Tuesday, 8 April 2014

Great images depend on optimal lighting, Photojojo’s Luxi light meter helps you find it

For casual photographers looking to add more precision and professionalism to their shots, say hello to the little Luxi from Photojojo.

Luxi is a portable spot-on light meter that easily attaches to your iPhone, meant to be used with a DSLR or any camera that has a manual mode. With a quick slip-on of its diffusing 180-degree dome, Luxi is able to measure the light falling onto your subject and give accurate readings to ensure the most vivid exposure possible. (Unfortunately, if you have a case on your iPhone, you'll have to remove it first before attaching the Luxi.)


Difference between using a DSLR's automatic light meter and the Luxi.
Luxi is best described is an "incident light meter," which differs greatly from reflected light meters in cameras that only gauge light being bounced directly toward them. After downloading the free companion app, Luxi provides info you can use to adjust your camera's manual settings and compose images how you want them to be, rather than how the camera's auto setting "sees" it.

Generally, cameras have automatic settings that can interfere with your intended images – especially when high contrasts come into play. Luxi measures the amount of light falling onto your subject and responds accordingly, so your shots (even with backlit subjects) come out pristine and ready to share with the rest of the world. At least, that's the theory. Luxi doesn't tell the camera directly how to change those settings; the user has to input that info into the camera's manual mode.

Luxi is now available for $30 on Photojojo's website. It's a bargain considering its potential usefulness.


Settings for different lighting conditions.
(Photos via Photojojo)
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Samsung Launches a Powerful and Expressive Smartphone, Galaxy ACE Style

Summary:

Samsung unveiled Galaxy Ace Style, which features a 1.2GHz dual core processor, a 4-inch touchscreen display, and an intuitive touch-user interface, TouchWiz Essence.
The new Samsung Galaxy ACE Style will be available globally in Cream White and Dark Gray beginning in April.
 
Samsung Launches a Powerful and Expressive Smartphone, Galaxy ACE Style

Fun, expressive and easy-to-use smartphone designed for the social user

Samsung Electronics announced the availability of the Galaxy Ace Style, a new streamlined, easy-to-use smartphone designed to support and power young social consumers. The Galaxy ACE Style features a fun, unique design with an enhanced camera and advanced features for superior performance.

Ace Style_Black
 
The Galaxy ACE Style features a unique look and a light, simplified user experience powered by Google's Android 4.4 KitKat operating system ideal for the young, expressive consumer. Optimized for performance, the new Galaxy ACE Style also features a 1.2GHz dual core processor for seamless multi-tasking and fast app activation time. It has a 4-inch touchscreen display, 4GB of internal memory and features Samsung's intuitive touch-user interface, TouchWiz Essence.


Samsung Galaxy ACE Style also comes with a powerful, 5-megapixel camera, offering advanced autofocus and VGA for stunning pictures that are instantly shareable. The One Camera Preview feature provides easy access for both video recording and picture taking in full HD. The Galaxy ACE style also comes preloaded with ChatON, so consumers can quickly and easily share pictures, icons and talk with friends.


The new Samsung Galaxy ACE Style will be available globally in Cream White and Dark Gray beginning in April.


*All functionality, features, specifications, and other product information provided in this document including, but not limited to, the benefits, design, pricing, components, performance, availability, and capabilities of the product are subject to change without notice or obligation. 
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Uber launches UberRush, an on-demand courier service

Mobile car service startup Uber is branching out, on Tuesday launching a new delivery service for small packages and other items.

Called UberRush, the on-demand courier service will kick off in Manhattan and allow users to request immediate pick-up of items, with fast delivery promised via bicycle or on foot.


Click to enlarge.
Items out for delivery can be tracked by both the sender and the recipient via the Uber app, with service rates set on a zone basis (see map on right). The five zones run from around Central Park (below 110th Street to begin with) down to Lower Manhattan, with a flat $15 fee charged for same-zone delivery. An extra $5 is added for every zone crossed as the package is taken to its delivery address. Essentially this means a top rate of $35, though the bill is likely to run higher if multiple deliveries are made in one trip.

The Uber team describes UberRush as "an experiment" though promises the new service is focusing on "Uber level quality." If it proves successful, it'll be rolled out on a wider scale, with the company noting that within Manhattan at least, it hopes to expand coverage "quickly."

Couriers working for the new service can expect to be paid $20 to $30 an hour, according to a Craigslist job listing spotted earlier by VentureBeat. They'll also receive a free iPhone 4S loaded with the Uber app so they can receive notifications for nearby pick-ups.

Uber, best known for its ride-on-demand service, has hit the headlines with other initiatives since it launched in 2010, though many of these have been little more than publicity stunts. UberRush, in contrast, appears to be a concerted effort by the company to explore new services and widen its horizons.

[Main image: Mervas / Shutterstock]
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Delta to hand out Nokia Lumia 1520 phablets to its 20,000 flight attendants

While Delta Air Lines pilots are tapping and swiping away on their Surface 2 tablets up at the front, flight attendants working for the carrier will soon be doing much the same in the cabin with their Nokia Lumia 1520 handsets.

In what is certainly a sweet deal for Microsoft-owned Nokia, the airline has ordered 20,000 of the devices for its army of attendants. The 6-inch device will replace the smaller Lumia 820 smartphone already being used by the airline's flight crew, and, like the 820, will function as their in-flight manual as well as a sales device, Delta announced Monday. It added that sticking the hefty manual onto the phablet is expected to save the US carrier more than $1 million in reduced fuel and printing costs.

The smartphones, which are set to be handed out in October, will run Windows 8.1 and be used for a variety of duties, including dealing with passengers' meal orders, handling information about their flight, and providing information for personalized services.

"The phablet is a great foundation for future software applications that, in time, will allow our flight attendants to readily access customer preferences, previous travel experiences with Delta and worldwide connectivity to the company, enabling them to provide the more tailored experience many customers have come to expect," Theresa Wise, senior vice president and chief information officer, explained in a release.

Monday's news follows an announcement by Delta last October that it intends to hand out Surface 2 tablets to its 11,000 pilots in a bid to make all cockpits in its fleet paperless by 2015.

DT's mobile editor Jeffrey Van Camp described the Lumia 1520 as "famliar but gigantic," though praised it for its clear, pixel-dense display, speedy operation, and "solid" camera.
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Rooney expected to face Bayern Munich

Manchester United manager David Moyes says he would be "mad" not to let Wayne Rooney play in Wednesday's Champions League quarter-final second leg against Bayern Munich.
There were concerns over the striker's fitness after he picked up a toe injury in the first leg, which ended 1-1.

The 28-year-old trained on Tuesday and could play with an injection.
"He is happy to take an injection, which shows his feeling about the game and the club," said Moyes.

He added: "He is massively keen to be involved. He has not trained all week so we will have to be wary of that, but we will do everything we possibly can. We need him as well because he is a really important player to the team.

"We think it is OK because we wouldn't do anything medically wrong. We take advice from the doctors but everyone knows the character Wayne is. He is determined to play, if he is determined we would be mad not to let him do so."
Rooney's injury kept him out of Saturday's win at Newcastle but Bayern boss Pep Guardiola expects the England international to feature.
"He will play, I am 100% sure and I am willing to bet a large glass of beer on it," said Guardiola.

"This is one of the best players I've seen and the big players do not want to miss this type of game."

Moyes's men held the defending champions to a 1-1 draw at Old Trafford, after Bastian Schweinsteiger cancelled out Nemanja Vidic's header.
But the United boss admitted his side would have to be even better to progress to the semi-finals.

The former Everton manager said: "We will need a very good performance from everyone. It is a game all the players are looking forward to. I feel the players are going into the game in a good frame of mind. It is like a cup final for us."

Holders Bayern struggled to break down the home defence in the first leg and Guardiola is again expecting United to try to frustrate the German champions.

"I think United will be again waiting for us at the back," said the Spaniard. "They will be waiting deep, deep in their own half.

"English teams defend and then wait for the quick break. David Moyes also has eight, nine players at the back. They are waiting for mistakes, set-pieces and breaks."

Bayern have already won the German title but their record 53-game unbeaten run in the Bundesliga came to an end last Saturday after an under-strength side lost 1-0 at Augsburg.

They have not won in three games, but Guardiola said: "I knew we would lose eventually. Obviously we still have to play the last few Bundesliga games but our targets are now different ones."
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UNBELIEVABLE!!! Chelsea advance to the UEFA Champions League semi-final by defeating Paris St-Germain 2-0 at their home

Unbelievable
Demba Ba struck three minutes from time to send Chelsea into the Champions League semi-finals on away goals.

Trailing Paris St-Germain 3-1 from the first leg, substitute Andre Schurrle halved the deficit when he produced a neat first-half finish.

But when Schurrle and Oscar hit the bar straight after the interval, it seemed Chelsea would fall short.
Chelsea were not to be denied and Ba stabbed home to send Jose Mourinho's side into the last four.
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Ukraine crisis: Nato warns Russia against further intervention

Nato Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen: "I urge Russia to step back"
Nato has warned Russia that further intervention in Ukraine would be a "historic mistake" with grave consequences.

Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said Moscow must pull back troops it has massed on the Ukrainian border.

Ukraine has regained control of one of the government buildings occupied by pro-Russian activists in the east of the country, in the city of Kharkiv.

However, armed militants are refusing to withdraw in another city, Luhansk.

Moscow has said that using force to end the protests could lead to civil war.

Kiev says the unrest in the east is being fomented by Russia following its annexation of the Crimean peninsula.


Steve Rosenberg reports from the barricades surrounding Donetsk city hall
Russia took control in Crimea - where Russian-speakers are in a majority - after a disputed referendum, which sparked Western sanctions.

In other developments

The Kremlin said Russian President Vladimir Putin would meet senior officials on Wednesday to discuss economic ties with Ukraine - including energy supplies
The International Monetary Fund said Russian growth this year was likely to be "subdued" partly because of tensions with Ukraine and warned of further damage if sanctions were intensified
'Historic mistake'

"I urge Russia to step back and not escalate the situation in east Ukraine," Mr Rasmussen said in Paris where he was attending a seminar on Nato reforms.


Pro-Russian activists erected a barricade outside the security service building in Luhansk

Activists with metal bars guarded the outside of the building

Ukrainian police sealed off the regional government building in Kharkiv

Barricades and razor wire surround the government building in Donetsk

Manning the barricades in Donetsk proved tiring for some activists
He called on Russia to "pull back the tens of thousands of troops" it had massed on Ukraine's borders and "engage in a genuine dialogue with the Ukrainian authorities".

Meanwhile, the European Commission is setting up a special "Support Group for Ukraine" to co-ordinate assistance, an EU diplomatic source told BBC News.

The group will consist of several dozen people and its work could be extended to cover fellow ex-Soviet states Georgia and Moldova, the source added.

US Secretary of State John Kerry, addressing a US Senate panel, said Russian special forces and agents had been "the catalyst behind the chaos of the last 24 hours".

Recent events, he said, "could potentially be a contrived pretext for military intervention just as we saw in Crimea".


BBC's Daniel Sandford has this snapshot of Russian television news reports
A senior Russian parliamentarian, Senator Viktor Ozerov, stressed that President Putin could theoretically send troops anywhere in Ukraine under the powers given to him by parliament that allowed him to move forces into Crimea.

Eastern tension

Hundreds of pro-Russia demonstrators seized government buildings in Kharkiv, Donetsk and Luhansk on Sunday night, barricading themselves inside and raising Russian flags, with calls for Moscow to send in "peacekeepers".

On Tuesday, the Ukrainian authorities said they had retaken control of the building in Kharkiv, detaining some 70 people in a bloodless operation.

But in Luhansk, officials accused "radicals" occupying the state security building of placing explosives and holding about 60 people against their will.

Activists in the building denied having explosives or hostages but said they had seized an armoury full of automatic rifles.


A video was released purporting to carry a statement by the gunmen, delivered by a masked man surrounded by three other masked men armed with Kalashnikovs.

He insisted they were all Ukrainian citizens, from Luhansk or the surrounding region, including veterans of the Soviet war in Afghanistan.

Their sole demand, he said, was to carry out a referendum on the region's status within Ukraine. In the event of the building being stormed, he said: "Welcome to Hell."

In the city of Donetsk, protesters remained inside the regional authority building, calling for a referendum on secession from Ukraine.


Lawmakers traded blows at Ukraine's parliament in Kiev
Russia is refusing to recognise the new authorities in Kiev who took power after pro-Moscow President Viktor Yanukovych was ousted in February.

Mr Yanukovych fled Kiev for Russia after months of street protests triggered by his refusal to sign an association agreement with the EU in favour of closer ties with Russia.

More than 100 people died in the ensuing unrest.

On Tuesday, a brawl erupted inside the Ukrainian parliament in Kiev after a Communist leader accused nationalists of playing into the hands of Russia by adopting extreme tactics early in the crisis.
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Oscar Pistorius recounts moment of killing

The court was adjourned as Oscar Pistorius was overcome by grief
South African athlete Oscar Pistorius has described the moment he fired the shots which killed his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp in his home.

He told his trial in Pretoria he had heard noises from the toilet and thought an intruder was coming out.

"Before I knew it, I had fired four shots at the door," he said.

The trial of the athlete, who could face life imprisonment if convicted of murder, was adjourned until Wednesday after he broke down crying.

The 27-year-old double amputee denies deliberately shooting Ms Steenkamp on Valentine's Day last year.

On his first day on the stand, on Monday, he made a tearful apology to Ms Steenkamp's family.

The prosecution alleges that Mr Pistorius killed his girlfriend after an argument with her.

'She wasn't breathing'

In the early hours of 14 February 2013, he said he had got up from bed to bring in some fans he had left outside, in order to cool his bedroom.

When he heard a window opening in the bathroom, he said, he thought there was a burglar trying to get in.

Wanting to protect Ms Steenkamp, who was not sleeping, he had gone to get his gun in the dark.

"I whispered to Reeva to get down and phone the police," he said.

He said he then went into the passage without his prosthetic legs and, overcome with fear, started screaming, and shouted for Ms Steenkamp to get to the floor.


Oscar Pistorius (l) arriving for Tuesday's proceedings in Pretoria

Reeva Steenkamp's mother, June, listened intently during the second day of Oscar Pistorius' testimony

Aimee Pistorius, the defendant's sister, hugged a family member in court

Members of the public followed the testimony from the gallery

A bucket was put in the dock in case Mr Pistorius vomited as he testified

Mr Pistorius is seen here leaving court on Tuesday
The toilet door slammed, reconfirming his belief there was a person or people in the bathroom, the athlete said.

"I heard a noise from inside the toilet, what I perceived to be someone coming out of the toilet," he said tearfully. At that point, he shot at the door.

After the shooting, Mr Pistorius said he had smashed in a door panel to get into the toilet, where he discovered what he had done.

"Whilst I leant over the partition to get in, I saw the key, so I took it and I unlocked the door, and I flung the door open, and I threw it open," he said, sobbing.

"And I sat over Reeva and I cried... and um, I don't know how long... I don't know how long I was there for... She wasn't breathing."

As the athlete broke down, the judge adjourned the trial.

Valentine's gifts

Earlier, the athlete described how the couple had spent a quiet evening together on 13 February, Ms Steenkamp doing some yoga as he spoke to his cousin on the phone.

He had then watched TV in bed with his head resting on her stomach and she would occasionally show him photos of cars she was looking at on her phone, he said.

He said that they had bought Valentine's Day gifts for each other. He had bought her a bracelet and they had been due to go the jewellers' to collect it the next day, he said.

Ms Steenkamp, a 29-year-old model, reality TV celebrity and law graduate, was hit by at least three bullets while in the toilet cubicle of Mr Pistorius's home in Pretoria.

Known as the Blade Runner, Mr Pistorius holds six Paralympic medals and competed in the 2012 Olympic Games.

There are no juries at trials in South Africa, and his fate will ultimately be decided by the judge, assisted by two assessors.

Even if he is acquitted, South African law stipulates that the court must consider the separate, lesser charge of culpable homicide, or manslaughter.

If convicted on this charge, he could face between six and 15 years in prison.

Mr Pistorius also faces charges of illegally firing a gun in public and of illegally possessing ammunition, which he denies.

1. Balcony

Mr Pistorius said in his statement at the start of the trial that he woke in the early hours and walked on his stumps to the balcony, pulled in two fans, closed the sliding door and drew curtains. He said that shortly before he had spoken to Reeva, who was in bed beside him.

He said he rejected prosecution claims that a witness heard arguing coming from the house before the shooting.

2. Bathroom noise

Mr Pistorius said he heard the bathroom window sliding open and believed that an intruder, or intruders, had entered the bathroom through a window which was not fitted with burglar bars.

"Unbeknown to me, Reeva must have gone to the toilet in the bathroom at the time I brought in the fans," he said.

Mr Pistorius said he approached the bathroom armed with his firearm, to defend himself and his girlfriend, believing Ms Steenkamp was still in bed.

3. Shooting

Both sides agree four bullets were fired. Ms Steenkamp was hit three times.

Mr Pistorius said he fired his weapon after hearing a noise in the toilet which he thought was the intruder coming out of the toilet to attack him and Ms Steenkamp.

He said he was in a fearful state, knowing he was on his stumps and unable to run away or properly defend himself.

Mr Pistorius said he rejected claims that he was on his prostheses when he shot at the door.

A witness told the trial she woke to hear a woman screaming and a man shouting for help. She said that after the screams she heard four shots.

4. Bedroom

Mr Pistorius said he went back to the bedroom after shooting at the toilet door, still shouting for Reeva. Lifting himself up onto the bed, he felt over to the right hand side of it and noticed Ms Steenkamp was not there.

Mr Pistorius said this was when he realised she could have been in the toilet.

5. Toilet door

Mr Pistorius said he went back to the bathroom but the toilet was locked, so he returned to the bedroom, pulled on his prosthetic legs, turned on the lights before bashing in the toilet door with a cricket bat.

Forensics expert Johannes Vermeulen told the court that the height of the marks on the door caused by the cricket bat suggest Mr Pistorius was on his stumps at the time.

6. Emergency calls

Mr Pistorius's defence team say he then called security at the gated housing complex and a private paramedic service before carrying Ms Steenkamp downstairs.

A security guard claimed it was the other way round, and he had called Mr Pistorius first after reports of gunfire. However, phone records shown to the court revealed Mr Pistorius called the estate manager at 3:19am, a minute later he called the ambulance service and at 3:21am he called estate security.

A minute later he received an incoming call - estate security calling him back.

According to police phone expert Francois Moller, Mr Pistorius called his friend Justin Divaris a short time later and just after 4:00am he called his brother Carl.
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Irish President Michael D Higgins hails UK friendship

Michael D Higgins: "The relationship between our two islands has achieved a closeness and warmth that once seemed unachievable"
Irish President Michael D Higgins has spoken of his country's "deep and enduring" friendship with Britain.

Speaking in Westminster during the first state visit to the UK by an Irish head of state, he said both countries could take "immense pride" in their work towards peace in Northern Ireland.

But he said there was "still a road to be travelled" to reach lasting peace.

At a banquet in his honour at Windsor Castle the Queen hailed the UK and Ireland as "neighbours and friends".

She said Britain and Ireland should "no longer allow our past to ensnare our future".

'Mutual respect'

Earlier in the day Mr Higgins was greeted at the Irish embassy in London by Prince Charles before heading to Windsor where he shook hands with the Queen and Prince Philip.

The ceremonial welcome at Windsor Castle was marked by a 21-gun salute, military bands, and marching troops.

He then visited Westminster Abbey and laid a wreath at the Grave of the Unknown Warrior - the tomb of a British soldier of World War One. This is customary on state visits.

He and his wife Sabina also stopped to look at a memorial to the Queen's cousin, Earl Mountbatten of Burma, who was killed by an IRA bomb in 1979.


Both the UK and Irish national anthems were played as the president arrived at Windsor Castle

Mr Higgins stopped at a memorial to Earl Mountbatten of Burma, who was killed by an IRA bomb
In a speech to both Houses of Parliament in the Palace of Westminster, Mr Higgins said: "I stand here at a time when the relationship between our two islands has, as I have said, achieved a closeness and warmth that once seemed unachievable."

He spoke of the "pain and sacrifice" associated with Irish independence from the UK in 1922, which he said had cast a "long shadow across our relations".

"We acknowledge that past but, even more, we wholeheartedly welcome the considerable achievement of today's reality - the mutual respect, friendship and co-operation which exists between our two countries," he said.

Mr Higgins's trip comes after the Queen became the first British monarch to visit the Republic of Ireland three years ago.

Then Sinn Fein did not take part, but Northern Ireland's Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness, a former IRA commander, attended the banquet on Tuesday evening - where he joined in a toast to the Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh and the people of the UK.


The Queen said the UK and the Republic of Ireland "should live together as neighbours and friends"
During the banquet, Mr Higgins again spoke of the Ireland's journey to "true reconciliation" with the UK.

He said: "Ireland and Britain live in both the shadow and in the shelter of one another, and so it has been since the dawn of history.

"We celebrate what has been achieved but we must also constantly renew our commitment to a process that requires vigilance and care."


President Higgins meets Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall at the Irish Embassy in London

Crowds cheered the carriage carrying the Irish president to Windsor Castle
During his visit, which ends on Friday, Mr Higgins is also due to meet Prime Minister David Cameron at Downing Street, pay tribute to the work of Irish health professionals, and meet business leaders and London Mayor Boris Johnson.

The statesman, who came to England to work as a waiter when he was 21, said his visit would be "very important for the relationships between the people of Ireland and UK".


Mr Higgins and the Duke of Edinburgh inspected British soldiers at Windsor Castle
He will be joined on the trip by Taoiseach Enda Kenny and Foreign Affairs Minister Eamon Gilmore.

BBC Ireland correspondent Andy Martin said the trip could not have happened 20 years ago because of "lingering acrimony" between the two countries.

Our correspondent added that "changed entirely three years ago", when the Queen laid a wreath at a memorial to those who died fighting for Ireland's independence.


More than 3,600 people are estimated to have been killed during the Troubles between 1969 and 1998
The Queen set another historic precedent two years ago when she shook hands with Mr McGuinness during a trip to Belfast.

Conor Murphy, a Sinn Fein MP and former IRA member, said the president's visit was a "symbolically significant step" on the "journey towards reconciliation and better relationships".

But in a sign of the tensions caused by Sinn Fein's participation in some of the events, Stephen Gault - whose father was killed by an IRA bomb in 1987 - accused republicans of trying to "airbrush" history.

"How can I forgive somebody who hasn't turned around and asked for my forgiveness?" he said of Mr McGuinness on BBC Radio 4's Today programme.

For centuries Ireland was under British or English rule and the more recent Troubles can be traced back to the partition of the country.

Ireland won independence following a civil war, but six counties were kept under British control, creating Northern Ireland.

President Higgins said before his visit that there were "a lot of very difficult memories" and that it would be wrong to "wipe the slate clean".

"How could I say to any family whose family member might be in a wheelchair or somebody who is dead, you must put it behind you?" he said.

Meanwhile Peter Hain - Northern Ireland secretary from 2005 to 2007 - suggested there should be no more prosecutions for offences committed before the 1998 Good Friday Agreement.

He said his proposal was not an "amnesty", but "perhaps some special judicial process" where people could come forward and admit crimes but not be sentenced.


The handshake between Martin McGuinness and the Queen in 2012 was a watershed moment
Mr Higgins has been a stalwart of Irish public life, as a politician, poet and the subject of songs.

In an interview with the BBC's Fergal Keane on the eve of the visit, the president was asked if he would bring a gift for the Queen.

"Oh yes," he said. "Something equine, something cultural. The warmth around this visit has been tremendous."
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The Joey’s Chronicles Of A Lagos Ajebutter "I’m Dating Genevieve Nnaji"

I am an Ajebutter. Not by birth, or by formings, or by swag – I am simply an unapologetic Ajebutter by default. I didn't choose to be born one. God, without seeking my opinion (because He's God, I guess), gave me the genes of an Ajebutter and a funny Bri-Merican accent . By luck or some twisted work of fate, fortune, Karma (I might have killed ten defenseless puppies in my past life) or destiny, I have found myself in Lagos, crazy Lasgidi, and this is my story…

» more Joey Akan, Joey's Chronicles Of A Lagos Ajebutter, Pulse.ng
I once touched Genevieve Nnaji's  elbow, and it felt like I had tasted heaven on earth. I once spent an afternoon listening to the eerie voice of Nigeria's rap queen, Eva Alordiah, and I never hungered for the voice of another woman for a month. I still have the overpowering cologne of Yemi Alade from the last time we hugged…and it's been over 2 months.

And that has been my greatest failing in relationships.

Working as a journalist, presenter, publicist, and music critic in Nigeria's largest entertainment digital media firm throws a lot of things down my way, and I deal with all of them smoothly…except for one of  them. Nigerian female celebrities.

Many of them, in person, have sincere smiles that could make Sango long for the warmth of mortals. Their sense of humor and humility is always a delight, and when you combine that with their penchant for hugging, and staring into your eyes during interviews, then you grow soft inside, and  you fall in love.

That has been my problem. I want to date a Nigerian female celebrity. Why? Because the non-celebrities, the good loving girls who would go the extra mile for me, plan our future together, and help me save on my salary do not give me those feelings.

They smile, no magic happens, they give me full tight hugs, and I feel like I'm been crushed. Even when they stare into my eyes and talk to me like I was the only dude in the universe, all I can think about is my next drink of beer.

Whenever I sit right across the sofa on set with a diva, every part of me comes alive. I feel like a peacock who's got the brightest plumes to dazzle the world. Sometimes I actually dazzle. Other times, I sound like a leprous goat.

I tried my hands in love a thousand times, and each of them have failed to move to the next level. One even slapped me thrice to deliver me from the spirit of negligence, and all I could think about was Heineken.

Genevieve Nnaji will never slap me. Neither will Seyi Shay whose makeup that stained my shirt last year is still on it. I refused to wash that shirt. My sweet Seyi Shay.

Today, I still daydreamed about Genevieve Nnaji, and I caught myself 'oohing, aaahing, and aawwwing". Perhaps I'm in love. Perhaps not. But one thing I'm certain is, Nigerian  female celebrities have my heart in their palms, and they all have a place right in that heart.

But of all of them, I want Genevieve Nnaji and  her magical elbow. The rest will be my concubines.

See you next week. Peace & Good hustle.
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I am innocent Klint Da Drunk Clears The Air On His Fraud Case

It wasn't me.

Nigerian top comedian, Clinton Afamefuna Igwemba, popularly called Klint Da Drunk, has come out to attempt to disassociate himself from the messy fraud scandal that has been hanging on his head in the past few days, by saying that the church that accused him, Christos International Church, is actually to be blamed for what he calls a misrepresentation of facts.

The news has been viral that Klint was contracted by the Abuja based church to anchor a youth empowerment program after the sum of N250,000 had been paid to him but that he refused to honour the event and has even refused to refund the said amount.

But in his defense, Klint said in the first place, the church paid him N200,000 and not N250,000 and that the date he was given was Sunday 23rd March, 2014, and not Saturday, March 22, 2014, as claimed by the church.

Narrating the incident, the Abia State born humour merchant said:

«On Saturday, 22nd March, I had a show in Owerri, Imo State and had boarded a flight from Lagos for the function, hoping to connect Abuja from there for the church event on Sunday.

«On my way to Owerri, they called to tell me that the event was that day, which was 22nd of March, and that I should start coming to Abuja.

«They were begging me to be in Abuja. If they were so sure of the date, why were they begging me? The church told me they would pay whatever cost I incur for my flight to the programme that day.

«That I missed the show wasn't my fault, the church should be faulted. At the end of the day, I still went to Abuja on Sunday because I had already bought the ticket. I tried reaching the pastor, but I couldn't.

«They claim to be a church, which is supposed to be the most peaceful organization. I will go to that church and I will settle it with them.

«I don't want my name to be dragged in the mud.

We believe you Klint. Just do the right thing and let sleeping dogs lie.
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Wizkid slam fans on twitter again

Starboy Musician Wizkid, recently slammed on an impertinent fan on twitter who made sarcastic comments about his activities on twitter. In a derogatory tweet, the fan said all wizkid had done in 2014, was post Instagram pictures. Wizkid replied by saying he had made more money than the fan had ever made in his life. Quite a biting reply don't you think?
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Confessions Gay People Lived With My Father Fela” - Seun Kuti

Afrobeat musician, Seun Kuti, has revealed that his legendary father, Fela Anikulakpo Kuti, was open to homosexuals, showing them hospitality, and even admitting them into his home.

Seun believes that Fela would never have given his support to the anti-gay law, if he were alive. Speaking to Television Continental reporters, he revealed that he is against the popular Nigerian law which criminalise same sex intimate relationships.

"I do not support the anti gay law and contrary to what people think, if my father was alive, he would not have supported the law too. I know him more than all the people saying otherwise. In our house in Kalakuta, there were gay people living there,' Kuti said.

The controversial law was passed earlier in the year and prescribes a 14-year jail term for offenders.
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First Drive: 2015 McLaren 650S

Standing in the courtyard of the hotel in Málaga, Spain, leaning against the fastest car I've ever driven, I glance over at my co-pilot.

Slightly out of breath, he looks hypnotized by the orange supercar sitting before us. His eyes slowly wander from the car and onto my face.

"Was I really going 275 kilometers per hour?" he asks.

The next morning, I looked over from breakfast to see a childhood hero sitting at the adjacent table.

"It was actually 273 … but who's counting?" I reply with a chuckle.

"You could've slowed me down," he says. "We could've been arrested. Then again, that would've been such good press for both of us. We would've looked so cool …"

"I know, Patrick, I know." I reply, with a slow nod, tapping on carbon fiber wing.

As an automotive journalist, wild adventures in far-off places are commonplace for me. Except this one is different.

Today my driving partner is renowned actor Sir Patrick Stewart and the car that left us speechless is the 2015 McLaren 650S.

Before we climb behind the wheel with Sir Stewart, let me tell you a bit about McLaren's latest supercar.

Hyperbole

"Better than the 12C," said the McLaren representative during our briefing.

That's hard to imagine, considering that just three years ago McLaren Automotive relaunched itself into the world of street-legal supercars. Although it hadn't launched a car in 19 years, the brand was immediately accepted amongst the likes of Lamborghini, Aston Martin, and Ferrari.

However, the folks at McLaren didn't accept a one-hit wonder and call it a day, as they had with the F1. Instead, they sought to calibrate and recalibrate the tuning on the MP4-12C.

Accordingly, they'll tell you that the 2014 and 2011 models drive completely differently, all thanks to software adjustments. And the best part? Owners of early models need only visit the dealer to have their cars modernized with a quick update to the ECU.

McLaren is a brand focused on space-aged technology – speed through science – above all else, and it shows.

At its core, the 650S borrows nearly 70 percent of its components from the 12C, and the rest comes from lessons learned in developing McLaren's P1 hypercar.

From a visual standpoint, the nose of the 650 is shared with the P1, while the rest of the car is mostly 12C. The twin-turbocharged 3.8-liter V8 engine has been tuned up to 641 horsepower (650 PS, hence its name), and 500 pound-feet of torque. The suspension has been stiffened. The sport and track modes adjusted. And the aero work produces more downforce, front and rear.

Hell, it'll even crack 60 mph in just 2.9 seconds.

Equal parts road and track

Our hotel overlooked the Mediterranean, about an hour and a half from Ascari Race Resort in Ronda. The drive to and around the track zigzagged upward into the mountains, into the rolling farmlands of Andalusia.

After a quick breakfast on the terrace, I walked out to the courtyard to meet my Tarocco Orange 650S.

Open both doors and take a photo; it's dramatic from every angle.

The doors get you, every time. They don't open directly forward like a Ferrari, or upward like a Mercedes SLS, but rather like an open-armed sun salutation in yoga – stretching up and out to welcome the day. Open both and take a photo; it's dramatic from every angle.

Swing open the doors and pop inside and you'll find a customizable cabin. You can have the interior in nearly any color you'd like, with choices between the sportier Alcantara finish with carbon fiber sport seats sourced from the P1 or leather seats that feel little more relaxed and significantly more luxurious.

For the driving we'd do on this trip, I preferred the sports seats. However, the car feels more upscale with the full leather dash. Ladies in skirts will prefer entry and exit with the width of the traditional – and adjustable – bucket seats.

A word to the wise: You may want to build your car according to how you'll spend most of the time in your 650S. But, the car is more comfortable for long hauls than the comparable 458 Italia, regardless of your seating preference, so there's no way to lose.

Where there isn't Alcantara or leather on the interior, you'll only find carbon fiber – and plenty of it. The car is made almost entirely of the lightweight woven element, with exception to a bit of magnesium behind the dash and the aluminum extrusions that mount the front and rear bumpers.

Sitting in the 650S feels like sitting in something from the future, as if we've utilized some alien technology to build a rocket with tires. Even the infotainment system's interface looks like it was pulled right out of Tron, with its portrait orientation and simple black and white screens. It's gorgeous, it's responsive, and it's easy to use. The only downside is that you can't skip audio tracks unless you're using the media screen, which requires backing out of the phone and navigation features first.

Ascari

On the Ascari track, Euan Hankey – one of McLaren's factory GT drivers – guided me through the Normal, Sport and Track modes, pushing me harder and harder with each lap.

We sped through each of Ascari's three loops, faster and faster with each consecutive lap. I was blown away by the car's traction and power delivery. Honestly, there was no way that I could push the car to the edge of its limits; the 650S is built to appease even a professional racer.

Pumped full of adrenaline and eager for more, I asked Euan to show me what the car could really do with a racer behind the wheel. I'll freely admit that he's the first driver to ever legitimately scare me. Between the 650S' mind-boggling handing and his tremendous driving, I walked away a little shaky, but completely impressed.

Until this day, my personal favorite car has been the Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG Black, an exotic muscle car with a completely different kind of personality, but similar levels of power and performance. Even other cars, like the Nissan GT-R and Lexus LFA have absolutely dazzled me, but my time in the McLaren casts a long shadow over each of these cars.

Maybe it's the novelty of a brand many people don't know. Maybe it's the glove-like fit of the cabin. Maybe it's just the doors. Either way, a dozen laps around Ascari with a professional racer have changed my tune, and I'm not sure what I could possibly drive – save maybe the P1 – that I'd enjoy even more.

Crème de la Crème

The next morning, after a full nights' rest full of track-day dreams, I went down to the hotel café for breakfast in the garden.

As I settled in and sipped my cappuccino in silence, I glanced around the patio. As I surveyed the place and the other patrons, I suddenly did a double take.

Sitting at the adjacent table was Sir Patrick Stewart, captain of the Enterprise, leader of the X-Men, and my childhood hero.

Maybe I'm the obnoxious American that Europeans curse. But I don't really care. But without hesitation, I walked over to Sir Stewart's table, squatted down next to him and asked the question that no one can refuse: "How would you feel about taking a spin in a McLaren?"

Eyebrows rise. A smile is cracked. Waivers are signed. A friend made.

Warp speed

I told Sir Patrick that I would take us out of the town we were staying in, to warm up the engine. Then the keys were his to bring us home again.

Hell, it'll even crack 60 mph in just 2.9 seconds.

As I sped through the Spanish countryside, we talked about the McLaren's active aerodynamics system, which functions as an air brake when you slow down quickly enough. We talked about his adventures with Stirling Moss and Jeremy Clarkson, too.
Eventually, I pulled off to swap seats. That's when I realized that Sir Patrick's story about "only liking to drive up to a certain speed … a comfortable one," and his long list of driving practice didn't necessarily sync.

Sir Patrick is more adept behind the wheel than he lead on. In fact, he took us all the way to 170 mph – through a tunnel – before lifting off the accelerator. There's a warp speed joke in there somewhere, but I'll let it rest.

We could've been killed. We could've been arrested. Instead, we were left rolling in laughter and excitement.

We returned back to the hotel and took a selfie in the main drive, which he tweeted out to his followers. That gave the folks at McLaren the chance to tell him everything that I hadn't already, as well as plan a visit to the factory to see where the magic happens in Woking, England.

Conclusion

The 2015 McLaren 650S is priced from $265,000, just north of the MP4-12C it replaces. It's an aesthetic masterpiece, and a brilliant work of machinery and science-fiction/fact, absolutely worthy of its position in the realm of supercars.

Better, though, is that while it may offer similar levels of thrill found by some of its competitors, it does so more comfortably than most. Ipso facto, it's one of the best ultra-performance daily drivers available on the market today.

It's fast – very fast – with a top speed of 207 mph, and that's not even the fastest car McLaren builds.

Highs

Space-aged design
Formula-like sound, acceleration, braking, and handling
Comfortable for long rides, and surprising utility
High-Tech personality, different from alternatives
Lows

Infotainment doesn't multitask well
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iWatch coming this summer, Apple may ship 65 million (and every other rumor we’ve heard)

It was obvious during CES 2014 that manufacturers love smartwatches – there was an entire section of the show floor dedicated to them called the "Wrist revolution." We're not sure any of them have revolutionized our wrists yet, but if anyone can launch a truly groundbreaking smartwatch, it's Apple.

The impending arrival of the iWatch, as it has been dubbed, has been rumored for many months. However, there's absolutely no official proof such a device is in production, or planned by the firm. Instead, rumors, leaks, and a mountain of circumstantial evidence is piling up around Apple making a move into wearable tech, potentially starting with a watch. Will it be the product to silence those who say Apple can no longer innovate? Here's everything we've heard so far about the iWatch.

Updated on 4-08-2014 by Jeffrey Van Camp: We've updated the article with new rumors from Economic Daily News (a Chinese publication) pointing toward a July – September 2014 release date for the iWatch. Supposedly, Apple hopes to ship 65 million watches in 2014 alone.

When did all this iWatch talk start?

Amazingly, iWatch rumors can be traced back to the end of 2012, when a Chinese site indicated Apple was building a smart watch with a 1.5-inch OLED screen, which would connect to the iPhone. An early 2013 launch date was provided, which obviously didn't come true.

The next round of meaningful rumors began in February 2013, when both Bloomberg and the Wall Street Journal discussed Apple's interest in a "Wristwatch-like" device. At the time, Apple had a team of around 100 people working on the project, including software and hardware engineers and a marketing team. This suggested the device had moved beyond the concept stage and was being primed for release.

A report around the same time from the New York Times said the watch would run Apple's iOS mobile software, and differentiate itself from the competition by using curved glass.

Apple assembles a team, Mission: Impossible style

If the iWatch project is as important to Apple as we're led to believe, it must have a crack team of geniuses working on it, right? The members of Apple's very own IMF team has been the subject of much speculation, equalling talk of the watch itself. In July last year, 9to5Mac reported that Apple's Bob Mansfield was heading up the team, assisted by VP Kevin Lynch and James Foster.

iWatch could be covered in Corning's super flexible Willow Glass. It's so strong, Corning says it can be wrapped around a device.

French website MacG.com added that other team members on the project also worked on the iPod. Of all Apple's previous products, the sixth-generation iPod Nano is the closest it has come to releasing a wearable device.
There are two other notable names attached to the project – unofficially, of course. The first is Jay Blahnik. Fitness expert Blahnik joined Apple in August 2013, having previously worked on the iOS-only Nike FuelBand, and sources told 9to5Mac he would be assisting the iWatch team.

The other interesting addition to the Apple family is Paul Deneve, who once headed up Saint Lauren Paris. He joined Apple in July 2013, and in a statement it was revealed he would be working on unnamed special projects. As style is going to be paramount to the iWatch's success, this could be that special project.

At the beginning of January 2014, Apple went on a health kick, and reportedly snapped up two health tech experts. The first, Nancy Dougherty, worked on a Bluetooth-enabled Band-Aid for Sano Intelligence, which can monitor heart rate, breathing and body temperature. The second name is Ravi Narasimhan, formerly of Vital Connect, which also makes a wearable sensor to monitor your vital signs. As fitness and health is rumored to play a part in the iWatch's feature list, these could be two new additions to Apple's team.

The iWatch has also been linked with engineers who worked on the iPhone 5S fingerprint sensor and experts on miniaturization and power efficiency. Apple's design expert Jony Ive is also said to be heavily involved.

What's the tech going to be like?

We've heard about the people working on the iWatch, but what will the watch be like? For much of this we must rely on analyst predictions and speculation. Sizes ranging between 1.3-inches and 1.5-inches have been put forward as possible iWatch stats, as has a much larger 2-inch screen.

According to a Korean news source, LG was awarded the contract to produce the screens for Apple's iWatch. Apparently measuring 1.52-inches, the screens will be P-OLED displays, which is the same technology used on LG's G Flex flexible smartphone. Mass production is said to begin after July, which makes a late September onwards announcement seem possible. The usual supply constraints are also mentioned. It's all far from official though, and the article was pulled from the website after publication. 

The watch could also be covered in Corning's super flexible Willow Glass, which is thin and flexible enough to be used on curved displays, has been specially designed for touch screens, and is compatible with OLED panels. It's so strong, Corning says it can be wrapped around a device. Patents from Apple showing curved screens have been spotted in the past.

However, Willow Glass isn't the only option for keeping the iWatch's face free from scratches and damage. Apple's recent deal with makers of sapphire crystal panels, GT Advanced, means it's in a prime position to use the almost indestructible material instead. A document has been uncovered which seems to show Apple and GT Advanced's new factory in Mesa, Arizona will start operating in February. 

There's no confirmation it's going to produce screens, but the so-called Project Cascade is going to produce a, "Critical new sub-component of Apple products." The use of the word new suggests it won't be anything to do with Apple's current use of sapphire – the camera lens cover and TouchID sensor on the iPhone – though. Working with sapphire crystal is time-consuming, meaning any product which relies on GT Advanced's component is many months away from release.

Wireless charging may be essential

Patents hint at flexible battery packs, while a Forbes contributor says wireless charging will be an essential part of making the iWatch usable because the inevitable color display will eat through the unavoidably small battery. In a report published by the New York Times, anonymous sources indicated Apple has been experimenting with "Magnetic induction," or wireless charging, for the iWatch. Apple's tech would potentially use the same method seen on several Nokia smartphones, where the device is placed on a special mat, which then charges without the need for cables.

Apple apparently hasn't settled on wireless charging, and may also be looking at both solar and kinetic charging. These have been used in watches before, but the increased power demands of a smartwatch could mean they will supplement a wirelessly charged battery, helping the device last through the day.

More than one version is possible

A Korean news source says Apple is developing three different versions of the iWatch – which may explain why no-one can agree on the screen size – perhaps so it can provide a model suitable for men and women separately. The report also talks about the watch having a flexible OLED display.

Speculation, and not fact, has brought up talk of a fingerprint scanner just like the iPhone 5S, along with the inclusion of NFC for wireless payments and syncing. While they're possibilities, the inclusion of Siri may be more likely, if only to make it easier to use the small screen. However, would this involve the watch running a full version of iOS? A cut down version for use on the wrist makes more sense.

Of course, we can expect fitness and health tracking to play a part, along with sleep analysis, and all the usual notification and music controls we've seen on existing smartwatches. All of this is made possible by Bluetooth Low Energy. Finally, we're not sure whether the iWatch will end up being able to make calls. If so, it may follow the Galaxy Gear and include a microphone and speaker, rather than a SIM card slot.

What has Apple said about all this?

This is where the rumors become something more. Apple CEO Tim Cook is to blame. At the D11 conference in May he called the wrist "interesting" when talking about wearable technology, but dismissed the idea of smart glasses like Google Glass. He continued, "I think the wrist is somewhat natural," and that the wearable market was "Ripe for exploration."

Cook has also talked about what's coming in 2014, saying the company big plans for the year that "Customers are going to love." Will the iWatch be one of these products?

When is it going to be released, and how much will it cost? 

If you've followed the story, then you know the iWatch has been expected since early last year. Since it hasn't materialized, production may not be going smoothly. This is backed up by reports saying less than 50 percent of models assembled actually work, thanks to problems making the tiny devices reliable, and that the battery has been causing headaches.

Release Date: In August 2013, DigiTimes claimed that the iWatch was scheduled for launch during the second half of 2014. New reports point toward a more specific Q3 2014 release, meaning we may see it in the July – September timeframe. Apple is hoping to ship 65 million units in 2014.

Price: An analyst pegged the price at around $150 to $230, calling it an iPod replacement rather than a smartwatch. More recently, an analyst from Morgan Stanley estimated Apple would charge $300 for the iWatch, matching the original Galaxy Gear price. The same analyst added the iWatch could bring Apple $17.5 billion in revenue over the first year, five billion more than the original iPad. It's also noted that like the iPad, Apple will target existing customers with the watch, promoting it as primarily a companion device.

With many months between us and the watch (at least), we're sure to hear plenty more about it, so check back for regular updates.

———

Past updates

Updated on 02-04-2014 by Andy: An analyst has estimated Apple may charge $300 for the iWatch, and said it could make the firm up to $17.5 billion in revenue during its first year on sale.

Updated on 02-03-2014 by Andy: How will you charge the iWatch? Apple is rumored to be working on wireless, solar, or even kinetic systems.

Updated on 01-30-2014 by Andy: A document has been uncovered suggesting a joint Apple/GT Advanced manufacturing plant will start producing sapphire components in February. Could the panels end up on the iWatch? Also, Apple has reportedly been hiring health technology experts.

Updated on 01-20-2014 by Andy: A news source states LG has won the contract to product the iWatch screens, which will be 1.52-inch P-OLED displays.

(Images courtesy of Martin Hajek)
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All the compliments to Beyonce in her ‘Out’ cover story, ranked

By now, we all know that Beyoncé woke up flawless. And, apparently, that lyric isn't an exaggeration.

Bey's on the latest cover of Out magazine, and Out magazine really wants us to know that Beyoncé is great. Flawless, even! Although the cover story's author wasn't able to snag an in-person interview with the Queen, he did get to talk to her team — all of whom had nothing but glowing things to say about their boss. No, really: The overarching theme of the profile is "Beyoncé is perfect." (Given the subject matter, maybe this shouldn't be a surprise.)

Need proof? Here's a list of every word of praise for Beyoncé contained in the story, ranked from (relatively) least to most gushing:

Stylist Ty Hunter on Beyoncé's humbleness: "The picture of [Beyoncé] is 'diva, diva, diva,' but I've been here this long because she's not."

On her office's casual decor: "Decorated like a boutique hotel — plush sectional sofas, hardwood floors, an enormous contemporary chandelier — the most visible sign of Beyoncé are the 17 Grammys that line one end of the conference room and a cool portrait of a young Michael Jackson, her idol."

On her positive message onstage: "With her all-female backing crew, the Sugar Mamas, Beyoncé gave her Scottish fans a show to remember that night, but she gave them something else, too: a role model."

On Beyoncé being a self-described "modern day feminist": "The claim has been much debated on blogs, and you have to admire Beyoncé for daring to go there."

On how Beyoncé looks cuter than everyone else, duh: "A good number wear flashing plastic bows in their hair, echoing the one Beyoncé sports to fetchingly in the video for 'XO.' (In the damp Glasgow air they look less adorable.)"

On how no one has anything bad to say about her: "But in all of the accolades and glowing character references, you will also find little shafts of light that fall on their subject in illuminating and lovely ways."

On the controversial "Eat the cake, Annie Mae" line from "Drunk in Love": "For some, this strains Beyoncé's credibility, but Beyoncé's masterstroke was to find a way to ensure that none of this mattered, by getting her music to the fans before the critics, professional and self-appointed, had time to weigh in. That, too, is power."

Creative director Todd Tourso on Bey's influence: "When you have this type of leadership and muse and mentor, I think the sky's the limit."

Visual director Ed Burke on climbing an Egyptian pyramid with her: "She looked like Mother Teresa, wearing this white dress and a head wrap, and when we got to the top she sang Donny Hathaway's 'A Song For You.'"

On adding 10 new songs to her tour: "Most artists would spend months working out the kinks. Beyoncé took three days."

On what we knew all along: "…for those who work closet to her, Beyoncé is, quite literally, flawless."
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'Intramural’ trailer: ‘SNL’ cast and more get sporty in new underdog comedy

With the recent end of March Madness, we know sports can be a very serious thing. Luckily, not for everyone.

Intramural is the epic sports film for those who don't really know or care much about athletics. Jake Lacy (The Office) stars as Caleb, a fifth-year senior and former college intramural champion who gave up the game after his best friend paralyzed his "little friend" on the game-winning play. Back for redemption, Caleb reunites his team in the hilarious send-up of inspirational sports movies (think training montages, lots of training montages) to face off against their rivals, reigning champs the Titans. Twilight's Nikki Reed also stars in a cast that includes SNL regulars Kate McKinnon, Jay Pharaoh, and Beck Bennett. Andrew Disney (Searching for Sonny) directs. Watch the trailer below:

Intramural will premiere later this month at the Tribeca Film Festival.
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On The Books: Stephen King’s ‘Carrie,’ ‘The Stand’ and more to be reissued!

Six of Stephen King's early novels are going to get a fancy, limited edition reissue from Cemetery Dance Publications. The collection will include some of his best works: Carrie, 'Salem's Lot, The Shining, Night Shift, The Stand and Pet Sematary. The books will be oversize editions on heavy paper, with newly commissioned artwork for the dust jackets, new introductions by Mr. King, and other features. Ahhhh!! But they will only be printing very few and they will not be cheap, so start saving now. The fisrt installment will be Carrie: The Deluxe Special Edition, which is due in August. an essay by Tabitha King about the book's exploration of adolescent terror and sexuality, six paintings (as well as a dust jacket) by the fantasy illustrator Tomislav Tikulin, and a reproduction of the telegram sent by Doubleday to Mr. King saying that the company would publish the book. You can buy at 3 price points, ranging from the artist-signed copies that are already sold out, to ones with a special dust jacket for $225 to the most affordable version in a slipcase for $80. [New York Times]

Rabble-rouser and British bad boy of the art world, Damien Hirst has finally confirmed that Penguin will be publishing his autobiography. This promises to be a wild ride and he's sworn to write with "utter candor" about his early exploits. It will cover his childhood and his college years in London, including "his Turner prize win in 1995 for Mother and Child, Divided, one of his many works fixated on death. The piece consists of four glass tanks, containing the two halves of a cow and calf preserved in formaldehyde, and would be followed by his famous shark in formaldehyde known as Physical Impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living. The shark is one of my favorite pieces of modern art. Terrifying to behold. I hope the title of his book is something equally overstated: "The Physical Impossibility of the Infinite in the Mind of an Artist…and Also Death." [Guardian]

The Bailey's Prize for Women in Fiction has revealed it's shortlist. The predictable choices were: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie – Americanah, Jhumpa Lahiri - The Lowland, Donna Tartt - The Goldfinch. Less obvious choices: Eimear McBride - A Girl Is A Half-Formed Thing, Audrey Magee - The Undertaking, Hannah Kent - Burial Rites. Helen Fraser, the Chair of the judges said, "We feel you could give any one of these books to a friend with the absolute confidence that they would be gripped and absorbed and that maybe their view of the world would be changed once they had read it." The winner of the prestigious honor and the £30,000 reward will be announced on June 4th.

Did you remember that Paddington Bear was Peruvian? Well he was, and the author Michael Bond is releasing a new Paddington book, Love From Paddington, where the duffel-coat-wearing bear writes letters to his Aunt Lucy in Lima, reminiscing about his first days in England. A Bear Called Paddington has been in print continuously since it's publication in 1958, and Bond has written a number of sequels since then. There's even a Paddington movie coming out in November with Nicole Kidman and Colin Firth. 
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Matt Gerald Will Play a Villain Role in Upcoming Marvel’s “Ant-Man”

It seems that the key cast of upcoming Marvel's film "Ant-Man" has been completed with the addition of latest cast member "Matt Gerald" for a villainous role. It has been announced that he will plaY "one of the bad guys", but it has not been told exactly which bad charactER he would play. A number of media sources reported this news, and the fact that Patrick Wilson (known for "Watchmen", "The Conjuring" and "Insidious") was also in talks for a key role in the film. Gerald has preViously appeared in several big Hollywood films including Avatar, Escape Plan, AND Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, and G.I. Joe: Retaliation.

Even the sources have not revealed anything about his villain status, many fans might have imagined as much, as Gerald is considered to be an outstanding actor at playing enemies. Many people remember him as the cruel Ray Speltzer from Season 7 of highly acclaimed serial killer TV show "Dexter". He played the role of a serial killer who used to put on horns prior to killing his targets.


Many fans also know him as his character White Power Dave from the short film titled as "Marvel One-Shot: All Hail the King", opposite Ben Kingsley and Sam Rockwell. His other credits are Red Dawn, TV show Castle, The Frozen Ground, Hawaii Five-0, TV series The Shield, Grimm, Intelligence and Last Resort.

Keeping in mind that he is not recapitulating the White Power Dave from "All Hail the King", there is not nothing more to think about his bad character in Ant-Man, which is has become one of several anticipated films of the Summer 2015, particularly owing to the better cast that includes Michael Douglas as Hank Pym and Paul Rudd as Scott Lang/Ant-Man. Both are projected to wear the Ant-Man costume.

According to the comic books, Douglas' character Dr. Henry Pym is the man who found out Pym Particles and is considered as the original Ant-Man, while Rudd's character Scott Lang is a frantic crook who winds up thieving the Ant-Man outfit. This film has been projected to be launched on July 17, 2015, so we can expect to hear more news and details about the film this year, but for now, the cast is in progress satisfactorily, with "The Hobbit" star Evangaline Lilly and "End of Watch" star Michael Pena among the other big names linked to this film.
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35 Years Later – Kate Bush Announced Live Gigs For This Summer!

Kate Bush, the English singer-songwriter and record producer, is back on tour this summer and the 77,000 tickets that were released for her live shows sold out in a matter of minutes. This amount of time is shockingly quick for any performer out there at any level, but what is most surprising is that Kate Bush has only toured once in her entire career, when she was first getting started, 35 years ago, in 1979.
That was shortly after her song Wuthering Heights topped the UK singles charts for four weeks in 1978, making her the first woman ever to have a hit song in the UK that she had written herself. After a tour that lasted only two months in April and May of 1979, Bush quit touring – until now.

Why Bush quit touring
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There had been a lot of speculation as to why Bush didn't tour any more, despite continuing to churn out hit singles and records and generally be regarded as one of the most talented artists in pop music, if not the music business in general.
Many people chalked it up to her not being able to be in total control of the final product, as so many things can go wrong when playing live and songs never actually sound as good when they are performed outside the studio.

Another aspect of why she never toured ever again was that her lighting director Brian Duffield was killed in an onstage accident at the beginning of her tour in April 1979. This may have cast a real haze over the rest of the tour, one which made her never want to risk the lives of others who she cared out to promote her own music.

There was also the openly admitted fear of flying, that really hinders the ability to successfully do a full tour for a reasonable amount of overhead, especially in Europe. Of course, Bush never admitted any of this and had only said that she never toured after her first, which she claims to have enjoyed, because she was too consumed producing her own subsequent records.

Reasons bush is coming back

Photo credit: WENN
However, lately she has opened up about another reason for her abrupt end to touring and performing her own music live in front of her fans.

According to an interview she gave to the Daily Telegraph, Bush said she quit touring, "because I felt that my sexuality was being given to the world in a way which I found impersonal."

So what made her change her mind at the age of 55, to convince her to start touring again?

Perhaps she wanted a change of pace and felt that performing live was the way to do so.

Or maybe the word reached her that studio records no longer made money and that the only way to continue making a healthy living in the music industry was touring and performing live. Either way, she seemed to have no problem selling tickets to her shows, which have been searched for more in the UK than the previously most popular artists like Beyonce, Lady Gaga and Katy Perry.

There is no doubt more dates will be announced on this tour, to satisfy all of those who couldn't score tickets to the first round of dates, making Kate Bush one of the hottest tickets in the world this year, seemingly out of nowhere. Maybe this was actually her strategy all along.
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Korean dramas: A beginner’s guide

Why are more and more Americans falling under the sudsy spell of South Korean dramas? One theory: These shows tend to come in self-contained 16- to 20-episode seasons, making them easily digestible. Another: If you don't speak Korean, watching one demands your full attention (subtitles!), meaning you get sucked in that much more quickly.

And then there are the dramas themselves — endearingly theatrical and kooky, with a sweetness that can be tough to find in grittier American fare. "Their portrayal of love is a little more PG," says Jacqueline Sia, senior content manager of massive international TV library DramaFever. "Korean dramas can spend 16 episodes getting to the point where the leads kiss."

Want in? Simply start with any of these conveniently categorized gateway dramas. Anieyo (translation: You're welcome).

Teen Soap: Boys Over Flowers (Hulu, Netflix, DramaFever)
The premise: A feisty dry cleaner's daughter snags a scholarship to a tony prep school — populated exclusively by spoiled hotties.
Selling points: Imagine The O.C. infused with the silly energy of a TGIF sitcom. Bonus: The theme song is a K-Pop version of "Almost Paradise" as sung by what sounds like Bill Murray's Nick the Lounge Singer.
If you like it, try… Heirs (Hulu, DramaFever), a Gossip Girl-inspired serial that also stars Boys breakout Min Ho Lee.

Romance: My Lovely Sam Soon (Hulu, DramaFever)
The premise: Sparks fly between lovably flawed Sam Soon and her reserved new boss, Jin Heon.
Selling points: If Sam Soon sounds a lot like Bridget Jones's Diary, that's because it is — only with a Pretty Woman-esque twist. (Sam Soon agrees to be Jin Heon's fake girlfriend in exchange for the equivalent of $50,000.)
If you like it, try… Coffee Prince (Hulu, DramaFever), a gender-bending romance with a conventional soul.


Historical Fantasy: Gu Family Book (Hulu, DramaFever)
The premise: During the Joseon dynasty, a half human, half fox falls in love with a fearless martial-arts teacher.
Selling points: Great costumes, heart-pounding fight sequences, and an epic story line that's a crash course in Korean mythology. (Nine-Tailed Foxes: They're a thing, and they're pretty cool.)
If you like it, try… Empress Ki (Hulu), a more realistic costume drama about a lady monarch in the Yuan dynasty.


Action Thriller: City Hunter (Hulu, Netflix, DramaFever)
The premise: A brilliant IT expert dedicates his life to avenging the death of his father, a bodyguard killed by the very government he was sworn to protect.
Selling points: Think Revenge, only minus the last two seasons of Revenge. Also: Min Ho Lee stars in this one too. Dude is everywhere!
The next step: Three Days (Hulu, DramaFever), the Korean answer to 24.


Paranormal/Horror: Vampire Prosecutor (Hulu, DramaFever)
The premise: Uh, it's about a vampire. With a law degree.
Selling points: Vampire. Prosecutor. What about this needs explaining?
If you like it, try… Master's Sun (Hulu, DramaFever), a spookier variation on Ghost Whisperer.


Genre-Defying Miscellany: My Love From Another Star (Hulu, DramaFever)
The premise: An alien falls for an actress. (Is she the reincarnation of the girl he loved in the 17th century? You bet!)
Selling points: Rom-com, sci-fi, melodrama, showbiz spoof – Love mushes them together in a tasty K-drama stew. And don't you want to see the show so popular it's ruining lives in China?
If you like it, try… Secret Garden (Hulu, DramaFever), which somehow turns Freaky Friday into a romance.


A version of this story appeared in the April 11 issue of Entertainment Weekly, on stands now.
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The 20 Best Summer Blockbusters of All Time: ‘The Avengers’

Image Credit: Marvel
Iron Man, Captain America, The Hulk, Thor, the Black Widow, and Hawkeye joined forces to battle evil (otherwise known as Loki) in this 2012 Marvel film that incited mixed reaction from fans and critics alike. Could director Joss Whedon convincingly weave multiple superhero storylines? Would the ensemble cast of heroes conjure up bad memories of bicker-filled family reunions? Or would it be a feel-good film about the fantastic nature of the good guys?

Skeptics wondered whether a film combining so many heroes would work, but Whedon packed in scene after scene that left audiences craving more and cemented America's fascination with comic book movies. Sure, there were the flashy special effects and sleek superhero suits, but there were a lot of elements that set The Avengers apart and made it simultaneously the highest-grossing film of 2012 and one of the biggest American cinematic success stories. It's No. 16 on our list of the top 20 Best Summer Blockbusters of All Time, and the formula that proved to be so successful for The Avengers has helped make Marvel films No. 1 time and time again since.

Rank: 16

Release Date: May 4, 2012

The Competition: By getting ahead of the typical Memorial Day action releases, Disney captured audiences hungry for a popcorn flick when the only options were limited releases like The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel and horror flick Mother's Day. It took another film with dudes in suits — the May 25 release of Men In Black 3 — to take down The Avengers' back-to-back blockbuster weekends.

Box Office: $623 million domestic ($207 million opening weekend); $1.5 billion worldwide.

Positive reviews helped the film exceed studio and analyst expectations. The Avengers debuted to a massive $207 million, out-earning previous opening-weekend record-holder Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 ($169.2 million and our No. 17 all-time Summer Blockbuster). The film broke a handful of other records too: It reached $150 million in two days; became the fastest film to pass $300 million, in a mere nine days; and became the third-highest earning film worldwide right behind Titanic and Avatar. Perhaps most notably, The Avengers was the highest-grossing film of 2012, followed by The Dark Knight Rises ($448.1 million) and The Hunger Games ($408 million). The film — the first to be released by the Disney-acquired Marvel Studios — also shattered opening-weekend box office records in countries as far-flung as Malaysia, Hong Kong, and the United Arab Emirates.

What EW said: "In terms of storytelling, The Avengers is for the most part a highly functional, banged-together vehicle that runs on synthetic franchise fuel. Yet the grand finale of CGI action, set in the streets of New York, is — in every sense — smashing. True, it wouldn't be out of place in a Michael Bay movie, but no Transformer was ever as transfixing as this leaping, flying, pummeling superteam. It makes you eager to see what they'll do next, now that they've defeated a threat even bigger than their egos. B+" — Owen Gleiberman

Cultural Impact Then: Simply put, The Avengers was more than just sky worms and slick action sequences. Instead, the word "avenge" took on a whole new meaning when presented in a smart, tightly knit storyline that allowed the good guys to have fun and come into their own as full-fledged personalities. The success of The Avengers also gave Whedon a super-status in Hollywood, something his previous projects hadn't afforded him. Following the film's release, Marvel offered Whedon a three-year contract, ensuring the ongoing creative contributions of a bona fide A-lister respected by studio execs and comic book geeks alike.

Cultural Staying Power: This super-size film redefined the comic book genre by veering away from the usual action film formula and taking on deeper, smarter topics — like self-sacrifice, determination, self-awareness, feminism, and loss. Mammoth "save the day" moments will always be a fixture in comic book reboots, but thanks to The Avengers, so will a wink at a deeper type of drama often reserved for different genres.

Its commercial and financial success also helped bankroll subsequent Marvel offerings like Iron Man 3, Thor: The Dark World, and Captain America: The Winter Soldier, prompting execs over at rival studio Warner Bros. - DC Entertainment to rethink their action-flick offerings. Agent Coulson's jaw-dropping death sequence in The Avengers also spawned the first-ever Marvel universe television series, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D, which premiered on ABC in September. And the fun isn't over just yet: A Whedon-directed sequel titled The Avengers: Age of Ultron is scheduled for theatrical release on May 1, 2015.
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