Tag Archives: survey

Kate Gosselin Switching Up Her Hair Again

As she readies for her debut on Dancing With the Stars, Kate Gosselin has a big decision to make. No, not whether to hire Stephanie Santoro to watch the kids. Stylist Ted Gibson is giving her hair a new look … but what kind? Rumor has it that when Kate hits up the salon today, she’ll be back to her famous short ‘do. But only on a temporary basis while her new longer hair is readied. “She’ll have a new hairdo tomorrow because we’re taking out [her hair extensions ] and we’re not putting them back in until Thursday,” Gibson dished recently. “We’re actually doing three different shades , a caramel, a beige blond and a bit of a lighter blonde … The extensions will last the whole time she’s on the show.” What do you think? Good move? What hairstyle should she wear on DWTS? Take a look at some recent Kate Gosselin pictures and vote in our survey below … What’s Kate Gosselin’s best hairstyle?

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Kate Gosselin Switching Up Her Hair Again

Fashion Face-Off: Blake Lively vs. Alicia Keys

Who would win a fashion face-off between two gorgeous stars like Blake Lively and Alicia Keys? There’s only one way to find out, if you know what we mean. We mean vote in the survey below. It’s a tough call! The sexy Gossip Girl star showed off her long, long legs in Balmain’s sharp-shouldered sequin mini at a post-Emmy party last August. Meanwhile, the talented singer rocked the sparkling, plunging number for the Brit Awards last month. Who do you think looked better in it? You decide … Who looked better in their black mini-dress?

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Fashion Face-Off: Blake Lively vs. Alicia Keys

More Americans get news from Internet than newspapers or radio

More Americans get their news from the Internet than from newspapers or radio, and three-fourths say they hear of news via e-mail or updates on social media sites, according to a new report. Sixty-one percent of Americans said they get at least some of their news online, according to a survey by the Pew Internet and American Life Project. That's compared with 54 percent who said they listen to a radio news program and 50 percent who said they read a national or local print newspaper. Almost all respondents, 92 percent, said they get their news from more than one platform. “In the digital era, news has become omnipresent. Americans access it in multiple formats on multiple platforms on myriad devices,” reads the report, based on a survey conducted in December and January. “The days of loyalty to a particular news organization on a particular piece of technology in a particular form are gone.” Social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter have made news a more participatory experience than ever before, the survey suggests. People share links to news stories by e-mail, post articles on their Facebook and other networking feeds and tweet them on Twitter — often following up by discussing the articles on message boards and other sites. Seventy-five percent of respondents said they get news forwarded through e-mail or posts on social networking sites, while 37 percent of online users said they've reported news, commented on a story or shared it on sites like Facebook and Twitter, the survey said. “To a great extent, people's experience of news, especially on the Internet, is becoming a shared social experience … ,” reads the report. “[T]he advent of social media like social networking sites and blogs has helped the news become a social experience in fresh ways for consumers.” Most people said they use between two and five online news sources, and 65 percent said they don't have a single favorite Web site for news. When looking for news online, people said they're most often seeking information about a common topic: the weather. Eighty-one percent said they search for weather information online, followed by national news at 73 percent. Just over half — 52 percent — said they look for sports news, while 47 percent said they look for entertainment or celebrity news. Online news users are generally younger than the average population, according to Pew. About two-thirds of the study's online news users were younger than 50, and nearly 30 percent were younger than 30. Racially, that group is more white and Hispanic than the national average, while half of non-Hispanic black respondents said they get all of their news from offline sources. Only television news still outpaces the Internet, with 78 percent of respondents saying they watch local news and 73 percent saying they view a national network or cable news channel like CNN, Fox News or MSNBC. The report was based on a daily tracking survey of 2,259 adults age 18 or older. The margin of error for all respondents is plus or minus 2.3 percentage points — 2.7 percentage points for Internet users. A combination of land line and cellular numbers was used in the survey. added by: singrrr

8.8 Magnitude Earthquake off the coast of Chile

A massive 8.8-magnitude earthquake capable of tremendous damage struck central Chile early Saturday, shaking the capital for a minute and half and setting off a tsunami. Buildings collapsed and phone lines and electricity were down, making the extent of the damage difficult to determine. The quake hit 200 miles (325 kilometers) southwest of the capital, Santiago, and at a depth of 22 miles (35 kilometers) at 3:34 a.m. (0634 GMT; 1:34 a.m. EST), the U.S. Geological Survey reported. Its epicenter was just 70 miles (115 kilometers) from Concepcion, Chile's second-largest city, where more than 200,000 people live along the Bio Bio river, and 60 miles from the ski town of Chillan, a gateway to Andean ski resorts that was destroyed in a 1939 earthquake. Buildings shook and collapsed in Santiago. With phone lines down, confirmation of damage was difficult elsewhere, especially further south toward the epicenter. The quake was felt in Argentina as well. The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center issued a warning for Chile and Peru, and a less-urgent tsunami watch for Ecuador, Colombia, Panama, Costa Rica and Antarctica. “Sea level readings indicate a tsunami was generated. It may have been destructive along coasts near the earthquake epicenter and could also be a threat to more distant coasts,” the center said. The U.S. west coast tsunami warning center said it did not expect a tsunami along the west of the U.S. or Canada but was continuing to monitor the situation. The largest earthquake ever recorded struck the same area of Chile on May 22, 1960. The magnitude-9.5 quake killed 1,655 people and left 2 million homeless. The tsunami that it caused killed people in Hawaii, Japan and the Philippines and caused damage to the west coast of the United States. More information at the USGS website: http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/recenteqsww/Quakes/us2010tfan.php —- [Ed. – Help up find images from the affected area below in the comments.] added by: Acoltus

Confused Britney Spears Goes Back to Blonde

Looking a bit melancholy or just straight up confused as to where the hell she is at the moment, Britney Spears heads to her salon for a nighttime hair appointment. As she walked to the Hollywood salon, the star’s hands never left her hair. Was she having weave issues? Second-guessing the transformation about to take place? Could she simply not remember where she was going and why? Or whether she remembered to DVR The Secret Life of the American Teenager ? One never knows … Wait … where am I right now? Ding dang, life is confusin’ Fortunately, she looked a bit more like her old self – in more ways than one – when she emerged several hours later. Those peeps did quite a number on her hair! Let’s just say that she looks nothing like the Britney Spears pictures above, and more like Brit circa 2000. Follow the jump to see her hairstyle transformation … OMG!

First Lady Makeover: Michelle Obama Gets Sexy

If it’s somehow inappropriate, offensive or in any way wrong to call the First Lady of the United States sexy … we apologize. And we don’t wanna be right! Michelle Obama got a makeover over the weekend, as you can see. Speaking about her Let’s Move childhood obesity initiative at Fairhill Elementary School in Philadelphia, Michelle wore one of her traditional ensembles Friday. But the next day, previewing the Governor’s Ball performances, she changed things up with a sexier Jason Wu dress, a crisscross top and sleeker, sassier bob. What do you think of the First Lady’s transformation? Check out the Michelle Obama pictures showing both looks, then vote in our survey below and tell us! Which Michelle Obama fashion statement is your favorite?

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First Lady Makeover: Michelle Obama Gets Sexy

No More Surveys About Sarah Palin Please

A survey has revealed that the majority of Americans think Sarah Palin is unqualified to be president . This survey wildly misses the point of Sarah Palin, and the tea party movement she inspires – both are ideological, not political. You may have noticed that Palin can do whatever she likes. She can evade taxes, lie outright, stand next to animals being slaughtered, display stupendous ignorance and inexperience, and still her followers bay for her. This mystifies journalists and pundits, so they commission surveys about it. The mistake they (we) make is to try and apply normal standards of debate to the far right-wing. The movement they most resemble is not the Boston Tea Party, which had a clear political and economic agenda. It is the extreme ideological groups they profess to dislike the most — Islamic extremists and the far left. It may seem like an overblown comparison. After all the Taliban oppressed, tortured and killed millions in a war-torn nation. And Palin is, for all of the vitriol she generates, no Stalin. But here are the similarities: They all arise in times of trouble: economic and social turmoil is, almost by definition, confusing and difficult. People seek clarity. Extremism is a form of clarity. They all value ideological purity over intellect or skill: Mullah Omar, the one-eyed leader of the Taliban when they came to power in the 1990s, had never left Afghanistan and had read almost nothing but the Koran. No one cared. He rode to power on a wave of national discontent that sought single-mindedness after years of confusion. They all share a feeling of oppression: Palin used the word revolution when addressing the tea party conference in Nashville — there is the sense that tea-partyers and Palinites feel they are rising up against a government that doesn’t know, or care, what they think. Communism spread, in similar but far more extreme circumstances, on the back of the Russian revolution. In Afghanistan, in the 1990s, very legitimate and thoughtful governments – like Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and, to an extent, the US — began to back the Taliban for reasons of personal expediency. America in 2010 is a moderate and sophisticated democracy, far removed from that war-torn nation, or from post-revolution Russia. But, on a much smaller scale, the Republican party has made a similar deal with the devil. It’s time we admitted that and stopped wasting the time of pollsters and analysts.

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No More Surveys About Sarah Palin Please

We Are (Still) The World: A Photo Montage

We have a special responsibility to help needy people. – Celine Dion So said the widely-respected singer yesterday, as she and over 80 celebrities gathered at the same Hollywood studio where the original version of “We Are the World” was recorded

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We Are (Still) The World: A Photo Montage

World Wonders: Lady Gaga Have Man Parts?

It’s a question that surfaced last summer and continues to confound the masses: Does Lady Gaga have man parts? In other words, is she a hermaphrodite

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World Wonders: Lady Gaga Have Man Parts?

Lady Gaga Grammy Fashion: Hit or Miss?

Amazingly, Lady Gaga may have been upstaged in the outrageous fashion department last night.

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Lady Gaga Grammy Fashion: Hit or Miss?