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Gwyneth Paltrow: Women need to stop being so cruel to other women

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 31 Desember 2014 | 23.16

Gwyneth Paltrow is back on her soapbox.

"Women really need to examine why they're so vitriolic to other women," the 42-year-old goop founder told Harper's Bazaar U.K.

"Why they want to twist words, why they want to read about someone in a negative light and why that feels good to them," she added. "But I also know a huge tribe of women who are loving and supportive of other women, in ways that are completely transformative."

Despite her commentary, Paltrow failed to acknowledge her own spat with domestic goddess Martha Stewart, 73, with whom she traded digs in 2014.

Paltrow, who's 10-year marriage to Chris Martin, 37, ended last March, says women have the right to define themselves.

"I think we are a generation of women who are different in a lot of respects, and some of us want to be ambitious, and for it not to be a dirty word," she explained noting several attributes women want to be.

"We want to be feminine and soft, we want to be maternal, we want to be sexual, we want to be explorers—and we can be a combination of all these archetypes. You can be powerful, but you can also be vulnerable … [I have] learnt the power of kindness and the importance of non-judgmental ways of looking at others."


23.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

AirAsia jet made ‘unbelievably’ steep climb before crash

Preliminary radar data suggests the ill-fated AirAsia jetliner was possibly pushed beyond the Airbus A320's operational limits when it made an "unbelievably" steep climb before plunging into the sea, according to a source familiar with the probe, Reuters reported.

"So far, the numbers taken by the radar are unbelievably high. This rate of climb is very high, too high. It appears to be beyond the performance envelope of the aircraft," said the source, who declined to be identified.

The data was sent before air traffic controllers in Jakarta lost track of Flight 8501 on Sunday, the source said, adding that the information used for the assumptions was still incomplete.

Investigators are considering the role of stormy weather and the pilots' reactions to it before the six-year-old aircraft crashed into the Java Sea, killing all 162 people aboard.

The cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder, or black boxes, have yet to be found.

"With the CVR and FDR, we can establish what went on in the cockpit and what was going on with the aircraft. We can conclude if the radar information is accurate," the source said.

The pilot requested permission to climb from 32,000 feet to 38,000 feet and turn left to avoid stormy weather a little more than a half-hour after taking off from Surabaya on a flight to Singapore.

Jakarta responded two minutes later by asking the crew to deviate left for seven miles and climb to 34,000 feet – but the pilots did not respond while the plane was still detected by controllers.

An image reportedly leaked from AirNav Indonesia, which handles the local airspace, apparently shows the plane at 36,300 feet and climbing at 353 knots, Reuters reported. AirNav Indonesia declined to comment.

Authorities monitor progress in the search for AirAsia Flight QZ8501 in the Mission Control Center inside the National Search and Rescue Agency in Jakarta.Photo: Reuters

Two veteran pilots told Reuters that the information suggests the doomed aircraft may have climbed suddenly and lost speed – possibly stalling and crashing.

An A320 cruises at a speed of about Mach 0.78 – or about 516 knots – at 32,000 feet, one pilot said.

"If you encounter turbulence, you go slower at what we call the turbulence penetration speed to get through it. If you climb to avoid turbulence, you slow down to have a better climb rate.

That could be around Mach 0.76," he told Reuters. "But if you climb suddenly and start to lose speed, you will stall."

Aircraft tracking website flightradar24.com said other aircraft in the area were at between 34,000 and 39,000 feet.

"We know that there was severe local weather and big clouds. But they (the other planes) were higher and did not appear to encounter any major problems. We want to look into that too,"the source close to the probe said.

Industry sources told Reuters there could be similarities between the AirAsia incident and the 2009 crash of an Air France Airbus A330. The investigation in that case showed the co-pilot lost speed readings because of icing.

He apparently kept trying to climb despite stall warnings over the Atlantic.

Industry experts say the A320's systems usually prevent pilots from doing anything outside safe flight limits – but the safeguards can be disabled in some situations.


23.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

The worst college basketball beat imaginable

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida forward Jacob Kurtz accidentally tipped in a Devon Bookert miss with 0.4 seconds left to give Florida State a 65-63 win against its in-state rival.

The victory Tuesday snapped a Gators' five-game win streak in the series dating back to 2008.

"That was crazy," Florida State guard Montay Brandon said. "I thought he had a rebound. I guess it just slipped out of his hand. I don't know how to explain it, but I was just happy.

"At first I was looking around like, did that happen? Then I saw the scoreboard change and I was like, oh man, we're winning. I started going crazy."

The fluke play saved the Seminoles after they gave up an alley-oop from Kasey Hill to Dorian Finney-Smith with eight seconds remaining to tie the game at 63.

"That was probably the first time I've seen a game end like that," Hill said. "That was not Jacob Kurtz's fault at all. That was everybody's fault. We made some mental errors and that's what killed us. It wasn't Jake's fault at all."

Florida State coach Leonard Hamilton said: "It's one of those shots that went in that you shake your head about. I've been on the other end of that so many times that I'll take that and be very happy."

A pair of free throws from Brandon gave the Seminoles a five-point lead with 49 seconds left in the game. The two possessions seemed like they would be enough, but Hill knocked down a transition layup, was fouled and made the free throw. Then the alley-oop was set up off an offensive rebound.


23.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

Amid NYE festivities, NYPD probing 63 threats against cops and mayor

The NYPD will be on high alert during New Year's Eve festivities as they continue to investigate over 60 threats against cops as well as some targeting the mayor, police sources said Wednesday.

Investigators are currently monitoring 63 threats against NYPD officers and three against the mayor, the sources said.

Tweets captioned "Kill a Pig Night," and "The New Year's Eve Massacre of 2014," recently emerged on social media sites prompting law-enforcement in multiple states across the US to monitor the threats, the sources said.

Gang members are lashing out on social media and leaving serious threats—but they are not all coming from New York, police sources said.

One Instagram user, m_d_c, posted a photo of two pigs with NYPD insignia captioned "Bullets give them wings," with the hashtag #laughatyourdeaths.

The user has used several anti-cop hashtags, including #randomcopskills #killallcops and #iwillstopyourbreathing, the website reveals.

Another post reads, "Dear Police, Don't think that this can't happen again," from user @FreeTopher via Twitter.

A Ferguson protester with the username Jdstl tweeted, "New Years Eve Massacre Kill a Pig night 12/31/2014," DNA Info first reported.

Photo: @Jdstl314 via Twitter

A quick search for the hashtag #wingsonpigs via Intsgram turns up over 80 posts.

Cops say they take all threats seriously and all will be investigated.

One Instagram account, with the username "Noloveforthepigsinblue," recently posted a photo of LAPD officer Chris Dorner, who was targeted and killed last February. Some of the hashtags the user posted were #bluelivesdontmatter #winterofresistance.


23.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

Cops shoot, kill man after he tries to run them over

UPPER DARBY, Pa. — Police shot and killed a man who had posted an online video threatening to kill police and FBI agents after he tried to use his car to run down officers trying to arrest him in a Philadelphia suburb.

Upper Darby Police Superintendent Michael Chitwood said that officers feared the man would kill them Tuesday and they "did what they had to do." He said five officers fired at the man. No officers were injured.

Authorities did not immediately identify the man who was killed, as officers ordered him out of the car and he appeared ready to accelerate at them as they manned a blockade. The Philadelphia Inquirer said he was 52-year-old Joseph A. Pacini and that he had posted three online videos with rambling messages and threats.

Police had secured an arrest warrant for the man after the threats in the online video, Chitwood said. The man's death comes a little more than a week after a man who made similar threats shot two New York Police Department officers dead in their patrol car and then killed himself in a subway station.

Police said they began following the man after he left a home in nearby Clifton Heights. They said when officers stopped him at an intersection and ordered him out of the car, he reversed and slammed into a police vehicle and then prepared to run over other officers.

Officers opened fire, killing the man, Chitwood said. The man did not fire at police, and Chitwood said he did not know if the man had a weapon.

In the New York case, Officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu were ambushed on a Brooklyn street as they sat in their marked car on Dec. 20. Their attacker, Ismaaiyl Brinsley, had referenced in online posts the high-profile killings by white police officers of unarmed black men, specifically Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner on Staten Island. Soon after the officers' shooting Brinsley, who was black, killed himself.

Decisions by grand juries not to indict the officers involved in the killings of Brown and Garner have sparked protests around the nation, with demonstrators lying down in the streets as though they're dead. Many protesters have chanted "Hands up! Don't shoot!" a reference to their contention Brown's hands were raised when he was shot dead by police, and "I can't breathe," which Garner was heard saying on a video recording of his encounter with a policeman who put his arm around his neck.

On Sunday, two men opened fire on a police car patrolling a tough part of Los Angeles, but the two officers inside were not injured and one was able to shoot back, authorities said. One suspect was later arrested, and the other was on the loose. Police haven't determined a motive for the shooting in South Los Angeles, an area plagued by gang violence, but said there were no indications it was linked to other attacks on police.


23.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

14 Romances We Fell In Love With On Streaming In 2014

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 30 Desember 2014 | 23.16

2014…what a year, amirite? During each of the final 14 days of the year, the Decider staff will be counting down our favorite and most memorable moments of 2014. If you happen to miss an installment along the way, don't fret! You can follow all the action on our official Best 14 Of '14 hub page.

Love is a many splendored thing, but it's also a dramatic, hilarious, and downright sexy thing. Over the last year, we've gotten to stream the stories of dozens of doomed love birds, we've seen scores of adorable meet cutes, and we got to see a feisty feminist of the 1940s fall in love with an 18th century Highlander.

In short, 2014 was a great year for romance and streaming just made it better. Here are Decider's 14 favorite romances that came to streaming this year.

Modal Trigger

Photo: Everett Collection

14) HENRY & ELIZA on 'SELFIE' – This modern retelling of 'Pygmalion' started off a little bit rough, but wound up being one of our favs of the season. The show might have been cancelled too soon, but you can see Henry and Eliza's romance start to bloom in unaired episodes on Hulu.

ABC

13) DANNY & MINDY on 'THE MINDY PROJECT' – From the very first episode of 'The Mindy Project,' it was crystal clear that Danny and Mindy would wind up together. This season finally brought them together and showed what happens after the couple gets together at the end of a romcom.

Everett Collection

12) EVERYONE & EVERYONE ELSE on 'REIGN' – The CW's newest frothy soap is 'Reign.' It tells the true-ish story of Mary, Queen of Scots, when she was a teen navigating courtly politics and bedroom pleasures in France. Everyone falls in love with everyone else and people DIE! Oh, and Nostradamus is there. SEXY!

Everett Collection

11) MARGOT & LA MOLE in 'QUEEN MARGOT' – Speaking of courtly drama in France… Netflix now has a beautifully remastered version of the 1994 film, 'Queen Margot.' The movie is sexy, sumptuous, and based on one of the most tragic love stories of all time. Oh, and there's nudity.

Everett Collection

10) FRANK & CLAIRE on 'HOUSE OF CARDS' – You might think that 'House of Cards' is a cynical political drama, but I would argue that it's the beautiful portrait of a loving marriage between two charming sociopaths. Sometimes you just want to watch the world burn with someone else…

Everett Collection

9) DANIELLE & HENRY in 'EVER AFTER' – The greatest love stories can be reduced to mere fairy tales, so why not indulge in one of the best film adaptations of Cinderella of all time? 'Ever After' hit Netflix this year and our swooning hearts are thankful for it.

Everett Collection

8) JANE & MR. ROCHESTER in 'JANE EYRE' – Jane Eyre and Mr. Rochester is one of the most complicated and enduring love stories in all of literature. While some film adaptations lay on the schmaltz, Cary Fukunaga's take on it is tense, thrilling, and sensual. And on streaming.

Everett Collection

7) JANE & RAFAEL on 'JANE THE VIRGIN' – Looking for an enchanting love story with a different kind of meet cute? How about Jane and Rafael? They were from two different worlds until Jane was accidentally inseminated with Rafael's sperm.
6) PAT & TIFFANY in 'SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK' – This might have been the Oscar bait flick that scored Jennifer Lawrence her Best Actress Academy Award, but make no bones about it. This is a sweet and frothy romantic comedy. There's even a dance competition!
5) GOMEZ & MORTICIA ADDAMS in 'ADDAMS FAMILY VALUES' – Gomez and Morticia are quite simply the most romantic couple of all time. If you don't believe me, I wrote an essay about it. Or, you can just watch 'Addams Family Values' on Netflix.

Everett Collection

4) LESLIE & BEN on 'PARKS AND RECREATION' – Love can be steamy, but true love grows with time and only gets sweeter. So it is with 'Parks and Rec' love birds Ben and Leslie. Season 6 saw them grappling with the revelation that they would be parents to twins, and the upcoming farewell season will see them still happily married in the future.

Everett Collection

3) ADELE & EMMA in 'BLUE IS THE WARMEST COLOR' – Sad, sensual, and so, so very steamy. These are all words you could use to describe the heart-breaking romance, 'Blue is the Warmest Color.'

Everett Collection

2) GUS & HAZEL in 'THE FAULT IN OUR STARS' – Oooo! Are we fighting? Do you think John Green's doomed love birds should be top of the list? Look, they came close. They came REALLY close. Okay? Okay.

Everett Collection

1) CLAIRE & JAMIE on 'OUTLANDER' – Starz's new hit is an adventure series, a historic drama, and a time travel caper. However, the thing that kept audiences rapt all season was finding out if, and when, and HOW, Claire and Jamie would hook up. Their sexy wedding night was well worth the wait, but now we are growing all too impatient to find out what happens next for them.

Gif by Jaclyn Kessel; Footage: Starz

Stream The Love:

Selfie, The Mindy Project, Reign, Queen Margot, House of Cards, Ever After, Jane Eyre, Jane The Virgin, Silver Linings Playbook, The Addams Family Values, Parks and Recreation, Blue Is The Warmest Color, The Fault In Our Stars, Outlander.

Like what you see? Follow Decider on Facebook and Twitter to join the conversation, and sign up for our email newsletters to be the first to know about streaming movies and TV news!


23.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

5 celeb pairs who can’t wait to see 2015

With the new year comes the promise of a fresh start — free of the past year's drama of separation, divorce, financial catastrophes, health concerns and alleged sex changes. While most of us endure such things privately, celebrities' traumas are out there for the world to see.

Here are a few people sure to welcome 2015 with open arms, ready to begin a new chapter based on past experiences and the lessons learned from them.

Kendra and Hank Baskett

Hank Baskett and Kendra WilkinsonPhoto: Steve Granitz/WireImage

Every married woman's worst nightmare unfolded on WE's reality show "Kendra on Top." Former Playboy bunny Kendra Wilkinson, 29, and her husband, former NFL star Hank Baskett, 32, reconciled after he admitted to partying with transsexual model Ava London — while his wife was pregnant with their second child.

But while Wilkinson flushed her wedding ring down the toilet, she opted for marriage counseling instead of divorce. In fact, she recently told Life & Style that her marriage is stronger than ever. Here's hoping it stays that way.

Kris and Bruce Jenner

Bruce and Kris JennerPhoto: Kevin Winter/Tonight Show/Getty Images for The Tonight Show

After 22 years of marriage, Kris and Bruce Jenner finalized their divorce, leaving her free to share a celebratory New Year's Eve kiss with her boyfriend, Corey Gamble, 34.

Gamble, a road manager for Justin Bieber, met the 59-year-old reality star in August in Spain at Givenchy designer Riccardo Tisci's birthday party. The couple are still going strong as Gamble accompanies Kris and the rest of the Kardashian clan on lavish family trips. As for Bruce Jenner, 65: Here's hoping the former Olympian has the support of his kids, including Kylie and Kendall, in whatever he chooses to do . . . or be.

VEGA$

A photo posted by Kim Kardashian West (@kimkardashian) on

Phaedra Parks and Apollo Nida

Phaedra Parks and Apollo NidaPhoto: Ben Rose/WireImage

"Real Housewives of Atlanta" star Phaedra Parks, 43, was dead set against bringing her sons Ayden, 4, and Dylan, 1, to visit their father in jail. But she seems to have softened her stance for the holidays, as Apollo Nida, 36, serves an eight-year sentence for money laundering and check fraud. Parks announced on the "Ellen" show in October that she was seeking a divorce — all the while promoting her book, "Secrets of the Southern Belle" — and remains adamant about her plans to move forward with ending her marriage.

But as Nida recently told In Touch Weekly: "I will not walk away empty-handed, considering all I've put into the marriage over the five years . . . It wouldn't be right for her to just take everything and leave me with nothing to come home to." Good thing Parks is a lawyer: We're sure she already has her strategy lined up and is ready for the battle ahead.

Halle Berry and Gabriel Aubry

Gabriel Aubry and Halle Berry in 2009Photo: Jon Kopaloff/FilmMagic

It was a rocky year for Oscar winner Halle Berry, after former Versace model Gabriel Aubry — with whom she has joint custody of a daughter, Nahla, 6 — sued against lowering the $16,000 he receives from her each month in child support. The two were together for close to five years before breaking up in April 2010. In November 2012, Aubry clashed with Halle's then-fiancé, Olivier Martinez, a former boxer.

The 39-year-old Aubry claimed his modeling career suffered afterward from facial injuries sustained in their tussle. Halle, 48, hoped this year to reduce his monthly allotment to $3,800. Maybe in 2015, a judge will agree with her.

Ciara and Future

Future and CiaraPhoto: Rich/Splash News

Ciara has a reason to toast a goodbye to 2014: It seems her engagement is officially off to rapper Future. No longer is she wearing her 15-carat engagement ring, revealing a scar left by the newly removed tattooed "N" from her finger (Future's real name is Nayvadius Cash).

Which is a perfect indication that Ciara is ready to start 2015 free and clear of her former fiancé. The couple have a 7-month-old son — now if only she could delete Future from her "Body Party" video.


23.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

14 Best Romances On Streaming In 2014

14 Best Romances On Streaming In 2014 | Decider | Where To Stream TV & Movies on Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Instant, HBO Go
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Photo: Everett Collection

14) HENRY & ELIZA on 'SELFIE' – This modern retelling of 'Pygmalion' started off a little bit rough, but wound up being one of our favs of the season. The show might have been cancelled too soon, but you can see Henry and Eliza's romance start to bloom in unaired episodes on Hulu.

ABC

13) DANNY & MINDY on 'THE MINDY PROJECT' – From the very first episode of 'The Mindy Project,' it was crystal clear that Danny and Mindy would wind up together. This season finally brought them together and showed what happens after the couple gets together at the end of a romcom.

Everett Collection

12) EVERYONE & EVERYONE ELSE on 'REIGN' – The CW's newest frothy soap is 'Reign.' It tells the true-ish story of Mary, Queen of Scots, when she was a teen navigating courtly politics and bedroom pleasures in France. Everyone falls in love with everyone else and people DIE! Oh, and Nostradamus is there. SEXY!

Everett Collection

11) MARGOT & LA MOLE in 'QUEEN MARGOT' – Speaking of courtly drama in France… Netflix now has a beautifully remastered version of the 1994 film, 'Queen Margot.' The movie is sexy, sumptuous, and based on one of the most tragic love stories of all time. Oh, and there's nudity.

Everett Collection

10) FRANK & CLAIRE on 'HOUSE OF CARDS' – You might think that 'House of Cards' is a cynical political drama, but I would argue that it's the beautiful portrait of a loving marriage between two charming sociopaths. Sometimes you just want to watch the world burn with someone else…

Everett Collection

9) DANIELLE & HENRY in 'EVER AFTER' – The greatest love stories can be reduced to mere fairy tales, so why not indulge in one of the best film adaptations of Cinderella of all time? 'Ever After' hit Netflix this year and our swooning hearts are thankful for it.

Everett Collection

8) JANE & MR. ROCHESTER in 'JANE EYRE' – Jane Eyre and Mr. Rochester is one of the most complicated and enduring love stories in all of literature. While some film adaptations lay on the schmaltz, Cary Fukunaga's take on it is tense, thrilling, and sensual. And on streaming.

Everett Collection

7) JANE & RAFAEL on 'JANE THE VIRGIN' – Looking for an enchanting love story with a different kind of meet cute? How about Jane and Rafael? They were from two different worlds until Jane was accidentally inseminated with Rafael's sperm.

6) PAT & TIFFANY in 'SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK' – This might have been the Oscar bait flick that scored Jennifer Lawrence her Best Actress Academy Award, but make no bones about it. This is a sweet and frothy romantic comedy. There's even a dance competition!

5) GOMEZ & MORTICIA ADDAMS in 'ADDAMS FAMILY VALUES' – Gomez and Morticia are quite simply the most romantic couple of all time. If you don't believe me, I wrote an

essay

about it. Or, you can just watch 'Addams Family Values' on Netflix.

Everett Collection

4) LESLIE & BEN on 'PARKS AND RECREATION' – Love can be steamy, but true love grows with time and only gets sweeter. So it is with 'Parks and Rec' love birds Ben and Leslie. Season 6 saw them grappling with the revelation that they would be parents to twins, and the upcoming farewell season will see them still happily married in the future.

Everett Collection

3) ADELE & EMMA in 'BLUE IS THE WARMEST COLOR' – Sad, sensual, and so, so very steamy. These are all words you could use to describe the heart-breaking romance, 'Blue is the Warmest Color.'

Everett Collection

2) GUS & HAZEL in 'THE FAULT IN OUR STARS' – Oooo! Are we fighting? Do you think John Green's doomed love birds should be top of the list? Look, they came close. They came REALLY close. Okay? Okay.

Everett Collection

1) CLAIRE & JAMIE on 'OUTLANDER' – Starz's new hit is an adventure series, a historic drama, and a time travel caper. However, the thing that kept audiences rapt all season was finding out if, and when, and HOW, Claire and Jamie would hook up. Their sexy wedding night was well worth the wait, but now we are growing all too impatient to find out what happens next for them.

Gif by Jaclyn Kessel; Footage: Starz

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Giants QB coach ditching Eli Manning for college job

Eli Manning is going to have to work with his third quarterbacks coach in three years. Danny Langsdorf is leaving the Giants to become the offensive coordinator at Nebraska.

Langsdorf, 42, came to the Giants this past season, brought in by first-year offensive coordinator Ben McAdoo. After only one year, though, Langsdorf is headed back to college, where he will be reunited with Mike Riley. Langsdorf worked for Riley at Oregon State. Riley was recently hired at Nebraska to replace Bo Pelini.

So, the Giants are on the look-out for a new quarterbacks coach. In his one year with Manning, Langsdorf helped the veteran quarterback acclimate to the West Coast offense, and Manning was able to come away with one his best statistical seasons, finishing with 30 touchdowns and 14 interceptions.


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AsiaAir owner bought company for less than a buck

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — His airline empire began, Tony Fernandes likes to say, with the purchase of a bankrupt company for less than a dollar. Now, after years of growth that made him the king of Asian budget travel, the flamboyant Malaysian businessman is facing the horror of the disappearance of an AirAsia jet with 162 people on board.

Fernandes, who built AirAsia's regional network on cheap fares, a love of the spotlight and occasionally provocative advertising ("There's a new girl in town. She's twice the fun and half the price."), was clearly exhausted by the time he met reporters late Sunday at the airport in Surabaya, Indonesia, where the missing flight had taken off.

"We are very devastated by what has happened. It is unbelievable," he said. In an earlier tweet to his employees, Fernandes said, "This is my worst nightmare."

Fernandes pioneered regional low-cost air travel by launching AirAsia in January 2002, growing it from two planes to more than 180 by breaking the dominance of national airlines and making flying affordable for the millions of Asians entering the middle class. Today, he has an estimated net worth of $650 million.

A massive air and sea search has so far turned up no confirmed sign of AirAsia Flight 8501, which vanished from radar Sunday morning about 42 minutes after taking off from Surabaya en route to Singapore.

The missing jet was the third major airline incident this year involving Malaysia. First came Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which disappeared on its way to Beijing from Kuala Lumpur on March 8 and has not been found. A few months later, Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 was shot down over Ukraine.

Fernandes talks to relatives of missing AirAsia plane passengers on Monday.Photo: EPA

But this marks the first tragedy for Malaysia-based AirAsia, which has a strong safety record. Flight 8501 was operated by AirAsia Indonesia, a subsidiary that is 49 percent owned by AirAsia Malaysia.

Earlier this year, AirAsia boasted in its in-flight magazine that its well-trained pilots would never lose a plane. The airline withdrew the magazine and Fernandes apologized for the article, which was written before Flight 370 disappeared. Fernandes also courted controversy on the day that flight lost contact. An active Twitter user with more than a million followers, he tweeted that the plane's radio had failed and that all on board were safe. He later deleted the tweet.

Shukor Yusof, an aviation analyst with Endau Analytics in Malaysia, said Fernandes had reacted well so far to the latest crisis, communicating properly and quickly traveling to Surabaya.

"There will be some adverse knee-jerk reaction, but I don't think it will cripple the airline," Shukor said. "AirAsia has sound fundamentals in terms of its business model and management, and this crisis should not suppress its growth."

Last year, AirAsia flew 42.6 million people across the region.

A 50-year-old Malaysian of Indian-Portuguese descent and a serious music buff — he plays keyboards and the drums — Fernandes earned a finance degree in the United Kingdom and rose quickly in the music industry, first at Virgin Group and later at Warner Music International. He was appointed Warner's chief in Malaysia in 1992 at age 28, the youngest person to hold that post.

After purchasing AirAsia in the early 2000s, Fernandez turned the airline into the go-to affordable option for Asian travelers.Photo: Getty Images

Warner CD sales jumped during his tenure, but he left after Time-Warner's merger with AOL to enter the airline business, a longtime dream.

Fernandes got together with three other investor, mortgaged his house and withdrew his savings to get the floundering AirAsia running after buying it on Sept. 8, 2001 for a symbolic 1 ringgit, or about 25 U.S. cents. Three days later, New York and Washington were hit by terrorist attacks.

But AirAsia coasted through the crisis. With its tagline "Now Everyone Can Fly," it revolutionized cheap air travel in the region and repaid its 40 million ringgit ($11.4 million) debt in less than two years.

Today, it has more than 8,000 employees and flies to 132 destinations in Asia. AirAsia is now a major competitor to full-service carriers such as Singapore Airlines and Thai Airways, which have since set up budget offshoots to vie for a bigger share of passengers.

In many ways, Fernandes' career echoes the empire Richard Branson created at Virgin Group — both in terms of how the men love attention, and how they have expanded across industries.

From short routes of up to four hours, AirAsia has expanded into long-haul flying through its sister airline AirAsia X. Through his Tune Group, which owns AirAsia, Fernandes also started a hotel chain and offers car rental, insurance and credit cards in tie-ups with banks.

He was, in many ways, ahead of the industry curve, sensing a need for low-cost flights in what is now the world's fastest-growing region for airlines.

Fernandes is also the owner of Queens Park Rangers, an English Premier League soccer club.Photo: Reuters

"Air travel is made for Asia," Fernandes told The Associated Press in 2002. "You can generally drive from one end of Europe to another or take a train, but that's not the case here. You want to try driving from Kuala Lumpur to Bangkok? Good luck, mate!"

Fernandes is a vocal leader who enjoys interacting with the public at airports and on social media. AirAsia passengers often tweet him photos of their vacations, images Fernandes then shares with his followers.

In 2011, Fernandes stepped into the sports world when he bought a majority stake in the Queens Park Rangers, an English Premier League soccer club. The same year, Britain honored him as a Commander of the Order of the British Empire and France made him an Officier de la Legion d'Honneur.

He also has funded a Formula One racing team, making lavish bets with owners of competing teams. But he sold his shares in the F1 team this year.

Last year, Fernandes further put AirAsia in the spotlight by hosting the Asian version of the reality TV series "The Apprentice." Filipino Jonathan Yabut won and now works for AirAsia in his country.

Since the disappearance of Flight 8501, Fernandes has focused on encouraging his staff not to buckle under the pressure.

"Be strong," he told his staff in another Twitter message. "Continue to be the best. Pray hard."


23.16 | 0 komentar | Read More

Mel B: ‘My hubby never would lay a hand on me’

Written By Unknown on Senin, 29 Desember 2014 | 23.16

Despite claims Mel B and Stephen Belafonte's marriage is on "life support," the former Spice Girl, 39, is defending her man.

"This is for my fans havin problems with my Twitter will be back soon!" she captioned a coupled up Instagram photo with Belafonte, 39, on Sunday. "I'm very good was very prolly but much better now and for the record my hubby never would lay a hand on me sorry took so long but any response fuels rumors #lovemyfamily #lovemyfans."

Rumors of marital strife began after Mel B appeared on the season finale of "X Factor UK" with several visible bruises on her body. Her appearance came on the heels of a hospital stay for an undisclosed illness.

Last week, insiders revealed the couple's seven-year marriage is indeed strained. "Mel's marriage has reached a crisis point—in fact it's on life support," a spy told The Sun. "She has told friends it is over with Stephen."

Belafonte didn't dodge questions about a possible split when quizzed in a Daily Mail interview. "I'm not disputing it, I didn't know, I had no idea," he said.

He also adamantly denied abusing his wife.


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Final passengers rescued from stranded, burned ferry

BARI, Italy — Helicopters defied high winds and stormy seas Monday to evacuate hundreds of passengers and staff from the Greek ferry that caught fire off Albania. Five people died and survivors told of a frantic rush to escape the flames and pelting rain.

The evacuation was completed in the early afternoon and only the vessel's captain and four Italian sailors remained on board to try to hook the ferry up to a tug boat, Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi said.

The navy said the latest numbers indicate 414 people have been rescued from the ferry, and five bodies removed.

Passengers and crew huddle on the deck of the Norman Atlantic while they wait to be rescued on Sunday.Photo: AP

The ferry company had originally said there were 478 passengers and crew on board the ferry. Officials couldn't immediately explain the discrepancy between the numbers.

Rescue helicopters battle through gale-force winds to reach the burning ferry.Photo: Getty Images

The dead included a Greek man who died after becoming trapped in a lifeboat chute and four others whose bodies were recovered from the sea Monday, the Greek coast guard said. Their identities and the circumstances of their deaths were not immediately known.

Exhausted and cold from their ordeal, 49 passengers reached land Monday in the southern Italian port of Bari, more than 24 hours after fire broke out on a car deck of the ferry making a journey from the Greek port of Patras to Ancona in Italy.

The Greek and Italian premiers separately expressed their condolences to the victims and gratitude to the rescue workers. Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samras said the "massive and unprecedented operation saved the lives of hundreds of passengers following the fire on the ship in the Adriatic Sea — under the most difficult circumstances," while Renzi said the "impressive" rescue efforts prevented "a slaughter at sea."

Passengers accounts emerging Monday painted a picture of a panicked reaction as the fire spread, with passengers choking on the smoke and struggling to figure out how to reach safety as they suffered both searing heat from the ship's floors and driving rain outside. Prosecutors in Bari were opening an investigation into how the fire started.

A Greek truck driver, reached by the Associated Press aboard one of the rescue vessels, described the rescue scene as "a chaos, a panic." He said the fire alarm came after most passengers, alerted by smoke filling their cabins, had gone outside, and that there was no crew in sight to direct passengers.

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Rescue operations were completed on Monday, but bodies were still being recovered from the ferry.

Getty Images

Smoke rises from the ferry stranded in the Adriatic Sea on Sunday.

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"Our feet were burning and from the feet up we were soaked," Christos Perlis, 32, told the AP by telephone.

When rescue helicopters arrived, Perlis said, passengers began to panic.

"Everyone there was trampling on each other to get onto the helicopter," said Perlis, who said he and another man tried to impose order.

"First children, then women and then men. But the men, they started hitting us so they could get on first. They didn't take into consideration the women or the children, nothing," Perlis said. He said he reached safety after jumping in a helicopter basket carrying a girl.

A survivor of the ferry Norman Atlantic is carried by a rescuer after arriving in the port of Bari on Monday.Photo: Getty Images

Turkish passenger Saadet Bayhan, speaking to Turkey's NTV television from a rescue ship, confirmed that there were no fire alarms and that passengers woke each other up.

"We experienced the Titanic. The only thing missing was that we didn't sink," she said.

Another rescued Turkish passenger, Aylin Akamac, told the state-run Anadolu Agency from a hospital in Brindisi that the rescue operation was disorganized and that there were only three lifeboats on the ferry.

"Those who got out first got on the lifeboats," she said, while the others were made to wait. "We were soaked from the water they doused to extinguish the fire. Our feet froze. People were forced to move closer to the fire to keep warm. We waited outside for hours."

Norman Atlantic survivors disembark from a container ship that was turned into a makeshift rescue vessel in Bari on Monday.Photo: Getty Images

Most evacuees were to be brought to shore later after the rescue was completed, Greek officials said, but one of the cargo ships, the Spirit of Piraeus, left ahead of the pack, reaching Bari just after 7:30 a.m. Monday with 49 survivors aboard. The first to disembark was an injured man wrapped in a yellow striped blanket and wearing bandages around his bare feet, helped down the ship's ladder by two rescue workers.

Other evacuees, many wrapped in blankets, made their way gingerly down the ladder with assistance, some thrusting their hands in a victory sign as they waited their turn. Among them were four children. The evacuees then boarded bright red fire department buses. Officials have said hotels have been booked for them around town.

The fire broke out before dawn Sunday on a car deck of the Italian-flagged Norman Atlantic, carrying 422 passengers and 56 crew members. All day and night, passengers huddled on the vessel's upper decks, pelted by rain and hail and struggling to breathe through the thick smoke.

Survivors were also taken to southern Italian hospitals in smaller numbers in the hours immediately after the rescue operation got under way. Several were treated for hypothermia, some for mild carbon monoxide poisoning and one woman suffered a fractured pelvis, officials said.

A local convent was housing survivors who were released from the hospital.

Helicopters rescued passengers throughout the night, completing 34 sorties by dawn with winds over 46 mph. The Greek coast guard said seven people had been airlifted from the ferry to Corfu.

"Notwithstanding the weather and the darkness, which is another factor, we persisted throughout the entire night," Italian coast guard Adm. Giovanni Pettorino told Sky TG24.

Italian navy Capt. Riccardo Rizzotto said the ultimate destination of the stricken ferry was unclear. Some Italian officials said it would likely be towed to an Italian port, even though it was currently closer to Albania.

Pettorino said two Italian tugs tried to attach themselves to the ferry in the evening, but were frustrated by the thick smoke. Eventually the tugs managed to attach the line to stabilize the ferry, ANSA reported.


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Surfer survives ‘Jaws’ moment with great white shark

A surfer survived being attacked and dragged underwater by a juvenile great white shark off the central California coast Sunday.

California State Park Ranger Supervisor Robert Colligan said the attack by the 8-to-10 foot shark happened at around 11 a.m. local time at Montana de Oro State Park, approximately 200 miles northwest of Los Angeles.

The San Luis Obispo Tribune, citing witnesses, identified the surfer as 50-year-old Kevin Swanson of Morro Bay, Calif. He was airlifted to a local hospital with non-life-threatening injuries to his right hip and thigh and a hospital spokesman said Swanson was in fair condition Sunday afternoon.

Andrew Walsh, who was surfing with Swanson, told the paper that the shark swam up from underneath Swanson's board and grabbed him with no warning. Walsh added that Swanson surfaced after several seconds, yelled "shark attack!", and began paddling to shore.

Before Swanson got out of the water, Walsh said, he fashioned a tourniquet from his surfboard's leash cord. Two doctors who happened to be walking on the beach at the time examined him and determined that no arteries were hit.

"We're really blessed that he was still able to get himself to shore," Walsh said. "I was a few feet behind him, and we grabbed him and got him … up on the sand, and very quickly these doctors were there, helping out and calling 911."

The beach remained open, but signs will be posted for three days warning the public of the attack, Colligan said. He noted that if there is another shark sighting, the signs will remain up for another three days.

Sharks are native to the area, and Colligan said that they are spotted several times a year. He added that attacks like this are rare.

A woman swimming with seals was killed by a shark in 2003 about 10 miles south of the most recent attack, Colligan said.

This article originally appeared on Fox News.


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Icahn acquires stake in Manitowoc, will push for split

Shares of Manitowoc Co., a Wisconsin maker of cranes and food-service equipment, jumped about 11 percent in pre-market trading on Monday after Carl Icahn reported a 7.8 percent stake and became the second activist investor to call for the company's two distinct business units to be split into separate companies.

Icahn, between Dec. 17 and 26, amassed a stake of 10.5 million shares, including options, according to a regulatory filing Monday morning.

Manitowoc's shares rose 11 percent to $23.25 before the bell on Monday.

In June, Ralph Whitworth's Relational Investors urged the company to spin off the foodservice equipment business in June, when it reported an 8.5 percent stake.

That announcement sent Manitowoc shares up 9.4 percent over two days, to $30 — but four months later they had fallen to $17.34 when no action was taken.

The company's shares are down 10.3 percent this year.

Manitowoc's shares are down 10.3 % this year.Photo: AP

Manitowoc's crane business has been hurt by weak demand for its rough-terrain and boom trucks, and the company said in October that it expected revenue in the business to decline by a mid-to-high single-digit percentage in 2014.

The crane business contributed nearly 62 percent of Manitowoc's total revenue of about $4 billion in 2013.

Revenue in the foodservice business, which makes ice machines, refrigerators, deep fryers and other cooking equipment, increased about 3 percent in the third quarter ended Oct. 27, while revenue in the crane business fell 6 percent.

Icahn, who said he would seek board representation, "if appropriate," noted in the Securities and Exchange Commission filing that he had not yet had any discussions with the company, which has a market value of about $2.8 billion.

Manitowoc was not immediately available for comment.

With Reuters


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‘The Interview’ earns $18M in opening weekend

Sony Pictures said "The Interview" has earned more than $15 million in online sales and another $2.8 million in theaters, an impressive return made possible by the publicity surrounding the cyberattack blamed on North Korea.

The raunchy comedy that depicts the assassination of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made almost as much money through online distribution and in limited theaters in its opening weekend as it would have in a wide release that was shelved after threats from hackers.

The studio said on Sunday the film had been purchased or rented online more than 2 million times on the four days through Saturday, making it Sony Pictures' No. 1 online movie of all time.

"That is a huge number," said Jeff Bock, a box office analyst at Exhibitor Relations.

"This is almost what it was going to do theatrically before it was pulled. It made about what people expected, but in a completely different way."

The film that triggered the devastating cyberattack on the studio last month, which the United States says was launched by North Korea, opened Thursday in 331 independent theaters with a $1 million box office and $1.8 million over the subsequent three days, according to Sony. Many filmgoers and theater owners said they supported the film in the name of free speech.

The $44 million film starring Seth Rogen and James Franco had been expected to gross at least $20 million in its opening holiday weekend if it had gone to wide release, according to Boxoffice.com.

After large movie theater chains, like AMC and Regal Entertainment, refused to screen the comedy following threats of violence from hackers who opposed the film, Sony stitched together a limited release in theaters and a $5.99 video-on-demand rental and $14.99 purchase option on YouTube Movies, Google Play, Microsoft Xbox Video and a dedicated site starting Dec. 24.

Sony had been fiercely criticized by top Hollywood talent and President Barack Obama for what many considered caving to the hackers. Sony maintained it had no choice but to pull the wide release and immediately began looking for alternative platforms with technology companies.

'Weird watching this on TV'

Photo: UPI

It was still unclear whether Sony, which is still struggling with the impact of the cyberattack, would recoup the money it spent to make the film and the $30 million or $40 million in estimated marketing costs.

But in a sign of the film's power and place in the cultural debate, Apple said on Sunday it plans to carry the movie for rental and purchase on iTunes, the biggest and most-popular online content store.

"The Apple component will be significant," said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at tracking firm Rentrak. "I've heard anecdotes of people who have never downloaded a movie on iTunes doing that for this movie."

"The Interview" is now considered by experts a test case for simultaneous VOD and theatrical release, a taboo topic for the movie theater chains that want to retain their exclusive window.

"It'll be interesting to see how quickly industry moves forward with these kinds of services," Bock said. "This is money they don't need to share with the movie chains and that's a big deal. It could shake a lot of things up."

The film's unconventional rollout has also been a hot topic on social media. Rogen took to Twitter on Sunday to live tweet a viewing of "The Interview," in which Rogen and Franco play two journalists who snag an interview with Kim and then are enlisted by the CIA to take him out.

"It's at this point that I gotta say it's (expletive) weird I am watching this on TV right now," Rogen tweeted.


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Burglar attacks elderly woman, makes off with $300

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 28 Desember 2014 | 23.16

He's no Santa Claus.

An acrobatic crook broke into a Hell's Kitchen apartment through the balcony, attacked an elderly resident, and fled with hundreds of dollars Saturday evening, cops said.

The death-defying thief somehow made his way onto a fifth-floor balcony of the building on West 57th Street near Ninth Avenue at about 5 p.m., Saturday, and let himself in, police said.

Once inside, he confronted the female tenants, 75 and 78, and demanded money, according to cops.

Authorities said the plucky 78-year-old tried to fight off the home invader, but the creep punched and kicked her before fleeing with about $300.

The senior was not seriously injured.

Investigators are still trying to figure out how the prowler got onto the balcony half-way up the ten-story building.

The suspect, believed to be about 5-foot-8 and 160 pounds, was last seen wearing a brown skullcap.


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Nets rewind: The Lopez-Plumlee partnership just isn’t working

Here are three thoughts on the Nets' 110-85 loss to the Pacers Saturday night in Brooklyn:

1. It's pretty clear that the Brook Lopez-Mason Plumlee partnership isn't working, both by the eye test and the numbers, and it's probably for the best if the Nets bail on the experiment.

In 61 minutes this season, including 13 in the past two games against the Celtics and Pacers, the Nets have been outscored by over 17 points per 100 possessions when that duo has been on the floor together, including being outscored 20-12 in seven minutes in Friday's win in Boston, and being outscored 16-7 in six minutes in Saturday's blowout loss to the Pacers.

Nets coach Lionel Hollins went to the Lopez-Plumlee pairing early in both games, and then went away from it as the game wore on and it was clear it didn't work. Given the way it's performed so far this season, it would be hard to blame Hollins if he chooses to stay away from it permanently.

2. Speaking of Lopez, he looked absolutely lost in this one, going scoreless in 15 minutes – for just the second time in his career, with the first coming back in November 2008, six games into his rookie season – and looking completely out or sorts.

Lopez said all the right things afterward, saying he needed to remain patient, do what he knows he's capable of and get back to playing the way he has throughout his career. But even in a game where he didn't play great, Plumlee still finished with nine points and eight rebounds, and it appears he has a pretty firm grip on the starting center job for some time to come.

3. You'll have a hard time finding a player as confident in his shot as Mirza Teletovic, but he's now working on a two-month slump.

Teletovic hit 31.2 percent of his 3-pointers in November, and has followed that up with 31.3 percent in December, while shooting 39.8 percent from the field since the start of November.

Coming into the season, Teletovic was expected to be a vital cog for the Nets off the bench, a stretch four capable of knocking down open 3-pointers and beating defenses off the dribble. So far, however, he's spent most of his season struggling to get going, something the Nets will hope will start to turn around soon.


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Holder and Obama are making race relations worse, inflaming hatred

Attorney General Eric Holder insisted to MSNBC earlier this month that "we are in a better place than we were before" in race relations since Barack Obama was elected president.

The president doubled down in an interview with NPR last week. Asked if race relations were worse since he took office, he said, "No, I actually think that it's probably in its day-to-day interactions less racially divided."

But that's not what the American people see. A Pew Research Center poll found that only 40% of Americans approve of the way Obama is handling race relations. Black approval is down to 57%, while approval among whites is down to 33%.

More young people under age 30, the age group who were most enthusiastic about electing the nation's first African-American president, now disapprove of his performance on racial issues than approve. And Eric Holder has one of the lowest approval ratings of any public official.

Law-enforcement officials are appalled at the way the Obama administration exploited tragedies in Ferguson, Mo., and New York City to appeal to its political base. David Clarke, a Democrat who is the African-American sheriff of Milwaukee, doesn't mince his words.

"The thing that disappoints me the most is some very powerful people in this country — the president of the United States, Attorney General Eric Holder and Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York — have created a pathway that contributes to an unjustifiable hatred of law enforcement officers across the country," he told WMAL radio in Washington, DC. "They trashed an entire profession with a broad brush because it was politically expedient for them to do so."
Holder, who thinks we are "a nation of cowards" on race, has infused the Justice Department with the "racial justice" movement that falsely argues the police "subconsciously" discriminate through the use of "disproportionate" means such as traffic stops. It has forced 15 cities into consent decrees to end such practices, for which it has almost no evidence.

Take Seattle, where Justice claimed that "Biased policing is not primarily about the ill-intentioned officer but rather the officer who engages in discriminatory practices subconsciously," adding that even a well-meaning cop can violate the civil rights of black suspects by operating "on implicit biases that impact that officer's behavior or perceptions."

Even though DOJ admitted it couldn't verify the supposed bias, in 2012 it ordered Seattle to weaken its use-of-force rules while disciplining officers engaged in "implicit bias."

A lawsuit by Seattle police officers against Justice charges that the new policies have led to "hesitation and paralysis" in officers being able to carry out their duty to protect the public from criminals. The suit notes that crime rates have climbed in Seattle — with aggravated assaults up 14%, car theft up 44% and murders up 21%. It is those trends that should scare New Yorkers about the Obama-Holder approach to law enforcement.

Even honest liberals agree that Holder's Justice Department has been confrontational and polarizing. Juan Williams of Fox News, the author of "Eyes on the Prize: America's Civil Rights Years," laments that "the Justice Department has devolved into the heart of Washington darkness, the absolute pit of modern political polarization in my lifetime."

One reason for that is that, thanks to direct support from Holder and Obama, Al Sharpton has now become the nation's leading civil-rights leader. Far from becoming the "refined agitator" his apologists now claim him to be, Sharpton is the same racial charlatan and rabble-rouser of the past using slightly new tricks.

Sheriff Clarke says the Obama administration set a pattern early on that it would ignore bad behavior and bad actors if it suited their political purposes and their warped racial ideology.

In 2009, it dropped charges against the New Black Panther Party for intimidating voters at a Philadelphia polling place because the defendants were black. In 2013, the Inspector General of the Justice Department filed a report criticizing its Civil Rights Division for allowing the harassing and bullying of conservative employees. No disciplinary action was taken. And Holder has filled the ranks of the office at DOJ responsible for policing the police with radical lawyers hostile to law enforcement.

In 2013, a federal judge ordered a new trial for five New Orleans police officers convicted of a shooting during Hurricane Katrina because of "grotesque prosecutorial abuse." Judge Kurt Engelhard slammed the "skullduggery" and "perfidy" of Justice Department prosecutors in engaging in a PR campaign to inflame public opinion and sway the jury through anonymous postings on a newspaper website. The judge suggested that Holder "seriously consider appointment of an independent counsel" to investigate the scandal. Holder has ignored the judge's recommendation and instead recently moved to have the judge removed from the case.

For Sheriff Clarke, all of this fits into a pattern. "I think these two [President Obama and Attorney General Holder] have indicated their dislike of the police even if it's in coded language." He notes that in the wake of the killing of two cops last weekend in New York, Mayor de Blasio and others are now issuing "contrite statements about how they respect and admire our law enforcement officers. I think it's hollow. I don't accept it."

Since President Obama took office, "racial justice" ideology has been allowed to trump common sense. Saying we "are in a better place" when it comes to race relations may be true for the Al Sharptons of the world but not for ordinary Americans.

John Fund is the national affairs correspondent for National Review and Hans A. von Spakovsky is a former Justice Department official. They are co-authors of "Obama's Enforcer: Eric Holder's Justice Department" (HarperCollins/Broadside), out now.


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Michael Sam: Coming out was right thing to do

ST. LOUIS — Michael Sam dismissed the thought that his sexuality has cost him a spot in the NFL.

"I don't like to think that way," Sam said in an Oprah Winfrey Network documentary that aired Saturday night. "But I do believe I'm a very talented football player and I'm going to continue working hard and try to get that opportunity to play in the league."

The first openly gay player drafted in the NFL has no regrets.

"I did everything I was supposed to do. I did everything right," Sam said. "I am proud of how I handled things."

Sam said coming out was the right thing to do. He would have preferred the news come out after he informed the team that drafted him, but he feared it would be revealed and felt pressure to control the situation.

"It didn't need to be public," Sam said. "Why do gay people have to do it?"

The production was billed as the player's first TV appearance since being cut by the Dallas Cowboys in mid-October and played like a personal "Hard Knocks." The 90-minute program was followed by a one-on-one with Winfrey, who asked Sam whether he believed sexual orientation is hurting his chances, and how long he'd keep trying.

"As long as I can," Sam replied.

The documentary details countless anxious hours during the NFL draft, which Sam called "the longest three days of my life." The New York Jets telephoned his agents to say they weren't interested, and the Cowboys texted to say they were out, too.

Sam, who rose to stardom after a difficult childhood in tiny Hitchcock, Texas, asked that the sound on the TV be turned down at one point before the St. Louis Rams took him late in the seventh round.

"Am I going undrafted?" a frustrated Sam asked agent Cameron Weiss. "This phone still has not beeped."

Sam said the reassuring hand of his boyfriend, Vito Cammisano, on his shoulder during the wait to get picked affirmed the decision last February to reveal his sexual orientation to the nation. He informed Missouri coaches and players before his senior season and was the team MVP and SEC co-defensive player of the year.

"In that moment, I was like `I don't care what happens. I made the right choice to come out,'" Sam said.

Sam broke down in sobs when Rams coach Jeff Fisher telephoned just before the team made him the 249th pick of the 256-pick draft. He had been projected to be chosen as early as the fourth round.

Sam kissed and hugged Cammisano and then the two smashed cake in each other's faces as a national television audience looked on.

"Some say the kiss, the cake, it was all just too much," Winfrey said in the voiceover prom for the program. "Some say he wasn't good enough. Others say he should have never come out, one saying during the introduction to the program that he would be the mother of all distractions."

Sam called it the "infamous kiss." He said it was spontaneous and added he'd thought the cameras had been turned off.

"Everyone made a big deal out of it," Sam said. "It's just a kiss. Did you forget that I was gay? Should I be kissing a woman instead?"

Sam was among 21 players waived by the team to reach the 53-player limit before the season opener.

Echoing his remarks after making the pick, coach Jeff Fisher said several times it was purely a football decision. The Rams were well-stocked with pass rushers, and undrafted Ethan Westbrooks grabbed the final defensive end spot.

"I will tell you this: I was pulling for Mike," Fisher said then. "I really was, and I don't say that very often. Mike came in here and did everything we asked him to do."

On Twitter, roughly an hour after he was cut, Sam thanked the Rams and the city of St. Louis. He also wrote "The most worthwhile things in life rarely come easy, this is a lesson I've always known. The journey continues."

Sam spent seven weeks on the Cowboys' practice squad before being released and is currently a free agent.


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‘Flying dinosaur’ on the loose turns out to be injured hippo

Panicked locals in a Taiwanese city called police with an incredible claim — they had seen a "dinosaur" on the loose.

But this was no Jurassic Park. Instead the dinosaur — which some callers to police insisted had been flying — was a hippo that had fallen out the back of a truck in central Miaoli county.

The hippo, named "A Ho", panicked while it was being transported and jumped from the vehicle.

It broke its leg in the fall and the sound of the giant animal hitting the concrete startled residents who ran outside to see what the noise was.

The hippo jumped through the truck window and landed on a parked car before eventually coming to rest on the road.

Television footage showed the enormous animal lying there with a white fluid oozing from its eyes

One woman was quoted by the United Daily News saying that she ran out of her house after hearing the crash and thought she saw "a dinosaur" lying on the road.

The truck driver was quoted by the newspaper as saying that he saw the hippo "flying out" of the vehicle after getting spooked during the drive.

The injured animal lay on the road for a few hours before being put into a cargo container and taken back to its farm in central Taichung city, officials said.

The hippo is expected to make a full recovery but its owner could be in for a hefty fine.

Taiwanese authorities told AFP news agency the owner could face a fine of up to $2,400 for violating animal protection laws because of the injuries it suffered.

Local media said the hippo was a star attraction at its farm and had even appeared in a popular television soap opera several years ago.


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Marriage ultimatum horror stories

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 27 Desember 2014 | 23.16

'Tis the season for Santa, eggnog and, for those in serious relationships, proposals -— or pressure to propose.

"But demanding a propposal can backfire," caution Deb Costaldo, Ph.D., a relationship and marriage therapist and author of "Relationship Reboot."

Here, four real-life instances where that's exactly what happened:

Facebook 'official'

"Five years ago, my girlfriend at the time was talking marriage. We'd been together for two years and had lived together for a year, but hadn't come up with any date and I hadn't bought a ring. One day, at work, my phone began blowing up with texts congratulating me. I checked Facebook, and she'd switched her status to engaged. When I called her out on it, she said that since we had been talking about it, we might as well make it 'Facebook official' and that we'd sort through details later. What was even more uncomfortable was becoming "unengaged" on Facebook later that day, which caused everyone to assume we had broken up — which, within three months, was the case. The whole episode made it clear that there were a lot of cracks in our relationship." — Brian 33, sales analyst, Prospect Heights

Married to Mom?

"One day after work three years ago, I got a text from my girlfriend asking me to meet her at the swank King Cole Bar. It was the month of my birthday, so I figured it was some sort of pre-birthday surprise. When I get there, she's wasn't there — but her mom was. As soon as I sat down, her mother pulled a box from her purse, flipped the lid and showed me an engagement ring, explaining it was my girlfriend's grandmother's ring, and her mom felt it was time I had it. I felt like her mom was proposing to me. It was incredibly awkward — and, needless to say, I did not enjoy the 'celebratory' Champagne she insisted on ordering right after. The relationship limped along for another year — with a few check-ins from her mom about when I was 'ready for the rock' — before we realized it wasn't working." — Kev, 28, architect, Upper West Side

Mr. and Mrs. ?

"Four years ago, my then-girlfriend was really excited about our vacation to a swanky resort in Mexico. When we checked in, we were showered with Champagne and congratulations on our recent marriage. She confessed she'd called ahead to tell the resort it was our honeymoon in order to get better service, but it was pretty obvious she was angling for a proposal — and was really uncomfortable to always be referred to as 'Mr. and Mrs. X' when we were nowhere near that point in 'real' life. The vacation made it clear we were at very different points in where we saw 'us' going." — Sam, 40, graphic designer, Upper East Side

Pray for the 'happy' couple

"Last summer, my girlfriend and I were visiting her parents in the suburbs, and I agreed to go with them to church, even though I'm not religious. At one point, the minister was going over prayers for various members of the congregation and he suddenly said: 'Let us pray for Ashley (name has been changed) and Paul and their commitment to a future life together, and please guide them on their path toward engagement.' Later, Ashley swore she didn't know that was going to happen, but it was incredibly uncomfortable all the same. We broke up at the end of the summer for various reasons, but one of them was the fact that I was nowhere near as far down the 'path toward engagement' as she seemed to want me to be." — Paul, 27, engineer, Harlem


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Ryan Seacrest is expecting the unexpected this New Year’s Eve

Ryan Seacrest is regularly referred to as the busiest man in showbiz. But Seacrest himself isn't so sure.

"I think it's probably overstated," he tells The Post. "A lot of people in this business work incredibly hard, and long hours are required to put shows on the air."

Humble, yes, but true?

Wednesday night, he returns to his annual duty of hosting "Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve," beginning at 8 p.m. on ABC.

Thirty-eight live performances — including Taylor Swift, Florida Georgia Line, Iggy Azalea and Elton John — are planned for the 5-hour event, but it's what isn't planned that Seacrest is enthused about.

"What keeps things really exciting is all the stuff you don't plan for," he says. "That is the fun and beauty of live television."

Despite holding down the broadcast since 2006, Seacrest says he never feels like he's missing out while working the holiday night.

"As a kid, I used to dream of hosting a big live show on television," he says. "So now when I get to actually do it, I don't take it for granted."

"Rockin' Eve," of course, is but one of countless Seacrest endeavors. The 40-year-old shot to fame in 2002 as the host of "American Idol." When he's not hosting the most glamorous red carpets in Tinseltown, there's his nationally syndicated radio show, "On Air With Ryan Seacrest," as well as "American Top 40," which he took over from Casey Kasem. He's also an accomplished producer, with hits like a little show called "Keeping Up With the Kardashians." He's even got a clothing line at Macy's, and he's an investor in companies ranging from AXS TV to Pinterest.

With all that going on, sleep often ends up on the backburner, but maybe that will change in the New Year.

"My doctor says it's important!" he says. "I'm working on getting more."


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Tastemakers weigh in on favorite pop-culture moments of the year

Pat Kiernan

Morning anchor on NY1

Pat KiernanPhoto: Getty Images

Favorite album of 2014: Sam Smith's "In the Lonely Hour"

"There's something great about one of the top albums of the year coming from someone who nobody knew anything about the previous year. This is a pure success story."

Favorite TV show of 2014: "The Newsroom"

"Aaron Sorkin hits home with his message about Americans making dumb choices in the media we consume and the media we produce."

Ryan Seacrest

Ryan SeacrestPhoto: Getty Images

Favorite song of 2014: Sam Smith's "Stay With Me"
Favorite album of 2014: Taylor Swift's "1989"
Song he's most tired of hearing: "Not going there!"

Angie Martinez

Host of the afternoon show on Power 105.1 FM and co-author of "Healthy Latin Eating"

Angie MartinezPhoto: Startraks

Favorite TV Show of 2014: "Scandal"
Favorite Concert of 2014: Powerhouse 2014 at Barclays Center featuring J. Cole, Ne-Yo, Chris Brown and more

Meghan Trainor

Meghan TrainorPhoto: AP

Favorite TV show of 2014: "Modern Family"
Favorite app of 2014: Instagram

Joel Grey

Joel GreyPhoto: Getty Images

Favorite movie of 2014: "Birdman"
Favorite stage show of 2014: "Bridges of Madison County"
Favorite TV show of 2014: "The Normal Heart" on HBO

Elvis Duran

Elvis Duran and the Morning Show on Z-100

Elvis DuranPhoto: WireImage

Favorite song of 2014: "Bang Bang," by Jessie J, Ariana Grande and Nicki Minaj
Song he's most tired of hearing: "Bang Bang," by Jessie J, Ariana Grande and Nicki Minaj
Favorite TV show of 2014: "Black Mirror" on Netflix


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The 14 Pleasant Surprises In 2014

December 27, 2014 // 9:00am

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Illustration by Jaclyn Kessel; Photos Courtesy Everett Collection, NBC

2014…what a year, amirite? During each of the final 14 days of the year, the Decider staff will be counting down our favorite and most memorable moments of 2014. If you happen to miss an installment along the way, don't fret! You can follow all the action on our official Best 14 Of '14 hub page.

We've spent the last few days talking about the best of the year — the things we genuinely loved, and the best examples of what we watched while we grit our teeth. As consumers of massive amounts of pop culture, it's quite easy to become jaded about the same old things day in and day out, rarely allowing ourselves to truly enjoy and appreciate what comes across our radar. This year, however, there were still plenty of offerings that genuinely surprised us — things that reminded us how good entertainment can actually be.

14

'Peter Pan Live!'

Sure, it wasn't brilliant (an oft-told story, this time in the form of an old-timey musical for children), and it wasn't so remarkably bad to merit its three-hour run time, but one thing's for certain: Allison Williams worked very hard, and it showed. Finally stepping out of the shadow of Marnie, her character on HBO's Girls, Williams proved herself a pro as the boy who would never grow up. [Where to stream Peter Pan Live!]

13

'Wild'

Wild could have been a run-of-the-mill inspirational movie, but luckily its source material — Cheryl Strayed's memoir — provided a good foundation: an unlikeable, if redeemable, woman who goes on a solo hike on the Pacific Crest Trail in order to restart her life following the death of her mother, a recent divorce, and a budding heroin addiction. Directed by Jean-Marc Vallée, Wild is, yes, an inspirational tale, but a gut-wrenching one that never lets its lead character, played wonderfully by Reese Witherspoon, off the hook.

12

'How to Get Away With Murder'

From executive producer Shonda Rhimes comes this campy, trashy, and incredibly entertaining legal thriller series, combining the typical case-of-the-week format with a meandering mystery plot that seems to owe a major debt to Donna Tartt's literary thriller The Secret History. On top of all that, we get the indelible Viola Davis on our screens every week. [Where to stream How to Get Away With Murder]

11

'Gone Girl'

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Photo: 20th Century Fox; Courtesy Everett Collection

The cards were stacked against this one: a runaway bestselling novel, the seemingly poor casting of Ben Affleck in the lead role, a seemingly unfilmable plot device. Yet David Fincher accomplished what few directors manage to deliver: a faithful adaptation, a well crafted and acted film, and a deliciously dark, brutal, and sexy thriller. [Where to stream Gone Girl]

10

'The One I Love'

It's hard to keep the momentum of a spooky, sci-fi romance going, especially once the twist is revealed so early on in the film. Yet Charlie McDowell's film accomplishes just that with a little help from its two stars, Elisabeth Moss and Mark Duplass, who both deliver quiet and fascinating performances as a married couple trying their best not to split up. [Where to stream The One I Love]

9

'The Skeleton Twins'

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Photo: Roadside Attractions; Courtesy Everett Collection

We've grown to love Kristen Wiig and Bill Hader's comedic work, especially when they work together. So it was a bit of a shock to see them in more subtle, dramatic roles. Needless to say, we like them doing whatever they want to do together. []

[Where to stream The Skeleton Twins]

8

'Transparent'

Everyone seemed to expect that Transparent would be good, but we had no idea it'd be this good. Following an incredibly layered and fascinating family, the patriarch of which has decided to transition into a woman, Transparent gives a wide array of interesting characters who, through each thirty-minute episode, seem more complicated and unique than anyone found in an hour-long episode of television found on a network series. [Where to stream Transparent]

7

'The Cosmopolitans'

The world of Whit Stillman blessedly, and briefly, returned to us in the form of this pilot released on Amazon featuring Adam Brody and Chloe Sevigney as two Americans living in Paris and their expatriate cohort. Although Amazon sadly passed on the pilot, it gave Stillman fans exactly what we'd been yearning for: the clever wit, the incredible performances, and a great heaping of Stillmanesque charm. [Where to stream The Cosmopolitans]

6

'Peaky Blinders'

If the title alone didn't scare you away, perhaps the anachronistic soundtrack — featuring the music of the White Stripes, Nick Cave, and PJ Harvey — might induce a couple of groans. But this is hardly a British Boardwalk Empire; the series, which follows a real-life gang of bootleggers and thieves in Brighton, is a brutal and shocking account of a dark time in England's history. [Where to stream Peaky Blinders]

5

'Maps to the Stars'

David Cronenberg's Hollywood satire is a mixed bag — at its best, it's a David Lynch-lite feature. But despite its flaws, Cronenberg's film features one hell of a performance from Julianne Moore as a spacey actress haunted by the ghost of her mother. More impressively, it allows teen heartthrob Robert Pattinson to prove his talents beyond brooding vampire; his second collaboration with Cronenberg, Pattinson shows off a great performance.

4

'Inherent Vice'

After the one-two punch of There Will Be Blood and The Master, one wouldn't be shocked if Paul Thomas Anderson couldn't keep up his momentum as a director. And attaching himself to the enigmatic author Thomas Pynchon was a surprising move. Yet Anderson's adaptation of Pynchon's hazy, '70s-set hard-boiled detective story proves his ability to dip back into the groovy, bizarre, and hilarious arenas of his earlier films, again providing a winding plot and an impressive cast of characters reminiscent of Robert Altman's best work.

3

'Jane the Virgin'

A telenovela on the CW about a young woman who gets accidentally pregnant while being a virgin? Oh, brother, can you imagine? But while you might expect it to be comprised of the worst qualities of Ugly Betty, Jane the Virgin is actually a sweet, fully, and delightful series that's as well-written as it is goofily bonkers. [Where to stream Jane the Virgin]

2

'Mad Max: Fury Road' Trailer

We have to wait until next year to see this revamp of the classic film franchise, but holy cow: there hasn't been a movie trailer as exhilarating as this one, one that leaves us satisfied for the time being (how many times can you watch that on a loop? I've lost count) while still leaving us thirsty for the full-length movie.

1

'The Babadook'

Look, a movie called The Babadook is going to be a tough sell — after all, there's no much scary about the way that word sounds. Yet this horror film, which starts off deeply and quietly suspenseful before going full-throttle with an unleashing of terror and fright, succeeds on all accounts. Seemingly coming out of nowhere, The Babadook isn't just one of the scariest movies to come out in years — it's also one of the year's very best. [Where to stream The Babadook]

Feeling overwhelmed by all that the world of streaming has to offer? Enter Decider Streamline. It's our weekly video that will feature our top five picks for what you should be streaming this week.

Like what you see? Follow Decider on Facebook and Twitter to join the conversation, and sign up for our email newsletters to be the first to know about streaming movies and TV news!


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Thousands of cops line up for executed officer’s funeral

From across the country, they came to Queens to pay their respects to a hero in blue, brutally shot dead with his partner for no reason except that he was doing his job.

Thousands of police officers lined up hours before the 10 a.m. funeral of NYPD Officer Rafael Ramos, who was executed last Saturday on a Brooklyn street with his partner, Officer Wenjian Liu.

In a line that drew applause from the crowd at Christ Tabernacle Church in Glendale, Vice President Joe Biden said it is for good reason that New York City's police officers are known as New York's Finest.

"That is not is not an idle phrase," Biden said. "This is probably the finest police department in the world … They earned that phrase, because of the sacred trust they took on."

Biden — who lost his first wife and his 1-year-old daughter in a car accident in 1972 — addressed words of comfort to Ramos' mother.

"No child should predecease a parent. My heart aches for you," Biden said. "I also know from experience the times will come, the time will come when Rafael's memory will bring a smile to your lips before it brings a tear to your eye.

Rafael RamosPhoto: Getty Images

"My prayer for you is that it will come sooner than later," Biden said.

Clad in dress blues and white gloves, the somber officers waited in the bright light of a sunny, cool morning to pay their respects to Officer Ramos, a married father of two who was an usher at Christ Tabernacle Church.

The sea of blue stood five rows deep outside the church, filling the streets several blocks in every direction.Officials last night said they expected up to 25,000 police officers from New York and across the country — the largest gathering ever for a slain NYPD cop.

A painted portrait of Officer Ramos was displayed on an easel outside the church, along with a half dozen bouquets of flowers and several candles.

Mayor Bill de Blasio, who is caught up in an angry feud with rank-and-file cops over his support for anti-police demonstrations in the city and complaints about alleged police mistreatment of minorities, took the podium at 10:45 a.m. Cops in the streets watching the service on large monitors turned their backs in unison to the screen.
DeBlasio arrived at Christ Tabernacle at about 9:30 a.m., and entered the church with his wife Chirlane through a side door.

Police Commissioner Bill Bratton arrived at the church a few minutes earlier. Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Gov. Andrew Cuomo and US Rep. Peter King are also attending.

Gov. Cuomo held the hand of his companion Sandra Lee when they arrived at the church at 9:50 a.m. Vice President Biden and his wife Jill arrived seven minutes later.

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Video screens were set up on the street for the thousands who will not be able to get inside the church. Officials expected up to 25,000 police officers from New York and across the country to be in attendance.

On every officer's mind is the anti-police sentiment that has built up after months of protests over the the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. and the chokehold death of Eric Garner in Staten Island.

The officers are also concerned about de Blasio's support for the demonstrators and what they deem his lack of respect for cops. Dozens of cops turned their back on de Blasio when he showed up at Woodhull Hospital last Saturday after the officers had died.

"I think the mayor should definitely have the backs of all law enforcement," said Officer Joseph Pelchat, 30, a police officer in New London, CT. "If you don't have that support — when someone of that importance doesn't have your back it can really be damaging."

Five officers from Kenosha, WI attended the funeral. They left home at 5 p.m. Friday and arrived in Queens at 5 a.m. Saturday.

Kenosha Det. Pete Deates was struck by the senselessness of Ramos' death. "He was out doing his job and he died for no other reason than someone wanted to kill two cops," Deates said.


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