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Posts Tagged ‘fat’

T.I. & Tiny Get Touchy; Aretha Says Her Health Woes Are None Of Your Beeswax; Raven Liked Herself Better When She Was Fat; & More Crumbs

-At just four years old, Suri Cruise is well on her way to becoming a fashion maven – even putting together ensembles for her famous mom, actress Katie Holmes… -Is Casper: The Friendly Ghost spooking his way back to theaters? -T&A with Toni Braxton! -T.I.’s in trouble again. So what else is new? This time [...]

Economics Is Simple … The Fat Cats Just Want You to Think It’s Complicated So That You Won’t Demand Change

Economics and finance seem like complicated topics, and so many people “leave it to the experts”.However, these topics are actually simple, and if people hear a clear explanation, they will be able to form an opinion about our current economy and the g…

Kathy Griffin’s Bristol Palin Fat Joke Gets Comedienne Booted From CNN New Year’s Eve Special

Doing anything New Year’s Eve? ….Neither is Kathy Griffin. The off-color fat jibe the Emmy-winning comedienne, 50, made about teen abstinence advocate Bristol Palin at VH1′s Divas Special last weekend has left Kathy with more than just a red face and resounding boos from US troops: She’s out of a job. Griffin’s reportedly out of [...]

Sun Ray 3i Thin Client Hardware Provides Fat VDI for Intense Virtual Workloads

The Oracle Sun Ray 3 and 3i thin client hardware platforms integrate Oracle’s virtual desktop infrastructure to compete with VMware, Microsoft and Citrix in the ongoing push to gain centralized control over the end-user desktop experience. – The newly revamped Sun Ray 3 and 3i thin client systems announced by Oracle
carry on the Sun strategy of making easy-to-deploy hardware that supports a
variety of end-user virtual workloads while maintaining central, secure control
over desktop systems.

The Sun Ray 3 is a typical vertically …


Animal obesity: The fat cat cometh

It is not just human beings that are getting fatter. Animals are, too

IN THEIR attempts to explain the global epidemic of obesity, researchers have often taken to fingering culprits beyond people’s direct control. It is now believed that increased levels of stress, climate change and even artificial light at night may contribute to expanding waistlines. However, if such factors affect humans, they ought, in principle, to have similarly nefarious effects on other creatures. This should hold especially true for species that are physiologically similar to people and live in proximity to them. Pet owners have long fretted that this may, indeed, be happening.

Of course, anecdotal evidence carries little weight, so a group of researchers led by Yann Klimentidis, of the University of Alabama, decided to check whether animal obesity rates do in fact mirror the worrying trend among people. They published their findings this week in the Proceedings of the Royal Society. …

I got really fat because I stopped doing drugs, says Kelly Osbourne

Former wild child Kelly Osbourne has revealed that giving up on drugs made her gain weight. The former junkie told Piers Morgan in a chat how she tried every drug except crack after being raised with addict dad Ozzy, 61, in the house, reports the Daily Star. Her habit was so bad she contemplated suicide [...]

Dane Cook Broadway Debut “Fat Pig”

Funnyman Dane Cook will join Robin Williams on the Great White Way next year, making his Broadway debut in Neil LaBute’s adaptation of Fat Pig. The play — which premiered Off Broadway in 2004 and has been produced in Boston, Los Angeles, and London — is a comedy that tells the story of Tom, an [...]

Obesity: Does light make you fat?

When—not just what—mice eat affects how much weight they put on

THE blame for rising obesity rates has been pinned on many things, including a more calorific diet, the spread of processed food, a lack of exercise and modern man’s generally more stressful lot. Something else may soon be included in the list: brighter nights.

Light regulates the body’s biological clock—priming an individual’s metabolism for predictable events such as meals and slumber. Previous research has shown that, in mice at least, the genes responsible for this can be manipulated so as to make the animals plumper and more susceptible to problems associated with obesity, including diabetes and heart disease. It was not known, though, whether simply altering ambient light intensity might have similar effects. …

Fat of the lands

The bulging problem of obesity

ONE IN six adults in the 33 mostly rich countries of the OECD is obese (measured as a body mass index of 30 or more) according to a report published on September 23rd. The fattest countries are the United States and Mexico, where around a third of adults are obese. Britain’s adults are the biggest in Europe. By contrast, Asian OECD countries Japan and South Korea are the leanest. Governments will count the eventual cost: health-care spending on an obese person is 25% more than for someone of average weight. And the problem is not confined to the rich world. In rapidly developing countries such as China, Brazil and India obesity rates, though still low, are growing fast as the dietary habits of the ever-increasing middle classes change.

Fat Freddy’s Drop: Live at Roundhouse London

NEW ZEALAND ROOTS/DUB/REGGAE/JAZZ ENSEMBLE RELEASE NEW LIVE ALBUM

Fat Freddy’s Drop,
New Zealand’s hard-playing, easy-going jam masters, are set to release Fat Freddy’s Drop Live at Roundhouse London on September 28, 2010), which captures one crazy night at the storied London venue and picks up where the funky battle with Dr. Boondigga and the Big BW left off.

Check out a review of Fat Freddy’s Drop live in Australia here.

Fat Freddy’s Drop
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15 Most Improbable Celebrity Fatoshops

We love celebs. They’re simply so fun to laugh at. Still, we reckon any of them with a sense of humour would be laughing along at these images of themselves ballooning out big-time – with the help of a little Photoshop trickery, of course. Supersize is the celebrity way with these 15 blimp-like creations. To [...]

Metabolic syndrome: A game of consequences?

One of the scourges of modern life may have been profoundly misunderstood

BEING fat is bad for you. On that, almost everyone agrees. It is just possible, though, that almost everyone is wrong. In fact, getting fat may be a mechanism that protects the body. The health problems associated with fatness may not be caused by it but be another consequence, another symptom, of overeating.

That is the heretical proposal of Roger Unger and Philipp Scherer. Dr Unger and Dr Scherer, who work at the University of Texas, in Dallas, have been reviewing the science of what has come to be known as metabolic syndrome. This is a cluster of symptoms such as high blood pressure, insulin resistance and fatness that seem to increase the risk of heart disease and strokes, late-onset diabetes and liver disease. Metabolic syndrome is found in a sixth of the American population. …

Fat Indian weddings embrace lean times

Preeti Punamiya is a young and excited bride-to-be, preparing to get married in a traditional Indian wedding that usually features days of lavish celebrations.  But the impact of the global economic downturn has caused her to rethink the extravagance, following a trend that has seen many IndianPreeti Punamiya is a young and excited bride-to-be, preparing to get married in a traditional Indian wedding that usually features days of lavish celebrations. But the impact of the global economic downturn has caused her to rethink the extravagance, following a trend that has seen many Indian

Kerry Katona joins ‘fat camp’

Kerry Katona has gone to ‘fat camp’ to regain her figure, it has emerged.
The 29-year-old decided to spend two weeks with military trainers after being shocked by pictures of herself looking chubby in the Daily Star.
The ex-Atomic Kitten’s advisers told her that she should reduce if she wants to attract companies looking for celebs [...]

Golf: Mystery crash left Woods with ‘fat lip’ – report

Golf superstar Tiger Woods had a “fat lip” but no other visible facial injuries when Florida Highway Patrol officers met him four days after a mysterious car crash outside his home, a local television station reported Wednesday. Florida Highway Patrol spokeswoman Kim Montes told WESH-TV in

Golf: Mystery crash left Woods with ‘fat lip’ – report

Golf superstar Tiger Woods had a “fat lip” but no other visible facial injuries when Florida Highway Patrol officers met him four days after a mysterious car crash outside his home, a local television station reported Wednesday. Florida Highway Patrol spokeswoman Kim Montes told WESH-TV in

Obama talks tough with ‘fat cat’ bankers

President Barack Obama Monday talked tough with US bank chiefs, demanding they boost lending to create jobs, after raising the stakes for the White House talks by slamming Wall Street “fat cats.” Obama also warned the senior bank executives that he would relish a fight unless they dropped

Fat Freddy’s Drop: Beyond Bob

By: Jim Welte

Fat Freddy’s Drop by Kerry Brown

By official counts, Bob Marley fathered 11 children. But Tuff Gong’s musical ancestry extends far beyond one man’s fertility frontier, having spread his sonic seed across the globe in a period so fruitful that his progeny continue to turn up in far-flung places nearly three decades after his death.

In 1979, Marley performed a set at the Sweetwaters Music Festival on the West Coast of New Zealand’s North Island. Jamaican riddims fit Kiwis nicely, and the socially conscious lyrics tapped into the longstanding struggle of the indigenous Maori people for cultural and political recognition. The aftershocks from that show continue to be felt to this day, as a diverse and burgeoning dub and reggae influenced music scene in the capital city of Wellington has blossomed and taken its own message on tour around the globe. Bands like The Black Seeds, Salmonella Dub, and TrinityRoots have all had a hand in spreading the New Zealand reggae gospel over the past decade-plus.

But none has done it like Fat Freddy’s Drop, and there are a few crucial reasons why. For one, the septet boasts a multi-tentacled sound that seems to grow each time the band tours a new part of the world, while also remaining true to its dub and reggae roots. Its new album, Dr. Boondigga & the Big BW (released in U.S. November 10 on !K7), based on a fictional nemesis and his brain-washing robot henchman, reveals a beast of a band that seems ready to unleash the hounds. Secondly, they have taken their time since forming in 1999, touring the U.K. and Europe consistently and biding their time for a U.S. onslaught, which officially kicks off this week with a brief tour of California (full tour dates here).

Fat Freddy’s Drop by Kerry Brown

Finally and most importantly, Fat Freddy’s Drop is fronted by a voice for the ages. Dallas Tamaira (aka Joe Dukie) is a singer with so much warmth and soul in his voice that he’d captivate you whether he was busking on the corner or crooning intermittent verses amidst a cacophony of horns and techno thumps, as he is on Boondigga‘s marathon second track, “Shiverman.” Dukie, who got his nickname by combining the names of his musician father and grandfather, is the best singer you’ve never heard of. He draws on verses from prominent Maori authors like Hone Tuwhare and Witi Ihimaera, and says that his early imitations of people like Stevie Wonder and Luther Vandross “sounded [like] shit, so I had to kind of find my own voice.”

As a result, the sound of Fat Freddy’s Drop is a “Lovely Day”-era Bill Withers backed by the Aggrovators, with Mad Professor at the controls.

Like many intrepid musical excursions, it all began with some terribly good LSD. After their jam band Bongmaster fizzled out around 1998, Dukie, trumpeter Toby Laing and Samoan beatmaker Chris Faiumu (aka Fitchie aka Mu) began playing parties and club gigs. Mu had a host of regular DJ gigs, and he’d play all sorts of instrumentals, from house to soulful hip hop, over which Dukie and Laing could sing and play. Using vinyl limited the group a bit – “By the time they’d worked out some good ideas and some good melodies, the song would be over,” Mu says – so he bought an MPC 2000 sampler and started making his own beats.

Dallas Tamaira by Kerry Brown

The trio was tasked by the college radio station where Mu worked to come up with a song for a compilation. The flavor of the month LSD at that time in New Zealand featured the image of the Fat Freddy’s Cat from Gilbert Shelton’s comic strip, The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers. Over two days of writing, recording, mixing and mastering “Hope,” a soulful piece of sanguine space-out jazz, emerged. “We indulged,” says Mu. “We were quite young then.”

When asked what their group name was and having given it no thought, they put down Fat Freddy’s Drop. “We had planned to change the name but as time went on it was kind of too late,” Mu says. “We were too slack to change the name to a proper one, but people who didn’t know the story behind it liked the ring of it.”

Mu created the independent label The Drop that same year and steadily began releasing 12-inch singles, including “Midnight Marauders,” which was re-released by German electronic stalwart Sonar Kollektiv. Thus began a series of regular treks to Europe for the band and a growing following there fueled by tastemakers like BBC Radio 1 DJ Gilles Peterson. Mu also built himself a ProTools studio in the basement of his waterfront home in Wellington, a move that fostered a family vibe that has helped anchor the band through marriages and kids.

Fat Freddy’s 2006 debut album, Based On a True Story, featured tracks they’d been playing live for up to six years. It was aggressively mellow, rarely venturing outside soulful head-nodding territory. It was also spellbinding, the kind of record that pulls you in deeper with each spin.

Fat Freddy’s Drop by Kerry Brown

But unsurprisingly for a band that births most of its songs out of jam sessions, Fat Freddy’s Drop has fortified its rep on tour. As a fill-in at the Movement electronic music festival in Detroit in 2004, the band took the stage in front of about five people. “No one knew who the hell we were,” Mu says, “but we played a two and a half hour set and by the end, we attracted a huge crowd and people were digging it.”

Other than that show, Fat Freddy’s Drop hasn’t performed in the U.S. and Based On a True Story never got a U.S. distribution deal. As a result, a band that has been doing its thing for a decade, selling out shows in Europe and winning a bevy of awards in its home country, is largely unknown in America. The band had previous plans to tour the U.S. but they never came together, either because of the length of the trip, dependable European support, or post 9/11 nerves.

“We’re so far removed from America and it’s easy to look at America as such a huge place that you think, where do you start?” Mu says.

“We took what we thought was a safe option,” Dukie adds.

With Boondigga out through the !K7 label in the U.S. and the band set to tour California, all that is about to change, and both Mu and Dukie are thrilled at the opportunity. In the age of Obama, Dukie is sure that American listeners will take to older songs like “Hope for a Generation” and “Ray Ray,” which asks, “What’s the world with no soul?”

Boondigga sees the band spreading its wings, from the techno-meets-Gypsy jazz on “Shiverman” to a New Orleans flavor on “The Nod” that would be right at home in any second line parade. On the dubbed-out “The Raft,” Dukie hints at big things with lines like, “Although my people may not be many/ we are ready for the storm to come.”

“The time just feels right for us now to come to the States,” Dukie says. “We’ve done a lot of material, and it’s the kind of material that I would love to play for the American audience. We want to give them a taste of where we’re from and show them what makes us who we are. I know that there are people over there that will be able to appreciate that kind of thing.”

“It really feels like a long time coming,” he adds. “I can’t wait. And I’m nervous as well.”

Fat Freddy’s Drop Tour Dates

11/19/09 Thu The Independent San Francisco, CA

11/20/09 Fri The Roxy Theatre West Hollywood, CA

11/21/09 Sat WorldBeat Center San Diego, CA

11/22/09 Sun Saint Rocke Hermosa Beach, CA

11/26/09 Thu The Paradiso Amsterdam, NL

11/27/09 Fri Astra Berlin, GER

11/29/09 Sun Le Bataclan Paris, FRA

11/30/09 Mon Hammersmith Apollo London, GB

12/01/09 Tue Manchester Academy Manchester, GB

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Fat Freddy’s Drop | 10.18 | Australia

Words & Images by: Alex Anastas

Fat Freddy’s Drop :: 10.18.09 :: The Forum :: Sydney, Australia

Fat Freddy’s Drop :: 10.18 :: Australia

The Forum Sydney quite possibly has the single most appropriate name for any venue in Australia, encompassing three half-circle, Roman Coliseum-esque tiers above a dramatically downwardly sloped dance floor. This soaring, walled-in design, including a ’70s ceiling completely covered in mirrored tiles high above, generates the unique and unsettling feeling of audience-like gladiators jostling for pit position before being fed to the proverbial lions onstage. Therefore, once you and your crew are in a good spot for grooving, you’re there for the night, and there ain’t no chance of ditching your staked out gold for that extra cold one calling from one of the venues several bars.

The particular lions holding court on this brisk spring evening, Fat Freddy’s Drop, formed in a haze and daze about ten years ago during extended, improvised jam sessions in the close-knit music scene of Wellington, New Zealand. The lively seven-piece oozes luscious dub rhythms, extended takes on their studio cuts, jazzy solo breaks, and most noticeably, the slinky, sexy vocal stylings of Dallas “Joe Dukie” Tamaira floating above their adoring and growing fan base. Subconscious communication between these well-traveled and experienced band members also seems to come easily after 11 studio and live releases.

However, before FFD could finish off their sold out two night Sydney run, the packed-house was warmed nicely by a trifecta of openers. The brief turntable burns of DJ Bentley were heard by the few already inside but mostly by the many still in line, followed closely by local Sydney dub-reggae crooners The Versionaries featuring original tunes soaked in a classic Trenchtown sound, and finally DJ Thief, who really got the crowd amped and moving with masterful mash-ups. By the time Thief had cleared the stage, the Sunday night crowd was salivating for the main act.

Dallas Tamaira – FFD :: 10.18 :: Australia

Fat Freddy’s Drop opened their final Australian set with a few slow-building jams based around their rhythm section of Iain “Dobie Blaze” Gordon (keys), Tehimana “Jetlag Johnson” Kerr (guitar), and founder Chris “DJ Fitchie” Faiumu (MPC & decks). Adding layers of minimalist funk and deep-cutting, loud bass that warms the listener to the very core, these three players are the unheralded heroes holding down the back beat love of The Drop’s 21st century sound. The horn section out front features the all-too-cool Scott “Chopper Reedz” Towers (sax), the sandwiched thin man Toby “Tony Chang” Laing (trumpet), and the dance machine himself, the heart and soul of any FFD show, Joe “Hopepa” Lindsay (trombone). Never showmen to be outdone, the three brass blowers kept the show moving along, especially with “Hopepa” grooving like a madman possessed by a disco inferno beast. Conversely, their rhythm section often bow to their horned compatriots to finesse the crowd into a frenzied, cool dynamic rooted in years of jamming together.

Beats and rhythms aside, the true star is the humble Dallas Tamaira on vocals. Making females in the audience quiver and scream all night with his wincing reaches for the higher register, the tattoo-laden singer bubbles positive vibes through the cringe of a tortured soul survivor. Between his serious glares around the stage to pick up his bandmates’ lead, it becomes obvious that Tamaira is exorcising some reggae demons before our eyes. Holding court with steely glances from stage left, Tamaira often bowed out to the dance party chaos brought to life by the likes of the booty shaking “Hopepa,” who lead the youthful Sydney audience in some awfully dirty dancing.

Before they could duck back to their New Zealand digs, these Kiwi masters treated the Sydney crowds to two high-energy, awesome shows. A festival staple on the Oceanic tour scene with a fast growing fan base in Europe and North America, Fat Freddy’s Drop are playing three shows in California just before Thanksgiving.

Pop over here for FFD tour dates, and check back soon for an exclusive feature/interview.

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How to Stay Young and Healthy

The aging process is for the greater part no mystery anymore. It consists for a great part of daily damages done on the macroscopic, tissue, cellular and genetic levels. These add up as the years are passing. These damages have specific causes like oxidating agents, sun beams, mechanical wear and tear, psychological stress, lack of [...]