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Beyonce in hot water over new song ‘XO’

Written By Unknown on Senin, 30 Desember 2013 | 23.16

Beyonce has drawn criticism for the "insensitive" inclusion of audio from the space shuttle Challenger disaster in her video for a newly released love song.

Challenger exploded 73 seconds after liftoff from the Kennedy Space Center on January 28, 1986, killing all seven crew members.

The song "XO," about a troubled relationship, features the voice of now-retired NASA public affairs officer Steve Nesbitt, commentating as the shuttle was seen breaking apart on live television.

"Flight controllers here looking very carefully at the situation. Obviously a major malfunction," Nesbitt is heard saying. The brief audio clip runs for six seconds.

"XO" was written and produced by Ryan Tedder and Terius Nash, who goes by the stage name The Dream.

Beyonce issued a statement: "My heart goes out to the families of those lost in the Challenger disaster. The song 'XO' was recorded with the sincerest intention to help heal those who have lost loved ones and to remind us that unexpected things happen, so love and appreciate every minute that you have with those who mean the most to you.

"The songwriters included the audio in tribute to the unselfish work of the Challenger crew with hope that they will never be forgotten."

Former and current astronauts, NASA employees and Challenger family members see it differently. June Scobee Rodgers, the widow of Challenger Space Shuttle Commander Dick Scobee and a founder of the Challenger Center for Space Science Education, expressed her disappointment in the singer's decision.

Keith Cowing, a former NASA employee who now runs the NASAWatch.com website, said, "This choice of historic and solemn audio is inappropriate in the extreme. The choice is little different than taking Walter Cronkite's words to viewers announcing the death of President Kennedy or 911 calls from the World Trade Center attack and using them for shock value in a pop tune."

Cowing would like to see the clip removed and an apology issued to the families of the Challenger crew.

Retired NASA astronaut Clayton Anderson told ABC News, "For the words to be used in the video is simply insensitive, at the very least."

This article originally appeared on News.com.au.


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‘Violent bank robber’ made threats against Obama in 2010: Secret Service

PHOENIX — The Secret Service says the man authorities have linked to a three-state bank robbery spree, the killing of one Mississippi police officer and the wounding of another was arrested in 2010 after being accused of making online threats against the president.

Mario Edward Garnett was living in Oklahoma City at the time of the arrest, Secret Service spokesman Max Millien said Sunday. He would not say how the case was resolved.

Authorities have connected Garnett to a Dec. 23 bank robbery attempt in Atlanta, a bank robbery later that same day in Tupelo, Miss., and the shooting death of one Tupelo officer and the wounding of another.

A Phoenix detective shot and killed Garnett just after he robbed a bank Saturday morning.

Authorities in Phoenix are expected Monday to release 911 recordings and surveillance video from the fatal robbery. The 911 recordings are expected to include a call from a woman who was inside the Phoenix bank during the robbery.

President Obama reacts during the Diamond Head Classic men's hoops game in Honolulu.Photo: Zumapress.com

Phoenix police spokesman James Holmes said at a news conference Sunday afternoon that the 40-year-old Garnett was from the Midwest, had served for four years in the U.S. Army and appeared to have no friends or relatives in Arizona.

Earlier Sunday, the FBI's special agent in charge in Jackson, Miss., said records showed the suspect's cellphone was in Atlanta, Phoenix and Tupelo at the time of each incident.

The agent, Daniel McMullen, also told reporters in Tupelo that there were "numerous similarities" between the three bank robberies, including the clothing worn by the suspect, statements he made during the incidents and his "overall modus operandi."

Surveillance photos from the attempted bank robbery in Atlanta showed a man wearing a black-and-white patterned jacket tried to rob a Bank of America branch around 9:30 a.m. on Dec. 23. He was wearing a black ski mask and black gloves and carrying a handgun.

After failing to get any money from a teller, the man demanded and received an undisclosed amount of money from someone who was using an ATM in the bank's lobby. The man was seen leaving in a light gray car with no license plate.

Later that day, the suspect stole an undisclosed amount of money from the BancorpSouth in Tupelo before fleeing in a gray sedan, the FBI has said.

Officers Gale Stauffer and Joseph Maher were responding to a bank alarm and a report that the suspect had fled in a white SUV when they spotted such a vehicle stalled in traffic. The officers were confronting the SUV's driver when the suspect exited the gray sedan, which was stopped behind the SUV, and ambushed the officers, according to McMullen.

Stauffer died and was buried Friday after a funeral attended by as many as 1,000 people. Dozens of uniformed officers from Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee and elsewhere attended the service.

Stauffer's wife, Beth, said her family was grateful for investigators' work and for the support it has received.

"We can truly begin the healing process, and that could not have happened without the hard work of so very many," she told reporters Sunday. "Gale would be so proud."

Tupelo police Chief Bart Aguirre told the Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal that Maher's condition has improved and he was able to walk some with assistance Friday. Maher moved out of the intensive care unit at North Mississippi Medical Center and into a private room.

The Phoenix shooting happened Saturday morning at a Compass Bank branch in the near-northwest part of the city after someone called 911 to report seeing a man run into the bank while wearing a mask.

There were five people inside the bank during the robbery, Holmes said. A customer who ran outside when Garnett turned his attention to the bank manager also called 911.

The first officer to arrive saw the man leave the bank with a bag and a handgun.

"The officer drew his service weapon and began giving the suspect commands at which time the suspect raised his weapon and began firing at the officer," Holmes said in an earlier statement.

A detective who had just arrived at the scene shot the suspect, who was pronounced dead after being taken to a Phoenix hospital. No officers or bank employees were injured.

Holmes said Garnett drove a rental car to the Phoenix bank. It was unclear where Garnett had been and what he had been doing while in the state.

"We have no idea what he did between the 23rd of December and the 28th of December," he said.


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ObamaCare signups pass 1 million mark

HONOLULU — A December surge propelled health care sign-ups through the government's rehabilitated website past the 1 million mark, the Obama administration said Sunday, reflecting new vigor for the problem-plagued federal insurance market.

Combined with numbers for state-run markets due in January, that should put total enrollment in the new private insurance plans under President Obama's health law at about 2 million people through the end of the year, independent experts said.

That would be about two-thirds of the administration's original goal of signing up 3.3 million by Dec. 31, a significant improvement given the technical problems that crippled the federal market during much of the fall. The overall goal remains to enroll 7 million people by March 31.

"It looks like current enrollment is around 2 million despite all the issues," said Dan Mendelson, CEO of Avalere Health, a market analysis firm. "It was a very impressive showing for December."

The administration said that of the more than 1.1 million people now enrolled in the federal insurance exchange, nearly 1 million signed up in December. The majority came days before a pre-Christmas deadline for coverage to start in January. Compare that with a paltry 27,000 in October, the federal website's first, error-prone month.

"We experienced a welcome surge in enrollment as millions of Americans seek access to affordable health care coverage," Marilyn Tavenner, the head of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, said in a blog post announcing the figures.

The numbers don't represent a full accounting for the country.

The federal website serves 36 states. Yet to be reported are December results from the 14 states running their own sites. Overall, states have been signing up more people than the federal government. But most of that has come from high performers such as California, New York, Washington, Kentucky and Connecticut. Some states continue to struggle.

Still, the end-of-year spike suggests that the federal insurance marketplace is starting to pull its weight. The windfall comes at a critical moment for Obama's sweeping health care law, which becomes "real" for many Americans on Jan. 1 as coverage through the insurance exchanges and key patient protections kick in.

The administration's concern now shifts to keeping the momentum going for sign-ups, and heading off problems that could arise when people who've already enrolled try to use their new insurance.

"They've got the front end of the system working really well," said insurance industry consultant Robert Laszewski. "Now we can move on to the next question: Do people really want to buy this?" He also estimated 2 million will probably be enrolled this year.

The fledgling insurance exchanges are online markets for subsidized private coverage. Obama needs millions of mostly younger, healthy Americans to sign up to keep costs low for everyone. Open enrollment runs until the end of March.

Tavenner said fixes to the website, overhauled to address widespread technical problems, contributed to December's figures. But things haven't totally cleared up. Thousands of people wound up waiting on hold for telephone help on Christmas Eve for a multitude of reasons, including technical difficulties.

"We have been a little bit behind the curve," acknowledged Rep. Joaquin Castro, D-Texas, whose state has the highest proportion of uninsured residents.

"Obamacare is a reality," conceded one of the law's opponents, Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., who as House oversight committee chairman has been investigating the rollout problems. However, he predicted it will only pile on costs.

"The fact that people well into the middle class are going to get subsidies is going to cause them to look at healthcare…sort of in a Third World way of do we get subsidies from the government for our milk, for our gasoline and, oh, by the way, for our healthcare," said Issa.

For consumers who successfully selected one of the new insurance plans by Dec. 24, coverage should start on New Year's Day. That's provided they pay their first month's premium by the due date, extended until Jan. 10 in most cases.

But insurers have complained that another set of technical problems, largely hidden from consumers, has resulted in the government passing along inaccurate data on enrollees. With a flood of signups that must be processed in just days, it remains unclear whether last-minute enrollees will encounter a seamless experience if they try to use their new benefits come Jan. 1.

The White House says the error rate has been significantly reduced, but the political fallout from website woes could pale in comparison with the heat that Obama might take if Americans who signed up and paid their premiums arrive at the pharmacy or the emergency room and find there's no record of their coverage.

Officials are also working to prevent gaps in coverage for at least 4.7 million Americans whose individual policies were canceled this fall because they fell short of the law's requirements. The administration has said that even if those individuals don't sign up for new plans, they won't face the law's tax penalty for remaining uninsured.

A few states offering their own updates have posted encouraging totals, including New York, where more than 200,000 have enrolled either through the state exchange or through Medicaid, a government program expanded under Obama's health law to cover more people. In California, a tally released Friday showed nearly 430,000 have enrolled through the exchange so far.

Castro and Issa spoke on NBC's "Meet The Press."


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Swine flu makes a comeback as flu cases spike

Flu season is making its miserable presence felt across the United States, with a sharp jump in cases last week propelled by a comeback of the nasty swine flu virus that wreaked havoc in 2009, federal authorities reported.

The number of states reporting "widespread" seasonal flu activity — meaning cases are found in more than half of a state's counties — spiked from four to ten last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in its weekly flu update.

The northeast and mid-Atlantic are especially flu-prone this winter, with New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Massachusetts among the ten. The CDC also placed Alaska, Wyoming and  Kansas as well as three southern states — Texas, Alabama and Louisiana — on widespread flu alert for the week ending December 21.

Only four states — Alabama, Louisiana, New York and Texas — made the list the week before.

"It's a typical influenza season, if I can use that word," said Dr. Michael Jhung, a medical officer in the CDC's flu division, told CNN. But the resurgence of H1N1, the virus that was dubbed "swine flu," is a surprise, authorities said.

Flu has killed four children in the U.S. since September 29, according to the CDC, which urges vaccinations to combat the spread of the virus during a flu season that's expected to last into February.


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Italian distributor apologizes for ’12 Years a Slave’ posters

MILAN — The Italian distributor of the film "12 Years A Slave" has apologized for promotional posters attacked as racist for featuring Brad Pitt and Michael Fassbender, despite their relatively minor roles, and not the film's star, Chiwetel Ejiofor.

BIM Distribuzione said in a statement Monday the "inappropriate materials have now been withdrawn" and expressed "regret any distraction this incident may have caused." BIM said the new posters feature only Ejiofor, who has been nominated for a Golden Globe for his portrayal of a freed black man who is abducted and sold into slavery.

The distributor said the posters featuring Pitt and Fassbender were aimed at "giving wide representation of what is told in the film itself."

The film by director Steve McQueen opens in February in Italy.


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The 16 most memorable celebrity selfies of 2013

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 28 Desember 2013 | 23.16

The 16 most memorable celebrity selfies of 2013 | New York Post
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By Charlotte Willis, News.com.au

December 28, 2013 | 9:23am

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Kim K's post-baby bathing suit selfie was both loved and hated. Photo: Instagram

The Oxford English Dictionary officially declared "selfie" the term of 2013, and our snap-happy selfie-loving celebrities have given us some absolute gems this year.

Kim Kardashian delivered the perfect "f*** you" to all of her haters when she posted a sexy snap on her Instagram account just four months after giving birth.

But which star took the best selfie of 2013? Here are 16 of the most memorable.

Miley Cyrus dressed up as Lil' Kim for Halloween, donning the rapper's infamous outfit from the 1999 VMAs.

RiRi is pretty much the selfie queen, but why this particular bikini shot deserved more than 300,000 likes is a mystery to us.

James Franco shared a topless photo of himself while staring into the bathroom mirror. We're not complaining.

Bieber set tongues wagging when he posted this pic with ex-girlfriend Selena Gomez. The hashtag "#heartbreaker" sent Beliebers into a spin.

Kardashian matriarch Kris Jenner was both praised and slammed for this bikini snap.

Lena Dunham shared this selfie with her new iPhone case on Instagram. Little did she realize her boyfriend Jack Antonoff of the band fun was photobombing her.

Sam Worthington's very first photo on his Instagram account confirmed the rumors that he and Lara Bingle were officially an item.

Beyonce chopped off those famous long locks and debuted her new blonde pixie cut on social media.

Bieber went on a tattoo rampage this year. This "all-seeing eye" was inspired by his mother.

Rihanna took the celeb trend of wearing grills to the next level with her gun-shaped teeth bling.

She's famous for her ample derriere, and Coco Ausin loves a good workout selfie.

Lena Dunham took this selfie sitting on Zooey Deschanel's knee at the Oscars…just because.

It seems model of the moment Cara Delevigne caught the body art bug this year.

Taylor Swift took the classic doughnut selfie for St. Patrick's Day.

Niall Horan and Katy Perry announced their "engagement" with this pic. "She said yes!" The One Direction band member wrote.

Harry Styles donned a wig and posed with Sienna Miller for this selfie. No idea why…

This article originally appeared on News.com.au.

Filed under2013 in Review

Beyoncé

Cara Delevigne

Coco

Harry Styles

James Franco

Justin Bieber

Katy Perry

Kris Jenner

Lara Bingle

Lena Dunham

Megan Gale

Miley

Niall Horan

Rihanna

Sam Worthington

Selfi

Shaun Hampson

Sienna Miller

Tattoos

Taylor Swift

Zooey Deschanel

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The Soviet Union spent $1 billion on mind-control programs

The race to put man on the Moon wasn't enough of a battle for the global super powers during the Cold War.

At the time, the Soviet Union and the United States were in an arms race of a bizarre, unconventional kind – that has been exposed in a new report.

Beginning in 1917 and continuing until 2003, the Soviets poured up to $1 billion into developing mind-controlling weaponry to compete with similar programs undertaken in the United States.

While much still remains classified, we can now confirm the Soviets used methods to manipulate test subjects' brains.

The paper, by Serge Kernbach, at the Research Centre of Advanced Robotics and Environmental Science in Stuttgart, Germany, details the Soviet Union's extensive experiments, called "psychotronics". The paper is based on Russian technical journals and recently declassified documents.

The paper outlines how the Soviets developed "cerpan", a device to generate and store high-frequency electromagnetic radiation which was used to affect other objects.

"If the generator is designed properly, it is able to accumulate bioenergy from all living things – animals, plants, humans – and then release it outside," the paper said.

The schematic drawing made by Soviet scientist detailing the bio-circuitry of the human nervous system.Photo: B.B.Kazhinskiy

The psychotronics program, known in the US as "parapsychology", involves unconventional research into mind control and remote influence – and was funded by the government.

With only limited knowledge of each other's mind-bending programs, the Soviets and Americans were both participating in similar secret operations, with areas of interest often mirroring the other country's study.

The psychotronics project draws similarities to part of the controversial program MKUltra in the US. The CIA program ran for 20 years, has been highly documented since being investigated in the 1970s and was recently dramatized in the 2009 movie "The Men Who Stare at Goats."

Scientists involved in the MKUltra program researched the possibility of manipulating people's minds by altering their brain functions using electromagnetic waves. This program led to the development of pyschotronic weapons, which were intended to be used to perform these mind-shifting functions.

The illegal research subjected humans to experiments with drugs, such as LSD, hypnosis and radiological and biological agents. Shockingly, some studies were conducted without the participant's knowledge.

Kernbach's paper on the Soviet Union's psychotronics program fails to mention one thing – the results. He also doesn't detail whether there are ongoing mind-control programs in the US or Russia, but there are suspicions.

Russian President Vladimir Putin made mention of futuristic weaponry last year in a presidential campaign article.

"Space-based systems and IT tools, especially in cyberspace, will play a great, if not decisive role in armed conflicts. In a more remote future, weapon systems that use different physical principles will be created (beam, geophysical, wave, genetic, psychophysical and other types of weapons). All this will provide fundamentally new instruments for achieving political and strategic goals in addition to nuclear weapons," he wrote.

The newly declassified information outlined in the report only touches on the Soviet psychotronics program and the bizarre experiments undertaken. With so much information still classified, will we ever know the whole truth?

This article originally appeared on News.com.au.


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Libya detains 4 US military personnel, releases them hours later

WASHINGTON — Four U.S. military personnel investigating potential evacuation routes in Libya were taken into custody at a checkpoint and then detained briefly by the Libyan government before being released, U.S. officials said Friday night.

These four military personnel were operating in an area near the coastal city of Sabratha in northwestern Libya as part of security preparedness efforts when they were taken into custody, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said in a statement. Sabathra, about 40 miles west of Tripoli, is a popular tourist area with its ancient Roman ruins.

No one was injured. The military personnel were taken to the U.S. Embassy after their release, a Defense Department official said. The official was not authorized to discuss the incident by name and requested anonymity.

The four were supporting U.S. Marine security forces protecting the American Embassy, the official said. They were likely U.S. special operations forces, which have been deployed to Libya.

An altercation apparently took place at the checkpoint, the Defense Department official said. Reports of gunfire could not be confirmed.

After they were detained at the checkpoint, the Americans were transferred to the Ministry of the Interior and held for a few hours, the official said. Psaki said U.S. officials were still trying to confirm details of the incident.

"We value our relationship with the new Libya," Psaki said. "We have a strategic partnership based on shared interests and our strong support for Libya's historic democratic transition."

The U.S. Embassy in Tripoli includes a security detail. The embassy's personnel are restricted in their movements in Libya.

Libya has been marked by unrest since the ouster in 2011 of longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi. Armed groups that fought Gadhafi's army turned themselves into militias that exploited the weakness of the weak central government in Tripoli and operate independently of the police and the military.

In September 2012, terrorists attacked the U.S. diplomatic mission at Benghazi, Libya, killing U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.

President Barack Obama, who was vacationing in Hawaii, was updated about the incident by staff from the White House's National Security Council, officials said.


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Maguire, Wiig lead all-star spoof of bloated ’70s miniseries

There's a scene in "The Spoils of Babylon," IFC's six-episode miniseries satire starring Will Ferrell, Kristen Wiig, and Tobey Maguire, where Maguire is making love to his new wife.

The scene is a psychedelic depiction of frenzied passion, the sounds of orgasmic pleasure mixing with intense facial close-ups, fiery lighting, and limbs — an inhuman amount of limbs, all flailing and wavering.

While not that different on paper from what you might see on a network nighttime soap, there is one unique factor. Maguire's wife, Lady Anne York, is played by a mannequin (though voiced by Carey Mulligan), and the filming of the scene required the entire crew to surround Maguire with mannequin limbs, waving them furiously as the actor feigned sex with what was actually bits of hard plastic.

"The Spoils of Babylon," which also features Tim Robbins, Jessica Alba, Val Kilmer, Michael Sheen and more, is named for the fictional book on which the series is based — and parodies epic '70s and '80s miniseries like "The Thorn Birds" and "Shogun."

Each episode is introduced by the book's melancholy, past-his-prime author, Eric Jonrosh, a character influenced in part by Orson Welles' overweight-wine-commercial years.

Jonrosh is played by a bushy-bearded, fedora-topped, fat-suited Ferrell, who drinks several glasses of wine at once as he regales us with tales of the project's shoot, including how he slept with every member of the cast, and how the lead actress, his former wife (Wiig), was "very adventurous in all matters sexual."

The miniseries brings us inside five decades of the life of the Morehouse family, including oil baron patriarch Jonas (Robbins), his precocious daughter Cynthia (Wiig) and his foundling stepson Devon (Maguire), who becomes Cynthia's forbidden love.

Along the way they face wars, death, addiction, romance and loss, and all the life complications one might expect from a series this epic, rendered in the most ridiculous ways possible.

The identity of Lady Anne, for instance, was influenced by a certain aspect of '60s films and taken to nonsensical extremes.

"The decision to put that in the show was a bold one, because that could go either way," says Andrew Steele, the series' co-writer along with Matt Piedmont, who also directed.

"If you look at some '60s films, like some John Wayne films, they would pair him up with models and actresses that could barely act . . . and it felt like they were using mannequins as actors." To film this scene, Piedmont had the crew grab mannequin limbs and wave them around Maguire as he made love to what was actually just more fake body parts. "There was a shared recognition of just how surreal that was," Piedmont says.

Surreal was the mood throughout the shoot. Haley Joel Osment, who plays Cynthia's son Winston, describes a scene where Wiig's improvisation threw him way off guard. "There's a huge boardroom scene where we're speaking in front of these investors, and toward the end of it she just attacked me," says Osment.

"We were at odds in the scene, but [the script] didn't say anything about her attacking me and pulling me beneath the table. That came out of nowhere."

Piedmont and Steele wrote for "Saturday Night Live" back when Ferrell was on the show, and Steele wrote, and Piedmont directed, Ferrell's 2012 film, "Casa de mi Padre." Steele is also the creative director for Funny or Die, which Ferrell co-founded.

While brainstorming ideas for a possible third season of HBO's "Funny or Die Presents," Piedmont saw a hardcover copy of "The Thorn Birds," which he says was like "three phone books glued together," at an Oregon bookstore. "Any super melodrama that's pretentious and overwrought makes me laugh," says Piedmont. "So I thought, what if we did a fake book of one of these mini-series, that was like this epic melodrama?"

"Matt sent me a one-line text from Portland that said, 'The best-selling novel of all time, The Spoils of Babylon.' I fell in love with the title," says Steele. "I threw back at him the name of the fake author, and we just started spinning it out in e-mails and texts."


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Pop princesses pay respects to queen Britney Spears

Pop princesses pay respects to queen Britney Spears | New York Post
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Miley Cryus really enjoyed herself sitting in the front row of Britney Spears' first Las Vegas residency concert.

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Miley spotted fellow pop princess Katy Perry enjoying herself in the crowd.

Splashnews.com

Selena Gomez also had a great time at Britney's concert.

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Gomez and Perry eventually danced the night away with one another.

Splashnews.com

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Biden jets to Virgin Islands for tropical getaway

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 27 Desember 2013 | 23.16

WASHINGTON – Vice President Biden doesn't have to worry about playing second fiddle to his boss when it comes to tropical vacations.

President Obama's No. 2, and 2016 presidential prospect, jets Friday to the U.S. Virgin Islands aboard Air Force Two, the White House announced Thursday night. He'll be there through New Year's.

That puts Biden just steps away from some of the Caribbean's best snorkeling at the same time Obama is strolling Hawaii's spectacular golf courses and hiking trails.

On Thursday, Obama hit the links for his fourth time of his vacation, golfing with pals Eric Whitaker, Mike Ramos and Bobby Titcomb along with White House trip director Marvin Nicholson and chef Sam Kass.

He spent about six hours at the Ko'olau Golf Club in Keneohe, Hawaii. That's about five hours more than he spent on a family hike at the Manoa Falls Trail in drizzly weather.

The enchanting public course features "winding ravines, extreme elevation changes, and breathtaking views of cascading waterfalls," according to its website.

Obama travels with top advisers and staff, and has signed budget and defense legislation while getting briefings on trouble spots.

Biden typically spends his summer getaway time at his home in Wilmington and visiting a pal's home in the Hamptons, and he's also taken down time in South Carolina and at Camp David.

Though the Virgin Islands feature a balmy climate and white sand beaches, they offer limited political upside. Residents of the U.S. territory don't have electoral vote for president (though they do vote in primaries).


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Secret to happiness? Be a conservative woman

The head of the think-tank where I work believes he has discovered the secret of happiness, and he wants to share it with everyone. Don't worry: I'm not in a cult.

Arthur Brooks is the president of the American Enterprise Institute, where I am a visiting fellow, and also a social scientist who has written a book on happiness. His research has shed light on who's happy, and why.

Some of the results are what you would expect: Genes have a lot to do with a happy disposition. Poverty reduces happiness, but past a certain point, higher income does not do much to raise it. Brooks notes that the decline in global poverty over the last few decades, especially in China and India, has thus meant a happier world.

Once basic material needs are met, though, satisfying work matters more than money. What people want is not just success, but also "earned success" — the feeling that one's efforts have paid off. In a recent talk, Brooks cited a 1978 study in which lottery winners were slightly less happy six months after they hit the jackpot.

In general, people overestimate the importance of "one-off" events to their future happiness. Even after personal tragedies, people within months revert to their baseline level of happiness.

Other patterns were surprising, at least to me. Women in the United States have long reported greater levels of happiness than men. Their advantage has, however, been shrinking, and for an unhappy reason: falling happiness among women. Scholars are unsure why that's happening. Women also rebound more quickly than men from the death of a spouse — perhaps, Brooks speculates, because they have more close friends.

Over the last 40 years, women who describe themselves as "conservative" have been more likely than women to their left to say they are "very happy," and those who say they are "extremely conservative" have been happier still. Over the same period, conservatives in general have held the same pattern: Righty men, too, have been happier than their more liberal counterparts. So maybe the last two presidential elections should be seen as a victory for the redistribution of happiness as well as income.

Most Americans — 89 percent — are either satisfied or very satisfied with their jobs. Among those who want to "lean out": a plurality of mothers, who say they would prefer part-time employment. (Here I'm drawing on the work of another AEI colleague, W. Bradford Wilcox. Happiness surrounds me at the office.) Women who say they have turned down a promotion or made some other work sacrifice for the sake of their families report high happiness levels.

Brooks' read is that the four great sources of happiness within human control are faith, family, friends and work. Married people are happier than singles. Those engaged in religious practices are happier than the unchurched.

He draws some public-policy conclusions, too. A safety net provided by the government is morally imperative and politically inevitable; it also increases the sum of human happiness. Brooks thinks that conservatives need to make their peace with its existence, as most have, and proclaim their support for it in word and deed.

They should also reform it, and other policies, to enable more people to achieve earned success. That is, he argues, the ultimate reason for a focus on promoting economic growth and reducing dependency on the government. Policies that discourage work — aid programs that phase out steeply as poor people move ahead in their jobs, for example — do reduce happiness, not just economic efficiency.

Brooks is an optimist, a happy warrior for free markets. There is, however, a heavy lump of coal amid the numbers. All four sources of happiness he identifies are in retreat in our country — especially among men, and even more especially among men without college degrees (the majority of men). They are less and less likely to be working or even looking for work; less and less likely to get married and stay married; less likely to belong to a faith community; and less likely to report that they have close friends.

The low point for male happiness comes at age 45, on average, Brooks reports. Consistent with all these findings, there seems to be a surge in suicide rates among middle-age men without college degrees.

It is not easy to see how any of these deep-seated cultural trends, which have been under way for decades, could be reversed. Unless we do, however, our country could be in for a future with a lot more sadness.


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Norman Rockwell’s family rips ‘gay’ hints in new biography

BOSTON — The family of Norman Rockwell is taking exception to a new biography of the late artist, saying it contains inaccuracies and poses a "phantom theory" about his sexuality.

"American Mirror: The Life and Art of Norman Rockwell," by Deborah Solomon, was published in November.

Family members said in a statement that they found 96 factual errors in the book and that the author misused sources and made "highly selective" use of Rockwell's autobiography, "My Adventures as an Illustrator."

Messages left for Solomon through her publisher Thursday weren't returned.

Rockwell, who illustrated more than 300 covers for the Saturday Evening Post, died in 1978 at age 84.

The family cites Solomon's description of how Rockwell would stop boys on the street to paint them and how such behavior might be problematic today.

They say it ignores the account in Rockwell's autobiography of how he'd ask their moms for permission.

"She supports this unfounded claim with another phantom theory, that Rockwell was a closeted homosexual," said the family statement, signed by Rockwell's son, Thomas, and granddaughter, Abigail. "To link pedophilia and homosexuality in this way is offensive and clearly homophobic."

In October, Solomon told The Wall Street Journal she didn't believe Rockwell had gay relationships, but said that he preferred male company and that "enormous homoeroticism" was evident in his work.


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Team Obama’s latest plan to boost Assad

Anxious to keep their diplomatic fudge-orama running, President Obama and his secretary of state, John Kerry, are pressing ahead with maneuvers for yet another conference on Syria in Geneva next month.

The problem is that the conference — a Russian trick to keep the Ba'athist despot Bashar al-Assad in power — can only prolong the Syrian tragedy, while further damaging the United States' already diminished standing in the Middle East.

The Obama-Kerry tandem has already made several concessions in exchange for a Russian promise to attend the conference. Last month, the US halted the meager aid, labeled "nonlethal," it provided for anti-Assad rebels. Washington even exerted pressure on European allies to do the same, so far succeeding with the British, who have also halted their aid to Syrian freedom fighters. Worse still, the Obama administration has provoked a public rift with regional allies such as Turkey and Saudi Arabia, whose support is crucial for any settlement of the Syrian conflict.

Thus when Kerry flies to Geneva for another photo-op, he would represent a US that has abandoned all its regional allies. At the same time, the US will not be able to count on any of the three broad camps that together represent the anti-Assad coalition. The truth is that no one in Syria trusts the US these days. It seems increasingly unlikely that any of the major rebel groups will even go to Geneva.

In contrast, Russia would attend Geneva at the head of a united alliance that includes the mullahs of Tehran, Assad and his gang in Damascus and a string of anti-American personalities and groups in Lebanon, Iraq and the Palestinian territories. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov would have the authority to speak on behalf of his camp. Kerry will not be able to make the same claim on behalf of his camp because he has none.

Not surprisingly, Moscow has been trying to dictate the agenda for Geneva. Lavrov says the gathering will work on a "transition formula." The trouble is that he also insists that the shape of any transition and the identity of those who would lead it depends on "the Syrian government." Since Assad has already stated that he must lead whatever transition is agreed upon, the Lavrov formula would mean "transition from Assad to Assad."

In that context, Kerry could prove useful by granting a transition led by Assad a measure of big-power recognition, if not legitimacy. Russia would also need the US to push a resolution through the United Nations Security Council to approve the diplomatic swindle prepared in Geneva.

While the Russians have a very clear idea of what they want in Geneva, the Americans lack a strategy, apart from filling Kerry's photo albums and nurturing his dream of a Nobel Peace Prize.

It is, of course, too late for the US to develop a policy on Syria before Geneva. Thus, Obama and Kerry are left with two options: play the role scripted for them by Vladimir Putin, or scrap the whole sinister plan.

A third option may also be available, however, provided that Obama and Kerry take their task of shaping the foreign policy of a major democratic power a bit more seriously. In that option, they would insist that the planned Geneva conference focuses on two points:

  •  Implementing the accords made in the first Geneva conference on Syria, notably an end to indiscriminate bombing of urban areas by Assad's Russian-made air craft.
  •  Mobilizing a major international effort, led by the UN, to ferry aid to the Syrian people. The UN has already declared Syria to be the biggest humanitarian challenge the world faces. Almost 10 million people, nearly half the population, are either refugees or displaced inside Syria.

The US could assume leadership in mobilizing the resources needed to cope with this human tragedy, forcing the Russians to decide whether they wish to continue deepening the tragedy or stop it.

Kerry should tell Lavrov that the US will not allow itself to be used as a rubber stamp for a "transition from Assad to Assad" scheme.

A clear American position, not one geared to a Russian scheme, might help restore some of the credibility the US has lost among allies in the region and within the broad coalition of anti-Assad forces inside Syria.


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Top 5 Rangers storylines of 2013

By Larry Brooks

December 27, 2013 | 11:14am

The 2012 review was chock full o' milestone moments on the ice that featured a regular-season division championship, advance to the conference finals, and signal victories such as the Winter Classic in Philadelphia.

But 2013? Not so much.

1

Breaking bad

Two days after their second-round Game 5 elimination defeat in Boston, the Rangers gathered on Memorial Day at the practice facility for their exit interviews with management. Henrik Lundqvist offered cryptic remarks to the press regarding his future in New York. Two days after that, on May 29, John Tortorella was exiting the organization in a stunning, unforeseen move, fired as coach despite having recorded the fourth-most wins and second-best winning percentage in franchise history in his four-plus seasons behind the bench. Sources told The Post that Tortorella was dismissed by GM Glen Sather in the wake of a torrent of complaints about the coach by marquee players in their break-up day meetings.

2

No Captain our Captain, it is A.V.

Despite having been invited by Sather to apply for the position, as Mark Messier would later tell The Post, The Captain, absent substantive professional coaching experience, was not selected as Tortorella's successor. Rather, on June 21, the Blueshirts announced the hiring of Alain Vigneault, who'd been dismissed after seven years behind the bench in Vancouver, where the Canucks won two President's Trophies and advanced to Game 7 of the 2011 Stanley Cup Final only to lose to Boston. Vigneault pledged he would encourage the Rangers to play a more offense-minded style, a philosophy hailed by the players.

Messier soon after left his position with the franchise as special advisor to Sather to work full time on the development of the Kingsbridge National Ice Center in The Bronx. Tortorella, interestingly enough, was hired by the Canucks on June 25 in the NHL's unique version of Trading Places.

3

Double O-seven

After qualifying for the playoffs as the six seed following a finishing 10-3-1 kick to the lockout-truncated season, the Blueshirts trailed the Capitals 3-2 in their opening-round series before Lundqvist made Derick Brassard's goal midway through the second period stand up for a Game 6, 1-0 victory at the Garden. The next night in D.C., The King recorded his second straight shutout with the Blueshirts blowing out the Caps 5-0 in Game 7 to advance to Round Two against the Bruins.

4

King me?

Playing the first two months of the season as a pending unrestricted free agent, Lundqvist was off to the poorest start of his nine-year NHL career and had been benched for two straight games for the first time since late in 2010-11 as questions about both his short-term and long-term status began to swirl. On Dec. 4, the club and Lundqvist agreed to a seven-year, $59.5 million extension ($8.5M per) through 2019-20 that represented the highest average salary for a goaltender in NHL history.

Lundqvist started eight straight games immediately thereafter, allowing three or more goals in the final seven — the longest such streak of his career — before sitting for the Blueshirts' final two games before the Christmas break. Vigneault refused to clarify his thoughts on the goaltending position entering the hiatus, with Cam Talbot having gone 8-2 with a 1.60 GAA and .938 save pct. as compared to The King's 10-15-2, 2.77, .905. The 31-year-old Lundqvist's extension includes a no-move clause, but the contract does not kick in until July 1.

5

Ghostbuster

The 26-year-old Talbot, who joined the organization as an undrafted free agent in 2010 following a collegiate career at Alabama-Huntsville, and who had made his NHL debut on Oct. 24 in a 2-1 defeat in Philadelphia, recorded a 1-0 shutout over the Canadiens on Nov. 16 for the Rangers' first victory in Montreal since March 17, 2009 (0-7-1), first shutout there since Ed Giacomin blanked the Habs on Feb. 25, 1967, and first 1-0 victory in Montreal since Davey Kerr's 1-0 triumph on Jan. 18, 1940. Talbot, whose mask features a "Ghostbusters" logo, also recorded a shutout in his following game, Nov. 23 in Nashville.


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338K laid off before Christmas: Labor Dept.

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 26 Desember 2013 | 23.16

The number of new weekly jobless claims dropped by the most in more than a year in the latest week, according the US Labor Department.

The number of initial claims for unemployment benefits fell by 42,000 in the week that ended Dec. 21 to 338,000, below a consensus forecast of 345,000. This is the biggest drop since the week ended Nov. 17, 2012.

Stocks were little changed in premarket with Dow futures at +51 points and US 10-year Treasuries just below 3.0 percent yield.

The weekly number follows two weeks where claims unexpectedly jumped by 75,000, eventually reaching 380,000, the highest level since March.

The data can be especially volatile during the holiday season stretching from Thanksgiving to New Year's Day. State unemployment offices are open fewer hours and there are often delays in processing claims.

A 4-week moving average is considered a more accurate barometer of employment trends because it smoothens out quirks in the weekly data.

This week, the four-week average rose 4,250 to 348,000. This is the highest level since early November.

This article originally appeared on Marketwatch.com. 


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Amazon giving gift cards for late holiday deliveries

Amazon.com is refunding shipping charges and giving shoppers $20 gift cards if their holiday packages didn't arrive by Christmas as promised.

An Amazon spokeswoman declined to say how many customers had been impacted or offered such a rebate.

The rebate news comes as United Parcel Service determined late Tuesday that it wouldn't deliver some goods in time for Christmas, as a spike in last-minute shopping overwhelmed its system.

"The volume of air packages in the UPS system did exceed capacity as demand was much greater than our forecast," a UPS spokeswoman said.

Consumers were reporting missing deliveries from FedEx as well, although a FedEx spokesman said the company wasn't experiencing significant delays.

This article originally appeared on Marketwatch.com.


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JWoww and fiancé expecting first child

Snooki's son Lorenzo won't have to go without a best friend for long, as JWoww announced on Christmas afternoon that she's expecting her first child.

Jenni "JWoww" Farley, 27, and her fiancé Roger Matthews, 38, informed fans of the joyous news on the former "Jersey Shore" star's website Wednesday afternoon.

"Merry Christmas from within!" JWow wrote. "Roger and I couldn't have asked for a better Christmas gift this year! We wanted to share this exciting news with you all first because you have been a part of our lives these past few years and seen the love between Roger and me develop and blossom."

Just a minute later, Matthews posted a Christmas card-esque image, with an ultra sound image of the future "Jersey Shore" spawn, with the message, "Happy Holidays from our growing family to yours."

JWoww will become the third of the show's alums to have a child. In addition to Snooki, Pauly D announced earlier this year that he had a daughter as well.


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Anna Wintour turns Grinch in Christmas tree toss

Vogue editor Anna Wintour tossed out the family Christmas tree before Dec. 25 because it was "too messy," the editor's daughter said Wednesday on Instagram.

Photo: Instagram/beeshaffer

Bee Shaffer, 26, posted a photo of presents heaped on the floor with the caption, "My mom threw out our tree before Christmas Day because 'it was too messy.'"

It wasn't clear whether the sad shot was taken at Wintour's Greenwich Village townhouse or at her tony Long Island home.

Wintour is infamous for her precise taste and biting tongue and was even the inspiration for the fictional fashion magazine editor played by Meryl Streep in the "The Devil wears Prada."

"That is so much more memorable than having a tree! I'm doing that next year," comedian Mindy Kaling commented Shaffer's post.


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Nets rewind: Signs of trouble in locker room

Here are my three thoughts on the Nets' 95-78 loss to the Bulls on Wednesday afternoon in Brooklyn:

1. Up until this latest debacle, the Nets had done a fairly good job of keeping their issues with each other in-house. In meetings with the media, they managed to stay united, pledging their belief in one another and saying they have the talent and the time to turn things around.

But for the first time this season, that unified front appears to be breaking down. In Paul Pierce's four-minute post-game press session, Pierce took shots at his teammates and coach Jason Kidd.

When asked about his shooting woes the past two games, Pierce blamed playing inconsistent minutes — hard to take as anything other than a shot at Kidd for continuing to play Pierce, who had played just three games as a reserve before this season, off the bench.

"When you have inconsistency in your minutes sometimes, you have some inconsistency in your play," he said.

The quotes about his teammates were more damning, though. Pierce and Kevin Garnett were brought here to show these Nets, who were thought to lack heart and toughness after being bounced out of the playoffs by an injury-ravaged Bulls team last season, how to have the mentality of true contenders. Instead, Pierce said after Wednesday's game he doesn't know if people can be "taught" how to battle adversity.

"I don't know if it can be taught," he said. "I don't know if you can go to the library or read a book on it or buy it at a store."

The last thing the Nets need is for their locker room to fracture under the weight of the mounting losses. They already have enough problems; fighting among themselves will only make things worse.

2. Mirza Teletovic was one of the few bright spots in Wednesday's poor showing, scoring 17 points on 7-for-11 shooting. But even while playing well, Teletovic showed his limitations at the other end of the floor.

When he was out there against Chicago's imposing frontline of Carlos Boozer, Joakim Noah and Taj Gibson, Chicago immediately attacked Teletovic on defense (something the Bulls also seemed to do against Reggie Evans). Teletovic is simply going to have trouble handling the size of those players defensively — he picked up a couple of quick fouls Wednesday and had to go to the bench.

Teletovic's shooting ability spaces the floor well for the Nets' other offensive options in the wake of Brook Lopez's injury, so he will likely remain in the starting lineup. Still, his defensive issues against bigger opponents will continue to be an issue.

3. It's hard to overstate how dreadful the Nets' current situation is. After a home game against Milwaukee on Friday — even in their current state, you expect them to win that one — they head into a stretch of seven of their next nine games against teams with winning records, including road games in Indiana, San Antonio and Oklahoma City and home games against the Heat and Warriors.

If the Nets play like they have of late, that stretch will bury them to the point where they won't have a chance of recovering and making the playoffs in the pathetic Eastern Conference. One-third of the way through the season, this truly is gut-check time for the Nets if they want to salvage something of this year.


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Man killed in Christmas hit-and-run

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 25 Desember 2013 | 23.16

Man killed in Christmas hit-and-run | New York Post
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By Natasha Velez

December 25, 2013 | 9:07am

A 29 year-old man was killed in a hit and run accident on Christmas Day in East Elmhurst, cops said.

The victim was attempting to cross the street at 103rd Street and Astoria Blvd around 4:30 a.m. when the beige Toyota Camry plowed into him and fled the scene, according to police.

Police believe the car has Pennsylvania plates and was last seen traveling eastbound on Astoria Blvd. The identity of the deceased has not been released, pending family notification.

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Winds whip Paris

Winds whip Paris | New York Post
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By Associated Press

December 25, 2013 | 6:29am

PARIS — Violent winds have delayed international flights in and out of Paris and left a 12-year-old boy crushed to death beneath construction materials in Normandy.

Nearly all long-haul flights out of Charles de Gaulle Airport on Tuesday were departing late because of the storm, according to the Paris airport Web site.

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11,000 video games later, he’s a record holder

BUFFALO, NY — Maybe it was getting his first video game, Cosmic Avenger, for Christmas at age 12, and then having to wait an entire year for the hard-to-land ColecoVision console to play it on that made Michael Thomasson so determined to get his hands on every video game and system he could find.

Now, 31 years and roughly 11,000 games later, Thomasson is the newly crowned world-record holder for having the largest collection of video games, featured in a two-page spread in "Guinness World Records 2014 Gamer's Edition."

"I have games on cartridge, laser disc. I have VHS-based games, cassette-based games," Thomasson said, standing among the collection that fills the basement of his Buffalo home.

Sure, he's got the Xboxes and PlayStations, but also obscure consoles like the Casio Loopy, the only game system specifically geared toward girls, which came out in Japan in 1995. And, of course, the ColecoVision unit.

"It's my first love, so it's sentimental," Thomasson said. But the games also were quality, with very little of the "shovelware" — mediocre, rushed releases — typical of many systems, he said.

"They looked good, they played good. For the time they sounded good," he said, "for the bleeps and blips of the 80s."

Thomasson began collecting almost immediately, he said, but the path to the world record had a couple of restarts. He sold off his collection twice — once to pay for his 1998 wedding.

Since then, Thomasson has methodically rebuilt the collection, averaging two games per day on a strict $3,000-a-year budget, which means never paying full price. He estimates the collection is worth $700,000 to $800,000.

The father of a 5-year-old girl, Thomasson hasn't played every game he owns.

"I probably get three hours of playing in a week," he said. "If I'm lucky."

Guinness lists the number Thomasson's collection at 10,607 games, although he said the number exceeds 11,000 now, a year after the official count.


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Justin Bieber ‘officially retires,’ again

The message to his almost 48 million Twitter followers was typical in its brevity.

"My beloved beliebers I'm officially retiring."

Posted at 10:20 p.m. on Tuesday, the message was certainly a strange Christmas present to fans, although not entirely unexpected: he had floated the idea of his retirement last week.

On December 19, the Canadian pop star told a Los Angeles radio station he's planning to take a break from music after his new album "Journals" was released.

"After the new album, I'm actually retiring man," he said. "I'm retiring."

In follow-up tweets today, the Baby, Baby singer told his fans that the media "make up a lot of lies and want me to fail but I'm never leaving you, being a belieber is a lifestyle."

A couple of minutes after that he tweeted again, advising his 47,932,323 followers — his following is second only to Katy Perry's — that he was "HERE FOREVER."

"Be kind loving to each other, forgive each other as god forgave us through Christ Merry Christmas."

In that same interview, Bieber also suggested he hasn't quite made up his mind, adding: "I want to grow as an artist and I'm taking a step out, I want my music to mature."

Bieber's tweets have already gotten some in the celebrity world ruffled, with gossip blogger Perez Hilton posting a series of Tweets designed to inflame the "beliebers."

Among other provocations, Hilton advised his more than 6 million Twitter followers to retweet his message if they preferred English boy band "One Direction," but to favorite the tweet if Justin Beieber was their preferred artist.

Bieber's announcement comes days after the singer's grandmother blasted the media for spreading "so many lies" about the pop superstar, insisting they should treat the teen with a little more respect.

Bieber found himself under fire in the press throughout 2013 as he hit headlines for everything from showing up late at concerts, to urinating in restaurant mop buckets and defacing walls with graffiti.

He has also clashed with members of the paparazzi on numerous occasions during his Believe world tour, and his apparent bad behavior has caused a backlash among some reporters and bloggers.

The youngster's grandma, Diane Dale, admits the 19-year-old isn't perfect, but claims most of what is written about her grandson is made up.

Speaking to the Associated Press at the Los Angeles premiere of his new concert documentary, "Justin Bieber's Believe," on Wednesday, she said: "I think the media has been terrible on him (sic). There are so many lies going around. A little bit is true but most of it is lies. It's terrible."

Meanwhile, Bieber's mentor, R&B star Usher, insists dealing with media attacks is all part of life in the spotlight.

"I mean more money, more problems. The beautiful part about it is that those that are invested in a long-term story you understand that there are peaks and valleys in every person's life…
"Unfortunately the reality is he has to live with a camera in front of him, but what he chooses to do on or off camera is analysed or scrutinised in some off way."

This story originally appeared on News.com.au.


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Pope Francis’ Christmas wish: ‘Hope for a better world’

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Pope Francis delivers his "Urbi et Orbi" (to the City and to the World) message from the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2013.

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Swiss Guards arrive in St. Peter's Square to attend Pope Francis' Christmas Day message from the central balcony of St Peter's Basilica.

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Pope Francis prays during the Christmas night mass in the Saint Peter's Basilica at the Vatican Dec. 24

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Pope Francis began his first Christmas Eve Mass as pontiff by placing a baby Jesus statue in a replica of a manger in St. Peter's Basilica.

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Francis, who turned 77 a week ago, walked briskly up the main aisle of the basilica, which was packed with faithful and tourists at the start of Mass.

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VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis offered a Christmas wish Wednesday for a better world, praying for protection for Christians under attack, battered women and trafficked children, peace in the Middle East and Africa, and dignity for refugees fleeing misery and conflict around the globe.

Francis delivered the traditional "Urbi et Orbi" (Latin for "to the city and to the world") speech from the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica to 70,000 cheering tourists, pilgrims and Romans in the square below. He said he was joining all those hoping "for a better world."

In his first Christmas message since being elected pontiff in March, he asked for all to share in the song of Christmas angels, "for every man or woman … who hopes for a better world, who cares for others," humbly.

Among places ravaged by conflict, Francis singled out Syria, which saw its third Christmas during civil war; South Sudan; the Central African Republic; Nigeria; and Iraq.

In Iraq on Wednesday, militants targeted Christians in two attacks, including a bomb that exploded near a church during Christmas Mass in Baghdad. The separate bombings killed dozens of people.

The Vatican has been trying to raise concern in the world for persecution and attacks on Christians in parts of the Middle East and Africa.

"Lord of life, protect all who are persecuted in your name," Francis said.

The pope also prayed that God "bless the land where you chose to come into the world and grant a favorable outcome to the peace talks between Israelis and Palestinians."

Francis then explained his concept of peace.

"True peace is not a balancing of opposing forces. It's not a lovely facade which conceals conflicts and divisions," the pope said. "Peace calls for daily commitment," Francis said, reading the pages of his speech as they were ruffled by a chilly wind.

Francis also spoke about the lives of everyday people, especially those struggling for a better life.

Recalling the hundreds of migrants who have drowned this year while trying to reach European shores, including many close to the Italian island of Lampedusa, Francis prayed that refugees receive hope, consolation and assistance.

He added that "our thoughts turn to those children who are the most vulnerable victims of wars, but we think, too, of the elderly, of battered women" and others.

The 77-year-old pope kept to the simple style he has set for his papacy. Wearing a plain white cassock, Francis presented a sharp contrast in appearance when compared to the pope who stood on the same balcony on Christmas exactly a year ago. Then Benedict XVI, who was soon to stun the world by retiring last winter, read his Christmas speech while dressed in a crimson, ermine-trimmed cape. Benedict lives on the Vatican grounds, and Francis paid a holiday call on him earlier this week.

In the Mideast, pilgrims celebrated Christmas in the ancient Bethlehem church where tradition holds Jesus was born, as candles illuminated the sacred site and the joyous sound of prayer filled its overflowing halls.

This year's turnout was the largest in years in Bethlehem, and the celebrations have been marked by careful optimism amid ongoing Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. Leaders expressed hope the coming year would finally bring the Palestinians an independent state of their own.

The top Roman Catholic cleric in the Holy Land, Latin Patriarch Fouad Twal, led a prayer for some 1,000 worshippers. "The whole world now is looking at Bethlehem, the birthplace of Jesus," Twal said in his annual address, adding that the message of Jesus was one of "love and reconciliation."

Bethlehem lies 10 kilometers (6 miles) south of Jerusalem. Entry to the city is controlled by Israel, which occupied the West Bank in 1967.

Following a Palestinian uprising that began in 2000, the numbers of visitors to Bethlehem had plunged. But thanks to a period of relative calm, they have been steadily climbing in recent years.

Iskandar Salameh, an 18-year-old Palestinian, said the Christmas spirit was uniting those gathered Wednesday. "We all feel that Jesus is with us today," he said.

In Britain, the royal family turned out in force for a Christmas church service, but the newest family member, Prince George, son of Prince William and Kate, was nowhere in sight.

Cicely Howard said she asked about the baby when she greeted Kate outside the church. Howard told the British news agency Press Association that Kate described George as being "more interested in the wrapping paper than the presents."


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McDonald’s to workers: Don’t eat our food!

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 24 Desember 2013 | 23.16

McDonald's has some healthy advice for its workers – don't eat at McDonald's.

The fast-food behemoth recently posted the jaw-dropping tip on its Web site for employees, warning that the very same burgers and fries they sling for their legions of customers are hazardous to their health.

"Fast foods are quick, reasonably priced, and readily available alternatives to home cooking. While convenient and economical for a busy lifestyle, fast foods are typically high in calories, fat, saturated fat, sugar, and salt and may put people at risk for becoming overweight," the post said, according to CNBC.

The post shows a picture of a burger and fries – but slams the meal as an "unhealthy choice."

It then praises a submarine sandwich and salad – typical fare served by arch-rival Subway – as a healthier choice.

Photo: Image obtained by CNBC

"It is hard to eat a healthy diet when you eat at fast-food restaurants often," according to the post, which cautions fast-food junkies to watch how many burgers and fries they shovel down.

"In general, people with high blood pressure, diabetes, and heart disease must be very careful about choosing fast food because of its high fat, salt, and sugar levels."

The tips about healthful eating are only the latest in a series of embarrassing posts on the company's internal site.

An earlier post included a guide for how much the chain's low-wage employees should tip their au pairs and personal trainers.

And another offered tips on how workers could be more thrifty when managing their money – like spending nothing on heat in the winter and returning unopened Christmas gifts for cash.

Red-faced McDonald's brass defended the posts – which come from an outside vendor – in a statement.

"Portions of this website continue to be taken entirely out of context," McDonald's sniffed. "This website provides useful information from respected third-parties about many topics, among them health and wellness. It also includes information from experts about healthy eating and making balanced choices. McDonald's agrees with this advice."


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Candlestick Park closes with 49ers win, Willie Mays, 30 arrests

SAN FRANCISCO — On a night they cheered "The Catch" and all the San Francisco greats of old, the current 49ers looked ready to move that success right into the future at a flashy new stadium.

In one emphatic finish, NaVorro Bowman, Colin Kaepernick and the Niners sealed their postseason berth in a ceremonious regular-season farewell for Candlestick Park.

Bowman returned an interception 89 yards for a touchdown with 1:10 remaining, and the 49ers clinched a playoff spot with a wild 34-24 victory against the Atlanta Falcons on Monday night in the likely final game at The Stick.

"That's been the best thing I've ever seen happen in a football game," coach Jim Harbaugh said.

Before Monday night's game, Hall of Famer Steve Young threw passes to Hall of Famer Jerry Rice as the crowd roared. Hall of Fame baseball players Willie Mays and Willie McCovey, who played for the San Francisco Giants, waved to cheering fans.

San Francisco police say 30 people were arrested during the game.

Police did not say what the arrests were for, though the San Francisco Chronicle reported that at least some of the people were arrested on suspicion of stealing seats from the stadium.

In addition to the arrests, police said 81 people were ejected and seven people were cited.

The Niners began playing at The Stick in 1971. The team is moving to a new, $1.2 billion stadium next season.


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TWC, Viacom renew programming pact

Time Warner Cable and Viacom announced Tuesday the multi-year renewal of their distribution agreement, which will allow Time Warner Cable to continue delivery of the entire portfolio of Viacom networks to their subscribers.

"Our new agreement offers consumers a comprehensive collection of innovations across platforms, including the availability of EPIX and access to Viacom's vast array of popular content within the Television Everywhere environment both in and out of their homes," said Philippe Dauman, President and Chief Executive Officer of Viacom.

As part of an expansion of Time Warner Cable's arrangements with Viacom, Time Warner Cable will for the first time make the entertainment network EPIX available to its subscribers .


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FBI busts armed bandit behind East Coast bank heists

The FBI has arrested a gun-toting bandit wanted for a string of bank robberies on the East Coast, including several in the Tri-State area.

Federal investigators, with the help of local police agencies, busted 38-year-old Luis Alomar in Medford, Long Island at 2:30 a.m. Tuesday after an arrest warrant was issued for him in Delaware, The FBI said.

Alomar, who has several aliases and ties to Mastic and Shirley, LI, allegedly knocked off multiple banks in Delaware, New York and New Jersey, the FBI said.

In some cases, the 5-foot-4, 145 pound thief allegedly strolled up to tellers, flashed a weapon and threatened to shoot them if they uttered a word.

In others, he allegedly slipped a teller a note warning that he had a gun and then demanded large bills.


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Cops probe possible kidnapping after boy seen getting into trunk

Police are investigating a possible abduction after video surveillance captured a boy getting into a trunk in Bay Ridge before the vehicle disappeared, cops said.

The boy who cops believe is between the ages of 10 and 15, voluntarily hopped out of the Nissan Altima and into the trunk Sunday around 2:20 p.m. on Marine Ave near Fort Hamilton Pkwy, cops said.

That's when an unknown man who was seated in the driver's seat got out and closed the truck before driving off with the minor, according to police.

The dark colored 2007-2012 Nissan was last seen traveling eastbound on Marine Ave. towards Fort Hamilton Parkway.


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Plane wing clips building at Johannesburg airport

Written By Unknown on Senin, 23 Desember 2013 | 23.16

JOHANNESBURG — South African airport officials say four airport staff were slightly injured when the wing of a British Airways passenger aircraft clipped a building at Johannesburg's OR Tambo International Airport shortly before taking off for London.

The Airports Company South Africa said Monday that none of the 180 passengers on board was injured in the accident which occurred late Sunday night.

The Boeing 747-400 was taxiing on one of the airport's taxiways preparing for take-off when the accident occurred.

An ACSA spokeswoman said the aircraft has since been moved to a remote location and that operations had not been disrupted as a result of the incident, the cause of which was being investigated by the South African Civil Aviation Authority.


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Target’s weekend sales slip on data breach

Target, on the back of a massive data breach, may have suffered another blow — reduced customer traffic over one of the busiest shopping weekends of the year.

The number of transactions at Target slipped to nearly 4 percent compared with the final weekend before Christmas last year, estimates retail consultancy Customer Growth Partners.

By contrast, transactions at other retailers were strong.

A spokeswoman for Target declined to comment specifically on this weekend's results, saying the retailer reports sales on a quarterly basis.

Target tried to limit the damage by offering a 10 percent discount to all customers in its US stores over the weekend, and analysts said that effort helped.

"This is the worst possible time something like this could happen," said Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners.

His firm estimates that total US retail sales on Saturday totaled $17 billion, exceeding those on Black Friday by $2 billion.

This article originally appeared on Marketwatch.com.


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