Tag Archives: Water

Doodle 4 Google National Winner 2010 Wants to Save the Rainforest

The winning Doodle 4 Google drawing by Makenzie Melton, Age 9, Grade 3. A Green Doodle 4 Google Wins! Every year, Google holds a competition for kids. The winner gets to have its drawing of the Google logo seen by hundreds of millions of people on the search giant’s homepage. The Doodle 4 Google (aka Doodle4Google) competition is open to all students in U.S. schools from kindergarten to grade 12, including homeschoolers, and this year’s winner has been announced: It’s Makenzie Melton, age 9, from El Dorado Springs, Missouri. Her drawing shows the Google logo in the rainforest, a… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Doodle 4 Google National Winner 2010 Wants to Save the Rainforest

Oil Spill in the Mangroves Is a Disgusting, Sticky Mess (Exclusive Photos + Video)

No joke, this is Philippe dipping his hand into oil on a Louisiana beach. All photos and video courtesy of Philippe Cousteau. Guest blogger Philippe Cousteau is chief ocean correspondent for Planet Green , and will host the network’s forthcoming Blue August programming. He is reporting from the Gulf oil spill in Louisiana. Grand Isle, Louisiana – May 25, 2010 Another early morning, all the more early because we didn’t stop work till 2 a.m. last night. Today we head off … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Oil Spill in the Mangroves Is a Disgusting, Sticky Mess (Exclusive Photos + Video)

Twilight Saga, Robert Pattinson Take Home National Movie Awards

It’s safe to say the National Movie Awards, which took place in London last night, are not the Oscars. Need proof? New Moon took home the Best Fantasy Movie, while Eclipse actually garnered a victory despite the fact that it won’t be released for a month. It won Most Anticipated Movie. Star Robert Pattinson was also honored, receiving the trophy for Best Male Performance. Unable to attend, due to work on Water for Elephants, he recorded the following message for fans: Thanking Fans Meanwhile, Tom Cruise ended the show by winning the Screen Icon award. Gwyneth Paltrow presented it to him and said: “For over two decades he has shown a bold eagerness to take risks, engaging and enthralling audiences.” He’s also jumped on a lot of couches and may have inducted Katie Holmes into a cult. But, hey, how cool was the actor in Jerry Maguire ?!? Below, we’ve posted a number of photos from the event, highlighted by TomKat looking its cutest/creepiest: [Photos: Splash News]

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Twilight Saga, Robert Pattinson Take Home National Movie Awards

‘American Idol’ Season Nine’s Top 10 Best Performances

Look back at the highlights from Crystal Bowersox, Katelyn Epperly, Lee DeWyze, Alex Lambert and more. By Jim Cantiello Crystal Bowersox performs “Me and Bobby McGee” on “American Idol” Photo: Ray Mickshaw / FOX The ninth season of “American Idol” has taken a wallop from critics and fans for lacking the water-cooler chatter and overall talent of previous seasons. Yet despite the negative buzz, there were still a handful of performances worth celebrating among all those “do not wants.” So, as we gear up for Tuesday’s (May 25) final performance night, sit back and grab your brain’s TiVo remote as we quickly rewind season nine and revisit 10 of our favorite performance this year. 10. Andrew Garcia, “Straight Up” : Kara called Garcia’s soulful acoustic flip on Paula Abdul’s tune during Hollywood Week “genius,” and in some ways, she was right. It respected the show’s history while introducing a new element to the aging series: the YouTube cover artist. The dude may have ended up being a one-hit-wonder dud in later rounds, but that one hit knocked us out. 9. Tim Urban, “All My Loving” : Tween heartthrob (and judges’ punching bag) Urban won over viewers with his infectious, positive attitude (his Abercrombie model looks helped too), but on Lennon/McCartney night he finally won over America with his musical ability. This confident performance added a fun boogie-woogie swagger to the Beatles hit. 8. Lacey Brown, “What a Wonderful World” : The smoldering redhead’s smoky, haunting spin on this Louis Armstrong staple during Hollywood Week made us hope that she’d be a new and (important word alert) improved Megan Joy. Fans disappointed that Lacey never lived up to her potential felt vindicated when she reprised this song to smashing success on “The Late Show With David Letterman” days after her elimination. 7. Casey James, “Jealous Guy” : When the object of Kara’s affection ditched the goofy Eddie Van Halen mugging this season, he delivered devastating, honest performances, none more moving than this John Lennon cover. Joined onstage by a cellist and bathed in a rich, colorful light, James finally appeared as though he gave a damn about the show, and we finally gave a damn about him. 6. Lee DeWyze, “Simple Man” : Song choice! Song choice! Song choice! They judges always scream about picking the right number. When push came to shove and DeWyze was free of any theme constraints, the paint salesman selected the perfect (and excitingly unexpected) song to highlight his gruff voice and his troubled past. He’s never sounded better or more relatable. 5. Siobhan Magnus, “House of the Rising Sun” : Early on, before Siobhan relied on an uncontrollable wail-of-a-high-note to wow the judges, the glassblower’s apprentice took our breath away with this reinterpretation dedicated to her father. By turning the Animals’ garage-rock masterpiece into a partially a cappella, fully mournful, ghostly lament, Siobhan broke our hearts and piqued our interest. 4. Alex Lambert, “Everybody Knows” : In week one, Alex Lambert acted as though he was going to puke all over the small semifinal stage. (Turns out, he ralphed moments before his performance.) The next week, he shot to the head of the class with a rich, soulful John Legend cover, all the more winning thanks to a pre-performance interview in which he talked about his crippling stage fright. He had framed himself as the ultimate underdog and then knocked it out of the park, with a sly self-congratulatory smile creeping onto his face midway through. Was this “unripe banana” more media savvy than he initially led on, or were we witnessing the kind of blossoming “moment” that “Idol” fans live for? Regardless, Lambert’s “Everybody Knows” will go down as one of the greatest (if short-lived) comebacks in “Idol” history. 3. Lilly Scott, “A Change Is Gonna Come” : On paper, a pasty girl with platinum hair purring a civil-rights anthem like a hybrid of Jessica Rabbit and Courtney Love should not work. But somehow this semifinal performance went over like gangbusters. Armed with a 12-string guitar and her signature feather earring, Scott took Sam Cooke’s classic and claimed it as a battle cry for indie-rock kids everywhere. 2. Crystal Bowersox, “Me and Bobby McGee” : MamaSox gave us lots to gush over, whether she was bouncing back from a hospitalization with a strong “Long as I Can See the Light,” having an emotional breakdown during “People Get Ready” or spinning a lame “Caddyshack” song into a (respectful) middle finger to the “haterz.” But strip away all the exhausting drama, and the song that lingered the most was her exhilarating cover of “Me and Bobby McGee.” When you have only 90-120 seconds for a performance, it’s hard to do more than a couple of verses and a chorus or two without veering into Michael Johns’ “We Will Rock You”/ “We Are the Champions” butcher territory. Yet Crystal’s rendition started small and just kept on building with the momentum of a freight train gaining steam. By the time Bowersox and the band hit the climactic la-di-das, strumming and grooving on a carpet brought from home, the early front-runner had whipped the audience (both in the studio and in living rooms) into a mad frenzy. 1. Katelyn Epperly, “The Scientist” : Katelyn’s piano-based Coldplay rendition was a lot of things — stirring, intense, heartbreaking, beautiful and hypnotic are the first five words that come to mind. Yet for some reason, the judges harped on the word “slow” to describe Katelyn’s star-making performance, signaling the intelligence level of criticism we had to look forward to in season nine. It may have lulled Ellen to sleep but Katelyn’s yearning interpretation awakened many home viewers who were thrilled finally to find a singer who felt contemporary in this year’s Top 24. Letting Katelyn go the following week was a huge blow to season nine’s talent pool. If only scientists could figure out a way to turn back time. “Let’s go back to the start” indeed. Did your favorite performances make the cut? Who did we snub? Share your happiest “Idol” season nine memories in the comments below. Join Jim Cantiello live on the “American Idol” finale red carpet this Wednesday at 6 p.m. ET, for our Red Carpet Live Stream, only at MTV.com. Get your “Idol” fix on MTV News’ “American Idol” page , where you’ll find all the latest news, interviews and opinions. Related Videos ‘American Idol’ In 60 Seconds Related Photos ‘American Idol’ Season Nine Performances

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‘American Idol’ Season Nine’s Top 10 Best Performances

Toxic Oil Spill Rains Warned Could Destroy North America

By: Sorcha Faal, and as reported to her Western Subscribers A dire report prepared for President Medvedev by Russia’s Ministry of Natural Resources is warning today that the British Petroleum (BP) oil and gas leak in the Gulf of Mexico is about to become the worst environmental catastrophe in all of human history threatening the entire eastern half of the North American continent with “total destruction”. Russian scientists are basing their apocalyptic destruction assessment due to BP’s use of millions of gallons of the chemical dispersal agent known as Corexit 9500 which is being pumped directly into the leak of this wellhead over a mile under the Gulf of Mexico waters and designed, this report says, to keep hidden from the American public the full, and tragic, extent of this leak that is now estimated to be over 2.9 million gallons a day. The dispersal agent Corexit 9500 is a solvent originally developed by Exxon and now manufactured by the Nalco Holding Company of Naperville, Illinois that is four times more toxic than oil (oil is toxic at 11 ppm (parts per million), Corexit 9500 at only 2.61ppm). In a report written by Anita George-Ares and James R. Clark for Exxon Biomedical Sciences, Inc. titled “Acute Aquatic Toxicity of Three Corexit Products: An Overview” Corexit 9500 was found to be one of the most toxic dispersal agents ever developed. Even worse, according to this report, with higher water temperatures, like those now occurring in the Gulf of Mexico, its toxicity grows. The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in discovering BP’s use of this dangerous dispersal agent ordered BP to stop using it, but BP refused stating that their only alternative to Corexit 9500 was an even more dangerous dispersal agent known as Sea Brat 4. The main differences between Corexit 9500 and Sea Brat 4 lie in how long these dangerous chemicals take to degrade into their constituent organic compounds, which for Corexit 9500 is 28 days. Sea Brat 4, on the other hand, degrades into an organic chemical called Nonylphenol that is toxic to aquatic life and can persist in the environment for years. A greater danger involving Corexit 9500, and as outlined by Russian scientists in this report, is that with its 2.61ppm toxicity level, and when combined with the heating Gulf of Mexico waters, its molecules will be able to “phase transition” from their present liquid to a gaseous state allowing them to be absorbed into clouds and allowing their release as “toxic rain” upon all of Eastern North America. Even worse, should a Katrina like tropical hurricane form in the Gulf of Mexico while tens of millions of gallons of Corexit 9500 are sitting on, or near, its surface the resulting “toxic rain” falling upon the North American continent could “theoretically” destroy all microbial life to any depth it reaches resulting in an “unimaginable environmental catastrophe” destroying all life forms from the “bottom of the evolutionary chart to the top”. Note: For molecules of a liquid to evaporate, they must be located near the surface, be moving in the proper direction, and have sufficient kinetic energy to overcome liquid-phase intermolecular forces. Only a small proportion of the molecules meet these criteria, so the rate of evaporation is limited. Since the kinetic energy of a molecule is proportional to its temperature, evaporation proceeds more quickly at higher temperatures. As over 50 miles of the US State of Louisiana’s coastline has already been destroyed by this spill, American scientists are warning that the damage may be impossible to repair, and as we can read as reported by the Associated Press News Service: “The gooey oil washing into the maze of marshes along the Gulf Coast could prove impossible to remove, leaving a toxic stew lethal to fish and wildlife, government officials and independent scientists said. Officials are considering some drastic and risky solutions: They could set the wetlands on fire or flood areas in hopes of floating out the oil. They warn an aggressive cleanup could ruin the marshes and do more harm than good.” And to understand the full import of this catastrophe it must be remembered that this disaster is occurring in what is described as the “biologically richest waters in America” with the greatest amount of oil and toxic Corexit 9500 set to come ashore in the coming days and weeks to destroy it completely for decades to come. Reports are also coming from the United States that their government is secretly preparing to evacuate tens-of-millions of their citizens from their Gulf of Mexico States should the most dire of these scientific warnings start to come true. To the greatest lesson to be learned by these Americans is that their government-oil industry cabal has been just as destructive to them as their government-banking one, both of which have done more to destroy the United States these past couple of years than any foreign enemy could dare dream was possible. But to their greatest enemy the Americans need look no further than their nearest mirror as they are the ones who allowed these monsters to rule over them in the first place. www.whatdoesitmean.com/index1374.htm

Pete Wentz’s Son Bronx Mowgli Wentz picture

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Pete Wentz’s Son Bronx Mowgli Wentz picture

Watch V Season 1 Episode 12 – Red Sky

Watch V S1E12: Red Sky Val is still being hunted by a V soldier and soon after, her water breaks and the baby is now on it’s way to be born, good thing that Ryan is never leaving her side while all this is happening. Tyler and Erica is now going on their offensive mode as they have grown tired of waiting in defensive mode and with that being said they go up in the Mothership to be a part of the get to know every one better dinner to set themselves up to their master plan of destroying Anna’s V soldiers. Meanwhile, Chad finds out something he should have known before after checking out the message of Father Jack for Joshua. The latest episode of V is the TV show’s 12th episode of the 1st season that aired last 05/18/2010 Tuesday at 10:00 PM on ABC. Watch V 1×12 Online Free Online Streaming Full Episodes Replay of the Latest Season and Video Clip Download Link:

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Watch V Season 1 Episode 12 – Red Sky

The Dead Zone Is Expanding

Mon May 17, 2010 4:59 PM EDT By The Rachel Maddow Show (Times-Picayune graphic) Years before the Deepwater Horizon disaster, before the underwater volcano of oil threatened to create a dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico, scientists recognized another dead zone in the Gulf. The New Orleans Times-Picayune won a Pulitzer in 1997 for documenting the devastation around the mouth of the Mississippi River. The 7,000-square-mile dead zone was caused by algae blooms, feeding on agricultural and sewer runoff, that deplete the oxygen in the water. http://www.pulitzer.org/archives/6010 Ten years later, the Times-Picayune found this dead zone was still growing: “You reach a point where you've shifted the ecosystem to a completely different domain, and the recovery from that may be impossible,” said Don Scavia, a professor of natural resources and environment at the University of Michigan and former National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration scientist who led one of the first federal studies on the dead zone in 2000. “There will be a time where the critters that typically occupy the sediment in those areas can no longer recover.” added by: EthicalVegan

‘Robin Hood’: Ye Olde Bait-And-Switch, By Kurt Loder

Russell Crowe in search of Sherwood Forest. By Kurt Loder Russell Crowe in “Robin Hood” Photo: Universal Pictures Ridley Scott’s “Robin Hood” is brilliant, in a way. Faced with the fact that filmmakers have been cranking out pictures about the scalawag of Sherwood Forest for more than a hundred years now, the director and his writers must have pondered at length how to put a unique spin on the oft-told tale. Their brainstorm: Don’t tell it. Scott’s movie, very oddily, is actually a prequel — a sort of origin story for a better Robin Hood movie that doesn’t exist. Maybe brilliant isn’t the word. So Robin Hood fans hoping for some of the dash and wit of the classic films that starred Douglas Fairbanks and Errol Flynn should set their expectation meters to Off. The simple pleasure of a few acrobatic hours with Robin and his Merry Men — and the Sheriff of Nottingham, chubby Friar Tuck, evil Prince John and the lovely Maid Marion — is not forthcoming. True, there is a Sheriff of Nottingham loitering around the edges of the action; and also some men called Little John, Will Scarlet and Allan A’Dayle, although they’re not very merry. Mark Addy’s mead-sipping Friar Tuck is a fairly lively character, but Prince John, played here by Oscar Isaac, is an unthreatening buffoon, and Marion, played by Cate Blanchett, is hardly the elegant beauty of lore — at one point we get a closeup of her washing clots of mud off her bare feet. Russell Crowe, in his fifth collaboration with Scott, dispenses with Robin’s traditional tights and feathered cap, which is not a great loss; but he also dispenses with the character’s traditional high spirits, which is. In fact, the Robin cobbled together by writers Brian Helgeland, Ethan Reiff and Cyrus Voris isn’t even the jaunty rogue nobleman of earlier versions of the story; here, he’s just a glum yeoman called Robin Longstride, a loyal archer in the service of good King Richard the Lionheart (Danny Huston). As the movie opens, in 1199, Richard and his weary men are returning from the latest Crusade in the Holy Lands. They’re plundering their way through France en route to England, where Richard’s conniving brother, Prince John, has his eye on the royal crown. John is planning to dump his current princess and marry sultry young Isabella of Angoul

Greyson Chance Paparazzi 6th Grader Lady Gaga on Ellen Show

OMG – and that stands for Oh My God for you non – computer lingo savvy folks. This also happens to be what all the viewers of this video were saying simultaneously. But yes, OMG because Ellen has just discovered yet another teen star! The Ellen show is famous for finding YouTube sensations such as Arnel Pineda (now lead singer of Journey), Charice Pempengco (now a top Pop Star) and now Greyson Michael Chance has got his chance! The internet is definitely helping young stars get discovered! Check out his AMAZING video of his version of Paparazzi by Lady Gaga. Check out as the Sixth Grader Performs Lady Gaga Paparazzi video with Greyson Chance singing and playing the piano on the Ellen Show . This kid is simply awesome. He would have blown all the American Idol contestants out of the water! And no, he’s not the next Justin Bieber, but the first Grayson Michael Chance! See the video as Greyson Chance the sixth grader performs Lady Gaga Paparazzi on the Ellen Show via links Greyson Chance Paparazzi 6th Grader Lady Gaga on Ellen Show is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading