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Posts Tagged ‘Brittany’

Brittany Murphy Dead

We’re sad to report the shocking passing of one of Young Hollywood’s oustanding talents. The Grim Reaper has robbed us of starlet Brittany Murphy: Brittany Murphy, the actress best known for her roles in films like Clueless, 8 Mile, and Girl Interrupted, has died of a suspected cardiac arrest.
She was 32.

According to the Coroner’s Office, [...]

Brittany Murphy Dead

We’re sad to report the shocking passing of one of Young Hollywood’s oustanding talents. The Grim Reaper has robbed us of starlet Brittany Murphy: Brittany Murphy, the actress best known for her roles in films like Clueless, 8 Mile, and Girl Interrupted, has died of a suspected cardiac arrest.
She was 32.

According to the Coroner’s Office, [...]

“Project Runway” Season 7; “Models Of The Runway” Contestants Revealed

The cast of designers competing on the seventh season of Project Runway have been revealed!
The fashion competition, hosted by German catwalk maven Heidi Klum, will see the judges and designers returning to New York City, the home of the show for the first five seasons. Heidi will be joined by judges Nina Garcia and Michael [...]

Grady Sizemore Pictures Stolen From Brittany Binger E-Mail Account

Cleveland Indians center fielder Grady Sizemore has enlisted the help of investigators with Major League Baseball to halt further publication of a set of steamy snaps he says were stolen from his girlfriend’s e-mail account and posted online, The Associated Press said Monday.
In a series of humiliating pictures — which were sent to Playboy Playmate [...]

Grady Sizemore Nude Photo Leak

Yikes! Nude photos of Cleveland Indians’ center fielder Grady Sizemore is the latest celebrity victim of a nude photos leak. Images of the baseball ace and his privates have reportedly made their way to the Interwebs courtesy of Sizemore’s girlfriend, Playboy Playmate Brittany Binger.
Click Here For A Glimpse Of Grady Sizemore’s Nudes…….

PPR spins off CFAO: Out of Africa

The family firm that owns Gucci is shedding assets to focus on fashion

LEOPARD-SKIN print is in style this winter, but PPR, the French conglomerate that owns Gucci Group, a luxury-goods firm, has decided to sell its African division. Next week the group will conclude the sale of over half of the shares of CFAO, a trading house founded in France’s colonial era, on the Euronext stockmarket. PPR plans to use the resulting €900m ($1.3 billion) or so to add more big international fashion brands to its collection.

PPR has long traded in and out of businesses: Francois Pinault, its founder, started with a sawmill in Brittany and built it into an integrated timber-trading and processing firm before buying CFAO in 1990. He then bought several household names in French retailing: Conforama, a furniture chain, Au Printemps, which owns department stores, and Fnac, a books-and-records chain. In 1999 Mr Pinault moved into luxury goods with the acquisition of 42% of Gucci Group, later taking full control. …

Noisy Generator, Faux Shootout Send Brittany Murphy Into A Panic

This fool……Quirky actress Brittany Murphy sent shockwaves through her neighborhood in the early hours of Wednesday morning, after she was heard yelling from her balcony about gunfire outside her Hollywood home, according to TMZ.com. At approximately 2:30AM, concerned neighbors placed an emergency call to police. But when cops arrived on the scene, they found the [...]

Causing a stink

By Michael Hirst
BBC News

Green algae on a beach in Saint-Michel-en-Greve, western France, 9 August 2009

Holidaymakers beware – the picturesque beaches of north-west France are not as safe as they may seem.

The culprit is not a rogue shark or a plague of venomous jellyfish, but an innocuous-looking seaweed.

Ulva Lactuca – more commonly known as sea lettuce – is harmless while living, but when it decays on land it forms a crust under which a deadly gas forms.

This year has seen unprecedented levels of the algae being washed ashore on Brittany’s expanse of beaches, heightening concerns along a coastline that is visited annually by an estimated 9m tourists – 700,000 of whom come from the UK.

"When you walk into the crust of such accumulation, you make a hole in a reservoir of hydrogen sulphide, and this gas is very toxic," said Alain Menesguen, director of research at the French Institute for Sea Research and Exploitation (Ifremer).

"It can make animals or people unable to breathe, so you can die in less than a minute," he told the BBC.

Intensive farming

Environmentalists say decades of misuse of Brittany’s agricultural land is to blame for the phenomenon, due to the high levels of nitrates used in fertilisers and excreted by the region’s high concentration of livestock.

"Only a major reduction of the use of fertilisers and other nitrogen chemicals will result in a lower green algae tide"

Jean Francois Piquot
Eau et Rivieres

Despite its small population of 3m people living on just 5% of the country’s agricultural land, Britanny is home to 60% of France’s pig farms, 45% of its poultry farms and 30% of its dairy farms, said Jean-Francois Piquot of the environmental group Eau et Rivieres de Bretagne.

Nitrates used in the area’s farming leach into local rivers, and combine with the summer sunshine to cause an explosion of algae growth around the river estuaries, he told the BBC.

As the seaweed is then washed ashore, tonnes of the slimy green substance are left to rot on hot sand along parts of Brittany’s 1,650-mile (2,700 km) coastline.

Certain areas have been blighted by the algae for more than three decades, but the problem is worsening.

Despite annual clearance efforts – some councils spend more than 100,000 euros (£86,000) bulldozing putrid piles from their beaches each year – local authorities acknowledge they are no match for the tide of seaweed.

Mr Piquot said local authorities had wasted 1bn euros in the past 30 years collecting the sea lettuce and trying to get rid of it.

Less than a third of the 200m cubic metres of the algae washed ashore had been cleared, and clearance treatment was prioritised for those beaches popular with tourists, he added.

A spokesman from the Brittany Tourist Board said only three beaches in the Cotes d’Armor – one of Brittany’s four departments – were affected.

"The British public should be reminded that Brittany’s beaches are continuing to be cleaned very regularly and monitored on a daily basis," he said.

Action at last

Some officials argue they are powerless to deal with an agricultural problem that lies beyond their jurisdiction.

A protestor on the beach in Saint-Michel-en-Greve, north-western France, 9 August 2009

With algae levels continuing to rise, activists and locals alike blame French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s government of failing to adequately address the worsening problem.

"Only a major reduction of the use of fertilisers and other nitrogen chemicals will result in a lower green algae tide," said Mr Piquot.

Ifremer’s Mr Menesguen told the BBC’s World Today programme that despite the dangers, only one beach had been closed since a local vet was dragged unconscious from a metre-deep pile of the rotting algae earlier this month.

Vincent Petit, 27, had been horse riding when his mount collapsed after inhaling fumes from the algae.

His horse died within minutes, and Mr Petit has threatened to sue local authorities for reckless endangerment.

The Brittany Tourist Board said the "isolated" incident was being treated very seriously.

Local communities hope it will finally spur the authorities into action.

On Sunday, a 400-strong crowd gathered on one local beach demanding an adequate response from Mr Sarkozy’s government.

Eau et Rivieres said a central programme to cut the quantities of nitrates being used in the area was long overdue, but that the government had proved "incredibly passive" in its task to promote sustainable agriculture.

"The state’s indifference is the worst kind of pollution," said the group.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

“Clueless” Musical

Shut up! Clueless is Broadway-bound!
Acclaimed theater director Tina Landau is developing a new musical based on the hit 1995 comedy about a rich high school girl who eventually evolves from her shallow existence as a superficial fashionista.
The film made stars of actress Alicia Silverstone and Stacey Dash, who played on-screen companions Cher Horowitz and Dionne. [...]

“Gidget” Remake Starring Zac Efron, Miley Cyrus, Brittany Snow

Hairspray stars Zac Efron and Brittany Snow have reportedly been approached to star alongside Miley Cyrus in a motion picture remake of the motion picture and small screen hit Gidget.

According to MovieHole.com, Miley is being courted to play waverider Gidget in a project that would bring the classic back to television. Zac — who Miley [...]

Zac Efron, Brittany Snow may star in ‘Gidget’

Hairspray stars Zac Efron and Brittany Snow have reportedly been approached to star alongside Miley Cyrus in ‘Gidget’.
According to MovieHole.com, while Cyrus will play the waverider ‘Gidget’ in the project, Efron is likely to play her love interest.’
Actress Sandra Dee originated the role of ‘Gidget’ in Paul Wendkos’s 1959 film and actress Sally Field took [...]

The climb that leads to hell

American vowed to come back in 2002 and gain revenge for being beaten by the climb into hell

With echoes of the Terminator, Lance Armstrong said after finishing a frustrated third atop Mont Ventoux in the 2002 Tour: “We’ll come back, I’m sure.” Seven years later, Armstrong, a man who thrives on personal battles, has a score to settle with the peak which will decide whether he stands on the podium tomorrow. He has never won there, in any race. The tale of frustration began in 2000, when he and Marco Pantani approached the top to contest the stage win, back in the days when the American’s dominance of the Tour was only just beginning.

Pantani was clinging on, a pale, tormented shadow of the (EPO-fuelled) climber who had won the 1998 Tour. Repeatedly he lost contact with Armstrong’s wheel, repeatedly he clawed his way back. Finally, the Texan appeared to let him reach the summit first. He later said he regretted the gesture, because he never managed to get to grips with the “Bald Mountain”. He suffered there in the Dauphiné Libéré race – which goes up almost every year – and lost again in the Tour in 2002, when he gave Richard Virenque a seven minute start at the foot of the mountain, in what seemed like a handicap race.

So it is personal today for Armstrong, but that is the way it has been with the Tourmen and the Ventoux since it appeared on the route in 1951. As Roland Barthes wrote, no other ascent seems to have a personality. “A god of evil, a despot of cyclists,” he called it. Barthes’s point was this: most of the Tour’s great ascents are passes, between two mountains. The Ventoux is unique because the cyclists have to go up a whole mountain, 5,000 feet from its vineyards at its base at Bédoin to its wind-blasted summit with the famous observatory. There is nothing else higher for many miles around. Ventoux stands alone, visible from 65 miles away. If the weather is clear, at some point today the Tourmen will come up a rise after leaving Montélimar, and they will see it, even if it is several hours of pedalling away. That plays on the mind, as does the steepness of the road, particularly the early kilometres, which go straight up the side of the mountain through a rock cutting and between stunted oak trees, without a single hairpin to give even a few seconds’ respite. It is also a relatively rare feature in the route: this is the 14th visit since 1951.

The mountain has its own microclimate: stifling heat one day – on his first time up there, Tom Simpson said he sweated so much his shorts nearly fell down – freezing cold the next. The conditions are intensified on the bare scree slopes at the top, where there is no shade on a sunny day and no shelter from the wind, only the vast view of Provence far far beneath the “sloping desert, the Sahara of stones”, as the late organiser Jacques Goddet called it.

Unlike any other climb on the Tour, the Ventoux has an evil reputation. Before the road was built to the top, Ventoux was fabled for wolves, and flash floods that wiped out herds of sheep, and its caves were said to lead to hell. Soon after the Tour’s first visit in 1951, Antoine Blondin wrote of the extreme effort it demanded of the cyclists: “We have seen riders descend into madness due to heat and stimulants, some going down the hairpins when they think they are going up. There are few happy memories attached to this witches’ cauldron, climbed with a heavy heart.”

It was this way even before the death of Simpson, in 1967, due to a cocktail of intense heat, amphetamines, alcohol and his indomitable willpower. Now, however, the two legends, mountain and man, are inextricably tied. Simpson’s monument stands near the summit, the goal for the many amateur cyclists who take on the climb, but, as I wrote in Put Me Back on My Bike, he has appropriated the whole mountain as a memorial visible from 65 miles away: you look at the mountain and think of the man.

But the 1965 world champion is not the only life claimed by the Giant of Provence. There was a host of crosses on the slopes to pilgrims who failed to make it to the chapel just below the summit. More recently, a cycling fan was struck by lightning on the day the 1994 race went over, soldiers from the observatory were frozen to death in blizzards, at least one driver died in the motor races that use the mountain, while most surreal of all, a woman tourist was killed in the 1970s by stones picked up by a particularly vicious wind on the summit.

Other cycling careers, besides that of Simpson, have ended here: the great French hopeful Jean-François Bernard pushed himself to the limit to win a time-trial here in the 1987 Tour, and was never the same again. In 1955 the Frenchman Jean Malléjac, a decent Tour rider from Brittany, keeled over and never raced again, and in the same year, the Swiss Ferdi Kübler, winner in 1950, had what seemed to be a nervous breakdown in the searing heat.

“Ventoux has killed Ferdi,” he muttered, words echoed half a century later by Armstrong. “Mont Ventoux doesn’t like Lance Armstrong,” said the seven-time winner. Many of the field will share that feeling, tempered by the fact that this year, the day before the finish in Paris, they will see the Champs Elysées from the top.

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


USA Softball win

SURREY, British Columbia, Canada | Former University of Alabama outfielder Brittany Rogers went 2-for-3 with a walk and scored three runs to help the U.S. national team defeat Venezuela 10-0 in a game that ended in the early hours of Thursday morning at the Canada Cup international softball tournament.
Rogers batted in the leadoff position, while [...]

The Boss Adds U.S. Dates

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN & THE E STREET BAND ADD 25 NEW US DATES FOR 2009

As Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band are still in the midst of a massive European Tour, 25 new U.S. dates have been added to the band’s 2009 “Workin’ On a Dream” tour. The Boss’ five night run at Giants Stadium will no doubt be one for the books.

Bruce Springsteen Tour Dates:


Bruce Springsteen

07/14/09 Tue Hampden Park Glasgow, GB

07/16/09 Thu Les Vieilles Charrues Festival Brittany, FRA

07/19/09 Sun Olimpico Stadium Rome, IT

07/21/09 Tue Palaolympico Turin, IT

07/23/09 Thu Stadio Friuli Udine, IT

07/26/09 Sun San Mames Stadium Bilbao, ES

07/28/09 Tue Auditorio La Cartuja Seville, ES

07/30/09 Thu Estadio Municipal de Foietes Benidorm, ES

08/01/09 Sat Zorrilla Stadium Valladolid, ES

08/02/09 Sun Monte De Gozo Santiago, ES

08/19/09 Wed Comcast Theatre Hartford, CT

08/22/09 Sat Comcast Center (Great Woods) Mansfield, MA

08/23/09 Sun Comcast Center (Great Woods) Mansfield, MA

08/25/09 Tue Saratoga Performing Arts Center Saratoga Springs, NY

09/10/09 Thu Sommet Center Nashville, TN

09/12/09 Sat Ford Amphitheatre Tampa, FL

09/13/09 Sun BankAtlantic Center Sunrise, FL

09/16/09 Wed Bi-Lo Center Greenville, SC

09/20/09 Sun United Center Chicago, IL

09/30/09 Wed Giants Stadium East Rutherford, NJ

10/02/09 Fri Giants Stadium East Rutherford, NJ

10/03/09 Sat Giants Stadium East Rutherford, NJ

10/08/09 Thu Giants Stadium East Rutherford, NJ

10/09/09 Fri Giants Stadium East Rutherford, NJ

10/13/09 Tue Wachovia Spectrum Philadelphia, PA

10/14/09 Wed Wachovia Spectrum Philadelphia, PA

10/25/09 Sun The Scottrade Center St. Louis, MO

10/26/09 Mon Sprint Center Kansas City, MO

11/02/09 Mon Verizon Center Washington, DC

11/03/09 Tue Time Warner Cable Arena Charlotte, NC

11/07/09 Sat Madison Square Garden New York, NY

11/08/09 Sun Madison Square Garden New York, NY

11/10/09 Tue Quicken Loans Arena Cleveland, OH

11/13/09 Fri The Palace of Auburn Hills Auburn Hills, MI

11/15/09 Sun Bradley Center Milwaukee, WI

Check our review of Bruce’s awesome live show from earlier in the tour here.