Tag Archives: tools

Lady Gaga Has ‘Potential’ To Be The Next Madonna, Director Says

‘Telephone’ director Jonas

Olympic Skeleton Racer Katie Uhlaender Gets A Lesson From Carl Lewis

Olympic great comforts racer after disappointment in Vancouver. By Katie Uhlaender Photo: Shaun Botterill/Getty Images Sport No matter what the results are for an athlete in the Olympic Games, to participate in the Olympic movement is indescribable. To hear “USA” screamed by not only your family but also by other nations’ people who you have touched and inspired is an experience that truly teaches you what the Olympic spirit is. After going through four surgeries (from breaking my kneecap twice) and losing my father less than a year before the Olympic Games, it was a huge accomplishment for me to qualify for Vancouver. It was even more insane to have the fastest starts despite being barely six months from my last surgery. (Too bad I didn’t drive down the track as fast as I ran to curve one.) The Olympics is something we work years for, and it is over in minutes — everything has to be perfect. Nike is the only sponsor I have, and it’s a small deal, but they are full of love for their athletes. They noticed that I was unsure of what was next, and that I was a bit disappointed in the way things had gone down leading into my race since I had really wanted to bring home a medal for my country and my father. Nike sought to remind me what I was a part of, so they told me I was going to watch long track with Carl Lewis! A lot of my disappointment came from how I wanted to walk away from the race prepared, with everything in place, and somehow I allowed that not to happen. I worked so hard for four years, and I walked away wondering what if? Carl listened and said the key to success is finding a support group you can depend on and one person within that group that will look you in the eye and say, “You will be Olympic champion.” At this point I could feel my eyes watering up, and I realized that one person had been my father. I was crying in front of Carl Lewis! I was so embarrassed, but I couldn’t help it. He looked at me as though he was about to start crying as well, and told me how he had also lost his father at 23. I was shocked! He assured me it was going to get better, and asked me what I thought my father would say to me now. He told me my father had been around long enough to make sure I was ready to go out and be the woman he raised me to be, to represent my country and my family name, and to know he has left me with the tools and the knowledge I need to win. I need to let go, and once I’m able to do that my father will be even closer to me. I need faith that I am prepared to face life without him. The rest will come. It’s about finding that person that I can count on no matter what in this new chapter of life without my father. No one will replace him, but it’s time to grow and evolve into, hopefully, that Olympic champion he knew I could be. Carl helped me realize I can’t do this alone, and it will be very important to find that key support. He reminded me what the Olympics are truly about: educating and inspiring those around us to live life with passion and integrity. Those were the basic principles my father taught me, among many other life lessons, and I am honored to be a part of that. There are so many athletes here that have inspired me and picked me up, and not all of them were American. It’s not about nation, it’s not about glory; it is about inspiration.

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Olympic Skeleton Racer Katie Uhlaender Gets A Lesson From Carl Lewis

Sexting Leads To Teen Having To Register As A Sex Offender

MTV News’ ‘Sexting in America: When Privates Go Public’ will tell his story Sunday at 9 p.m. ET. By Gil Kaufman Phillip Alpert Photo: MTV News As soon as he woke up the next morning, Phillip Alpert knew that he had made a huge mistake. Angry that he was unable to get the attention of his ex-girlfriend, the then-18-year-old Florida teen arose from a sleeping-pill-induced stupor at 3 a.m. and forwarded some sexually explicit images that she had given him to everyone on his distribution list as a means of getting a reaction. When he was arrested on child-pornography charges and ordered to register as a sex offender a short time later, Alpert quickly learned that sexting has very real consequences, ones the teen could never have imagined. “Sexting cases are unusual and few and far between these days, and they don’t fit into any particular category or set of standards,” said Lawrence Walter, Alpert’s lawyer, who has taken on the now-20-year-old’s case pro bono, in part to help publicize the issue. “Usually police, prosecutors, judges and lawyers default to treating them as child-pornography cases, and the knee-jerk reaction is to have them register as sex offenders, which ruins their lives.” While Walter said Alpert quickly realized how wrong his behavior was, he stressed that sexting between underage victims involving underage men and women who are taking photos of themselves in which they are, essentially, both victim and perpetrator is a very different thing than an adult exploiting a child by making them participate in pornographic photos or films in which they are unwilling participants. “Society is starting to recognize that maybe this is something different, a phenomenon we haven’t dealt with before, but currently they’re doing it in the worst way possible, by lumping these kids in with pedophiles and molesters,” said Walter, who is pushing for the legal system to come up with a new means of dealing with sexting cases among minors. “[They’re being punished for] doing things kids have done for time immemorial: playing doctor, truth or dare and exploring their sexuality with each other. We just happen to have given them the tools to create digital copies to record them and send them around easily.” Alpert tells his story in “Sexting in America: When Privates Go Public,” a 30-minute special airing Sunday at 9 p.m. ET on MTV, in which we take a closer look at the dangers of sexting and the serious repercussions for the people who send and receive naked pictures of peers on their mobile phones and other devices. In Alpert’s case, after being arrested for child-pornography distribution, he was put on five years’ probation and required to register on the public sex-offender list, which lists his age, hair color, eye color and home address and is readily available to anyone and everyone. “I’ve actually had a lot of neighbors come to my door before … to check if it was safe for their kids to play around outside, with me here,” Alpert says in the show. “I’m extremely sorry for what I did, but the sex-offender thing, which is going to last until I’m 43, that’s overkill.” Images taken of someone under the age of 18 constitutes child pornography, according to Parry Aftab, an Internet privacy and security lawyer. “If you take a picture, you can be accused of producing child pornography; if you send it to somebody, you can be accused of distributing child pornography; and if you keep a picture, you can be accused of possessing child pornography,” Aftab explained. “Anywhere along this chain of transmission of the images, you can be charged as a registered sex offender.’ Walter said Alpert’s message is not that sexting is OK or should be decriminalized, but rather, “Look at me. Don’t make the mistake I did.” Perhaps the worst part is that Alpert’s dream of being an animator has been dashed because of the tight restrictions placed on his Internet use as a registered sex offender. “He can’t live within a certain distance of schools, so he can’t live with his father, because he lives too close to the high school that [Phillip] attended,” the lawyer explained. “He can’t be near places where minors congregate, but if you’re 18 and have underage friends, what do you do?” Because of his lack of privacy, Alpert is afraid to even send his lawyer e-mail, because if his probation officer decides that the e-mail was not work- or school-related, Alpert could go to prison for five years. “He can’t find a job, because he has to tell people he’s a registered sex offender,” Walter said. “It’s hard to make new friends and date.” But perhaps the worst punishment is the requirement that Alpert attend weekly sex-offender re-education classes for five years. “Here, he’s being trained not to reoffend and deal with his pedophilia or sexual deviance, which does not exist,” Walter said. “He’s stuck with people who did terrible things with minors, and he’s forced to tell his story over and over again and can’t move beyond it. For a 19- to 20-year-old kid, that’s not a healthy thing. The more he does this and the longer he goes to these classes, the more he concludes, ‘I guess I am one of them. I must have done something so horrible to be considered like the dregs of society.’ It has a terrible impact on his self-worth.” The MTV News special “Sexting in America: When Privates Go Public,” premieres Sunday, February 14, at 9 p.m. ET/PT. Related Videos ‘Sexting In America: When Privates Go Public’ Preview

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Sexting Leads To Teen Having To Register As A Sex Offender

Does death exist? New theory says ‘no’

Many of us fear death. We believe in death because we have been told we will die.

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Does death exist? New theory says ‘no’

Obama to unveil plan to add troops in Afghanistan

War-weary Americans will support more fighting in Afghanistan once they understand the perils of losing, President Barack Obama declared Tuesday, announcing he was ready to spell out war plans virtually sure to include tens of thousands more U.S. troops

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Obama to unveil plan to add troops in Afghanistan

Rihanna Interviews Continue: Singer Reflects on Domestic Violence, Media Scrutiny

Even if this past year has been one she’d rather forget for many reasons, Rihanna has been named one of Glamour magazine’s Women of the Year for 2009.

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Rihanna Interviews Continue: Singer Reflects on Domestic Violence, Media Scrutiny

Rihanna Says Rated R Is ‘Super Fearless — Exactly How I Feel Right Now’

Singer opens up about her new album, her career and Chris Brown in a candid interview. By Gil Kaufman Rihanna Photo: Christopher Peterson/ FilmMagic You’d never know it from the swagger she has in the just-released clip for “Wait Your Turn,” but as a girl from a modest home in Barbados, Rihanna never dreamed she’d rise to the top of the pop world by her early 20s. In a wide-ranging interview for Glamour magazine’s current “Women of the Year” issue , in addition to discussing her assault at the hands of former boyfriend Chris Brown in February for the first time in detail, Rihanna, 21, touched on her style, her early successes and how she poured the past eight months of pent-up emotions into her upcoming album, Rated R.

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Rihanna Says Rated R Is ‘Super Fearless — Exactly How I Feel Right Now’