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Posts Tagged ‘anything’

Female producers defend Casey Affleck in sexual harassment suit

Casey Affleck”s female producers have come to his defence in his battle with two women who claim they were sexually harassed while working on a documentary with him. Cinematographer Magdalena Gorka is suing Ben Affleck’s brother for 2.5 million dollars, accusing him of getting into bed with her and fondling her while she slept in [...]

New Dell, Asus, Acer Netbooks Won’t Bust the Budget

While Apple CEO Steve Jobs recently claimed netbooks aren’t better at anything before unveiling his company’s touch-screen iPad tablet, many in the business world disagree, finding netbooks inexpensive, highly portable alternatives to notebooks. Boasting sharp displays, longer battery life and improved memory and processing power, you may find that netbooks are, in, fact, better than anything. And they all come with keyboards.
– …


Leona Lewis auctions herself off to raise money for Haiti victims

Leona Lewis is auctioning off an afternoon in her company in a bid to raise money for Haiti earthquake victims.
The special time could involve anything from bowling to horse-riding and a meal.
“I”ve been amazed and inspired by the courage of people in Haiti. What’’s happened has been so devastating, and I really want to do [...]

10 Hot Funny Girls

Is there anything better than a hot girl with a functional brain?
(Complex)

Deciding What to Sell on eBay

Almost everybody has dreams of the day that they will be able to leave their job and set up on eBay as a way to provide for them and their families. Being self employed on eBay seems like a dream for many people. Being your own boss would be fantastic. However it can be very [...]

Kid Rock Twitter Slam: “It’s Gay”

Kid Rock is no fan of Twitter. The rapping rock star is stirring up controversy this Wednesday,thanks to his politically-incorrect remarks about the microblogging site in a new interview with Rolling Stone Magazine.
“It’s gay. If one more person asks me if I have a Twitter, I’m going to tell them, ‘Twitter this [bleep], mother[bleep]er. I [...]

Sito Negron: Not that there’s anything wrong with that

Ramon Renteria, a wonderful writer and a mentor to many a young reporter, usually captures the essence of El Paso in his columns. Maybe he…

Mike Alvear: What Straight Men can Learn from Gay Porn

My friend wanted to know if straight men could get anything out of gay porn. I selflessly helped with the research (it’s amazing how time flies when you’re doing work you enjoy!)

Brangelina’s daughter Shiloh loves to wear Maddox’s soccer boots

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt’s daughter Shiloh loves to wear her elder brother Maddox’s soccer boots.
The three-year-old toddler loves the shoes so much that she even wears them to her ballet and tap dancing lessons.
The 34-year-old actress has tried everything to persuade Shiloh to wear other clothes, but she refuses to don anything that [...]

Sara Davidson: What Do Women Want, More Than Anything?

I tell Billy the question that King Arthur was forced to answer to save his life: What do women want, more than anything?

The indie kid’s guide to classical

Chopin has made it on to Radio 1, courtesy of Muse’s latest hit United States of Eurasia. But don’t stop there,
kids: here’s where you and your iPod should venture next

Kids up and down the country are tuning in to Radio 1 and scratching their heads. What’s that weird, long piano section doing at the end of Muse’s new Bohemian Rhapsody-esque single, United States of Eurasia. Isn’t that (whisper it) . . . classical music? Being played on the nation’s favourite youth station? That’s right, kids, it’s Chopin’s Nocturne in E-flat major, Op 9 No 2 to be precise. So now, for all you puzzled young ‘uns out there, here’s how to get in to that classical music vibe . . .

How do you listen?

What you need to do is close the curtains, take your clothes off, lie face down with your teeth sunk deep into the carpet. Then get your butler to sprinkle your buttocks with rose petals and put on the 16-plus hours of Wagner’s operatic tetralogy, The Ring, before he retreats, locking the door on you, until the bloody ordeal is over. Not really: what you need is peace, quiet and concentration.

What am I supposed to be listening for?

Radio 3 helps here. It offers two great entry points to classical music. On Discovering Music (Sunday teatime), leading conductors take you passage by passage through a whole work, explaining what the composer was trying to achieve and what you might enjoy. In Building a Library (Saturday mornings), a critic anatomises different recordings of the same work in a manner that switches between the hilariously pernickety and the genuinely instructive – you can even download it as a weekly podcast.

What should I avoid?

For the time being, avoid anything labelled Salford Toccata by Harrison Birtwistle, explosante fixe . . . by Pierre Boulez, Helikopter-Streichquartett by Karlheinz Stockhausen. Stuff by Alban Berg, Arnold Schoenberg and Olivier Messiaen might well have you calling 999 and shouting hysterically “Fire in the pet shop! Fire in the pet shop!”

What should I try?

Download Thomas Tallis’s Spem in Alium and, if you have functioning ears, prepare to weep. It is a 10-plus minute, 40-part motet written in the late 16th century: a wall of sound more overwhelming than anything in Phil Spector’s philosophy.

Liked that. Now what?

David Mellor is, as we know, wrong about everything, but the name of his Classic FM show, “If you liked that, you’ll like this”, is helpful here. If you liked the Chopin on Muse’s single, then listen to some more Chopin music – say Martha Argerich’s 1965 concert of his sonatas, mazurkas and nocturnes. Or try the andantino from Schubert’s sonata in A – it’s what Isaiah Berlin insisted be played at his funeral. If you like Roy Orbison, Terence Trent d’Arby or – though you really shouldn’t – James Morrison, then you might well like lieder. Lieder is German for songs – helpfully as short as anything on Chris Moyles’s playlist, but more heartfelt than anything that comes from his mouth. Try some lieder cycles: Schubert’s Winterreise or Schumann’s Dichterliebe will shatter your heart. If you like Kraftwerk, you’ll probably dig minimalist music: try Steve Reich’s Music for 18 Musicians or his Different Trains.

Any chance I’ve heard any of this classical stuff before?

Remember Torvill and Dean hurling each other across the ice? Perhaps you weren’t even a twinkle in your dad’s eye then, but if you were, you might enjoy realising that that stuff they were skating to was Ravel’s Bolero and you’d get a kick listening to it properly. And then there was Wagner’s Ride of the Valkyries used when Robert Duvall napalmed Vietnam.

Symphonies – they go on and freaking on. Help me over this experiential hump.

Don’t try (yet) the forbiddingly sculptured hours of Bruckner’s symphonies. Plump instead for Beethoven. You’ll know the opening to his fifth (“Da-Da-Da-Dah”) but stick around for its second movement which, if you have heartstrings, will pluck them mercilessly. If you don’t find the first movement of his sixth the perfect accompaniment to a summer walk in the country, then look into my eyes as I give you the frowning of a lifetime. For those of you whose attention spans have been ruined by daytime telly, Haydn symphonies (try his No 94th, the so-called”Surprise”) are often obligingly short.

Five downloads to getyou started

Schubert: the Trout Quintet

Bach: Brandenburg Concertos

Mozart: Clarinet Concerto

Beethoven: Symphony No 9

Puccini: Madame Butterfly

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Cynthia Boaz: The “Birthers” and Our Ailing Political Culture

These birthers represent a small but vocal minority in this country who have somehow failed to grasp that American democracy is rooted in a set of principles, not a set of demographic characteristics.

Happy Maybe Day

Join me in celebrating a day of not being sure about anything. But don’t expect the Certain to thank you for it

Today is Maybe Day, a day inspired by the late writer Robert Anton Wilson. It was his hope that on this day people of all creeds and beliefs would come together and chant, “Jesus is the only son of God, maybe” “Hear O Israel, the Lord thy God is one, maybe” and “There’s no God but Allah, maybe, and maybe Mohammed is his prophet.” At this point the world would suddenly become a far saner place.

Of course, it is not necessary to congregate to celebrate Maybe Day. It is not even necessary to say those words out loud. Simply reading the words in a newspaper or a blog is enough to participate, and in that spirit may I personally thank you for joining in and making Maybe Day 2009 such a success.

But be careful: the Wars of the Certain rage around us. As Wilson pointed out, “certitude is seized by some minds, not because there is any philosophical justification for it, but because such minds have an emotional need for certitude.” By celebrating Maybe Day you risk abuse from those people, the Certain, who object to the unsure, the sceptical or the deeply confused. In The God Delusion, to give one example, Richard Dawkins engages with the monotheistic viewpoint with argument, but he dismisses agnostics with insults. They are, in Dawkins’ view, the theological equivalent of the Lib-Dems, “namby-pamby, mushy pap, weak tea, weedy, pallid fence-sitters.”

To sympathise with the Certain for a moment, they do not have it easy. There are billions of people on this planet and they all have wildly differing ideas about politics, ethics, theology, art and science. It is very hard for the Certain to insist that their own position is the only right, true and undeniable one, especially if they posses a basic knowledge of mathematics and probability. You can rationalise away this problem by deciding that the rest of the world is basically composed of idiots, but it is rarely a good idea to admit this publicly. We live in a culture where megalomania is frowned upon.

Then there was the relentless march against certainty that took place in the 20th century. The work of Einstein, Joyce, Picasso, Heisenberg, Leary, Jung, Lorenz and countless others showed that we do not possess a single model of our universe that can account for all that we find around us. Instead, we have a number of contradictory models, each with their own strengths and flaws, and we must decide which is the most practical to adopt for our current needs. Our task, therefore, is to keep testing those models, to evaluate probabilities and to reject once-treasured ideas when more suitable replacements are found. This is not to say that all models are equally valid; rather, it is to say that all models should be recognised as incomplete, flawed and useful only to a point. To quote Robert Anton Wilson again, “I don’t believe anything, but I have many suspicions.”

Maybe Day allows us all to cast off our certainties, if only for one day. It is a day when you are can allow yourself to be sceptical of your favoured models without any danger of damage to your ego. The Certain are invited to climb up on the agnostics’ fence and join them for a cup of their famous weak tea and a plateful of mushy pap. By sitting up on the fence, they’ll be able to see the whole territory. Maybe the Certain will be surprised by this view. Maybe they will see that the important question is not which side of the fence they should defend, but what idiot put the fence there in the first place, and exactly who benefits from leaving it up?

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Apple iPhone sales grow 626% YoY

Yeah, the economy is bad. We all know that, you only have to turn on the TV or read anything to know that. Despite the poor economy and tanking computer sales Apple has been able to continue turning impressive profits.

Apple also gets some serious help from its world-beating iPhone. According to Apple’s recently announced financials [...]

Dr. Conrad Murray: “I Didn’t Kill Michael Jackson”

Michael Jackson’s personal doctor has broken his silence over the King of Pop’s death.

“I did not kill him,” heart specialist Conrad Murray told Britain’s The PEOPLE on Saturday. Dr. Murray denies giving Jackson any drugs that could have lead to th 50-year-old megastar’s death of cardiac arrest in his Los Angeles home June 25.
Murryay claims [...]

Michelle Schweiger Schecter: Empathy For The Devil

Hart Senate Office Building, Room 216 was the venue for a skirmish that at times got awfully mean. Judge Sonia came in earnest, her cards laid out on the table.

Janet Jackson Wants Custody Of Michael’s Kids

Is Janet throwing her hat in the ring for The Jackson 3?
Pop legend Michael Jackson wanted his baby sister, R&B diva Janet Jackson, to take care of his three children, according to a scoop featured in Britain’s Grazia Magazine on Tuesday.
The “Thriller” star — who died last month at 50 — had reportedly discussed his [...]