Friday, January 4, 2008

Pissed Spears hands over children after dispute

LOS ANGELES: Police were called to Britney Spears' home in a custodial dispute that lasted nearly three hours before an intoxicated Spears reportedly turned over her children to ex husband Kevin Federline.

Officers were called to the home around 8 pm Thursday, and the 26-year-old singer turned over the children around 10.50 pm, Officer Jason Lee, a police spokesman, told City News Service.

Aerial footage from KTLA TV showed Spears being lifted in a gurney into an ambulance. It was unclear where she was being taken. Lee said Spears was under the influence of an unknown substance, and no injuries were reported.

The incident involved a family dispute that police worked to resolve “peacefully by court order”, he said. An Associated Press photographer outside the gated community that includes Spears' house saw six police cars, an ambulance and a fire truck enter around 10.30 pm. A dispatcher with the fire department referred calls to the police department.

Spears and Federline are fighting over custody of their sons, two-year-old Sean Preston and one-year-old Jayden James.

Federline, 29, has temporary custody of the children because Spears, who has limited visitation rights, has defied court orders.

Obama beats Clinton, Huckabee dazzles Romney, in Iowa Smackdown



Democrat Barack Obama and Republican Mike Huckabee won convincing victories in Iowa's caucuses last night that both men called a mandate from voters for change.

Obama, a senator from Illinois, got 38 per cent support for a win fueled in part by voter turnout almost double that of Democrats in 2004. Former Senator John Edwards finished second, while the party's longtime front-runner, Senator Hillary Clinton, was third.

Huckabee, a former Arkansas governor, claimed 34 per cent of the Republican vote, besting his chief rival, former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, who had outspent Huckabee in the state by tens of millions of dollars and garnered 25 percent. Senator John McCain, who gave little attention to Iowa, finished fourth, closely behind former Senator Fred Thompson and ahead of Texas Representative Ron Paul.

“We're choosing unity over division, and sending a powerful message that change is coming to America,”' Obama, 46, told supporters in Des Moines.

Like Obama, Huckabee, 52, credited his victory to voters' craving for change.

“Tonight what we have seen is a new day in American politics,”' Huckabee said at his victory celebration. “Tonight we've learned that American politics still is in the hands of ordinary folks like you.'”

The caucuses also narrowed the Democratic field before the New Hampshire primary on January 8. Senators Joseph Biden of Delaware and Christopher Dodd of Connecticut announced they are abandoning their bids for the presidential nomination after failing to register even one per cent support in the caucuses. New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson registered 2 percent.

The results were setbacks for one-time New Hampshire front- runner Romney, 60, who saw his lead in Iowa evaporate in the final weeks of the race, and for Clinton, who has sought to position herself as the inevitable nominee for the Democrats.


All about Barack

Name: Barack Hussein Obama

Date and location of Birth: August 4, 1961, ,; Honolulu, Hawaii, USA

Political Party: Democrat

Spouse: Michelle Obama

Alma Mater: Columbia University, Harvard Law School

Children: Two daughters; Malia Ann (9) and Natasha (7)

Books: Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance, The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream

All about Mike

Name: Michael Dale "Mike" Huckabee

Date and location of Birth: August 24, 1955, ,; Hope, Arkansas

Political Party: Republican

Spouse: Janet McCain Huckabee

Alma Mater: Ouachita Baptist University

Children: John Mark, David, and Sarah

Books Character is the Issue: How People With Integrity Can Revolutionize America, Kids Who Kill, Living Beyond Your Lifetime, Quit Digging Your Grave with a Knife and Fork, From Hope to Higher Ground: 12 Stops to Restoring America's Greatness, Character Makes a Difference: Where I'm From, Where I've Been, and What I Believe


Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Editorial cartoon of the day


Here's an excellent one from Kal at the Economist

Now see Hitler, the family guy

Nazi propaganda portrayed Adolf Hitler as a man minus private life but new rare colour footage released 62 years after his death reveal a different dictator and the frail truth about the 'family man' Fuhrer.

Hitler, known to be a maniac, never had his own kids but he liked spending time with those of others. His Chief Propaganda Minister Josef Goebbels's six children were one of his surrogate families, as were the sons and daughters of his architect Albert Speer.

In the main picture, 50-year-old Hitler stands surrounded by children in fancy dress, probably the sons and daughters of Nazi dignitaries, invited to his 50th birthday party on April 20, 1939.

The photo is one of several taken at the Eagle's Nest, Hitler's mountain-top chalet in the German Alps in Bavaria, according to the Daily Mail which has also published the snaps in today's edition.

Other photos show how rapidly Hitler aged after posing at a 1933 rally of the Storm Department – the brown-shirted mobsters who assisted the Nazi dictator's rise to power.

The pictures, released by the Rue des Archives picture agency which was founded in Paris in 1936 four years before Nazi forces occupied the city, also revealed that Hitler was obsessed with the French capital.

"It was the dream of my life to be permitted to see Paris," he had announced while posing under the Eiffel Tower in 1940 -- and pictures were stored there during the Nazi invasion and beyond.

Tainted vodka kills 11 in Mongolia


ULAN BATOR, Mongolia: At least 11 people died and another 21 were hospitalized for drinking tainted vodka during New Year's Eve celebrations in Mongolia's capital, a government official said Tuesday.

An emergency has also been announced for Baganuur district of Ulan Bator where the deaths happened, city governor's office announced.

That means all shops were closed and further celebrations were banned, said Ganbold Khurlee, an official in the office.

He said tests showed that the vodka was made with methanol spirits normally used for nonfood purposes like cleaning.

“Relevant government agencies have determined that various vodkas produced by this company contained up to 30 per cent methanol spirits,” he said.

That front page story wasn't mine

Anyone who read that puerile story on page 1 (with my byline on it) should know that it was not originally written in that shoddy manner. Here's the original text, please forgive the morons, for they literally know not what they do.

Head: Before I die, I want to…

Strap: From swimming with sharks, to drinking and paragliding, Mumbaikars have some strange things on their Bucket List

Byline: Dean Williams & Munira Chendvankar

If you thought Mumbaikars who spent a quite evening at home as the clock counted down to 2008 twiddled their thumbs, you’d be so far off the mark, William Tell will be spinning in his grave. They were pondering something profound.

“I want to travel to space,” says 24-year-old Jacob Rebeiro. “I want to see if the earth looks the way it does in all the Hollywood films.”

“I want to take a trip on the Trans-Siberian Railway,” says NGO-worker Kiran Shekhar. “Doctor Zhivago is my favourite film and I love the setting.”

Are these the simple aspirations of city-dwellers hemmed in by the urban sprawl? Not quite, these are just a couple of entries from Mumbaikars’ Bucket Lists (a list of things to do before you kick the bucket).

The Internet has so many of these lists, it’s hard to know where to start, and the suggestions are often ridiculous, you’d rather just stay in bed and…well…die.

Wanderlist for instance, cites ‘falling in love’ as one of the top 10 things to do. The fact that love is wholly subjective and inevitably leads to depression seems to have slipped their minds completely. The website AskMen lists ‘become a millionaire’, as though all you have to do is pass a written exam, and so far you’ve just been too lazy to do it.

Of course, it’s not all ramblings of vapid list-writers; there are some genuinely helpful suggestions too. The BBC’s list includes ‘Walk the Inca trail’, and ‘See the Northern Lights’, both genuinely good ideas, that involve two essential human needs: the need to travel, and the need to be awed by nature’s (and, at times, man’s) ability to conjure sublime beauty.

Mumbaikars, however, are not looking as far afield as Finland or Peru, but that doesn’t mean they don’t have a sense of adventure coursing through their veins.

“The one thing I would love to do before I die is go skydiving in Barbados,” says model, Shayan Munshi, who goes on to state that he couldn’t imagine dying before he accomplished this. Skydiving seems to be one of the dominant entries on Mumbai’s Bucket Lists.

In keeping with the adventurous trend housewife Anita Almeida says she wants to “swim with Great White sharks.” Almeida has never seen Jaws and as such may be a tad too eager to doggie-paddle with nature’s most efficient hunter.

Shreyasi Bhattacharya, a student, wants to take drinking and driving to the next level: Drinking and paragliding. “I would like to sip the world’s most expensive wine while paragliding over an uncharted island,” she says. That feat in itself might get her into the record books, but she seems unfazed by any references to the fate of Amelia Earhart.

War zones and all their catastrophic environs also seem to lure the intrepid Mumbaikar: journalists Yashshri Soman and Arun Das want to cover a war.

“I would love to cover a live war as a reporter for a leading TV channel. Also, I hope I can achieve some kind of record in this field, as a woman,” says Soman.

Das, however, just wants to wear a flak jacket like his idol John Simpson: “It looks and sounds cool, and I would really like to try it before I die.”

Shalini Puri, a BPO executive, when told that Orlando Bloom’s Bucket List lists ‘Learn to play the Bongos’, is beside herself with joy. “That’s on my list too, along with ‘learn to play the piano’. Maybe Orlando and I could form a band,” she says.

But for many Mumbaikars, the Bucket List is more than just a database of selfish pursuits. It’s a chance to realise a philanthropic spirit often bushwhacked by globalisation.

Singer Kailash Kher says that he wants to see India a developed and economically independent country before he dies. “A true, shining India. That’s what I want to see.”

Rohan Jhungare, a student, is refreshingly pragmatic when he says that, for him, it’s about leading a life sans regret: “Before I die, I want to look back and say I’ve led a full life, without regrets. That’s the only thing on my Bucket List.”

The continuing rise of ‘Things-to-do-before-you-die’ lists and books is a global phenomenon: Patricia Schulz’s phenomenally popular bestseller 1,000 Places To See Before You Die, has been reincarnated as calendar, and Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman are starring in a new film titled…you guessed it…The Bucket List.

But eventually it all comes down to death and our morbid preoccupation with it. Maybe we should all take the advice of Somerset Maugham: “Dying is a very dull, dreary affair. And my advice to you is to have nothing whatever to do with it.”

Mr Maugham’s advice goes straight to the top of my Bucket List.

Sunday, December 30, 2007

Teenage mums rife in Britain

The government of Britain has admitted for the first time that sex education initiatives are failing to control teenage pregnancy rates.

Every year, almost 50,000 girls under the age of 18 years fall pregnant and the number who conceives is at its highest level since a multi-million-pound programme to curb teenage pregnancy was initiated almost a decade ago, Sunday Telegraph reported.

Britain therefore tops the league table of teenage mothers in western Europe, despite its record number of school-age abortions, the newspaper said quoting a report by the department of health posted on its website.

Smartest quotes of 2007

'Every woman should have four pets in her life. A mink in her closet, a Jaguar in her garage, a tiger in her bed and a jackass who pays for everything.'
— Paris Hilton

'My dear, I thank you. But although I still have the desire, I lack the device.'
— Peter O'Toole to a flasher in the lift of a New York hotel.

'I can't see it happening somehow. We don't airbrush to that extent.'
Hugh Hefner, responding to curvy Kelly Osbourne's wish to appear in the magazine.

"The president is really sorry he couldn't be here tonight. ... His book club is meeting."

Dick Cheney, at the 2007 Gridiron dinner

"A year ago, my approval rating was in the 30s, my nominee for the Supreme Court had just withdrawn, and my Vice President had shot someone. Ahhh, those were the good old days."

–George W. Bush, at the 2007 Radio-TV Correspondents' dinner

"I wish the Iranian people well, and only hope their experience with an inept, rigid ideologue president goes better than ours."
- Oliver Stone, after being refused from filming a documentary about Ahmadinejad in Iran

"Pot. It mightn't kill you, but it could turn you into a dickhead."
- The tag line in an Australian government ad to discourage teenage use of marijuana

"There were only two of them, but they made a whole frontage: huge, compelling, pneumatic. They burst out of tight red dresses--preferably red--or teased among feather boas, or flanked a dizzying cleavage that plunged to tantalising depths. These were celebrated, American breasts, engineered by silicon to be as broad and bountiful as the prairie. With them, a girl from nowhere--or from Houston, Texas--could do anything. The body behind them waxed and waned, sometimes stout as a stevedore's and sometimes almost waif-like, matching the little-girl voice; but the Breasts remained."
- The Anna Nicole Smith obituary in The Economist

The stupidest quotes of 2007

"I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy. I mean, that's a storybook, man."
Sen. Joe Biden (D-DE) on Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL)

'Why is it good to die for one's country? Isn't it better to live in New York?'
Bar Refaeli, Israeli girlfriend of Leonardo DiCaprio, on her decision to avoid national service.

"Thanks for the question, you little jerk."

John McCain, after being asked by a high school student if he was too old to be president.

"Welcome to Scotland"
- Scotland's new slogan, which is what an ad agency came up with for a new "exciting" slogan after spending six months on the initiative and getting paid 125,000 pounds

"People use music as a utensil to better themselves."
- Jessica Simpson

"I want to be like Gandhi and Martin Luther King and John Lennon – but I want to stay alive."
- Madonna

"That's a wonderful side effect of leather pants: when you pee yourself in them, they're more forgiving than jeans."

Slash on the benefits of being a rock star

"I'm the Ali of today. I'm the Marvin Gaye of today. I'm the Bob Marley of today. I'm the Martin Luther King, or all the other greats that have come before us. And a lot of people are starting to realize that now."

R. Kelly

"[I] don't believe there's any difference between a monogamous and a polygamous relationship. Those are all just big words, like 'gymnasium.'"

Gene Simmons on open marriage

Bushisms Mk2007


"And there is distrust in Washington. I am surprised, frankly, at the amount of distrust that exists in this town. And I'm sorry it's the case, and I'll work hard to try to elevate it." --interview on National Public Radio, Jan. 29, 2007

"I fully understand those who say you can't win this thing militarily. That's exactly what the United States military says, that you can't win this military."

--on the need for political progress in Iraq, Washington, D.C., Oct. 17, 2007

"One of my concerns is that the health care not be as good as it can possibly be."

--on military benefits, Tipp City, Ohio, April 19, 2007

"My relationship with this good man is where I've been focused, and that's where my concentration is. And I don't regret any other aspect of it. And so I -- we filled a lot of space together."

--on British Prime Minister Tony Blair

"You helped our nation celebrate its bicentennial in 17 -- 1976."

--to Queen Elizabeth

"There are some similarities, of course (between Iraq and Vietnam). Death is terrible."

--Tipp City, Ohio, April 19, 2007

"As yesterday's positive report card shows, childrens do learn when standards are high and results are measured."

--on the No Child Left Behind Act

Man City or Al Hilal? Errr…

MANCHESTER, England: Asian Player of the Year Yasser Al Qahtani revealed he has turned down an offer to join English Premier League club Manchester City.

The Saudi Arabia striker had been on trial with Sven-Goran Eriksson's side but has opted to stay in his home country with Al Hilal.

"I had a successful trial with Manchester City and I was given great praise from everyone there including coach Sven-Goran Eriksson," said 25-year-old Al Qahtani. "We had reached an agreement but there were some issues in the contract that were not resolved. "However, the reason I rejected the offer was not due to financial reasons but because I feel Al Hilal need me too much this season."

Motherwell skipper dies

Motherwell captain Phil O'Donnell died on Saturday after collapsing during a match against Dundee United.

O'Donnell, 35, fell to the ground as he was about to be substituted towards the end of Motherwell's 5-3 Scottish Premier League win over Dundee United.

He then received some five minutes of treatment on the field before being carried off on a stretcher and was subsequently taken by ambulance to hospital.

"Unfortunately I can confirm very, very sad news that Phil O'Donnell has lost his life," said Motherwell chairman Bill Dickie.

The cause of death is as yet unknown