Tuesday, 29 April 2014

Oklahoma inmate dies after 'botched' lethal injection

Lockett's execution was halted after 20 minutes

A death row inmate in Oklahoma died of a heart attack after his execution was halted because the lethal injection of three drugs appeared to have been botched.

Clayton Lockett, 38, experienced a vein failure which prevented the deadly drug cocktail from working properly.

The execution was halted after 20 minutes, during which he writhed and shook uncontrollably, US media report.

The execution of fellow inmate Charles Warner has been postponed.

A spokesman for the Oklahoma Department of Corrections told US media that Lockett had died of a heart attack following injection of three lethal drugs.

"We believe that a vein was blown and the drugs weren't working as they were designed to. The director ordered a halt to the execution," corrections department spokesman Jerry Massie said.

Prison officials pulled a curtain across the view of witnesses when it became apparent that something had gone wrong.

"He was conscious and blinking, licking his lips even after the process began. He then began to seize," Associated Press news agency reporter Bailey Elise McBride tweeted from the scene.

"This was botched, and it was difficult to watch," said David Autry, one of Lockett's lawyers. ‏

Warner, 46, had been scheduled to be put to death in the same room two hours later in a rare double execution.

Lockett was sentenced to death for the 1999 shooting of a 19-year-old woman. Warner was convicted for the 1997 murder and rape of an 11-month-old girl.

'Untried' drug combinations

The two men had unsuccessfully challenged an Oklahoma state law that blocks officials from revealing - even in court - the identities of the companies supplying the drugs used to sedate inmates, paralyse their respiratory systems and stop their hearts.

The state maintains the law is necessary to protect the suppliers from legal action and harassment.

Lockett and Warner argued it was necessary for the men to learn the name of the suppliers in order to ensure the quality of the drugs that would be used to kill them and to be certain that they had been obtained legally.

In March a trial court ruled in their favour, but the state's highest court reversed that decision last week, ruling that "the plaintiffs have no more right to the information they requested than if they were being executed in the electric chair".

In recent years US states have had increasing problems in trying to obtain drugs used in executions, amid an embargo by European pharmaceutical firms.

Some have turned to untried combinations of drugs or have sought to obtain the drugs custom-made from compounding pharmacies.
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Selena Gomez about the selfies PICTURES

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Kim & Khloe Kardashian as Gang Members! PHOTO

The sweet families is taking some time to have some fun, Kim and Khloe Kardashian did some mudding on Saturday (April 26).

The duo donned pink and black bandanas as they sailed down the terrain in Instagram shots from the day.

The photos are captioned "We Mud Run This Town" and "Keeks & Kokes #MudRun."

On Friday, Kim spent time with her other sister Kourtney. The twosome went out to lunch at Villa.

Photo credit:Instagram
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Justin Bieber’s Trouble At LAX Customs!Video

Justin had some problems at LAX Customs and after he finally got out he wasn't very talkative.
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Selena Gomez about the selfies PICTURES

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Wikipedia edit from government computer added Muslim insult

Its linked to IP addresses used by government computers were made over the course of several years
The charity that represents Wikipedia in the UK has condemned edits made from government computers after more incidents of vandalism emerged.

The BBC has discovered that the phrase "all Muslims are terrorists" was added to a page about veils.

Another edit deleted text in Cherie Blair's entry about the flat-buying scandal that made headlines in 2002.

The Liverpool Echo last week revealed that insults had been added to the entry for the Hillsborough Disaster.

Stevie Benton, from Wikimedia UK, told the BBC: "We find this kind of vandalism appalling."

Wikimedia UK is the local arm of the global Wikipedia Foundation, the charity set up by the online encyclopaedia's founder Jimmy Wales to support the thousands of volunteers who edit and maintain Wikipedia.

"Wikipedia is the encyclopaedia that anyone can edit," Mr Benton added.

"This openness has led to an enormous reference work of great value. While vandalism does occasionally happen we are grateful to the many thousands of volunteers who write, edit and organise the content."

In an email, the Cabinet Office reiterated its statement on the matter.

"The amendments made to Wikipedia are sickening. The behaviour is in complete contravention of the Civil Service Code. It is entirely unacceptable."

It added: "The Civil Service Code applies at all times, and we take breaches very seriously. We have already announced an investigation to examine offensive edits to Wikipedia, and will look at other concerns raised."

'Spells evil'

The BBC found more than a hundred instances of inappropriate editing, vandalism and deletion made by computers accessing Wikipedia through the two IP addresses known to be used by government machines.

A change made to the entry for "veil" in October 2006 added: "It should be noted that the word Veil, when the letters rearraged [sic], spells evil.


Large parts of an entry about Cherie Blair were deleted
"Since the Veil is mostly worn by Muslims, and all Muslims are terrorists (with the argument for this being that all terrorists have been Muslim), this fact should be dually [sic] noted by all."

The comment was removed by a Wikipedia volunteer six minutes later.

Nasima Begum, a spokeswoman for the Muslim Council of Britain, told the BBC: "It is these types of attitudes that create an unnecessary climate of fear and hostility.

"It is shocking and cause for great concern that inflammatory comments like these should be sent from someone within the government."

Removed paragraphs

As well as vandalism, large passages of text were deleted.

In 2002, Cherie Blair made a public apology after it had emerged she had bought two flats, at a discounted price, with help from convicted fraudster Peter Foster.

Paragraphs about the incident in Mrs Blair's Wikipedia entry were removed by a government PC in October 2005.

Later, a different user would revert the changes, arguing that they were "relevant to the subject's reputation".

The BBC was unable to reach Mrs Blair to discuss the matter. There is no indication that she had any knowledge of the changes.

Other edits made by government machines included:

In the entry for the London bombings, links to websites detailing popular conspiracy theories were added.
The article for former prime minister Tony Blair was deleted in its entirety and replaced with the words "he should be assassinated".
Homophobic insults were added to the entry for newspaper columnist Richard Littlejohn.
Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver, who has worked for the government on healthy eating initiatives, also had homophobic insults added to his page.
Mr Benton, from Wikimedia UK, praised the work of Wikipedia editors in correcting the changes.

"Edits of this nature are removed very quickly by the volunteers who write and edit Wikipedia," he said. "Often in a matter of minutes."

Edits made by government computers have come under close scrutiny following the Liverpool Echo's report showing how insulting remarks about Liverpool fans were added to the page detailing the Hillsborough Disaster.

The changes were identified by analysing edits made by two IP addresses - 195.92.40.49 and 62.25.106.209 - known to be connected to the Government Secure Intranet (GSI).

The GSI is used to allow government machines to connect to the internet securely.

Investigation

The Cabinet Office has admitted that, due to the nature of its computer network, it would be almost impossible to track down who is responsible for the offensive remarks.

A spokesman said: "We are exhausting every option. Anyone with information should contact the Cabinet Office."

Unlike most people's home internet connections, where an IP address can sometimes be used to pinpoint one particular computer, large organisations tend to mask individual machines for security reasons.

It is also possible to "spoof" IP addresses to make the source of a connection look like it is coming from somewhere else. However, several of the offensive messages were made prior to the government IP addresses being disclosed in 2008.

Government machines were also used to vandalise, or "troll", on several pages, including:

In the entry about indie band The Libertines: "[T]he more astute critics correctly identify the band as scum", and added a remark about lead singer Pete Doherty's drug use.

Extra

Comments about footballer Wayne Rooney that said he was "currently knocking off 'queen chav' Coleen McGlochlin".

The deletion of the entire post for Irish politician Christopher Byrne, replacing it with simply "is a sexy beast".

Changing the entry for BBC presenter Peter Levy to list "Adolf Hitler" as an ex-partner.

Describing Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger as being "made of clay".
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Amanda Knox 'delivered fatal blow to Meredith Kercher'

The case against Raffaele Sollecito (L) and Amanda Knox (R) has received much publicity in Europe and the US
The Italian judges who reinstated the guilty verdict against Amanda Knox say she delivered the fatal knife blow to UK student Meredith Kercher.

Explaining their ruling, the judges said Knox and her Italian ex-boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, killed Miss Kercher after a violent argument.

Knox and Sollecito were originally convicted of the murder in 2007.

They were acquitted on appeal in 2011, but that ruling was overturned in January.

Knox, who is currently in the US, was sentenced to 28 years and six months. Her former boyfriend received 25 years.

Both had pleaded not guilty.

'Fought over money'

Explaining its reasoning on Tuesday, the appeals court in Florence said the victim's wounds indicated multiple aggressors.

The judges said they believe both Knox and Sollecito wielded knives, as another man, Rudy Guede, held the victim down and committed a sexual assault.

But it was Knox who "delivered the only mortal blow", striking Meredith Kercher with a kitchen knife, presiding judge Alessandro Nencini concluded.

The prosecution had originally argued that Miss Kercher was killed in sex game that spiralled out of control.

But in its explanation, the appeals court agreed with a later theory that she was killed after a violent quarrel.

It said Knox and Miss Kercher had fought over money on the night of the killing.

In a statement on Tuesday, Knox said the court's reasoning was "not supported by any credible evidence or logic".

Both Knox and Sollecito are expected to appeal against the latest decision.

The trial will now go back to Italy's highest court, the Court of Cassation, which could uphold or overturn the verdict.

If it upholds it, officials are expected to begin the lengthy process to extradite Knox from the US, where she returned on her release from prison in 2011.

Meanwhile, Guede is already serving a 16-year prison sentence after being convicted of Miss Kercher's murder at an earlier trial.
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Azerbaijan's Leyla Yunus, human rights defender, held

Leyla Yunus has fought against human rights abuses in Azerbaijan for years
Azerbaijan's most prominent human rights campaigner has been detained with her husband while trying to leave the country.

Leyla Yunus and her husband Arif Yunus, an academic, were hoping to board a flight from the capital Baku to Doha in Qatar, but were held at the airport.

They were released after a night in custody. But her passport was withheld.

Her arrest comes amid a crackdown on human rights activists and journalists in the oil-rich ex-Soviet state.

Azerbaijan has been ruled by the Aliyev family since 1993, soon after the break-up of the Soviet Union.

'Spying' arrest

Mrs Yunus had been pressing for reconciliation between Azerbaijan and its next-door neighbour and bitter rival Armenia.

Earlier this month journalist Rauf Mirkadyrov, who worked with her on the Armenian project, was arrested and accused of spying for Armenia.

Mrs Yunus predicted last week that she faced imminent arrest.

On Tuesday morning, after her overnight detention, she was taken back to her home but refused to let police search it without a warrant. Amid the tension her husband fell ill and was taken to hospital.

Doctors told the BBC Azeri service he had suffered from hypertension and was stable.

'Like the Middle Ages'

Mrs Yunus told journalists outside her house that during her 11-hour detention she was not allowed to use the toilet, and when finally allowed to go it was only in the presence of a male police officer.

"It's like torture, like the Middle Ages," she said. "I haven't slept for a whole day."

She was later released, but her office was searched.

Azerbaijan has been repeatedly criticised by human rights organisations for stifling dissent, jailing opponents and obstructing democracy.

Nevertheless, it is preparing to assume the chairmanship of the council of ministers of the Council of Europe, Europe's top human rights body.

Ilham Aliyev was elected for a third term as president in October, though he did not even run a campaign, in a vote opponents said was undemocratic and fraudulent. Azerbaijan said the vote was fair.
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No green thumb needed: Niwa simplifies hyroponics with your smartphone

Ideally, we'd all be able to grow our own produce and have fresh food whenever we want it, but the unfortunate truth is that if you live in an urban area and don't have your own patch of soil, cultivating a garden is easier said than done. Sure, you could always grow stuff in pots inside your house, but if you've got a limited amount of square footage to work with in your pad, growing more than a couple sprigs of lemongrass is pretty tough.

Niwa, an upcoming product from a UK startup of the same name, seeks to solve this problem — not only by bringing hydroponic gardening into your living room, but also by making the process easier and more efficient than ever.

For those of you who may be unfamiliar, hydroponic gardening is a technique for growing plants without soil; instead they're supplied with nutrient-rich water to promote growth. Normally, these kinds of growing setups require a fair amount of space, knowledge, and effort to maintain, but Niwa simplifies the process, and shrinks the entire setup down into a self-contained pod that does most of the hard work for you.

Using the accompanying smartphone app, you can control a wide range of environmental variables inside Niwa, including temperature, humidity, light, and airflow. The system's hardware is paired with the smartphone app, so you can either customize the variables on your own, or simply designate what you're growing and let the app set the right values for you. Once you're all set up, you can check in and understand your plant's progress and adjust settings from anywhere in the world.

It's definitely not the first entry into the "smart planter" category, but it's easily one of the most advanced we've seen so far. Unfortunately it's not available for purchase or pre-order at this point, but its creators say they plan to launch a Kickstarter campaign within the next few months to get the project off the ground.
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This pocket-sized molecular spectrometer tells you the chemical makeup of foods

Tel Aviv-based startup Consumer Physics pulled the curtain back today on its first product: a tiny hand-held molecular sensor called Scio. The device, which Consumer Physics has launched a Kickstarter project for, would allow users to scan practically anything –foods, drinks, pills, plants, and more– and get detailed information on the object's chemical makeup in just a few seconds.

It might sound like science fiction, but it's actually built around an age-old method of materials analysis known as near-infrared spectroscopy. Basically, this process involves shining a near-infrared light onto the surface of a given material, which causes the molecules to vibrate and bounce back light in their own unique way. This reflected light is then collected and passed through a spectrometer (think of it like a prism) that separates the light out into all the different wavelengths it contains. By analyzing the unique optical signature of the scanned material, it's possible to determine what it's made out of. 

Near IR-spectroscopy has been used by scientists for decades, but up until Scio, spectrometers were very large, and prohibitively expensive. To bring the technology out of the lab and into the hands of consumers, Consumer Physics has spent the past few years shrinking the technology down and making it easier to use. In addition to the tiny, keychain-sized scanner, the company also designed an accompanying smartphone app to help you make sense of the readings it takes.

To deliver scan analysis information in real time, Scio communicates the spectrum to your smartphone app via Bluetooth, which it then forwards to a cloud-based service. From there, advanced algorithms analyze the spectrum, and delivers information regarding the analyzed sample back to your smartphone within seconds.

It's not just limited to food and drinks either. Technically, Scio can be used to determine the molecular makeup of anything except metals, so it has an extremely broad range of potential applications. Need to determine the CO2 content of your home-brewed beer? Want to know the ripeness of an avocado at the grocery store? Want to check to make sure the drink you left sitting at the bar hasn't been tampered with? Scio could make that happen. Consumer Physics is even releasing a software development kit, so third-party developers will be able to create their own applications for the device.

Oddly enough, this isn't the first time a device like this has hit the crowd-funding scene. You might remember a similar device called TellSpec from Indiegogo late last year. Both devices rely on molecular spectroscopy to scan foods — the difference is that Scio is actually past the R&D stage. Consumer Physics has already developed multiple working prototypes, and will supposedly be ready to ship to early backers as soon as December of this year.

If you're quick enough, you can lock down a developer kit right now for the early-bird price of $150, or pre-order the finished consumer version for $199. Head over to Kickstarter for more info.
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Nissan GT-R heads back to its old stomping grounds: the 2014 Nurburgring 24-hour race

The Nissan GT-R received much of its considerable fame beating more-expensive supercars around Germany's infamous Nurburgring Nordschliefe racetrack.

Now, Nissan is bringing the car known as "Godzilla" back to its old stomping grounds for the 2014 Nurburging 24-hour endurance race.

The race, held June 21-22, is exactly as grueling as it sounds: a 24-hour marathon on one of the world's most grueling tracks.

Leading the charged will be a group of drivers associated with Nissan GT Academy, a competition that takes Gran Turismo video game players and pits them against each other in a battle for a spot on an actual Nissan race team.

GT Academy Germany judge Nick Heidfeld will drive the No. 80 GT-R NISMO GT3, in honor of Nissan's 80th anniversary. He will be teamed with 2013 GT Academy Germany winner Florian Strauss – in only the fourth international race of his career – former winner Lucas Ordonez, and Alex Buncombe.

A second GT-R will be raced primarily by NISMO affiliates from Japan. The No. 30 car will be driven by Japan Super GT racers Michael Krumm and Kazuki Hoshino, teamed with Nissan 'Ring expert Tetsuya Tanaka and NISMO Global Exchange driver Katsumasa Chiyo.

The NISMO Global Exchange is a Nissan program set up to pair drivers with race teams around the world.

In addition, there will be a third GT-R driven by Gran Turismo creator Kazunori Yamauchi and 2009 GT Academy winner Jordan Tresson.

The Nurburgring has been the sight of many GT-R triumphs, including a 7-minute, 8.679-second lap by the 2015 GT-R NISMO that Nissan calls a record for a "volume production car."

Will the GT-R have another impressive outing this June? With a new GT-R reportedly on the horizon, the current R35 version only has a few more chances to shine.
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Trident’s Iceni diesel sports car can do 0-60 in 3.7 seconds and 2,000 miles on a tank

As manufacturers, consumers, and governments try to make performance cars greener, a lot of attention has been paid to plug-in hybrid and battery-electric sports cars. But what about a diesel?

Diesels may routinely win the 24 Hours of Le Mans, but they haven't really been accepted in performance road cars. The British Trident Iceni hopes to buck that trend, adding new body styles to its proposed diesel sports car.

The Iceni was unveiled in 2012 as a convertible, and is now joined by the Iceni Magna fastback and Iceni Venturer shooting brake. Regardless of the body style, the Iceni's styling is classic sports car. This is no Volkswagen Jetta TDI.

Of course, the main selling point of the Iceni isn't its styling, but its diesel powertrain. It consists of a turbocharged 6.6-liter V8, connected to a six-speed automatic transmission.

With 395 horsepower and 700 pound-feet of torque on tap, the Iceni will do 0 to 60 mph in 3.7 seconds, and reach a top speed of over 190 mph, according to Trident.

Yet the diesel engine should also make the Iceni incredibly fuel efficient. Trident estimates its cruising range at around 2,000 miles.

Trident is currently taking orders for all three body styles of this best-of-both-worlds sports cars, with prices starting at around 96,000 British pounds (around $161,000 at current exchange rates). While it hasn't built any cars yet, Trident says the Iceni will be available globally.
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Bayern Munich 0-4 Real Madrid agg

Real Madrid crash out Bayer Munich in UEFA Champions League.

FT 90' +3
HT 0-3
agg 0-5

UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE
Date: Tuesday, 29th April
Kick off: 19:45
Venue: Allianz Arena

Key events
Real MadridGoal
Ramos 16'

Real MadridGoal
Ramos 20'

Real MadridGoal
Ronaldo 34'

Real MadridGoal
Ronaldo 89'

Close Match details

Real Madrid sailed into their first Champions League final since 2002 with an astonishingly one-sided away victory over holders Bayern Munich.
Sergio Ramos scored two headers from set-pieces before Cristiano Ronaldo rounded off a counter-attack to all but end the game as a contest.

Ronaldo added a late free-kick for his record 16th goal of the European campaign to seal a 5-0 aggregate win.
Real will face either Chelsea or Atletico Madrid in the final in Lisbon.

The defeat was a humiliation for Bayern, who last year thrashed Barcelona 7-0 on aggregate in the semi-finals before overcoming fellow Germans Borussia Dortmund to lift the trophy for the fifth time.

And the result will increase the pressure on manager Pep Guardiola amid the growing feeling that, despite winning the Bundesliga in record time, he has not delivered the progress his employers were expecting.

The future of the former Barca coach will be of little concern to Real, who now have the chance to add to their record haul of nine European Cups, 12 years after Zinedine Zidane's volley delivered their last triumph at Hampden Park.

With Zidane now watching from the Real bench as a member of Carlo Ancelotti's coaching staff, the Spaniards started the game with verve and purpose and were swiftly on the way to their first ever victory over Bayern in Munich at the 10th attempt.

Gareth Bale had already gone close with a long-range effort after Manuel Neuer's weak punch when a Luka Modric corner from the right located the unmarked Ramos, who powered a header past the Germany goalkeeper.

Shortly afterwards, Real doubled their lead via a near-identical goal as Angel Di Maria's free-kick was flicked on by Pepe, and Ramos was once again on hand to head in.

With Bayern's usually fervent fans stunned into silence, Real added a third on the break. Benzema's hooked pass sent Bale racing clear and the Welshman squared for Ronaldo to slot in his 48th goal of the season.

The only low for Real in an otherwise perfect first period was Xabi Alonso's yellow card for a foul on Bastian Schweinsteiger, which will rule him out of the final on 24 May.

With Bayern needing a near-impossible five goals, the second half was predictably flat.

Arjen Robben curled wide from the edge of the area, Franck Ribery drew a rare save from Iker Casillas with a low drive and substitute Mario Gotze could not keep his shot below the bar after turning sharply in the box.

And Bayern suffered a final ignominy in the 89th minute when Ronaldo curled a 20-yard free-kick under a jumping wall to kick-start the Real celebrations.

The victory sets up a mouth-watering final either way, with Real poised to face either former boss Jose Mourinho should Chelsea make it through, or city rivals Atletico.

That tie is delicately poised at 0-0 going into Wednesday night's second leg at Stamford Bridge.
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MH370 Searchers dispute company's wreckage claim

Company: These images may be MH370

Near Perth, Australia (CNN) - A private company declared that it has found what it believes is wreckage of a plane in the ocean, but leaders of the search for the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 are dismissing the claim.


The reasons for the skepticism are obvious -- the site where GeoResonance says it found the wreckage, in the Bay of Bengal, is several thousand miles away from the current search area in the southern Indian Ocean.

The Joint Agency Coordination Centre, which is coordinating the multinational search, dismissed the claim.

"The Australian-led search is relying on information from satellite and other data to determine the missing aircraft's location," the JACC said.

"The location specified by the GeoResonance report is not within the search arc derived from this data. The joint international team is satisfied that the final resting place of the missing aircraft is in the southerly portion of the search arc."

Malaysian acting Transportation Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said Malaysia "is working with its international partners to assess the credibility of this information."

GeoResonance said it analyzes super-weak electromagnetic fields captured by airborne multispectral images.

"The company is not declaring this is MH370, however it should be investigated," GeoResonance said in a statement.

The company's director, David Pope, said he did not want to go public with the information at first, but his information was disregarded.

"We're a large group of scientists, and we were being ignored, and we thought we had a moral obligation to get our findings to the authorities," he told CNN's "New Day" on Tuesday.

GeoResonance's technology was created to search for nuclear, biological and chemical weaponry under the ocean or beneath the earth in bunkers, Pope said.

The company began its search four days after the plane went missing and sent officials initial findings on March 31, Pope said. It followed up with a full report on April 15.

By going public, the company says it hopes it will spur officials to take its claim seriously.

Malaysian authorities contacted GeoResonance on Tuesday and were "very interested, very excited" about the findings, Pope said.

Inmarsat, the company whose satellite had the last known contact with MH370, remains "very confident" in its analysis that the plane ended up in the southern Indian Ocean, a source close to the MH370 investigation told CNN.

The Inmarsat analysis is "based on testable physics and mathematics," the source said, and has been reviewed by U.S., British and Malaysian authorities as well as an independent satellite company.

Aerial search ends

After seven weeks of intense but fruitless searching, the international air effort to find the plane is over. But some ships will stay on the Indian Ocean to gather any debris that might surface.

More than 600 military personnel from at least seven countries solemnly posed in front of search planes Tuesday for a commemorative photo. Some traded military patches and mulled over their disappointment in not finding the Boeing 777.

Also on Tuesday, relatives of missing passengers heard new details from officials, including audio recordings from the plane that had never been released to the public before.

Searchers dispute company's wreckage claim

The final words between the cockpit and a control tower weren't extraordinary. But after 52 days in limbo, families say they're finally starting to get some of the answers they've been looking for.

More intense underwater search

Most of the international air crews will leave the Royal Australian Air Force Base Pearce, near Perth, over the next few days.

The likelihood of finding any debris on the ocean's surface is "highly unlikely," Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said Monday. By now, most of the debris is probably waterlogged and has probably sunk, he said.

So officials are moving on to the next phase: a more intense underwater search that will use private contractors and could cost about $56 million.

Crews will now scour a much larger area of the ocean floor -- 60,000 square kilometers. The process could take at least six to eight months, officials said.

The Bluefin-21 underwater probe will continue scanning the ocean floor. But the submersible couldn't search Tuesday because of weather and very high seas.

No one knows exactly what happened to Flight 370, which disappeared on March 8 with 239 people on board. The plane was headed from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, to Beijing.

New details for relatives

Relatives of Chinese passengers have been furious about the perceived lack of information given by Malaysian authorities.

But on Tuesday, Malaysian officials briefed scores of family members in Beijing and played never-before-released audio of the plane's final chatter with a control tower.

"Malaysia three seven zero contact Ho Chi Minh 120.9, good night," says a voice identified by Malaysian officials as that of a radar controller in Kuala Lumpur.

"Good night Malaysian three seven zero," answers a male voice believed to be a crew member on board.

Officials also showed family members maps of the flight's route, including a questionable turn at Penang over the Strait of Malacca. That turn sent the plane veering far off course.

Malaysia Airlines representative Subas Chandran said the plane probably ran out of fuel about seven-and-a-half hours into the flight.

Such details, while sobering, were welcomed by relatives.

"They are making progress," said Jimmy Wang, a member of the families' committee aimed at seeking answers.
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Ukraine crisis: Pro-Russia activists take Luhansk offices

The BBC's David Stern said it was the second building in the city to be taken over.

Pro-Russia activists have stormed several official buildings in the eastern Ukrainian city of Luhansk.

They seized the regional government's headquarters and prosecutor's office before opening fire with automatic weapons at the main police station.

Interim President Olexander Turchynov criticised local police for their "inaction" and "criminal treachery".

The US accused Russia of seeking to "change the security landscape" of Eastern and Central Europe.

In a speech at the Atlantic Council in Washington, Secretary of State John Kerry told the Kremlin to "leave Ukraine in peace" and warned: "Nato territory is inviolable we will defend every single inch of it."

In other developments on Tuesday:

A conference in London heard allegations that Ukraine's ousted President Viktor Yanukovych and his associates may have stolen assets worth tens of billions of dollars
Ukraine's Interior Minister Arsen Avakov told BBC Russian that voting in next month's presidential election may not be able to take place in all regions because of the unrest
'No control'

Moscow has said it has no intention of invading eastern Ukraine, where pro-Russia activists have seized government buildings in more than a dozen towns and cities.

Until now, only the local office of the State Security Service (SBU) in Luhansk, a city of 465,000 people less than 30km (20 miles) from the Russian border, had been targeted.

But on Tuesday afternoon, hundreds of people shouting "Russia, Russia" gathered outside the headquarters of the regional government to demand a referendum on greater autonomy.


Pro-Russia activists reportedly opened fire at Luhansk's police headquarters to force officers to surrender

Earlier, men armed with sticks and metal bars stormed the regional administration's headquarters

A small group broke windows to gain access to the building, which was not protected

Once inside, they opened the building's main entrance to allow in demonstrators gathered outside

Inside the courtyard, the activists found dozens of security personnel in riot gear

The Ukrainian flag was replaced by a Russian tricolour and the flag of Donetsk People's Republic
A group of men armed with sticks and metal bars broke into the building. They pulled down the Ukrainian flag flying from the roof and replaced it with a Russian tricolour and the flag of Donetsk People's Republic.

Crowds of pro-Russia activists then overran the building housing the prosecutor's office before attacking the headquarters of the interior ministry's police force.

Hours later, an AFP news agency journalist reported that officers had abandoned the police station and been taken away in buses, as an angry crowd shouted at them to "Go home".


Activists also went into a regional television station, but decided not to take it over after they were allowed to make a live broadcast.

Following the takeovers, President Turchynov demanded the dismissal of the police chiefs in Luhansk and the other eastern city of Donetsk.

"The overwhelming majority of law enforcement bodies in the east are incapable of fulfilling their duty to defend our citizens," he said.

Pro-Russia activists control much of the neighbouring Donetsk region.

Sanctions

Eastern Ukraine, which has a large Russian-speaking population, was a stronghold for former President Yanukovych before he was overthrown by protesters in February.

The interim government has rejected the pro-Russian activists' demands for greater autonomy, fearing they could lead to the break-up of the country or more regions being annexed by Russia, as happened with Crimea last month.

Pro-Russian activists continue to detain some 40 people, including seven military observers linked to the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) seized last week.

On Tuesday evening, the self-styled "mayor" of the town of Sloviansk, where the observers are being held, said "good progress" had been made at talks with OSCE representatives.

Vyacheslav Ponomaryov had earlier warned that they would only be released if the EU dropped its sanctions against separatist leaders.

Earlier, the EU published a fresh list of 15 individuals facing travel bans and asset freezes.


Sloviansk resident: "I think that it should end in a peaceful way"
It included the chief of the Russian General Staff, the head of Russian military intelligence, and a Russian deputy prime minister, as well as separatist leaders in Crimea, Luhansk and Donetsk.

On Monday, the US announced sanctions against seven individuals and 17 companies it said were linked to President Putin's "inner circle".

President Putin warned that new sanctions might have an impact on the operations of Western companies in Russia.

"If this continues, we will of course have to think about how they work in the Russian Federation, including in key sectors of the Russian economy such as energy," he said, adding that there were "neither Russian instructors, nor special units, nor troops" in Ukraine.

US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew said the sanctions, first imposed by Washington and Brussels after Crimea was annexed, had so far caused "a quite substantial deterioration in Russia's already weak economy".
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Turkey to seek cleric Fethullah Gulen's extradition

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (left) and Fethullah Gulen were once close allies

Turkey is to start extradition proceedings against US-based cleric Fethullah Gulen, PM Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said.

Mr Gulen, a former ally of the prime minister, has been accused by Mr Erdogan of using his supporters to try to topple him.

The cleric denies mounting a campaign against him.

Turkey's government has faced a string of corruption scandals and rights groups accuse it of authoritarianism.

Speaking at parliament after meeting with deputies from his Justice and Development Party (AKP) party on Tuesday, Mr Erdogan confirmed the extradition process "will begin", reports say.

'Model partner'

The Turkish PM was speaking hours after an interview with US broadcaster PBS, in which he said he hoped the US would deport Mr Gulen and send him back to Turkey.

It was his first interview with foreign media since his party claimed victory in local elections last month.

In the interview, Mr Erdogan said he hoped Washington, as a "model partner", would deliver on the issue.

"At least they should deport him," he added.

Mr Gulen, 74, has lived in self-imposed exile in the US state of Pennsylvania since 1997.

He has many supporters in the police and judiciary, and has denounced moves to shut down an investigation into corruption allegations levelled against several of the prime minister's allies.

His teachings have inspired the Hizmet ("Service") movement, which is believed to have millions of followers spread across over 150 countries.

Hizmet promotes a tolerant form of Islam, emphasising education, altruism and hard work.

Mr Erdogan has accused the movement of being behind a series of wiretaps and social media leaks allegedly exposing major corruption of figures with ties to the government.

Thousands of alleged Hizmet sympathisers in the police and judiciary have since been demoted or reassigned to other jobs.

Over the past year, Turkey has been convulsed by mass protests against Mr Erdogan's ten-year rule and the corruption allegations.
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Putin hugs German ex-Chancellor Schroeder at party

Mr Schroeder stands next to Mr Putin (centre), who has his back to the camera.

Germany's former Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder has hugged Russian President Vladimir Putin in St Petersburg, despite the imposition of more Western sanctions on Russia.

Mr Schroeder has long had close ties to Mr Putin and runs a pipeline venture bringing Russian gas to Germany.

Their embrace was photographed as Mr Schroeder celebrated his 70th birthday.

He held his Russian party as Nato states accused Russia of helping pro-Putin militias in eastern Ukraine.

Russia's state monopoly Gazprom pumps gas to Germany via the Nordstream pipeline under the Baltic Sea, and Gazprom chief executive Alexei Miller was reportedly among Mr Schroeder's guests at the Yusupov Palace in St Petersburg.

Three German officers are among seven military observers from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) currently held captive by pro-Russian rebels in eastern Ukraine. The German government has demanded their release.

The OSCE sent in unarmed observers after the rebels seized Ukrainian official buildings.

Criticism

German media commentators criticised Mr Schroeder on Tuesday for his closeness to Mr Putin.

The Russian leader speaks fluent German, having served as a KGB secret service officer in communist East Germany during the Cold War.

Mr Schroeder was chancellor from 1998 to 2005. He used to lead the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD), who are now in coalition with Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU).

Roland Nelles of Spiegel Online said the former chancellor "apparently forgets that one must still act responsibly for one's country as a former government leader".

"It would help if the ex-chancellor could use his influence to bring some sense to his friend Putin. Perhaps he is doing that too, but unfortunately you don't get any sense of that whatsoever. Pity," he wrote.

In Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung another commentator, Thomas Holl, said "the pictures of a laughing Schroeder, being hugged and cuddled by his friend Vladimir in the former tsarist palace, while German army soldiers are held hostage by fanatical Putin admirers, look macabre".

A senior German government official quoted by Reuters news agency said Mr Schroeder "does not represent the German government" and he "left active politics some time ago".
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This unofficial Mercedes-Benz U-Class concept should be the next-gen Maybach

To the chagrin of rappers and despotic dictators (Simon Cowell) everywhere, Mercedes-Benz killed its Maybach line last year.

Recently, though, the German automaker has been playing with ideas of rebirthing the brand with a stretched-out version of its new S-Class.

I think, though, there's a better solution. It's called the U-Class and its from the mind of Scott Wu Kaiser, a transportation design student at Art Center College of Design.

Kaiser created the U-Class – named for the German word "üppig", which means "sumptuous" and "lavish" – to compete with the German-owned Bentley and Rolls-Royce brands.

"Mercedes-Benz will need to secure their dominant position in the full-size luxury segment while entering the higher priced market," Kaiser's design presentation reads. "In order to achieve this goal, the next generation S-Class will be designed and priced to directly compete with the Audi A8 and BMW 7 Series. A new class of vehicle called the U-Class will enter into the higher-end market."

I think Kaiser is dead-on. While the S-Class is a world-class luxury sedan, it doesn't quite compete with the much more exclusive Bentley and Rolls-Royce models. After all, a $250,000 S-Class is still an S-Class that started life as a $92,900 land yacht.

Just ook at the front end of that thing. I love how Kaiser brought in elements of vintage Mercedes models, melded with a modern profile and rear-end.

Powered by a 6.0-liter twin-turbocharged V12, which I should mention isn't a currently existing Mercedes motor, the U-Class would be one mean rear-drive luxury sedan.

In fact, it wouldn't just be huge on power; the U-Class would be longer than the Bentley Flying Spur but just a bit shorter than the Rolls-Royce Ghost.

What do you think of the U-Class? Tell us in the comments below.

(Photo credit: Scott Wu Kaiser Design)
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Saying farewell to the world’s strangest car: the Mitsuoka Orochi

As an automotive journalist and a lover of cars, one of the things that I lament the most is the loss of strangeness in the automotive industry. Even Citroen, a bastion of odd decisions, has reformed itself. Now it looks like we are losing another standout of oddness, as the strangest looking production car I've ever seen, the Mitsuoka Orochi, is being discontinued.

Made by the small and largely domestic Japanese automaker Mitsuoka, the Orochi is simply bizarre. Car designers love talking about how their cars look like animals or sculptures, but most of the time it's a stretch. The Orochi, named after a mythical dragon, definitely looks like a fish. And not a normal one either, it looks like a combination between a halibut and some sort of deep sea predator. Hell, the decorative hood vents – Orochi is mid-engined – even look like squid suckers.

The effect may not exactly be beautiful to my eyes, but I do like it. It seems like it would be more at home in an anime cartoon than the real world. And I appreciate that.

As for its mechanical underpinnings, it began life based on the Acura NSX platform. As for power, it was derived from a 233-horsepower Toyota V6. This hardly makes it a supercar. But in a country where cars are limited to 100 mph, the Orochi makes some sense. Especially when you consider that expensive cars are often made to be looked at more than driven.

Unfortunately, this dragon fish is not long for the world. According to AutoWeek the car will be going out of production after a seven-year run. I, for one, will miss knowing that you could lay down some yen for this astonishingly outlandish vehicle. I just hope that Misuoka replaces it with something that fills my need for automotive oddness. 
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2014 FIFA World Cup Review

"Enthusiasm is everything," says Brazilian soccer legend Pele in Victory, the truly ridiculous movie wherein multinational World War II POWs must play an exhibition soccer match against Nazis in order to escape. "It must be taut and vibrating like a guitar string." Pele's explaining to Sylvester Stallone and the other prisoners why exuberance, one of the defining characteristics of both broader Brazilian culture and football's role within it, is so essential to playing the game.

It should be stated up front that nothing nearly this awesome ever happens in EA Sports' 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil. No sweet matches where you crush Nazis on the pitch are played. Pele delivers no rad speeches to Sylvester Stallone. His advice, though, is practiced all throughout. It may seem like a quick and dirty licensing opportunity, arriving just seven months after FIFA 14 as a full-priced $60 game for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. Inside the guts of this game is a winning exuberance for the World Cup season and an admirable economy of features.

This is purely a World Cup experience.

2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil is a rare case of less actually being more.

For any football fans that skipped the spectacular FIFA 14 in favor of waiting for World Cup or players that did pick it up and want even more, be forewarned: this is a far more sparse package than EA Sports' perennial soccer tent pole. Gone are the many modes, individual teams from MLG or the Premiere League, and their individual replica stadiums. New York Red Bulls fans thinking they can pop this in and find Thierry Henry's card for their Ultimate Team pack should go pick up FIFA 14 instead. This is purely a World Cup experience.

In that regard, it is impressively thorough, with all 203 national teams that competed for World Cup qualification and replicas of the 12 stadiums hosting World Cup matches this summer, from Rio de Janeiro's Maracanã Stadium to Fortaleza's Costelao.

The tournament also acts as the nucleus for World Cup's variations on FIFA's core modes as well. Road to the FIFA World Cup lets you select a national team of your choosing, and take them all the through qualifying rounds, training sessions for individual players, and finally onto the tournament itself. Road to Rio de Janeiro is an online-only campaign that lets you play across the dozen Brazil venues against real world players to win the cup for yourself.

They lack the sheer range offered by FIFA 14, but the campaigns themselves aren't diminished by losing the granular simulation of global football at every level. If there's any drawback, it's that the game is more forbidding to new players. FIFA's always excellent skill games used for training are on hand, and the game does invite you to play them at the beginning of your first matches to help set the AI difficulty or control scheme. Sadly, it never does anything so elegant as dropping you directly into a match amongst stars like Lionel Messi as FIFA 14 does when you first turn it on.

The assumption seems to be that World Cup is for football diehards, but this is a game that ties into the most popular soccer event in the world, and only on consoles with the biggest install base. The experience could have benefited from a friendlier structure for absolute beginners.

World Cup makes up for those faults in a myriad of subtle ways. Captain Your Country, the stand-in for FIFA's create-a-character career, isn't dramatically different from that of the main game, but the World Cup-specific color commentary goes a long way to making it feel unique and, yes, exuberant. Listening to Andy Goldstein and Ian Darke ruminate on how insane it would be for Italy to name a new team captain right as it enters the World Cup qualifying rounds is the kind of quiet touch that elevates EA's game above the cash grab it might seem to be.

If you have FIFA 14 and want to get some World Cup action in your game, maybe wait for the price to drop.

That quiet enthusiasm holds true for the package as a whole. From the green and yellow wash of the menus to the lack of blaring licensed pop songs cluttering up the game, World Cup benefits from the absence of things like Ultimate Team. While it may not invite players into the fundamentals of play as well, it does have far fewer barriers to the action than proper FIFA games. Somewhere between the sparser, laser focus of World Cup and the absurd range of options available in the centerpiece games released every year by EA Sports is the ideal soccer game that highlights the series' spectacular field play.

Speaking of the field play, the action feels identical to that of FIFA 14 (read our review). World Cup comes with a marketing-ready blitz of bullet-pointed improvements to the field game–"New Penalty Kicks" and "Adidas Ball Physics" and "Set Piece Tactics" oh my!–but in practice, this game feels indistinguishable from last fall's game. That's no bad thing.

The teammate AI, the tactility of moving down the field, the inertia of the ball, all of it feels just as good in World Cup. EA's series remains peerless in giving you a game that feels physical and gives you dual the sensations of controlling both a team and an individual on the pitch. It should be noted, though, that it does not have the slightly improved feel offered in the Ignite engine-powered PlayStation 4 and Xbox One versions of FIFA 14. Those are the gold standard that this Xbox 360/PS3-only version of the game can't quite match.

It doesn't need to though. 2014 FIFA World Cup is a great soccer video game. Absentee modes like Ultimate Team and irritating pop soundtracks may make this a non-essential purchase for series devotees (and may make the $60 price tag seem all the more outrageous), but there's an admirable clarity in World Cup. If you have FIFA 14 and want to get some World Cup action in your game, maybe wait for the price to drop. If you just want a killer soccer video game, though, this option is taut and vibrating like a guitar string.

This game was reviewed on an Xbox 360 using a disc provided by EA Sports.

Highs

Same sterling field play as FIFA 14 on PS3/Xbox 360.
Lack of clutter from modes like Ultimate Team.
Excellent new commentary tracks.
Lows

Lack of feature parity with FIFA 14 makes $60 price tag exorbitant.
Lack of modes like Ultimate Team may turn off fans.
Field game can't stack up to FIFA 14 on PS4/XB1.
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A green-car competition for the Camaro? Yep. And it’s going to be awesome

Efficiency and environmentalism are deeply interwoven into the future of automotive development. These days, you can't say that gas mileage and emissions only matter for hybrids and small cars; everything has to get more efficient. With that in mind, the announcement of the EcoCar 3 competition is particularly exciting because the challenge is to create a hyper-efficient Camaro.

The EcoCar challenge is a collaboration between GM, the Department of Energy, and colleges and universities across the U.S. The goal is for students at each participating school to develop a more efficient version of a car. And, according to the Detroit News, those students will spend the next three years working on developing a more efficient Camaro.

Given that the most efficient version of the Camaro equipped with a V6 gets just 22 mpg, there is a lot of room for improvement. That is one of the reasons that this was such a good choice; students won't be working on eking out a bit more from an already efficient car. Instead, they'll be working to transform a performance car's efficiency without killing its sporting character.

This challenge also is just plain sexier than previous attempts. EcoCar 2 worked on Chevy Malibus, and while that may not be a bad car, it's hard to work up much excitement for a vehicle that will spend a lot of its life in rental fleets. Part of any such program is bringing good PR to the work being done, and that is also made easier when you have a car that looks and drives like the Camaro.

To achieve these ends, students will try everything from replacing the powertrain with alternative fuels or hybrid systems to reducing weight and improving aerodynamics. The research and development process will emulate the same process used by GM and other big automakers, giving the students a chance not just to work on the car but also get some experience relevant to the automotive industry.

The best part, though, is bringing some of the worst efficiency offenders up to merely respectable levels, say 27 to 30 mpg, would have a dramatic impact on the entire industry's average.  This means that we can still enjoy the odd sportscar or full-size truck with eye-wateringly bad mileage, with a little less crippling guilt. 

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Davido Shows Off His Newly Acquired S 63 4Matic Mercedes Automobile

Davido is living up to his "Omo Baba Olowo" name as he has added a new automobile to his fleet.

The superstar shared this photo of the newly acquired ride via his instagram page.
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Jared Harris talks new horror movie ‘The Quiet Ones’

In the '70s-set The Quiet Ones, Jared Harris (Mad Men) portrays a British professor determined to prove that there is a scientific explanation for the seemingly supernatural phenomena besetting a young woman, played by Bates Motel actress Olivia Cooke. As The Quiet Ones, which opens this Friday, comes to us from the famously horror-obsessed U.K company Hammer, it does not spoil things too much to reveal that the prof's plan goes wildly awry.

Below, Harris talks about The Quiet Ones — which co-stars Erin Richards, Rory Fleck-Byrne, and Hunger Games franchise cast member Sam Claflin — and why your guess as to what's going to happen next on Mad Men is as good as his.

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: This seems to be a horror film where everyone concerned was determined to play it with a straight face.
JARED HARRIS: You had to. I mean, I loved Evil Dead 2. But that's a totally different type of movie. You're robbing the audience of the experience if you're not taking it seriously.

What was it that attracted you to the film?
What I liked was that it dealt with the supernatural but started from the point of view of skepticism. You slowly work away at the audience's objections and doubts, which are legitimate, until you get to the point where you've rationally brought them there, rather than, "You must assume this is true from the very beginning when you buy a ticket."

When I was growing up in Britain there almost seemed to be a Hammer movie on TV every night…
Yeah, yeah.

…were they a big part of your youth?
We had a 16mm projector and my father (screen legend Richard Harris) used to rent movies for us. He loved Westerns and action films and horror movies. So, yeah, I loved them. We used to watch them all the time, scare ourselves silly. I remember he rented — and regretted it for a long time — Night of the Living Dead. I didn't sleep for decades.

I think there's a noble effort involved [in Hammer]. Every weekend, British movies have to compete with American films at the British box office. It's an uphill mountain every weekend. The goal is to establish an identity, a brand, in British cinema that audiences will come and support. I think Hammer have a tremendous opportunity to do that and the British public hopefully, once they get the idea of what they're doing, I think they'll support it. And it's fun, you know. It's a fun brand.

What was the shoot for The Quiet Ones like?
It was tough. Those sort of budgets, they require you to do a lot of work in a short amount of time. The good thing on this was that the director (John Pogue) insisted that we would get two weeks' rehearsal, which was really important because all those sort of séance-type scenes, some of them are long, and they all are shot from one perspective so you can't cut. [It] was a good opportunity for us all to get together and bond and figure out each other's playing styles.

Now, you, like me, are still in the first flush of youth…
[Laughs] You old silver-tongued devil you.

…but compared to the rest of the film's cast you're something of an elder statesman. What was that like for you?
There's a great tradition in theater where the lead actor is expected to lead the company. You're supposed to set an example, but you're also supposed to protect them, and help them out, and create room for them so that they get heard, their ideas get tried out. On the reciprocal side of that, you can become a little bit frustrated and jaded by filmmaking — there's so many problems, you can become swamped and forget that actually it's great fun and it's a joy to do. I got that off of those four. I said, "I'm never going to forget that ever again."

The Quiet Ones isn't your first horror film. What do you remember about making Resident Evil: Apocalypse?
Actually, going back to The Night of the Living Dead, when they sent it along, when I read the bit where I turn into a zombie, I [thought], "I'm in! I want to be a zombie!" Just to purge that fear. But, yeah, great fun.

Mad Men recently started again. Is it odd to have this train go on without you?
I'm a fan. I watched all of season 6 and really enjoyed it. I sit there like everybody else trying to second guess where it's going and what's going to happen and loving it.
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Dr Sid & Simi Osomo Pick Wedding Date: Don Jazzy’s Mavin Artiste Getting Married In Dubai

Less than a week after Mavin 1st Lady Tiwa Savage got married in far away Dubai, another Mavin star has dropped the bombshell.

While fans were busy celebrating with Tiwa Savage over the weekend, late Justus Esiri's son, Dr Sidhas announced his own wedding plan.

He took to Instagram to announce his upcoming wedding in July
Though he hasn't released the full detail of his upcoming wedding, entertainment insiders disclosed that the Mavin star will be getting married in July in Dubai.

On the 8th of December 2013, Dr Sid and his fashion consultant fiancee, Simi Osomo did their family introduction in Lagos.

Must everybody marry in Dubai??????
Congrats to Dr Sid and Simi Osomo.
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Kevin Smith talks ‘Jay and Silent Bob’s Super Groovy Cartoon Movie’ — EXCLUSIVE

Despite its seemingly kiddie-friendly name, the new film Jay and Silent Bob's Super Groovy Cartoon Movie is not suitable for children — unless they're very young. "You can sit down with a child that doesn't perceive vulgarity and that child will totally delight in it, because it's colorful to look at," says director and prolific podcaster Kevin Smith, who wrote the film. "But if that child understands content at all, you're going to have a lot of explaining to do."

In the animated movie, which is available on VOD starting May 6, the much-beloved, Smith-created characters of Jay and Silent Bob decide to become a crime-fighting duo in their home town of Red Bank, N.J. The problem? "They don't have any villains [to fight]," explains the Clerks director. "So they wind up creating them along the way and then saving the city. It's really ridiculous, man. The one thing I can say in its defense — besides that it's really funny — is that it only cost $69,000 to make. The budget was predicated on the ability to just say '69′ and laugh and giggle "

As usual, Smith himself plays the taciturn Silent Bob — "He has, like, one line but I pop in as 'Kevin Smith' once or twice" — while the role of Jay is once again taken by Jason Mewes. The latter is also one of the film's producers and Smith admits the whole enterprise was in part an attempt to keep the actor, who has a history of drug problems, on the straight and narrow.

"He was talking at one point like, 'I've got to busy myself, dude,'" says Smith. "He said 'I think that was part of the problem in the past, I didn't have enough to do. Maybe I could do something else in movies.' I was like, 'What about directing?' He goes, 'No, that seems complicated.' I was like, 'It can't be, I do it.' He said, what about producing? I said, well, 'Scott Mosier (Smith's longtime producer) does that, so it can't be that difficult. Do you want to give it a shot?' So I gave him this script and he went off with Steve Stark, who's a Canadian animating friend. I was so happy for Jason that his little busy-work project actually turned into something. I was like, 'S—,' let's take this out on tour, like we did Red State. By the second show, we were knee-deep in profit."

The film co-stars British writer and comics legend Neil Gaiman. "Gaiman does the voice of our Alfred-like butler," says Smith. "Boy, did he class up the project. Any time now they're going to make him Sir Neil Gaiman and I'll be able to reissue Jay and Silent Bob's Super Groovy Cartoon Movie as 'The Royal Edition starring Sir Neil Gaiman.' I'm always looking ahead!"
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'Blue Ruin’ filmmakers talk beards and betting the bank on their indie-thriller

It has become standard operating procedure for studios and filmmakers to target specific slices of the population when promoting movies. But we're fairly sure that writer-director Jeremy Saulnier's film Blue Ruin is the first thriller to reach out to the community of beard-growers.


In the movie, actor Macon Blair plays a homeless man whose plan to kill the person responsible for the death of his parents unravels in increasingly tragi-comic, and, at times, extremely violent, ways. For the role, Blair spent 9 months growing out his facial fuzz and that growth has become a strangely pivotal part of the movie's marketing campaign, starting with a beard contest held at the Sundance Film Festival, where the movie screened earlier this year. "They would have me being the judge of these contests, and I felt like I needed to put a disclaimer at the beginning," says the now clean-shaven Blair. "These are professional guys that go to professional beard contests. These are very cultivated, crafted examples of facial hair. I felt like I needed to be like, 'Guys, look, this was for a movie, it was supposed to look terrible. It was supposed to look like a guy who had checked out of mainstream society and had given up on himself and let himself go. It wasn't supposed to look nice!'"

Macon's beard has also featured prominently in many of the film's publicity images, and the actor even conducted an interview with the website, Beard Revered (sample question: "Who is your ultimate bearded hero and why?"). "They were very sweet and I was happy to talk with them," says Macon.

Blue Ruin director Saulnier admits he had some misgivings about such beard-oriented marketing. "I was initially skeptical," he says. "I was like, 'What are we doing with this whole beard thing?'" But the filmmaker concedes it is appropriate that Macon's beard is front and center publicity-wise. "The beard that Macon grew was this beacon of hope and symbol of commitment," says Saulnier. "Who knows? Maybe that's why this film got made."

Blair isn't the only one who showed considerable commitment to the project. Saulnier reveals that both he and his wife raided their pensions to help pay for Blue Ruin, which co-stars Devin Ratray (Nebraska), Amy Hargreaves (Homeland), and Jan Brady herself, Eve Plumb, as the gun-toting matriarch of the family Blair's character faces-off against. "My wife read the script, responded to it, and cashed out her account," says Saulnier. "It was really inspiring to me. It wasn't a small thing. She risked our financial security and her children's future on the movie."

That risk has paid off. Blue Ruin premiered at last year's Cannes Film Festival and, following an avalanche of positive reviews, hits theatres, VOD, and iTunes this Friday. Blair says he hopes their romancing of the facially hirsute will help the film at the box office. "However many people with beards come to the movie theatre," he laughs, "I get a certain percentage."
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New deal Sean Tizzle Signs ₦20 Million MTN Endorsement Deal

Telecomms giant MTN Nigeria has added Sean Tizzle to their list of A-list celebrity brand ambassador and the deal is reportedly for a cool ₦20 Million according to TheNetNG.

They also go on to say Tizzle's management has been in talks with MTN for a while and his impressive run in the last 12 months with his mega hit Sho Lee informed their decison to bring him on board.

The telecoms brand will be announcing their new set of ambassa
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Cech & Terry return to training

Chelsea keeper Petr Cech and defender John Terry trained on Tuesday ahead of Wednesday's Champions League semi-final second leg against Atletico Madrid.

Cech's season was said to be over (external) after he dislocated his shoulder in the first leg, while Terry injured his ankle in the 0-0 draw.
Eden Hazard (calf) and Samuel Eto'o (knee) were also fit enough to train.
Midfielders John Mikel Obi and Frank Lampard are suspended for the return leg at Stamford Bridge.

They both received their second yellow cards of the knockout stages at Atletico's Vicente Calderon stadium.

Blues coach Jose Mourinho said after the match in Spain that both Cech and Terry would miss the rest of the Premier League season, with the Portuguese stating that the defender would only feature again if his club reached the Champions League final on 24 May.

Captain Terry, along with Hazard and Eto'o, who both missed the first game, trained with the squad, while Cech took part in a collective warm-up before having a personalised drill.

When asked by Sky Sports News whether he was fit, the Czech keeper responded: "Of course."

Australian keeper Mark Schwarzer, 41, came on in the 18th minute to replace Cech in Madrid and also played in the 2-0 win over Premier League title rivals Liverpool on Sunday.

Atletico will be without suspended captain Gabi. Former Chelsea midfielder Tiago Mendes is expected to take his place.
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Konga Nigerian biggest Mall lunch MAGA Sale off 70% discount to all customers and workers

Title: Its back! The Konga.com Workers Day Mega Sale is here in grand style
Hey guys! Happy workers day in
advance!!!

It's been an exciting year full of many exciting stories on all sides, and every Nigerian worker- blogger, doctor, mechanic, lawyer, teacher or whatever
profession we find ourselves truly deserve to smile, that's why
Nigeria's largest Online Mall,

Konga.com want to reward all workers
with an opportunity of a life time to buy all the items on their wish list without breaking the bank, with the return of the Konga.com workers day mega
sale!

So what do you expect in this year's Konga Workers day mega sale?

Do you remember the amazing discounts from the Konga worker's day mega sale last year?

Or is it your first time shopping on May Day? well, not to worry, this special offer starts from April 29th and will run to May 9th and all you have to do is head out to this special page http://www.konga.com/workers-day,
select your items, make payment with either your debit card, bank transfer or pay on delivery and get your items delivered to you!

Discounts are available on amazing categories like Fashion for women, fashion for men, phones and tablets- Google Nexus 4, beauty,health and personal care, home and kitchen, computers and accessories, etc

You can also participate in different games on social media and win lots of amazing prices!

Simply check out Konga on Facebook- http://facebook.com/Shopkonga,
twitter- http://twitter.com/shopkonga and with the hashtag #KongaMayDaySale

Regards,

Affiliate Marketing Manager | 
Phone 01 460 5555
/Shopkonga /Shopkonga /Shopkonga 

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‘Star Wars: Episode VII’: Meet the new cast

This news should be delivered in big yellow type, rising up into the void of space …

We have our new Star Wars cast.

New to the galaxy far, far away are John Boyega, Daisy Ridley, Adam Driver, Oscar Isaac, Andy Serkis, Domhnall Gleeson, and Max von Sydow. Meanwhile, the original trilogy stars — Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, Mark Hamill, Anthony Daniels, Peter Mayhew, and Kenny Baker — will all be returning.

No word yet on who the new characters will be, but obviously Ford is back as intrepid smuggler Han Solo, Fisher reprises Princess Leia (she made no secret she would be back,) and Hamill will be giving us a glimpse of what life for the last of the Jedi in winter.

Can Daniels still squeeze into that golden C3PO suit? (You know he puts everyone at his high school reunion to shame.) Despite advancements in robotics over thirty-plus years, fans will be glad to know that Baker will still be giving R2-D2 the human touch. And the towering Mayhew will again be riding shotgun and laughing-it-up-fuzzball in the Millennium Falcon as Chewbacca.

"We are so excited to finally share the cast of Star Wars: Episode VII," director J.J. Abrams says. "It is both thrilling and surreal to watch the beloved original cast and these brilliant new performers come together to bring this world to life, once again. We start shooting in a couple of weeks, and everyone is doing their best to make the fans proud."

Star Wars: Episode VII features a screenplay by Abrams and Lawrence Kasdan. Kathleen Kennedy, Abrams, and Bryan Burk are producing, and John Williams returns as the composer.

Can't you already hear the theme?

Now let's dive into who's who:

(developing …)

John Boyega

Daisy Ridley

Adam Driver

Oscar Isaac

Andy Serkis

Domhnall Gleeson

Max von Sydow

For more Star Wars news:
Follow @breznican

This British actor played Moses in the 2011 aliens-invade-the-inner-city comedy Attack the Block. He also appears as a regular on the upcoming 24: Live Another Day TV series, and has a starring role in the indie drama Imperial Dreams, which played Sundance this year.

In Imperial Dreams, Boyega plays  Bambi, an aspiring writer who has just been released from prison for aggravated assault, and is tending to his son, Day, the boy's mother (Keke Palmer) is in prison for another crime. 

'They Came Together' trailer: Amy Poehler and Paul Rudd are ready to charm their way into your heart.

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