Tag Archives: Water

Oil Workers Scramble to Clean a Giant Popcorn Spill

Photo: Bruno Rico, via UltimoSegunda Last week, a boat in the Amazon spilled around 210,000 gallons of popcorn into a major river , making the surface of the water look a bit like the floor of a movie theater . Fortunately, it didn’t take long before an oil company’s emerge… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Oil Workers Scramble to Clean a Giant Popcorn Spill

Green Gift Guide: The Foodie (Slideshow)

Image: TreeHugger What can be more luxurious than coming home to your favorite dish, freshly prepared and laid out on the table, or more indulgent than biting into a cake just out of the oven? If you’re not someone who likes to spend all free time in the kitchen, then shopping for the foodies among your friends and family can be more than a little overwhelming (what does one do with a pestle, anyway…). But have no fear: The gifts in our second of 10 holiday gift guides launching this week will make finding the perfect equipment, serving dishes, snacks, and cookbooks for the eco-minded chef in your … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Green Gift Guide: The Foodie (Slideshow)

Deep Water Corals Dead and Dying; Gulf Oil Spill to Blame (Video)

Photograph via BOEMRE and NOAA OER Lophelia II expedition While the news coverage has died down, the lingering impacts on wildlife of the Deep Horizon oil spill are still being uncovered. That includes what’s going on far under the surface of the water to deep sea corals. Researchers from Penn State have discovered that seven miles southwest of the disastrous wellhead is a huge bed of dead and damaged corals, and it is suspected that the damage is thanks to the spill. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Deep Water Corals Dead and Dying; Gulf Oil Spill to Blame (Video)

Rick Ross Kicks Off MTV News’ Top 25 Songs Of 2010

We unveil our favorite tracks of the year, starting with 25 through 18. By James Montgomery Rick Ross Photo: Christie Goodwin/ Getty Images In 2010, we fell in love with guys named Alejandro and Gurls from California. We learned how to Dougie and Blow Money Fast, shouted F— You and Oh My God, wished on Airplanes in the night sky, Loved the Way You Lie and got Fancy. We marveled at the Power one man possessed and pined openly for the Only Girl (In the World). In short, we lived vicariously through music — and 2010 was a heck of a year to do so. But in a year with so many genuinely great songs, what was the greatest? It’s a tough question to answer, but we decided to give it a try. Over the past month, we asked the MTV News staff to come up with their own list of their 25 favorite songs of 2010; they didn’t have to be singles and, really, they didn’t even have to be released in 2010. We were looking for any song that made an impact this year, be it commercially, culturally or critically. When we finally received all the lists, we had proof of just what a year it was: Our staffers ended up picking more than 300 different songs from some 200 artists, and it was up to a select few to tabulate the results and create a top 25. Using a point system — the #1 song on each list received 25 points, the #25 song received 1 point — we spent the next few weeks whittling down the lists. Finally, after some frantic addition (math was never our strong suit) and some rather spirited debate, we had our list — and we feel it’s a great one, full of songs by artists both big and small, yet all impactful in some way. It wasn’t easy, but we got it done. This week, we’ll roll out numbers 25-11, and then on Monday, we’ll begin to unveil our top 10. Oh, and we’re interested in seeing your lists too. Feel free to add them in the comments below. But now, without further ado, let’s look back on the year that was, by kicking off our countdown of the Top 25 Songs of 2010. 25. Rick Ross (featuring Ne-Yo), “Super High” Total Points : 48 The debut single from Ross’ Teflon Don album, “Super High” dropped in May and dazzled everyone with its mix of style (check Ne-Yo’s glossy, flossy chorus) and swagger (Ross boasts about besting foes “by margins larger than Fran Tarkenton” and insists that “only fly bitches ride with the Boss”). Produced by DJ Clark Kent, it glides by swatches of both N.W.A and silky ’70s R&B act Enchantment, which sort of makes it a pretty apt metaphor for Ross himself, when you think about it. 24. Swedish House Mafia, “One (Your Name)” Total Points : 50 (named on two ballots) It recalls, alternately, a blender, a rubber band, a Simon, a motorcycle and something from the “Mortal Kombat” soundtrack (and that’s just in the crowd-uniting intro). But, really, “One” is the year’s best club anthem, a seamless mixture of stray sounds, house stomp and monster rave hooks that packed dance floors from Iowa to Ibiza (and the Jersey Shore too). Throw in hints of acoustic guitar, piano and, uh, Pharrell Williams, and you’ve got a track that’s practically bursting its britches, but it’s a credit to the trio of Swedish stars that produced it that “One” remains slipstream-tight. Chances are, when Rihanna, Usher and Chris Brown made their respective forays into dance music, this was the track that inspired them to do so. 23. LCD Soundsystem, “I Can Change” Total Points : 50 (named on three ballots) A woozy mixture of bloopy electronics and, well, naked insecurity, “I Can Change” is, on the surface, just a come-down track from a night of excess and elation. But what makes it great is what makes all of James Murphy’s songs so great: the fact that, beneath it all, there beats a very human heart, a desperate, pleading one that needs love no matter what. Lie to him, build him up and then tear him down, Murphy doesn’t care, so long as he’s coming home with you tonight. “It’s good in the dark,” he sings, but he’s also smart enough to cover what happens in the light too. The end result may not be pretty, but, hey, at least he’s honest. 22. Yeasayer, “O.N.E.” Total Points : 52 What happens when one of Brooklyn’s brightest bands decides: “Screw this, let’s make a pop record?” “O.N.E.,” of course. A sumptuous, supple and sublimely silly tune — on an album, Odd Blood, that’s full of them — “O.N.E.” worms along on undulating synth lines, funky fretwork and a downright sexxxy falsetto yelp, and somewhere along the way, it also manages to transform itself into the picture-perfect pop song, for the 22nd century and beyond. All of which is a rather bookish way of saying Britney, Katy and Gaga wish they could pull something like this off. 21. Robyn, “Hang With Me” Total Points : 54 Robyn’s best songs are always her most bittersweet, and “Hang With Me” is no exception. A rather fragile, heartbreaking exploration of those first tentative steps into (or out of) love, it’s also a starry, synthy super-ballad, an electro-pop wonder that just keeps chiming along until the chorus hits, the joy overloads and everything is right with the world. Robyn cautions us not to fall “recklessly, headlessly” in love with her, but when she makes songs as good as “Hang With Me,” it’s sort of difficult not to. 20. The National, “Bloodbuzz Ohio” Total Points : 59 White-collar angst from blue-collar barflies, “Bloodbuzz” is the sound of all that is terrifying and unyielding in adulthood, a weary warbler practically bowed under with the unspoken regrets of anyone who’s ever been up against the wall or in too deep. Matt Berninger is at his boozy, woozy best, mumbling the year’s most perfectly crushing line — “I still owe money to the money I owe” — while the guitars fret beneath him and the water continues to rise. There’s no stopping the inevitable, after all. 19. Alicia Keys, “Un-Thinkable (I’m Ready)” Total Points : 60 A simmering, downright serpentine track that pulses on little more than a barebones back track, noirish piano chords and — above all else — Keys’ breathless, deft vocals, “Un-Thinkable” is the rare example of a megastar stripping it all away and just being brave. And it packs the kind of wallop no amount of studio trickery could muster as a result. Keys is laying it all on the line here, and she’s doing it because she deserves it. Or at least she thinks she does. And that caveat is the key: She’s the rare talent who’s also willing to admit that she has doubts, which makes her — and this song — all the more impactful. 18. Chris Brown, “Deuces” Total Points : 64 Unapologetic, brash and, sure, even cocky, “Deuces” is Chris Brown’s “FU” to the world, and truth be told, he’s at his absolute best when he’s angry. In theory, the song is little more than a supremely swaggering kiss-off to a nagging ex, but when he sings, “I’m movin’ on to something better,” you can’t help but think that’s also addressing everyone who’s vilified him over the past 18 months — and that’s probably the point. He knows you’re mad, but so what? MTV News’ Top 25 Songs of 2010 countdown continues Friday, when we reveal 17 through 11 on our list. The top 10 begins rolling out Monday, so make sure to keep checking back to see what song we’ve named #1. And don’t forget to share your picks in the comments below! Related Artists Rick Ross (Hip-Hop) Chris Brown Alicia Keys The National Robyn Yeasayer LCD Soundsystem

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Rick Ross Kicks Off MTV News’ Top 25 Songs Of 2010

MTV News’ Top 25 Songs Of 2010: The Countdown Begins!

We unveil our favorite tracks of the year, starting with 25 through 18. By James Montgomery Rick Ross Photo: Christie Goodwin/ Getty Images In 2010, we fell in love with guys named Alejandro and Gurls from California. We learned how to Dougie and Blow Money Fast, shouted F— You and Oh My God, wished on Airplanes in the night sky, Loved the Way You Lie and got Fancy. We marveled at the Power one man possessed and pined openly for the Only Girl (In the World). In short, we lived vicariously through music — and 2010 was a heck of a year to do so. But in a year with so many genuinely great songs, what was the greatest? It’s a tough question to answer, but we decided to give it a try. Over the past month, we asked the MTV News staff to come up with their own list of their 25 favorite songs of 2010; they didn’t have to be singles and, really, they didn’t even have to be released in 2010. We were looking for any song that made an impact this year, be it commercially, culturally or critically. When we finally received all the lists, we had proof of just what a year it was: Our staffers ended up picking more than 300 different songs from some 200 artists, and it was up to a select few to tabulate the results and create a top 25. Using a point system — the #1 song on each list received 25 points, the #25 song received 1 point — we spent the next few weeks whittling down the lists. Finally, after some frantic addition (math was never our strong suit) and some rather spirited debate, we had our list — and we feel it’s a great one, full of songs by artists both big and small, yet all impactful in some way. It wasn’t easy, but we got it done. This week, we’ll roll out numbers 25-11, and then on Monday, we’ll begin to unveil our top 10. Oh, and we’re interested in seeing your lists too. Feel free to add them in the comments below. But now, without further ado, let’s look back on the year that was, by kicking off our countdown of the Top 25 Songs of 2010. 25. Rick Ross (featuring Ne-Yo), “Super High” Total Points : 48 The debut single from Ross’ Teflon Don album, “Super High” dropped in May and dazzled everyone with its mix of style (check Ne-Yo’s glossy, flossy chorus) and swagger (Ross boasts about besting foes “by margins larger than Fran Tarkenton” and insists that “only fly bitches ride with the Boss”). Produced by DJ Clark Kent, it glides by swatches of both N.W.A and silky ’70s R&B act Enchantment, which sort of makes it a pretty apt metaphor for Ross himself, when you think about it. 24. Swedish House Mafia, “One (Your Name)” Total Points : 50 (named on two ballots) It recalls, alternately, a blender, a rubber band, a Simon, a motorcycle and something from the “Mortal Kombat” soundtrack (and that’s just in the crowd-uniting intro). But, really, “One” is the year’s best club anthem, a seamless mixture of stray sounds, house stomp and monster rave hooks that packed dance floors from Iowa to Ibiza (and the Jersey Shore too). Throw in hints of acoustic guitar, piano and, uh, Pharrell Williams, and you’ve got a track that’s practically bursting its britches, but it’s a credit to the trio of Swedish stars that produced it that “One” remains slipstream-tight. Chances are, when Rihanna, Usher and Chris Brown made their respective forays into dance music, this was the track that inspired them to do so. 23. LCD Soundsystem, “I Can Change” Total Points : 50 (named on three ballots) A woozy mixture of bloopy electronics and, well, naked insecurity, “I Can Change” is, on the surface, just a come-down track from a night of excess and elation. But what makes it great is what makes all of James Murphy’s songs so great: the fact that, beneath it all, there beats a very human heart, a desperate, pleading one that needs love no matter what. Lie to him, build him up and then tear him down, Murphy doesn’t care, so long as he’s coming home with you tonight. “It’s good in the dark,” he sings, but he’s also smart enough to cover what happens in the light too. The end result may not be pretty, but, hey, at least he’s honest. 22. Yeasayer, “O.N.E.” Total Points : 52 What happens when one of Brooklyn’s brightest bands decides: “Screw this, let’s make a pop record?” “O.N.E.,” of course. A sumptuous, supple and sublimely silly tune — on an album, Odd Blood, that’s full of them — “O.N.E.” worms along on undulating synth lines, funky fretwork and a downright sexxxy falsetto yelp, and somewhere along the way, it also manages to transform itself into the picture-perfect pop song, for the 22nd century and beyond. All of which is a rather bookish way of saying Britney, Katy and Gaga wish they could pull something like this off. 21. Robyn, “Hang With Me” Total Points : 54 Robyn’s best songs are always her most bittersweet, and “Hang With Me” is no exception. A rather fragile, heartbreaking exploration of those first tentative steps into (or out of) love, it’s also a starry, synthy super-ballad, an electro-pop wonder that just keeps chiming along until the chorus hits, the joy overloads and everything is right with the world. Robyn cautions us not to fall “recklessly, headlessly” in love with her, but when she makes songs as good as “Hang With Me,” it’s sort of difficult not to. 20. The National, “Bloodbuzz Ohio” Total Points : 59 White-collar angst from blue-collar barflies, “Bloodbuzz” is the sound of all that is terrifying and unyielding in adulthood, a weary warbler practically bowed under with the unspoken regrets of anyone who’s ever been up against the wall or in too deep. Matt Berninger is at his boozy, woozy best, mumbling the year’s most perfectly crushing line — “I still owe money to the money I owe” — while the guitars fret beneath him and the water continues to rise. There’s no stopping the inevitable, after all. 19. Alicia Keys, “Un-Thinkable (I’m Ready)” Total Points : 60 A simmering, downright serpentine track that pulses on little more than a barebones back track, noirish piano chords and — above all else — Keys’ breathless, deft vocals, “Un-Thinkable” is the rare example of a megastar stripping it all away and just being brave. And it packs the kind of wallop no amount of studio trickery could muster as a result. Keys is laying it all on the line here, and she’s doing it because she deserves it. Or at least she thinks she does. And that caveat is the key: She’s the rare talent who’s also willing to admit that she has doubts, which makes her — and this song — all the more impactful. 18. Chris Brown, “Deuces” Total Points : 64 Unapologetic, brash and, sure, even cocky, “Deuces” is Chris Brown’s “FU” to the world, and truth be told, he’s at his absolute best when he’s angry. In theory, the song is little more than a supremely swaggering kiss-off to a nagging ex, but when he sings, “I’m movin’ on to something better,” you can’t help but think that’s also addressing everyone who’s vilified him over the past 18 months — and that’s probably the point. He knows you’re mad, but so what? MTV News’ Top 25 Songs of 2010 countdown continues Friday, when we reveal 17 through 11 on our list. The top 10 begins rolling out Monday, so make sure to keep checking back to see what song we’ve named #1. And don’t forget to share your picks in the comments below!

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MTV News’ Top 25 Songs Of 2010: The Countdown Begins!

Solar Powered "Swater" Concept Collects and Purifies Water In the Desert

Images via Yanko Design Ways to gather water in arid places has grabbed the attention of designers more often lately, and the newest concept to come on the radar is the Swater, by designers Chun Yen Tsao and Hsing-Tan Yang. The idea is a small basin that collects water and uses solar power to purify what is collected. Could a field of these provide water enough for a village?… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Solar Powered "Swater" Concept Collects and Purifies Water In the Desert

Singapore Polo Team’s Trunks "Inappropriate"

(AP) Singapore rebuked its national water polo team for wearing swim trunks that feature an “inappropriate” likeness of the city-state's flag. The trunks, which were designed by members of the men's team currently competing in the Asian Games in Guangzhou, China, show the flag's white crescent moon jutting up from the groin area with five stars to the side on a red background. “Unfortunately the team did not seek our advice on the use of the crescent moon and stars when they designed their swim trunks,” the Information Ministry said in a statement Thursday. “We would have told them that their design is inappropriate as we want elements of the flag to be treated with dignity.” The ministry, which normally evaluates the use of the flag on uniforms on a case-by-case basis, declined to specify which part of the design was objectionable. The trunks sparked a controversy in the local media and on Internet message boards, with some offended by the use of the national flag while others were amused at the furor. Asian Games rules stipulate that a team's uniform cannot be changed in the middle of the tournament, so the government will allow the water polo players to wear the trunks when they play Kuwait on Thursday for fifth place. The team apologized and said it would retire the trunks after the Asian Games. “We didn't have the slightest intention to do anything funny on our trunks to insult Singapore,” team manager Samuel Wong, who helped design the trunks, told the Straits Times. added by: Itsbatman_Durr

‘Deathly Hallows’ Designer Reveals Scene Secrets

‘Harry Potter’ production designer Stuart Craig talks to MTV News about helping Harry retrieve Sword of Gryffindor from a frozen lake. By Kara Warner Daniel Radcliffe in “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1” Photo: Warner Bros. In the weeks leading up to the release of “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 1,” fans were in a frenzy, trying to figure out just how much of the book would make the first film, which scenes would delight and disappoint, and what characters might not return ever again. And trying to get the tight-lipped folks in the Potter camp to discuss those key points was a bit of a struggle. However, now that the film has opened, MTV News has enlisted the expertise of longtime Potter production designer Stuart Craig for a few behind-the-scenes tidbits. Much has been said of the production moving away from Hogwarts and out on multiple locations, which Craig described as a “movie on the run.” “We made a very different kind of film, which was shot a great deal on location. We traveled quite far, we built sets, and they spend a lot of time in a forest,” he explained. “We built forest sets and integrated them into the real forests, so there were challenges there, as you might imagine.” Another one of the production’s major challenges — and accomplishments — was shooting the sequence in which Harry retrieves the Sword of Gryffindor at the bottom of a frozen lake. “There was a really demanding, complicated special-effects requirement there to do the ice,” Craig said. “I think that all works remarkably quite well, actually. Harry breaking the ice, diving in and then subsequently strangled by the Horcrux around his neck and is struggling and can’t get up quickly because of the ice above him. It’s good stuff.” Which begs the question: How did Craig and his team pull off that scene, and what do they use to make the ice look so real? “As always, well, as nearly always, there’s more than one solution. The camera on top, looking from the outside down on it. It’s big, thick sheets of Plexiglass with frosty texture on top of that,” he revealed. “When we’re underneath, it’s actually an area of wax which floats on top of the water. And wax makes very effective ice. They’re tried and tested movie techniques; there are a lot. You could write a book one day, a guidebook, to the very movie techniques — frost on window panes with some Epsom salts and brown nails.” One of the great pleasures in chatting with Craig, whose credits outside the world of Harry Potter include “Ghandi,” “The English Patient” and “Notting Hill,” is the fact that he has such an informed perspective on the inner-workings of the industry; specifically, how advanced film-making technology is now. “The great thing about movies these days is that you can fix everything,” he said. “I have to give a talk at a film festival early next month, and I’ve just been looking at films that I’ve done in the past. In particular, ‘Ghandi,’ years ago in India. The thing then was: If sometimes there was a compromise, it was filmed and it was there, locked. Forever. You look at the movie 20 years later, and there it would be. “These days, with visual effects able to do so much, you can do face replacement, you can put Dan Radcliffe’s head on somebody else’s body. There’s nothing they can’t do, it seems. I mean, at a cost, it’s not cheap, so terrible things seem to get fixed, which is very reassuring,” he added, chuckling. What was your favorite scene in “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 1”? Tell us in the comments below! Related Photos ‘Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows – Part 1’

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‘Deathly Hallows’ Designer Reveals Scene Secrets

From Pure Water to Better Building Materials, Cleantech Open Awards Newest Wave of Green Thinkers

Image via Cleantech Open The Cleantech Open , one of the most prestigious events for start-ups in the industry, has announced the winners of this year’s competition. The winners earn the sort of recognition from venture capitalists that most start-ups only dream of. The winners this year highlight some of the best ideas of the year, and we are likely to see them in the marketplace in the near future. Check out who they are — from algae-based water treatment to super-light building materials… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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From Pure Water to Better Building Materials, Cleantech Open Awards Newest Wave of Green Thinkers

As Miley Cyrus Turns 18, What’s Next?

Find out what the birthday girl has planned for 2011. By Jocelyn Vena Miley Cyrus at her 18th birthday on Sunday Photo: Jeff Vespa/MC/WireImage Miley Cyrus is 18. The “Hannah Montana” star is finally able to vote, and that means she has a whole future ahead of her in the world of music and movies. As 2010 wraps up, it seems that 2011 will be just as busy for the teen star, and while she’s taking a break from music (not that you’d be able to tell, thanks to her bevy of music videos and awards-show performances), she has a bustling film career for fans to follow in the coming 12 months. Cyrus recently wrapped her Ashley Greene co-starring flick “LOL: Laughing Out Loud,” which saw the star not only filming Stateside but also in Paris. The movie follows teens who rely on the Internet to socialize, leaving their parents ( Miley’s mom is played by Demi Moore ) confused by the modern relationships their children are in. “[Miley] is a true professional, and she truly has a wonderful family,” Moore said about her teen co-star. “It really shows.” The veteran actress plays the overbearing, confounded mom of Cyrus’ character, who gets freaked out after accidentally reading her daughter’s journal and finding out just how out of touch they have become. Miley is also getting ready for some action for her next role in the flick “So Undercover,” where she’ll play “a tough, street-smart private eye hired by the FBI to go undercover in a college sorority.” The flick means that the star will have to learn to fight for the role. “She’s basically this chick who grows up as a super tomboy, and she’s an FBI agent and gets thrown into a bunch of girls that she doesn’t understand because she’s been around her dad, who’s been in the FBI his whole life,” Miley explained. “And basically, by having to go undercover and be someone that she’s not, she kind of finds the person she is, because she realizes she doesn’t have to carry the weight on her shoulder of what her dad was, and she can be her own person.” While Miley has finished shooting “Hannah Montana,” her hit Disney series won’t go off the air until 2011. “I think that she’s growing with the show, and I think it’s such a great platform for her,” her pal Selena Gomez told MTV News about the star’s plans to walk away. “And she’s lived up to it as wonderfully as she could, and I think she continues to carry it, but she’s ready for other things.” Until then, Cyrus will hang out with her family for her big day, something that she was looking forward to the last time we spoke with her. “I’m not going to go crazy; [just] have a fun party and then maybe take a vacation with my family … because that would be really cool. I think we need time to all be together,” she said. “So that would be rad if we could all go to the beach or something. … [I have] no idea [where we’re going]; somewhere near water. I’m a water baby; I have to be near the water and I love doing scuba and going out and being on a boat.” Share your birthday wishes for Miley in the comments! Related Photos Miley Cyrus’ 18th Birthday Party

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As Miley Cyrus Turns 18, What’s Next?