear in the carriages for the Royal procession, but there’s no place on Ladies’ Day for any other trainers. Instead, it’s the Crown Prince of Bahrain, Salman bin Hamad bin Isa al Khalifa, who gets to ride upfront with The Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh and the Duke of York. No jokes about ‘fake sheikhs’ please. Interestingly, while the Viscount and Viscountess Grimston are allowed to ride together in the third carriage, along with Princess Eugenie, the Earl of Hopetoun gets to go in the second carriage, while the Countess is demoted to detached motor car number 7. I hope they’re all watching out for the policeman with the speed gun who tried to catch me coming out of Windsor Great Park this morning. 12.35pm Which jockeys ride Ascot well / poorly? Chris Cook: A big, galloping circuit with lots of room in the straight, Ascot looks as though it should be a straightforward ride. But races here typically demand a lot of a horse’s stamina, so you can’t make your move too early. Don’t leave it too late, though, because the home straight is shorter than many other tracks and you may not have enough time to make up the ground. After all, there’s often traffic problems as the field comes round the home turn. If you’re on the straight course, you have to find where the best ground is. All in all, there’s a lot of factors to consider for any jockey, and ample opportunity for them to show their ability, or lack thereof. So each rider’s strike-rate at Ascot must be a relevant factor for punters to consider. According to the Racing Post’s statistics, Johnny Murtagh (18%), Tom Queally (16%) and Richard Hills (16%) have the best records since 2006 of those jockeys at the course today. Both, of course, would have had many excellent horses to ride, which always helps. Ryan Moore is on a surprisingly pedestrian 11%, while Frankie Dettori is on 8%. At the other end of the table are Pat Smullen (0 wins from 26 rides since 2006), Dane O’Neill (2%), Christophe Soumillon (4%), Liam Keniry (5%) and Jimmy Quinn (5%). Some of those would have had very few winning chances in that time – but what’s Christophe’s excuse? Follow Greg Wood’s tweets from the paddock Greg Wood will be paddockside before the Norfolk Stakes (2.30) and the Gold Cup (3.50), tweeting about the state of the various runners. You can read his impressions as to their wellbeing here . 11.30am Claudio Fallisco to score today? Chris Cook: This online Brazilian nickname generator has been helping our football staff pass the time between goals during the many tedious games at the World Cup so far. It’s fun and there have been rumours that Racing For Change is going to use it to generate Brazilnames for the jockeys at Royal Ascot this week, which they will be required to wear on the back of their silks. Ryan Moore comes out as Moorson, which seems appropriate for the son of a fine trainer. Boringly, Johnny Murtagh becomes Murta and Hayley Turner is a predictable Turnio, but Frankie Dettori produces the excellent Dettorandro, while Kieren Fallon is a frankly thrilling Claudio Fallisco. Will Hayler previews day three I start the third day of the Royal meeting content in the knowledge that a pound on every one of my selections so far this week would have yielded an astonishing profit of a penny. Not bad, eh? That means if you’d have had a modest £1,000 on each one, you’d be a whole tenner up. And you can buy a lot with a tenner. Not that I’m particularly confident about sending profits rocketing any further upwards on today’s card, given that it looks fiendishly tough stuff. You could have 10 goes in the Britannia and still get nothing in the first four, although if yesterday’s bias towards high-drawn horses is repeated that will at least help to narrow options down. Despite watering overnight, the going stick readings are just as quick as yesterday (stands’ side 9.9, centre 9.8, far side 10.0) and the official going is ‘good to firm, good in places’. Ask (3.50) has been my selection for the Gold Cup since before the start of the season. He is a high-quality performer, who definitely stays two miles and who, we are led to believe, is fully over whatever problems were holding him up earlier this season. Manifest was impressive in the Yorkshire Cup and, having been down to as low as 9-4 last week, he has drifted back out to a more-backable 4-1 this morning. But Ask did the job just as effectively in last year’s Yorkshire Cup and I just can’t oppose him because: a) I’d fancy him to win a match race against Manifest over a mile and a half, and b) Ask looks just as likely to stay today’s trip. The only other bet I have placed so far today is on London Stripe (5.35) , despite a disappointing wide draw in the King George V Handicap – a race his trainer, Sir Michael Stoute, loves to target. He is said to be one of Ryan Moore’s very favourite horses in the stable and is likely to take the beating. You can read my preview of today’s TV races here . Win a £50 free bet from Paddy Power Paddy Power have very kindly offered a £50 free bet to our champion tipster today. All you have to do is give us your selections for all of today’s races at Royal Ascot. As ever, our champion will be the tipster who returns the best profit to notional level stakes of £1 on each selection at starting price. Non-runners count as losers. Please post all your tips in a single posting, using the comment facility below, before the first race at 2.30pm. There are six races at Ascot today and you must post a single selection for each race. Our usual terms and conditions, which you can read here , will apply, except that this will be a strictly one-day thing. If we get a tie after all the races have been run, the winner will be the one who posted their tips earliest out of those with the highest score. If you don’t win today, don’t despair. We’ll run the same competition again tomorrow. Emmapathak was the only one to find Invisible Man, 28-1 winner of yesterday’s Royal Hunt Cup. Together with Strawberrydaiquiri, that was enough to make her champion. Moidadembums , cruelly denied on Tuesday, has stolen a march by posting his tips for today, using yesterday’s blog: 2.30 Dinkum Diamond 3.05 Gertrude Bell 3.50 Kasbah Bliss 4.25 Ransom Note 5.00 Quadrille 5.35 Tactician Click here for all the day’s racecards, form, stats and results. Click here for today’s latest odds. And post your tips and racing-related comments below. Horse racing Horse racing tips Royal Ascot Will Hayler Chris Cook Tony Paley Greg Wood guardian.co.uk

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Horse racing: Win a £50 bet in our Royal Ascot tipping competition, plus the latest news and best bets on Ladies’ Day

Brazil last worm-up match vs Tanzania (5-1) 7-06-2010

Brazil vs Tanzania (5-1) world cup 2010 worm-up match

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Brazil last worm-up match vs Tanzania (5-1) 7-06-2010

England 2 – 1 Japan Official Highlights of England’s final 2010 World Cup warm up match.mp4

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England 2 – 1 Japan Official Highlights of England’s final 2010 World Cup warm up match.mp4

Jay-Z’s ‘Empire State Of Mind’ To Replace ‘New York, New York’ At Belmont Stakes

NYRA official calls it ‘the quintessential 21st century theme song for New York City.’ By James Montgomery Jay-Z Photo: Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa In his massive hit “Empire State of Mind,” Jay-Z raps that he’s “the new Sinatra.” And it turns out he wasn’t joking. During Saturday’s 142nd running of the Belmont Stakes, “Empire” will be played as the horses are brought out onto the race track, replacing Sinatra’s classic “New York, New York,” according to a spokesperson for the New York Racing Association. “[It’s] the quintessential 21st century theme song for New York City,” an NYRA official told The Associated Press. A spokesperson for the NYRA confirmed the change to MTV News. “New York, New York,” (or, as it’s actually called, “Theme From ‘New York, New York,’ “) is most closely associated with Sinatra, though it was actually written for — and first recorded by — Liza Minnelli for the 1977 Martin Scorsese film of the same name. Sinatra recorded it for his 1980 album Trilogy: Past, Present And Future, and it became the last of his many signature numbers. Sinatra’s version has been performed as the field for the Belmont Stakes makes its way to the starting gate since 1997. Before that, the vaudeville tune “Sidewalks of New York” was performed. At Saturday’s race — which is held at Belmont Park on Long Island — teen singer Jasmine Villegas will perform “Empire.” Of course, this isn’t the first time the song has been performed at a sporting event. “Empire” became the unofficial theme song of the New York Yankees’ World Series run last year, with Jay-Z and Alicia Keys doing a version of the tune during Game Two of the Series. Later, Jigga did another take of the song during the Yankees’ championship celebration in Manhattan. Related Artists Jay-Z

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Jay-Z’s ‘Empire State Of Mind’ To Replace ‘New York, New York’ At Belmont Stakes