热门帖子

2010年10月31日星期日

Brazil's Rousseff poised to take presidency

www.go2bagtrade.com

The winner will lead a nation that will host the 2014 World Cup and that is expected to be the globe's fifth-largest economy by the time it hosts the 2016 Summer Olympics.
A 62-year-old career public official, Rousseff lacks the charisma of the outgoing president known everywhere as "Lula." But just hours before the polls opened, she assured Brazilians that he would always be near.
"President Lula, obviously, won't be a presence within my Cabinet. But I will always talk with the president and I will have a very close and strong relationship with him," Rousseff said in her hometown of Belo Horizonte. "Nobody in this country will separate me from President Lula."
Silva has served two four-year terms and is barred by Brazil's constitution from running for a third. He maintains an 80-percent approval rating and has a rabid following among the nation's poor, who view the former shoeshine boy as one of their own. Silva's generous social programs have helped pull 20 million people out of poverty and thrust another 29 million into the middle class since he took office in 2003.
Rousseff, who would be Brazil's first female president, pledged to continue Silva's work.
Early Sunday, Rousseff cast her vote in southern Brazil, flashed a victory sign, gave a big smile to photographers and left without making a statement.
Serra is a 68-year-old former governor of Sao Paulo state and one-time health minister who was badly beaten by Silva in the 2002 presidential election. He criticized what he said would be Rousseff's heavy reliance on Silva to help rule.
"We know that nobody can govern in the place of another," Serra said in a final campaign stop.
Yet Silva is so popular that even Serra promised that if elected, he would not "ostracize" Silva because of the leader's "immense political capacity."
Silva entered office with a background as a lefist labor leader, but he governed from a moderate perspective. Under his leadership, the economy grew strongly and Brazil weathered the global financial crisis better than most nations.
In the first round of the presidential election Oct. 3, Rousseff got 46.9 percent of the votes, falling just short of the majority needed to avoid a runoff. Serra finished second with 32.6 percent.
The Green Party's Marina Silva, a former environment minister and no relation to the president, took 20 million votes, leaving Rousseff and Serra to scramble for her supporters during the second round.
The respected Datafolha polling institute said Friday that about 48 percent of Marina Silva's voters reported planning to vote for Serra — more than the 27 percent who backed Rousseff, but not enough for him to win.
Overall, Datafolha gave Rousseff a 50 percent to 40 percent lead. The poll interviewed 4,205 people across Brazil on Thursday and had a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.
"I don't expect any great changes, I just want her to continue Lula's work," said Jacqueline Sales, a 24-year-old design student in Sao Paulo, who supports Rousseff.
Serra backer Julio Brochieri, a 28-year-old Sao Paulo bank worker, said he feared Rousseff would govern to the left of Silva. He also expressed concern about her political abilities, since she has never held an elected office.
"Serra has more experience and will handle the economy better," Brochieri said. "Rousseff will be more interventionist in the economy and that worries me."
Serra and Rousseff — both economists by training — have participated in Brazil's political transformation following the 1964-85 military dictatorship.
Rousseff was a key player in an armed militant group that resisted the dictatorship and was imprisoned and tortured for it. She is a cancer survivor and a former minister of energy and chief of staff to Silva.
Serra also battled the dictatorship, but through politics rather than armed resistance. He headed a national student group that opposed the regime and was forced into exile in Chile in 1965 before heading to the U.S., where he earned a doctorate in economics at Cornell.
Under President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Silva's predecessor, Serra served as planning minister, then health minister, winning praise for defying the pharmaceutical lobby to market cheap generic drugs and free anti-AIDS medicine.
About 135 million voters will cast ballots Sunday.
Under Brazilian law, voting is mandatory for citizens between the ages of 18 and 70. Not voting could result in a small fine and make it impossible to obtain a passport or a government job, among other penalties.


www.go2bagtrade.com

Halloween on the Web: Buzz Week in Review

www.go2bagtrade.com


Few things inspire Web searches like Halloween. The ghostly holiday lit up the Search box this past week with queries on everything from the predictable ("halloween costume ideas") to the bizarre ("fake halloween noodle brains") to the disturbing ("snooki halloween costume"). But that wasn't all — we also noticed a huge number of Web searches on the "Monster Mash." Beware — it's back to infest your ears.
Looking good on Halloween
Halloween is a time for kids to dress up, look creepy, and shake down complete strangers for candy. This week, searches on just about every Halloween theme you can imagine shot up like a zombie rising from the grave. Some of the week's biggest gainers included "history of halloween," which surged over 200%, and "DIY halloween costumes," which more than tripled. Clearly, people are just as eager to save money as they are to look good this Halloween. Among the various costumes searches, a few stood out. "lady gaga costumes" were incredibly popular in the Search box, as were lookups for "jersey shore snooki costume." A bunch of Snooki clones running around, begging for candy? Halloween just got a lot more frightening.
Searching on the 'Mash'
Valentine's Day has a bunch of songs, and so does Christmas. But Halloween? Well, Halloween really only has one. You know which one we're talking about: the "Monster Mash." Yup, the old-school ditty made a huge return to the Search box this week, as folks looking to get into the haunting mood pushed lookups on the tune up over 400%. People also thought to search on "monster mash lyrics" and "monster mash videos." We noticed more than a few searches on "who sings monster mash song." According to Fox News, the original (and most well-known) version of the song was performed and co-written by Bobby "Boris" Pickett. He never had another hit, but unlike most one-hit wonders, his big success keeps coming back every year.
Pumpkin carving 101
If you want to have a successful Halloween, you need not only a pumpkin, but also how-tos on carving it good and scary. Over the past seven days, Web lookups on "pumpkin carving tips" and "pumpkin patterns" surged into breakout status. There were also a slew of searches on specific pumpkin faces. Some of the more popular ones included "darth vader pumpkin pattern," "freddie krueger pumpkin," and "barack obama pumpkin pattern." Less ambitious folks spent their time researching "scary pumpkin faces," while others looked for ways to use up all the scooped-out innards: "how to cook pumpkin seeds" spiked almost 400%.


www.go2bagtrade.com

October 25-31: Rihanna Genuinely Happier With Matt Kemp

www.go2bagtrade.com




http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/thatsreallyweek__5/thatsreallyweek-431650466-1288421396.jpg?ymUQVAEDew_1n5QORihanna is the poster girl for bouncing back. It's been 20 months since her heated verbal exchange with former beau Chris Brown turned violent, and she is already preparing the release of her second post-incident album, "Loud." Romantically, she is blissfully happy in a relationship with her Los Angeles Dodgers boyfriend Matt Kemp.
Rihanna is genuinely giddy this time around, she reveals in a cover story in the December 2010 issue of Marie Claire UK. Access Hollywood reported that she told the magazine, "I feel like I smile for real this time. The smiles come from inside, and it exudes in everything I do. People feel my energy is different. When I smile they can tell that it's pure bliss and not just a cover up."
The "Only Girl (In The World)" singer said she knew when her tumultuous relationship with Brown had come to an end.
"One day, I remember I was in New York at the Trump Hotel and I woke up and I just knew I was over it," she said.
http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/thatsreallyweek__5/thatsreallyweek-751322860-1288421396.jpg?ymUQVAEDWZxjhuBxBut Rihanna believes the altercation happened for a reason. "God has a crazy way of working, and sometimes when stuff happens you feel like, 'What did I do to deserve this? Why was it backfiring on me?'" she said, according to an Us magazine report. "But, I needed that wake-up call in my life. I needed a turning point, and that's what God was giving to me. All [of] this terrible stuff they say to you, it breaks you down."
Brown, on the other hand, has also experienced his own turning point. Since the felony assault, his career has plummeted until recently. His introspective ballad "Deuces" reached No. 1 on Billboard's R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart and was recently remixed with guest vocals from hip-hop elite Kanye West, T.I., Andre 3000, and Drake.
Brown is feeling better these days, he told Access Hollywood. "Everything [is] good, I'm definitely - me personally and mentally - I'm a great guy now," he said. "Definitely just a person who's promoting positivity all the time, so that's just me," he said.
Brown added that he is also working on recording music. "The new album is called ‘F.A.M.E.': Forgiving All My Enemies. Basically, just being able to witness my success, failure and success again," he said. "Being able to see me going from my best times to my worst times and being able to overcome it and growing [in]to a man, as I was doing it."
Last Saturday, Celine Dion gave birth to twin boys, but fans were saddened to learn that Dion actually lost a third child during her pregnancy with multiples. Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon shared their good news, that they were expecting a baby this spring. And Billy Ray Cyrus and wife Tish filed for divorce.
There's been so much baby and couple news over the last few weeks. Let's cross our fingers that next week will yield a good-old fashioned rock star feud. See you then.


www.go2bagtrade.com

Soft-spoken 18-year-old American wins Miss World

www.go2bagtrade.com


BEIJING – The newest Miss World is from the United States.
Alexandria Mills, a soft-spoken 18-year-old, was named the winner in Saturday night's contest in southern China. The tall blonde was a relative surprise winner after speculation focused on other contestants.
Second place went to Emma Wareus of Botswana, and Adriana Vasini of Venezuela came third.
The host country's own contestant, Tang Xiao, also was among the final five.
According to a brief biography on the Miss World website, Mills calls Louisville, Kentucky, her hometown, and she recently graduated from high school. She would like to become a teacher.
"I've never met a stranger and enjoy meeting new people," she says in the bio.
For the final, she was wearing a shimmering ivory-colored dress slit up the leg.
Mills takes over the title from Kaiane Aldorino of Gibraltar, who was named Miss World 2009 at a ceremony in South Africa last December.
Women from more than 100 countries participated in the contest, organizers said.
This is the 60th year of the Miss World Competition, and organizers brought back contestants from past decades to give the night a retrospective theme.


www.go2bagtrade.com

2010年10月30日星期六

Greys Anatomy Star Jessica Capshaw Welcomes Baby Girl

http://www.go2bagtrade.com/

Jessica Capshaw | Photo Credits: Jon Kopaloff/FilmMagic.comTV Guide
It's a girl for Jessica Capshaw and husband Christopher Gavigan, People reports.
Check out photos of Jessica Capshaw
The Grey's Anatomy star, 33, gave birth to Eve Augusta on Oct. 20. "The family is thrilled to welcome their newest addition," her rep told People.
Capshaw, the daughter of actress Kate Capshaw, and her husband already have a 3-year-old son, Luke. The couple married in 2004.

http://www.go2bagtrade.com/

7 Ways To Look Younger In 30 Minutes

www.go2bagtrade.com

1. Keep your eye-cream in the fridge for quick under-eye depuffing. The cold constricts blood vessels to help swelling go down- and it feels extra refreshing.

2. An at-home gloss treatment dramatically amps up shine and refreshes your highlights, giving your face a happy boost. Try: L'Oreal Paris Colorist Secrets Shine Gloss, $9.

How To Look Younger Now

3. Define your eyebrows.
A pair of full, arched brows works like an instant eye lift. Pluck errant hairs and fill in sparse areas with a fine-tipped brow pencil.

4. Apply a firming body cream.
Toned, taut skin is the age-defying holy grail (see: Demi Moore). Try: Jergens Skin Firming Daily Toning Moisturizer, $5.

How To Look Younger By Tomorrow

5.
Have your stylist snip you some layers. Hair that moves lifts your features and just looks fun and free.

6. Take a brisk 30 minute walk whenever you can sneak one in. You'll jump start your metabolism and circulation and it'll give you a nice rosy glow.

How To Look Younger In a Week


7. Short nails, painted sheer and pink give off a young, fun vibe and make your hands look effortlessly flawless. Try: Essie's Ballet Slippers.



www.go2bagtrade.com

The top celebrity hair highs and lows

www.go2bagtrade.com


As much as we enjoy changing up our hairstyles and trying new colors, it's not always practical or affordable. Celebrities, on the other hand, have access to the best stylists and lots of money to invest in updating their looks. They've also learned that a new hairstyle, whether good or bad, can get them tons of publicity from people like you weighing in with your countless opinions. We've rounded up the prettiest, the ugliest, and the most outrageous styles we've seen on famous faces in recent months. See if you agree with our picks.

Getty Images
Getty Images
Drew Barrymore

Barrymore loves experimenting with her appearance, which often translates to frequently switching up her haircut and color. When you try many daring looks, there are bound to be a few misses, but her dip-dyed black ends are downright witchy, and there is no real way to make this blunt cut and color a flattering style. Thankfully Barrymore ditched the look after a few weeks, and grew her hair out. Here she illustrates a pretty way to wear multi-toned ombre hair color. The long feminine layers are equally enviable.

Getty Images
Getty Images
Jennifer Lopez

As a woman with a lot of hair, it’s fun to play with volume, but J.Lo’s beehive belongs in the hall of shame, or at least stuck back in the 1960s. Clearly the actress was trying to create a buzz (hehe) with her sky-high hairdo, but it’s hard to notice what she was wearing, what she had to say, or what movie she was even promoting with such a distracting and awful style. We much prefer the luscious bouncy curls J.Lo has become so famous for in her signature honey-glazed brown. Here she’s careful to avoid a big ‘80s hair moment by keeping the top of her hair relatively flat with bobby pins.

Getty Images
Getty Images
Lindsay Lohan

Lohan’s bleached out locks are a serious beauty low point. We’re not sure who ever thought this style was flattering, but it's terrible on her skintone! And these obvious Barbie extensions make the look that much worse. We tried and tried to find a great recent photo of Lohan’s hair, but had to go back to 2004. Yes, before she became a mess, but also before she started meddling with one of her truly awesome natural attributes: shiny red hair. We don’t think she’s genuinely smiled since this photo was taken, so hopefully she’ll take our advice and return to her vibrant roots.

Getty Images
Getty Images
Katherine Heigl

With the popularity of “Mad Men” came the resurgence of classic old glamour hairdos on the red carpet. While hair color shouldn’t necessarily be associated with any particular style, we believe our eyes may have trained us to anticipate this ‘do in a Marilyn Monroe shade of blond. This is also the color we’ve come to expect and love on Katherine Heigl, so when she dyed her hair dark we really disliked it. We also think her stylist botched this brunette retro look. The hair is too long, the volume is in all the wrong places, and the color is totally off. Triple whammy.

Getty Images
Getty Images
Taylor Momsen

The rocker/actress who swears she isn’t trying to be Courtney Love enjoys making a spectacle of herself, and Morticia Addams-length ratty hair coupled with I-was-just-in-a-fist-fight eye makeup has become her signature beauty look. Too bad it’s hideous. About two years ago, Momsen rocked a razor-cut Chrissie Hynde-style shag that we found incredibly edgy, especially for a then-15-year-old. We’d like to take this moment to say she nailed the look, and every time we watch “Gossip Girl” we long for it to return.

Getty Images
Getty Images
Kelly Osbourne

Earlier this year an odd trend emerged where celebs were dyeing their hair gray. Yes, you read that right. Kelly Osbourne, Kate Moss, Pink, and pre-teen blogger Tavi all went gray very prematurely, and it was not attractive. Was this rebellion against everyone trying to look younger, or merely ladies in the spotlight desperately searching for a style that had never been done before? Either way, we’re glad the moment has passed and that Osbourne sorted out her hair situation. Her newly blonde hair looks best short, and this asymmetrical, wavy style is both lovely and modern.

Getty Images
Getty Images
Megan Fox

When you’re frequently selected as the hottest, sexiest, and most desirable female by every men’s magazine it’s hard to do something to your appearance to make you look downright gross, but Megan Fox managed to do so. For some reason the actress slicked back only the top portion of her hair at an award show to achieve a wet, “just got out of a pool” look, but instead it just looked greasy and nasty. We love the length on Fox, but since her hair is thin and straight it looks best when it’s very clean with a soft wave added to it. A side part with hair flipped over adds oomph on top.

Getty Images
Getty Images
Tyra Banks

As a supermodel and TV personality, Tyra has worn her hair in many shapes, styles, and colors. She's even designated entire episodes of her talk show to revealing her "real hair." When you have stunning features, simple hairstyles are often best, and we love Tyra's basic shoulder-grazing cut with a center part. As for that weird, cinnamon bun of hair attached to her forehead? We'll just try to forgive and forget.

Getty Images
Getty Images
Katie Holmes

Katie Holmes transformed from “Dawson’s Creek” leftover to stylish, noteworthy adult over night, and it wasn’t because she married Tom Cruise. She cut her hair into a sleek bob that not only updated her look, it re-popularized the haircut. We’ve come to love admiring her shiny hair on the red carpet, and how there’s seemingly never a hair out of place. Clearly Holmes was having a bad hair day when she showed up to an event with this weirdly grown out, unwashed style. For us mere mortals this may pass, but when you’re a celeb with cameras in your face please remember to shampoo.


www.go2bagtrade.com

2010年10月29日星期五

Degrees That Get You Hired

www.go2bagtrade.com

Find out which 6 degrees rank highest in terms of employment

By Chris Kyle
Come graduation time, the English major, history buff, computer whiz, and business student all look alike in their caps and gowns.
Their job prospects, on the other hand, look very different.
Corporate consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas polled 100 human resource professionals to find out what graduating students this year can expect from the job market in 2010, and, specifically, which degrees have the best odds of helping students get jobs.
If you're contemplating a return to school and deciding what you want to study, read on for the six degrees that rank highest in terms of employment.

#1 - Health Care Degree

Graduates with recession-proof degrees in health care will find the most success in 2010, according to Challenger. In fact, more than one in four (26.3 percent) HR professionals picked health care as the best bet for job security. Nurses are receiving the most job offers in this category.
Desirable Degrees:
Nursing
Physical Therapy
Pharmacy
Medical Technician
Average Starting Salaries:
Nursing: $47,217
Health & Related Sciences: $30,522
Search for Nursing and Health Care schools now.

#2 - Business Administration Degree

It's no coincidence that business is booming for graduates with a business degree...it's the most popular bachelor's degree in the country.
Graduating with a degree in business administration puts job seekers in the second strongest position overall, just behind health care, according to the Challenger survey.
Desirable Degrees:
Business
Business Administration
Business Administrative Support
Average Starting Salary:
Business Administration: $45,200
Find the right Business school and start your training!

#3 - Computer Science Degree

Computers are an indispensable part of the economy, and so are graduates who study computer science, which ranks as the third most valuable degree in today's job market.


www.go2bagtrade.com

Hollywood's Best Actresses for the Buck

www.go2bagtrade.com


Anne Hathaway Steve Granitz/Wireimage.com Anne Hathaway and Cate Blanchett have given movie studios a solid gold return on investment.
Anne Hathaway is the embodiment of an all-around movie star. She's appeared in big-grossing films like "Get Smart" and the recent "Alice in Wonderland." She's been nominated for an Oscar for 2008's "Rachel Getting Married," and she's appeared in a line of ads for Lancome perfumes and cosmetics.
But unlike many movie stars, Anne Hathaway still doesn't cost that much if you want her in a movie. She's an affordable lead in romantic comedies like "Bride Wars," which helps her films turn a tidy profit.
Thanks to her still low (by Hollywood standards) payday, Hathaway tops our list of Hollywood's Best Actresses for the Buck -- the women who offer studios the best return on investment. For every dollar she was paid, Hathaway's movies returned an average of $64 in profit.
That's well below the $81 Shia LaBeouf returns for every dollar he gets paid, but LaBeouf has the advantage of starring in multiple installments of blockbuster franchises like "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" and "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull." Hathaway's highest grossing movie by far is "Alice in Wonderland" which brought in $1 billion at the box office worldwide. Her next highest-grossing film, Get Smart, earned $230 million.
The best way for an actress to get to the top of this list is to appear in high-grossing films while earning a modest salary. In order to create our list we looked at the top-earning actresses in Hollywood. To qualify, each actress had to have starred in at least three movies in the past five years that opened in more than 500 theaters. Movies that opened after June 1 of this year are not counted. We did not include animated films because the actors aren't really the draw and they tend to take pay cuts for voice work.
We used data gathered for our annual Celebrity 100 list to calculate each actress' estimated earnings on each film (including upfront pay and any earnings from the movie's box-office receipts, DVD and TV sales). We then looked at each movie's estimated budget (not including marketing costs, which are susceptible to accounting chicanery) and box-office, DVD and television earnings to figure out an operating income for each film.
We added up each star's compensation on her last three films and the operating income on those films and divided total operating income by the star's total compensation to come up with a return on investment number. The final number represents an average of how much a studio earns for every dollar paid to the actress.
Coming in second behind Hathaway is Cate Blanchett, who gives studios an average $27 return for every dollar she gets paid. Blanchett's ranking was boosted by appearances in two solidly performing films opposite two very expensive co-stars. In "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" and "Robin Hood," Blanchett earned less than Brad Pitt and Russell Crowe. That means her return on investment is higher. The actress is not slated to be in any big movies in the next few years unless she revisits her "Lord of the Rings" role as Galadriel in the upcoming film version of "The Hobbit."
Jennifer Aniston and Meryl Streep tie for third place with returns of $21 for every dollar they each get paid. Aniston's movies often open weak but perform over the long haul. "The Bounty Hunter" was derided for its $20 million opening weekend, but the $40 million film went on to earn $136 million at the global box office. Streep has appeared in much higher-grossing films, like "Mamma Mia!," which earned $610 million, but her average is weighed down by "Doubt," which earned only $37 million.
In fourth place: Sarah Jessica Parker. When she appears in "Sex and the City" movies, she earns every penny she gets paid. Her return isn't as good in movies like "Did You Hear About the Morgans." On average, Parker returns $17 for every dollar she's paid

www.go2bagtrade.com

Our Top Anti-Aging Picks for 2010

www.go2bagtrade.com




This site was created to review and recommend our best anti-aging products that are available to consumers today. As a leader in beauty, Beauty User ensures that each of these products meets the highest possible standards by handpicking the top ingredients and delivery technology. On the following pages, you'll find a simple summary of our top 3 products.
We classify our picks for the most common skin concerns based on ingredients, results and value. All the products below will help smooth your skin, tighten and restore elasticity and reduce the appearance of wrinkles. No needles, injections, or that "fake" plastic look. Now you won't have to wonder if you're giving yourself the best product. You'll know it, so you can focus on enjoying your beauty-filled life.

www.go2bagtrade.com

2010年10月28日星期四

The 10 worst beauty trends of the past 10 years

www.go2bagtrade.com



Getty Images
Getty Images
Last week, while watching the season finales of two popular shows— 'Mad Men' and 'Jersey Shore'— we were struck by a significant and salient point: Women in the past looked better than we do today, like a WHOLE LOT BETTER. Sure, 'Mad Men' is a highly-stylized, fictional depiction of a bygone era, and the 'Jersey Shore' reflects the "reality" of a small and specific cultural subset (namely East Coast guidos). We also know not every woman in the '60s was perfectly coiffed and manicured and wearing the ideal shade of red lipstick and, to be fair, not all modern ladies walk around looking like Snooki, BUT—from Oompa Loompa skin to obnoxious breast augmentation to ratty extensions— the women of the 'Jersey Shore'  represent quite a few of the ugliest beauty trends of the past decade.

It got us thinking of a sort of larger beauty timeline, about how a population of females can travel from that '60s-pulled-together-and-pretty appearance to, well, JWOWW. It made us ruminate on how the fresh-faced hippie look of the late '60s led to the sparkly-sex appeal of '70s disco, how disco begot over-the-top '80s power makeup, '90s grunge-chic followed, along with late-'90s sleek city girl (thanks Carrie Bradshaw!). Unlike these distinct trends, the aughts have seemed both identity-less and kind of ugly, more of an amalgamation of all of the decades (plus ones that came before them) and creepy modern innovations like spray tans and Botox.  Don't believe us? Check out the decade's worst of the worst:

Getty Images
Getty Images

1. The Fake Tan, aka the 'Soul Man'
Does anyone but us remember the 1986 movie 'Soul Man' where whitey-white actor C. Thomas Howell takes a bunch of "bronzing" pills so he can pass as a black man and get a scholarship to Harvard? The film has many, many problems (racism, stupidity) but perhaps chief among them is how Howell's skin more resembled the shade of Ernie from 'Sesame Street' than anything close to African American.

Weirdly enough, this alien-cum-Muppet look was highly sought after in the aughts, when pale, natural skin became essentially banned from the red carpet and everyone from Lindsay Lohan and Paris Hilton to Christina Aguilera and Jessica Simpson strutted around with a sort of orangey tanorexic glow.



2. Excessive plastic surgery
Why, for the love of God, would an attractive young woman endure painful, expensive surgeries to make herself look like a waxy, duck-lipped cartoon? Beats the heck out of us, but that's exactly what reality star Heidi Montag and thousands like her opted for in the aughts, creating expressionless faces and the kinds of bulbous bustlines we'd never seen before and, frankly, we never need to see again.

Getty Images
Getty Images
 
3. This haircut
Kate Gosselin birthed eight children total, and, rather famously, six at one time. She endured a highly public and seemingly painful divorce, was vilified by the press for behavior she may or may not have indulged in on a popular dancing show, and has appeared on countless magazine covers for having a great body! Raising Kids! Etc! Still, she may always be best remembered for the follicular atrocity at left, a reverse-mullet haircut that terrifies us but became a massive craze in 2009. 






Getty Images
Getty Images


4. The Snooki Pouf
When the 'Jersey Shore' debuted last year, dozens of women's magazines and fashion blogs were earnestly abuzz with just how to get Nicole "Snooki" Polizzi's signature hairstyle—with some even comparing the look to Sarah Palin's more modest 2008 campaign 'do.

How this happened is still beyond our understanding, though we're happy to see that, in 2010, the look was relegated to where it belongs: The Halloween costume rack. 






Getty Images
Getty Images

5. Drawn-On or Shaved Eyebrows

This Annette-Funicello-'50s beauty throwback got even thinner and less natural this time around, with naughtier, more sexualized celebs like Pam Anderson penciling them in and runway models (and 'America's Next Top Model' makeover recipients) wearing no eyebrows at all.






Getty Images
Getty Images


6.  The Return of Crimping

Wavy hair went electrical-socket wild once again, when an unloved '80s styling technique returned with a vengeance in 2008, but (thankfully) flamed out just as fast.












Photo by MAC cosmetics
Photo by MAC cosmetics

7. All things black

Seen on everyone from Lady Gaga to runway models, Rachel Zoe, and your mom, ultra-dark lipstick and nail polish made a huge splash in the past few years, starting with deep, deep burgundy and moving quickly to jet-iest jet black.

Call us old-fashioned, but we could never get fully behind the look, which seems particularly harsh and unfeminine, especially as it went from edgy urban stylista to commonplace 'Real Housewives."

We have to agree with Kanye West about this particular beauty trend. Last month he tweeted, "Please don't let girls start wearing dark lipstick again. I just think girls need to know that guys don't really like black lipstick."
Our question: Do girls like it either?

Getty Images
Getty Images

8. Shaving your head, on one side

This half-shaved haircut, or what we like to call, "army on the right, lady on the left" was found in some truly odd places in 2009, like on pretty singer's Cassie's head and the famous noggin of Carmen Electra. It's kind of ugly, it lacks versatility, and worst of all, if you don't like it, there's nothing you can do to correct it, FOR MONTHS, save wearing a perma-hat.










9. Sad lip liner


More than a new trend, or even a re-imagined old-trend, this is a look from the '90s that some women (like strippers and, sadly, at least until 2007, Kim Mathers) refused to let die. It involves drawing a thick outline of your lips with a dark pencil and then, doing nothing else, as if your mouth is a coloring book that's never been colored in, or a two-dimensional cartoon awaiting CGI, or like you took an art class once but stopped going after you learned "tracing."

It's a heinous technique, it ages the wearer, and no one should ever do this again in all of the land.




Getty Images
Getty Images


10. Hair extensions


African American women have supplemented their own hair for decades by weaving in sleek, natural-looking faux-hair pieces—usually to quite beautiful-looking effects. Not so much for the white gals, especially the blondes, who, since around 2000, have used Rapunzel-length weaves that have been bleached to a hay-like consistency and look like mangled princess wigs that were once maintained by a group of toddlers. The worst perpetrator of this hair trend has to be Britney Spears, who has famously walked around, ill-groomed and with half of her extensions falling out.

Other terrible white-girl weaves of the past decade: Paris Hilton, Lindsay Lohan, Brooke Hogan, Amy Winehouse.








www.go2bagtrade.com

Being Imperfect Could Save Your Life

www.go2bagtrade.com


Constantly striving to live a faultless life increases your risk of a very imperfect outcome—early death. Experts specializing in perfectionism recently convened at an Association for Psychological Science Convention in Boston to present research looking at perfectionism and its effects on health, ranging from loss of self-esteem and resilience to increased stress and risk of death. It can even interfere with effectively dealing in a crisis situation. "Even though these impossibly high standards are self-imposed, the true perfectionists find it hard to relinquish the high self-expectations of performance, or to settle for more realistic standards, even during times of severe emergencies requiring them to act fast," explains Prem Fry, PhD, professor of psychology at Trinity Western University in British Columbia.

The Details: At the convention, researchers specializing in perfectionist behavior shared their research, including Fry, whose recent study of older adults found a 51 percent reduced life-expectancy rate in perfectionists when compared to non-perfectionists. Other health ailments have also been linked to perfectionism. Other researchers have linked perfectionism to binge eating, hoarding, anxiety, substance abuse, and an increased risk of oxidative and nitrosative stress, which cause cell damage and inflammation, leading to a whole host of serious health problems. The good news is that not all perfectionists' traits mean bad news. Some of Fry's other work, published earlier this year, has found that perfectionists living with type 2 diabetes tend to more effectively control and monitor their condition. "Compared to non-perfectionists, they followed the treatment regimen more thoroughly and, as a result, lived healthier and longer lives."  


www.go2bagtrade.com

2010年10月27日星期三

Is Your Job Ruining Your Body?

www.go2bagtrade.com


 
The quick answer: YES
When a recent study found that sitting all day shortens women's lives, we gasped in our cubicles, leapt to our feet, and then...sat back down. But there's good news: You can undo the damage and the physical symptoms of stress, whether you spend your days stuck at a desk or chasing kids around.

DO YOU SIT ALL DAY LONG? It's official: Sitting too much is bad for you. Not only does it place pressure on the low back and tailbone, causing pain and even sciatic nerve trouble for some women, but two recent studies also found that the more time people spend on their butts each day, the more likely they are to die of cancer or heart disease. How to stay healthy: The way to ward off both back strain and the scarier, more serious health effects of sitting is fairly simple. "For five minutes every hour, get up and do something — a trip to the bathroom or the watercooler works, but the more active you can be, the better.

DO YOU TAKE CARE OF KIDS?
Many moms end up with soreness and tightness of the low back and shoulders, what should be called "mommy back." Momhood can be so hard on your body, in fact, that there's a whole group of medical experts who specialize in it: pre- and postpartum physical therapists. Learn how smart moms stay healthy

DO YOU TYPE CONSTANTLY? Spending 20 or more hours a week in front of a computer can put someone at risk of wrist injuries. Often the damage is severe enough that surgery is the only real cure, he says. That's why prevention is so crucial. How to stay healthy: "When you're typing, keep your wrists in a neutral position," says John Lloyd, Ph.D., a certified ergonomist in South Florida — never rest them on your desk or hold them up too high. "Ideally, your forearms should be supported on armrests." Interesting Fact:  "During 'that time of the month,' your body retains water, including in the arms and wrists, which increases pressure on the nerves," Lloyd says. (Who knew?)

DO YOU WORK NIGHTS? One major study found that night-shift nurses were more likely to end up getting breast cancer than those who worked during the day, and other new research found that night-shifters are more likely to have irritable bowel syndrome. How to stay healthy: "Once you get home, decrease room temperature in the bedroom, pull down the shades, and use earplugs to block out interruptions," says Joseph Cilona, Psy.D., a psychologist in New York City. Why Are You So Tired? Learn 7 Causes of Fatigue here.

DO YOU STAND FOR HOURS ON END? Women who stand for more than eight hours a day have significantly higher rates of varicose veins than those who are on their feet less, research has found. How to stay healthy: It seems counterintuitive, but after a long day of putting pressure on your legs and feet, the smartest thing to do is move them. "Sitting with your legs up can relieve engorged veins and soreness temporarily, but increasing circulation by moving around is the best thing," says Andrew Kwak, M.D., a varicose-vein expert in Bryn Mawr, PA.

ARE YOU SUPER-STRESSED?
Where things get ugly is if the pressure becomes chronic and your body and brain are constantly awash in stress hormones like norepinephrine and cortisol. That can lead to extra belly fat, and increased blood pressure and risk of heart disease, says business psychologist Debra Condren, Ph.D., author of Ambition Is Not a Dirty Word. How to stay healthy: Physical activity can stop the production of cortisol and get rid of tension held in your muscles. Though any kind of physical activity will work, intense cardio like jogging or stair climbing may work best. Learn how to boost your productivity instantly.



www.go2bagtrade.com 

Lady Gaga Beats Bieber To Billion-Served YouTube Mark

www.go2bagtrade.com


Bieber's hotter. But Gaga got there first.
Lady Gaga just became the first artist in history to pass the one-billion-viewed mark on YouTube, leaving nearest challenger Justin Bieber in the dust... if you can call his tally of 965 million views "dusty."
And you can't, because, in fact, Sir Bieber is within weeks of catching up with and surpassing Lady G in the YouTube record book. For the quarter that began in July of this year and ended September, JB was clearly on the faster track. His videos were viewed an average 3.98 million times a day, vastly outpacing her 2.04 million daily views.
These competitive figures speak to the big pop question of 2010: Is it Bieber's world and Gaga just lives in it? (My World 2.0, if we must put a name on this planet?) Or vice versa?


There are other metrics by which we might settle this battle royale. Lady Gaga is still on tops on Twitter, too, with 6.9 million followers, at last glance, the most of any extant celebrity. No doubt Bieber is crying like a "Baby"—all the way to the bank, that is—at trailing behind with a mere 5.9 million Twitter congregants.
On Facebook, Bieber is "liked" by 14.1 million fans... hardly a match for the 21.4 million who "like" the artist formerly known as Stefani Germanotta. In other words, even if Lady Gaga is likely to be giving up her YouTube crown before the end of the year, she'll still be the queen of social-media stats at least well into 2011.

How about sales? Both artists have new releases on the way—a studio album for Gaga, an "acoustic" set for Bieber. Lady Gaga's Fame album has sold 3.8 million, while the followup Fame Monster package has sold an additional 1.3 million. Bieber's My World 2.0 is at 1.9 million, while its predecessor, My World, is at 1.6 million. The point goes to Gaga... for now.
Lady Gaga used her uber-Twitter account to send thanks to her fans for watching her for free on their computers, over and over and over and over and over and over again.
"We reached 1 Billion views on youtube little monsters!" she wrote, so excited that she momentarily forgot her preference for lower-case letters and capitalized Billion. "If we stick together we can do anything." (Except get "don't ask, don't tell" overturned?) "I dub u kings and queens of youtube! Unite!"
Bieber had no such get-out-the-vote message for his own little monsters. His tweets this week have had more to do with odor-iffic triumph.
"couple of you have been asking me about a fragrance," Bieber wrote, sharing Gaga's disregard for needless capitalization. "yes Im working on a real fragrance that will be in department stores next year... and by real I mean a fragrance that comes in a tight bottle and smells..." (What a relief it was to know that the fragrance Bieber is "working on" is the kind that comes bottled.)
Gaga, where is thy retail smell? If you want to stay ahead of Bieber in the celebrity fragrance metrics, too, you'd better get the li'l monsters to work down at the olfactory factory.


www.go2bagtrade.com

The 10 worst beauty trends of the past 10 years

www.go2bagtrade.com



Getty Images
Getty Images
Last week, while watching the season finales of two popular shows— 'Mad Men' and 'Jersey Shore'— we were struck by a significant and salient point: Women in the past looked better than we do today, like a WHOLE LOT BETTER. Sure, 'Mad Men' is a highly-stylized, fictional depiction of a bygone era, and the 'Jersey Shore' reflects the "reality" of a small and specific cultural subset (namely East Coast guidos). We also know not every woman in the '60s was perfectly coiffed and manicured and wearing the ideal shade of red lipstick and, to be fair, not all modern ladies walk around looking like Snooki, BUT—from Oompa Loompa skin to obnoxious breast augmentation to ratty extensions— the women of the 'Jersey Shore'  represent quite a few of the ugliest beauty trends of the past decade.

It got us thinking of a sort of larger beauty timeline, about how a population of females can travel from that '60s-pulled-together-and-pretty appearance to, well, JWOWW. It made us ruminate on how the fresh-faced hippie look of the late '60s led to the sparkly-sex appeal of '70s disco, how disco begot over-the-top '80s power makeup, '90s grunge-chic followed, along with late-'90s sleek city girl (thanks Carrie Bradshaw!). Unlike these distinct trends, the aughts have seemed both identity-less and kind of ugly, more of an amalgamation of all of the decades (plus ones that came before them) and creepy modern innovations like spray tans and Botox.  Don't believe us? Check out the decade's worst of the worst:

Getty Images
Getty Images

1. The Fake Tan, aka the 'Soul Man'
Does anyone but us remember the 1986 movie 'Soul Man' where whitey-white actor C. Thomas Howell takes a bunch of "bronzing" pills so he can pass as a black man and get a scholarship to Harvard? The film has many, many problems (racism, stupidity) but perhaps chief among them is how Howell's skin more resembled the shade of Ernie from 'Sesame Street' than anything close to African American.

Weirdly enough, this alien-cum-Muppet look was highly sought after in the aughts, when pale, natural skin became essentially banned from the red carpet and everyone from Lindsay Lohan and Paris Hilton to Christina Aguilera and Jessica Simpson strutted around with a sort of orangey tanorexic glow.



2. Excessive plastic surgery
Why, for the love of God, would an attractive young woman endure painful, expensive surgeries to make herself look like a waxy, duck-lipped cartoon? Beats the heck out of us, but that's exactly what reality star Heidi Montag and thousands like her opted for in the aughts, creating expressionless faces and the kinds of bulbous bustlines we'd never seen before and, frankly, we never need to see again.

Getty Images
Getty Images
 
3. This haircut
Kate Gosselin birthed eight children total, and, rather famously, six at one time. She endured a highly public and seemingly painful divorce, was vilified by the press for behavior she may or may not have indulged in on a popular dancing show, and has appeared on countless magazine covers for having a great body! Raising Kids! Etc! Still, she may always be best remembered for the follicular atrocity at left, a reverse-mullet haircut that terrifies us but became a massive craze in 2009. 






Getty Images
Getty Images


4. The Snooki Pouf
When the 'Jersey Shore' debuted last year, dozens of women's magazines and fashion blogs were earnestly abuzz with just how to get Nicole "Snooki" Polizzi's signature hairstyle—with some even comparing the look to Sarah Palin's more modest 2008 campaign 'do.

How this happened is still beyond our understanding, though we're happy to see that, in 2010, the look was relegated to where it belongs: The Halloween costume rack. 






Getty Images
Getty Images

5. Drawn-On or Shaved Eyebrows

This Annette-Funicello-'50s beauty throwback got even thinner and less natural this time around, with naughtier, more sexualized celebs like Pam Anderson penciling them in and runway models (and 'America's Next Top Model' makeover recipients) wearing no eyebrows at all.






Getty Images
Getty Images


6.  The Return of Crimping

Wavy hair went electrical-socket wild once again, when an unloved '80s styling technique returned with a vengeance in 2008, but (thankfully) flamed out just as fast.












Photo by MAC cosmetics
Photo by MAC cosmetics

7. All things black

Seen on everyone from Lady Gaga to runway models, Rachel Zoe, and your mom, ultra-dark lipstick and nail polish made a huge splash in the past few years, starting with deep, deep burgundy and moving quickly to jet-iest jet black.

Call us old-fashioned, but we could never get fully behind the look, which seems particularly harsh and unfeminine, especially as it went from edgy urban stylista to commonplace 'Real Housewives."

We have to agree with Kanye West about this particular beauty trend. Last month he tweeted, "Please don't let girls start wearing dark lipstick again. I just think girls need to know that guys don't really like black lipstick."
Our question: Do girls like it either?

Getty Images
Getty Images

8. Shaving your head, on one side

This half-shaved haircut, or what we like to call, "army on the right, lady on the left" was found in some truly odd places in 2009, like on pretty singer's Cassie's head and the famous noggin of Carmen Electra. It's kind of ugly, it lacks versatility, and worst of all, if you don't like it, there's nothing you can do to correct it, FOR MONTHS, save wearing a perma-hat.










9. Sad lip liner


More than a new trend, or even a re-imagined old-trend, this is a look from the '90s that some women (like strippers and, sadly, at least until 2007, Kim Mathers) refused to let die. It involves drawing a thick outline of your lips with a dark pencil and then, doing nothing else, as if your mouth is a coloring book that's never been colored in, or a two-dimensional cartoon awaiting CGI, or like you took an art class once but stopped going after you learned "tracing."

It's a heinous technique, it ages the wearer, and no one should ever do this again in all of the land.




Getty Images
Getty Images


10. Hair extensions


African American women have supplemented their own hair for decades by weaving in sleek, natural-looking faux-hair pieces—usually to quite beautiful-looking effects. Not so much for the white gals, especially the blondes, who, since around 2000, have used Rapunzel-length weaves that have been bleached to a hay-like consistency and look like mangled princess wigs that were once maintained by a group of toddlers. The worst perpetrator of this hair trend has to be Britney Spears, who has famously walked around, ill-groomed and with half of her extensions falling out.

Other terrible white-girl weaves of the past decade: Paris Hilton, Lindsay Lohan, Brooke Hogan, Amy Winehouse



www.go2bagtrade.com

2010年10月26日星期二

BMW recalling 150,000 vehicles to fix fuel pumps

www.go2bagtrade.com


WASHINGTON – German automaker BMW AG is issuing recalls involving about 150,000 luxury vehicles to fix faulty fuel pumps that could cause vehicles to lose power.
One recall involves 130,000 vehicles, including the 2007-2010 335i; 2008-2010 135i, 535i and X6 xDrive35i Sports Activity Coupe; and 2009-2010 Z4 Roadster sDrive35i.
They have twin-turbo inline six-cylinder engines featuring BMW's direct fuel injection system. The company will replace high-pressure fuel pump and update software.
BMW recalled 20,800 2008 X5 Sports Activity Vehicles with inline six-cylinder engines to replace the low-pressure fuel pump. BMW said there have been no reports of accidents or injuries.
An ABC News investigation raised questions about the fuel pumps on Tuesday



www.go2bagtrade.com

Church, State and the First Amendment: What O’Donnell and Coons need to know

www.go2bagtrade.com


By Ken Paulson
President, the First Amendment Center
Sometimes political debates generate light as well as heat.
Delaware Republican Senate candidate Christine O'Donnell's question "Where in the Constitution is the separation of church and state?" in an exchange Oct. 19 over teaching creationism in public schools tells us something about her but also reminds us of how often America's bedrock principles on government and religion are misunderstood.
Democratic candidate Chris Coons was quick to tell O'Donnell that religion and government are kept separate by the First Amendment.
"You're telling me that's in the First Amendment?" she responded.
Indeed it is. Here's a quick take on what the First Amendment says — and doesn't say:
Keeping government out of religion and religion out of government is a core principle of the First Amendment. The first 16 words say, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." That means government can't limit our personal faith or favor one religion over others. It also means that creationism cannot be taught in America's public schools, because schools are run by governments, which are prohibited from endorsing a specific religious view


www.go2bagtrade.com

Animal lovers mourn death of giant stag in Britain

www.go2bagtrade.com


LONDON – Who shot the Emperor?
Nature lovers are mourning the death of a red stag dubbed the Emperor of Exmoor — a nine-foot (2.75 meter) giant reported to be the biggest wild animal in the British Isles. He was found dead soon after his picture appeared in the national press.
His size set him apart from the herd, but also made him prize prey for hunters willing to pay handsomely for such a majestic trophy.
"With a set of antlers such as this deer had, it was basically going to kill him in the end," said Richard Austin, the photographer whose images of the stag appeared in newspapers earlier this month — inevitably accompanied by the word "majestic."
"He was his own worst enemy, I suppose, Austin told the BBC Tuesday. "Growing that big and that huge and that magnificent, he was a definite target."
For the 12 years of his life, the Emperor roamed Exmoor in southwest England, a wild swathe of heath and woodland that has drawn hunters for 1,000 years.
Mystery surrounds his demise, reported by the local press and national media including the BBC. He is reported to have been shot two weeks ago near a main road linking the towns of Barnstaple and Tiverton.
Details of the stag's death and the location of its body could not be independently confirmed. In most cases the hunter — for a fee — takes the antlers and head as a trophy. The landowner keeps the carcass, which often ends up being sold for meat.
Austin said he deliberately did not reveal the Emperor's exact location.
Local people were speculating furiously Tuesday about the identity and nationality of the hunter: was it an American, a European, or a wealthy Briton who saw the picture and decided he wanted those magnificent antlers on his wall?
"Whoever has got the trophy is going to keep pretty quiet about it, because it has stirred the most awful furor," said Peter Donnelly, a deer management expert in the Exmoor area.
A former royal hunting ground, Exmoor is popular with local hunters and with wealthy outsiders, who jet in to stalk red deer — Britain's biggest land animal.
They pay landowners for the right to hunt on their land and take away sets of antlers as trophies — or for a higher fee the whole head. If done during the hunting season, which runs from August through April, it is perfectly legal.
Hunting is a divisive issue in Britain, where the traditional practice of chasing down animals with packs of hounds was outlawed in 2004 — though with enough loopholes that hunting carries on pretty much unimpeded across the country.
Supporters say it is a vital part of the rural economy, but hunting is bitterly opposed by some animal lovers.
Douglas Batchelor of the League Against Cruel Sports said it was "morally repugnant" to shoot animals for sport.
But animal conservationists say hunting helps maintain the health of the deer herd. The animals have no natural predators, so thousands are legally hunted every year to keep numbers in check.
Michael Yardley of the Shooting Sports Trust said killing older deer like the 12-year-old Emperor made sense.
"A deer past this age may properly be shot, and, indeed, should be shot, to allow younger fitter beasts into the harem, and also because it may well die of starvation as its incisors deteriorate," he said.
Donnelly, no opponent of hunting, said it was wrong to shoot the Emperor during the rutting season, when the strongest stags compete to mate with the choicest female deer.
"He was still in his prime. He did not need to be culled," Donnelly said. "There's plenty of rubbish stags out there that could be shot and would do nothing but improve the quality of the herd."


www.go2bagtrade.com

2010年10月25日星期一

Taylor Swift ready to "Speak Now" with third album

www.go2bagtrade.com


NASHVILLE (Billboard) – Taylor Swift pulled a sweater over her knees. She was seated on a black leather couch in the lobby of Big Machine Records in Nashville, and the office was a bit chilly for the short, frilly skirt she wore.
Despite the brisk temperature, the room held distinctly warm memories for the 20-year-old singer. A handful of framed wall hangings provided a mini-retrospective of her career, including a multiplatinum award for her last album, 2008's "Fearless."
The Big Machine lobby was, in fact, a significant reminder of just how far she's traveled in her quick rise from unknown teen to global star.
When she was still a 16-year-old high school student, there was nothing on the walls in this room. Swift remembered sitting on the floor in the early summer of 2006, stuffing promotional CDs of her first single, "Tim McGraw," into envelopes destined for radio stations around the country.
"With every envelope that I would seal I would look at the address and the station on there and think, 'Please, please just listen to this one time,'" she recalled.
"I would say a little message to each envelope: 'Please, whoever gets this, please listen to this.' There's no promise when you're putting out your first single that people are even going to listen to it."
Not only did the single get heard, it opened the door to sales of more than 4 million copies of her self-titled debut album, awash in songs about broken hearts and high school social dramas.
Her sophomore set, "Fearless," did even better, selling 592,000 copies in its first week, according to Nielsen SoundScan, on its way to more than 6 million sales.
Three of the songs reached the top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 -- a rare feat for a country artist -- as she commanded multiple magazine covers and even a 2009 MTV Video Music Award nomination and win.
When that VMA acceptance speech was infamously interrupted, the fiery Kanye West controversy supplanted the inspirational, dreams-really-do-come-true storyline in her career narrative.
Weeks after the VMA shocker, the Country Music Association presented Swift four awards, including entertainer of the year. In January, she won four more times at the Grammy Awards, with "Fearless" claiming the all-genre album-of-the-year trophy.


www.go2bagtrade.com

`Marriage Artist' joins love, death in Holocaust

www.go2bagtrade.com




"The Marriage Artist" (Henry Holt and Co., $26), by Andrew Winer: When Daniel Lichtmann's wife jumps from a building to her death with an artist Lichtmann helped make famous, the critic becomes obsessed with uncovering the details of their affair and what led to the suicide pact.
Lichtmann initially believes he might have been responsible for the affair, having taken his wife to a private preview of what would turn out to be Benjamin Wind's last show. He is stunned when he finds a photograph that makes it clear the affair had started years earlier. He begins delving into the artist's past, uncovering a string of family secrets.
Lichtmann's search eventually leads him back two generations to Wind's grandfather, a brilliant artist who made a living painting Jewish marriage contracts in Vienna before World War II.
Winer skillfully weaves the two men's stories together so that it becomes clear that what initially appears to be two distinctly separate plots is one tale told over more than six decades. Lichtmann's story becomes the epilogue to the romance between Wind's grandparents in a great demonstration of Winer's skill in structuring a story.
The idea of exploring how the acts of one generation affect those who come later isn't new or unique, but Winer expands on it, considering whether perspective and personality also might be passed on, perhaps even to those who never met their forebears.
Implicit in Winer's story is the idea that Wind inherited not only his grandfather's talent, but also his struggle to balance love and the intimacy it involves with a sense of disenchantment and the need to distance himself from the ugliness often seen in the modern world. Winer creates complex characters by sketching compelling portraits but leaving space for the reader to fill in shades of gray with his or her own interpretation.
The result is a story that is engrossing and haunting. It raises questions about whether it's possible to truly love someone you know well or whether in becoming close to them, you destroy the mystery that once surrounded them.
Winer takes an unflinching look at the pain that lovers can inflict on each other and yet still leaves the reader with the sense that it is better to love and hurt than to be alone. The isolation of love unreturned, as embodied in one of the novel's main characters, is perhaps the saddest thing.
With multiple characters wrestling with their Jewish identity and the backdrop of the Holocaust, "The Marriage Artist" also takes a thought-provoking look at faith and the way people understand and experience God. In Wind's grandmother, Winer joins his themes of love and faith, as her character tries to lose her self-identity in marriage to become closer to the God in everyone.
With such complex themes and sharp scenes of human misery, "The Marriage Artist" isn't a work that can be described as enjoyable or pleasant. But that's precisely why it is important: It makes you think about those things that you might prefer to avoid and examine your own beliefs about how possible it is to be both an individual and joined in love.


www.go2bagtrade.com

Newlyweds Brand, Perry leave India for Maldives

JAIPUR, India – Comedian Russell Brand and pop singer Katy Perry flew to the Maldives on Monday after their wedding at a tiger reserve in India, while authorities investigated whether the wedding party broke noise laws.
Under tight security, the couple tied the knot Saturday at an exclusive resort strewn with colorful lights and flower garlands.
On Monday afternoon, the newlyweds boarded a helicopter near Ranthambhore National Park and arrived in the city of Jaipur, where they took a chartered flight to the Maldives, Jaipur airport director R.K. Singh said. The nation of tiny coral islands in the Indian Ocean is renowned for its high-end resorts.
Friends who arrived by road joined the couple on the flight, Singh said.
Locals had mixed feelings about the celebrity visit, and Rajasthan state's chief minister on Monday ordered an investigation into public complaints about party noise that lasted into the early hours of Sunday, local district collector Ravi Kumar Surpur said. Local laws bar noise beyond 10 p.m. that would disturb local communities or wildlife.
The Ranthambhore National Park is home to tigers, leopards, wild boars and other animals. If laws were broken, the concerned parties or the resort management would be charged, Surpur said.
Also, two men from the wedding party apologized for assaulting four news photographers, including one from The Associated Press, then taking their car keys and stranding them in the wild tiger reserve Friday. The written apology acknowledged "physical assault" and "bad behavior."
Because of the apology, no formal police investigation was opened. None of the photographers sought medical care.
Local hoteliers and tour operators said the celebrity wedding brought positive attention to the tiger reserve.
The wedding "would only serve the cause of tiger conservation," local hotel owner Balendu Singh said. "The event was a big success, and Ranthambhore would get enough mileage as a tourist destination."
Brand, a 35-year-old British comedian and actor known for a drug-addled past and hedonistic tendencies, is next set to star as Trinculo in "The Tempest" and the title character in a remake of "Arthur."


www.go2bartrade.com