Thursday, April 25, 2013

SNL's Kate McKinnon Dances Around As Ellen While Being Interviewed ON Ellen! WATCH HERE!

We've always thought there isn't enough Ellen DeGeneres in the world…
Which is why we almost LIZZED ourselves (thanks forever Tina Fey !)
while watching Saturday Night Live 's HIGHlarious writer/ castmember
Kate McKinnon — who is known to be able to almost perfectly
impersonate the chat show host — getting interviewed BY Ellen on
Ellen! Why? Because Ellen requested that Kate dress up as her (Ellen)
and challenged her (Kate) to show just how good of an Ellen impression
she (Kate) could do! Dizzying, we know! Prepare to laugh until you pee
yourself and pressss plaaaayyy (above)! Too much! WE CAN'T EVEN
DEALLLLL. But an Ellen impersonation is NOT the only aspect that makes
us love Kate! Ch-ch-check out her actual interview and prepare to be
charmed …AFTER THE JUMP!!!

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

'After Earth' Film's Stars Will & Jaden Smith Imagine Our Planet's Future

In the upcoming science fiction film "After Earth", our home planet
goes through some serious changes over the next 1,000 years. So it's
fitting that the film's stars, actor Will Smith and his son Jaden,
would take some time to envision what the future of Earth might
entail. In a Google+ Hangout today (April 23), the stars of " After
Earth " joined SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, futurist Ray Kurzweil, Alexandra
Cousteau and a group of students to discuss what the planet Earth
might just look like in the next millennium. The event, sponsored by
Columbia Pictures, was billed as "After Earth Day" and came one day
after the annual day to celebrate the Earth. "It looks like great
entertainment, but it raises some profound issues [about the future of
the planet]," said Kurzweil, the director of engineering for Google
and moderator of the discussion said of the movie."After Earth"
explores the relationship between a father and son — played by Will
and Jaden Smith — after they crash-land on Earth 1,000 years into the
future, after humans have deserted the planet to live in space. A
"cataclysmic" event forced all humans to leave Earth , leaving the
planet to be overrun by other, unfriendly species, according to a
movie description released by Columbia Pictures. The film — directed
and co-written by M. Night Shyamalan — launches into theaters in June.
"With this film it was such a perfect collision of art entertainment,
education and a posing of fantastic questions," Will Smith said during
hangout. "As an artist, this film does exactly what I always dreamed
to be able to do with entertain and to also be able to pose
interesting questions." Smith went on to explain that shooting the
movie helped him and his son start to understand how human activity
influences the planet. "I feel like I really saw some true beauty in
the world after shooting in Costa Rica," said Jaden Smith. "After that
experience, it really showed me how important it is to save the
world." Alexandra Cousteau, a filmmaker and granddaughter of Jacques-
Yves Cousteau, also expressed her concern for the planet. She
explained that the Earth today is in a vulnerable position, but by
using technology and enthusiasm, a new generation can start to change
the Earth for the better. Elon Musk, the billionaire founder of the
private spaceflight company SpaceX and chief of the Tesla electric car
company, said he thinks that these issues could be motivation for
humanity to start moving away from Earth and into space. "I think we
want to be a space-faring civilization," Musk said during the event.
"Either we're a space- faring civilization or we're going to be bound
to the Earth until some kind of extinction event [occurs]." To Musk,
the idea that humanity can leave the Earth to create a new human life
elsewhere in the universe is "inspiring" and "exciting." Other
panelists were more interested in finding new and different ways to
help combat the effects of global climate change. "I have faith in our
generation," one of the eighth graders said. "I think that we can help
this earth. I'm sure we can [find a way to] not waste this planet and
go to a different planet. I'm optimistic that we can save this planet
and do the right things." "After Earth" is set for release nationwide
on June 7.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Earth Daze: What Happened to the Environmental Movement?

It's Earth Day, though you could be forgiven if you missed it. The
annual event doesn't quite have the same energy as it once did —
especially not compared with the first Earth Day 43 years ago. That
nationwide event, initially inspired by the work of Wisconsin Senator
Gaylord Nelson, was celebrated by more than 20 million people in more
than 12,000 events around the country. As Nicholas Lemann pointed out
in a recent piece in the New Yorker , Congress took the day off, and
two- thirds of its members — Democrat and Republican alike — spoke at
Earth Day events. The Today show devoted 10 hours of airtime to Earth
Day. And that mobilization — which was decentralized, mostly achieved
through a tiny national office — paved the way for real government
action: the Clean Air Act of 1970, the Clean Water Act of 1972, the
Endangered Species Act of 1973 and the creation of the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA). This year's Earth Day was a little less
memorable, and a whole lot less bipartisan. (I can't imagine a
Republican member of Congress giving a speech during Earth Day now
unless they were calling for the dismantling of the EPA.) And it comes
during a moment of crisis for the environmental movement as it
attempts to grapple, so far unsuccessfully, with the existential
threat of climate change. Back to Lemann: Then, 40 years after Earth
Day, in the summer of 2010, the environmental movement suffered a
humiliating defeat as unexpected as the success of Earth Day had been.
The Senate Majority Leader, Harry Reid, announced that he would not
bring to a vote a bill meant to address the greatest environmental
problem of our time — global warming. The movement had poured years of
effort into the bill, which involved a complicated system for limiting
carbon emissions. Now it was dead, and there has been no significant
environmental legislation since. Indeed, one could argue that there
has been no major environmental legislation since 1990, when President
George H.W. Bush signed a bill aimed at reducing acid rain. Today's
environmental movement is vastly bigger, richer and better connected
than it was in 1970. It's also vastly less successful. What went
wrong? Forty-three years after the first Earth Day, are Lemann and
other critics of the modern environmental movement right? Have greens
lost their way — and if so, why?There's no getting around the fact
that environmentalists have failed to push through a legislative
solution to climate change . Cap and trade, even under a Democratic
Congress and President, failed in 2010. The international climate
regime under the U.N. seems to get closer to collapse every year, and
even in much greener Europe , carbon markets simply aren't working .
And environmentalism as a concept doesn't seem to resonate with
Americans as it once did. A new YouGov/HuffPost poll found that
Americans are less concerned about the environment now than they were
on the first Earth Day. While isolated issues like fracking and the
Keystone pipeline resonate strongly with some Americans, especially
those who are directly affected — witness the mobbed hearin g on the
proposed Keystone XL pipeline last week and the stream of antifracking
protests — there's nothing close to the sheer number of Americans who
were motivated to take part in the first Earth Day. What's changed?
You can blame the specific failure of cap-and-trade legislation in
part on the mechanics of the U.S. Senate — the bill passed the House,
barely — where rural conservative states get outsize representation
and where legislation now needs to get 60 votes to pass. (Though of
course health care reform still managed to pass despite those same
obstacles.) The growing political polarization that has made
environmentalism almost solely a Democratic cause can't be blamed only
on greens. But I think the biggest reason is that environmentalism has
been a victim of its own success. The environment — everyone's
environment — really was a mess in 1970. Urban rivers were on fire,
smog choked the Los Angeles basin, toxic waste affected towns like
Love Canal and shorelines were marred by industrial runoff. See this
Slate roundup of once polluted or threatened sites in America that
have been saved by the environmental movement over the past four
decades. Things used to be very, very bad.

Monday, April 22, 2013

Boxing Canelo vs. Trout fight preview: Is Canelo Alvarez really boxing's next superstar?

Canelo Alvarez and Austin Trout are ready to square off live on
Showtime Saturday night. Many are already calling Canelo the future of
boxing, but is he being overhyped? Bloody Elbow breaks it down in this
Canelo vs. Trout fight preview. Join us Saturday night for Canelo vs.
Trout results and full fight coverage here at Bloody Elbow.Saturday
April 20, Bloody Elbow presents live fight coverage of Showtime Boxing
with Canelo Alvarez vs. Austin Trout in a Super Welterweight World
Title Unification fight. Showtime Boxing Canelo vs. Trout airs this
Saturday, April 20 with a fight time of 10:00 p.m. ET / 7:00 p.m. PT.
Bloody Elbow will have live fight night coverage, including results
and discussion. With all due respect to Austin Trout, it's Saul Canelo
Alvarez who is the star of this particular show. The 22 year old is
already wildly popular, with a devoted Mexican fan base. He's been
talked about as a future opponent for Floyd Mayweather (and, by some,
as perhaps the man to finally topple Money). He's been called the
future of boxing. He's widely considered the next boxing megastar. All
he has to do to get there is defeat Austin Trout.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Boston Bomber Suspects Had Attended Cambridge Mosque, Officials Say

A mosque in Cambridge, Mass., confirmed Saturday that Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev and Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the Chechen-born brothers suspected in
the Boston marathon attacks, infrequently attended services at the
small center that was a 10-minute walk from their apartment. "In their
visits, they never exhibited any violent sentiments or behavior.
Otherwise they would have been immediately reported to the FBI," said
the statement from the Islamic Center of Boston . "After we learned of
their identities, we encouraged anyone who knew them in our
congregation to immediate report to law enforcement, which has taken
place." Anwar Kazmi, a member of the mosque's board of trustees, told
a USA Today reporter that 26-year-old Tamerlan Tsarnaev, who died
early Friday morning after a shootout with police, was an infrequent
attendee for about a year- and-a-half, while 19-year- old Dzhokhar A.
Tsarnaev, who was captured hiding in a boat in Watertown on Friday
night, attended only once. The Los Angeles Times reported that
Tamerlan Tsarnaev was kicked out of the mosque three months ago after
he interrupted a Friday prayer service to argue with the imam. The
imam leading the service had enraged Tsarnaev by talking about Martin
Luther King Jr. A congregant told the newspaper that Tsarnaev shouted,
"you cannot mention this guy because he's not a Muslim!" Imam Suhaib
Webb, of the Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center, the city's
largest mosque, said in an interview that he had recently heard of the
incident. "That's a sign right there that his views aren't
mainstream," Webb said. The Cambridge mosque leaders' theology is not
extremist, he said. Webb's mosque has the same owners but separate
administration from the Islamic Society of Boston. Webb said he never
met the brothers and had not found their names on his mosque's
membership list. Reports previously quoted friends of the brothers
saying they had attended the mosque , but Saturday was the first time
the mosque confirmed their association. "Right now, our focus will
remain on grieving for the victims and their families, praying for a
speedy recovery for the injured, and offering what support we can to
all in need," the statement said. Friends and family have described
Tamerlan Tsarnaev as becoming more strident in his religious views in
recent years. Federal authorities are investigating a six- month trip
he took in 2012 to Chechnya and Dagestan , Muslim-majority regions in
Russia and home to militant separatist movements. Reports have painted
Dzhokhar A. Tsarnaev as also being interested in Chechen independence
movements.

Friday, April 19, 2013

BABY JUSTIN BIEBER 7

Justin Bieber's Norway Hotel Surrounded By Hordes Of Fans!-All thanks
to Justin Bieber , the Oslo hotel in Norway, temporarily housing the
pop star, was surrounded by a seriously large group of screaming
Beliebers yesterday. Talk about loyalty. While we hope their stake out
proved successful, we can't help but feel bad for those coincidentally
vacationing during JB's trip. Maybe the Biebs put on a little private
performance for his fellow hotel- mates? A nice song and dance could
have eased the tension? …Or not. Just saying.

Police converge on neighborhood outside Boston

A tense night of police activity that left a university officer dead
on campus just days after the Boston Marathon bombings and amid a hunt
for two suspects caused officers to converge on a neighborhood outside
Boston, where residents heard gunfire and explosions. The chaos in
Watertown, about 10 miles west of Boston, occurred just hours after a
Massachusetts Institute of Technology police officer was shot and
killed on campus. It was unclear if the outbursts of violence were
related. No arrests had been made in the officer's fatal shooting, and
a manhunt was on for the shooter. The officer had been responding to
report of a disturbance Thursday night when he was shot multiple
times, according to a statement from the Middlesex district attorney's
office and Cambridge police. It said there were no other victims. In
Watertown, witnesses reported hearing multiple gunshots and explosions
at about 1 a.m. Friday. Dozens of police officers and FBI agents were
in the neighborhood and a helicopter circled overhead. State police
spokesman David Procopio said, "The incident in Watertown did involve
what we believe to be explosive devices possibly, potentially, being
used against the police officers." Boston cab driver Imran Sais said
he was standing on a street corner at a police barricade across from a
diner when he heard an explosion. "I heard a loud boom and then a
rapid succession of pop, pop, pop," he said. "It sounded like
automatic weapons. And then I heard the second explosion." He said he
could smell something burning and advanced to check it out but area
residents at their windows yelled at him, "Hey, it's gunfire! Don't go
that way!" MIT said right after the 10:30 p.m. shooting that police
were sweeping the campus in Cambridge and urged people to remain
indoors. They urged people urged to stay away from the Stata Building,
a mixed-use building with faculty offices, classrooms and a common
area. Hours later, MIT, which has about 11,000 students, said the
campus was clear but the shooter was still on the loose.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Boston News Station: Do These Pictures Show the Second Bomb Before Explosion and a Suspicious Man?

TheBlaze has received a curious video sequence showing a spectator
from the hours leading up to the Boston Bombings that we've forwarded
to the FBI. You can view that video and our thoughts here .A local
Boston news station took to the air on Tuesday with a set of pictures
that it says could have clues about the second bomb to go off at the
Boston Marathon -- pictures it says the FBI is looking at.
Additionally, the outlet is showing pictures from a viewer suggesting
odd behavior from someone in the crowd. WHDH-TV was sent pictures from
a viewer who captured the scene of the second bomb both before the
explosion and after. Here's how the outlet frames them: In the first
picture you can see a bag next to a mailbox and up against a barricade
along the marathon route. In the second, which we have blurred because
it is very graphic, there is no sign of the bag. The viewer who took
the pictures says there may be an hour or more between when the first
and second pictures were taken.Another set of pictures sent to the
station are questioning the reaction of a man seen with shredded
clothes running from the scene of the first explosion. The man who
sent them wonders if he's actually fleeing the scene: But caution is
needed. It's hard to know exactly how anyone will act when faced with
unimaginable circumstances -- and even harder to say how one should.
WHDH-TV talked to the man who took the pictures and he admitted the
reaction of the man in the pictures could be explained as simply the
result of panic.

Justin Bieber's Anne Frank Comment: 50 Cent Defends Him While Mark Wahlberg Suggests A Vacation!

JB has been getting a LOT of shade for writing in the Anne Frank House
guest book, "Hopefully she would have been a belieber," but he also
has some heavy back up! Piers Morgan , Chloe Moretz , and now 50 Cent
belieb there was nothing wrong with Justin's hope that Anne Frank
would've been a fan if she lived to hear some of his hit songs. As 50
walked the red carpet for the premiere of Pain & Gain, he spilled:
"She probably would have been [a belieber]." Ok, ok we get it. It is
VERY possible Anne Frank could've been a belieber if she wasn't busy
hiding from Nazi soldiers. Piers made a good point when he said
Justin's comment made his young fans aware of the iconic girl, but we
think it is time to move on from this joke! …and Mark Wahlberg agrees!
During the same premiere, Mark gave the Biebz some GREAT advice.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Pentagon chief calls Boston attack 'act of terror '

WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said Tuesday that the
deadly twin bombings at the Boston Marathon finish line amounted to
"cruel act of terror" and vowed that those who are responsible will be
brought to justice. Testifying on Capitol Hill, Hagel was the first
Obama administration official to refer to terror or terrorism after
the bombings Monday killed three and wounded more than 140 people
Monday afternoon. President Barack Obama, in his own brief statement
at the White House late Monday, made no mention of terrorists or
terrorism as a possible cause of the bombings. A White House official
speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation was still
unfolding did say the attack was being treated as an act of terrorism.
Hagel said any event in which explosive devices are used is clearly an
act of terror. "As the president said yesterday, we still do not know
who did this or why and a thorough investigation will have to
determine whether it was planned and carried by a terrorist group,
foreign or domestic," Hagel told the House Appropriations defense
subcommittee. "It's important not to jump to conclusions before we
have all the facts, but as the White House said last night, 'Any event
with multiple explosive devices, as this appears to be, is clearly an
act of terror and will be approached as an act of terror.'" Hagel
mentioned the Pentagon's connection to the race, with many in the
defense community participating in the race and commended the quick
work of the Massachusetts National Guard to assist after the
explosions. Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, also praised the National Guard. Dempsey was testifying with
Hagel. Hagel said the thoughts and prayers of those at the Pentagon
are with the people of Boston. House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio,
also referenced terrorism. "You can describe it in a lot of different
ways, but it was a terrorist attack of some sort. ... There's just not
enough information at this time," Boehner told reporters Tuesday at a
news conference. "We just don't know enough about it, but I have no
doubt that we will. ... The president and I had this conversation last
evening. He'd like to know more, I'd like to know more. The American
people would like to know more. Unfortunately we don't, but I am
confident that we are going to get to the bottom of this." At the
House hearing, Rep. C.W. Bill Young, R-Fla., pressed Hagel about
Pentagon plans to disband one of the civil support teams that
responded to the attack in Boston. Young said Congress was notified in
a March 29 letter that the two teams, one based in New York, the other
in Florida, would be disestablished. Hagel insisted that the teams
would remain and said the budget proposal that the administration
submitted last week included money for the teams.

Justin Bieber Wants To Lie Down & Snuggle A Belieber!

Calm down, Beliebers, he hasn't picked his baby, baby, baby yet! But
we're sure Justin Bieber got his fans in a bigger tizzy than ever
after he posted this dreamy pic on his Instagram (above). With a
cartoon image of the Biebs snuggling up to a cartoon Belieber as she
sleeps, he got millions of teen girls instantly thinking that image
looks JUST.LIKE.THEM! We're not sure what message the Biebs is trying
to send with this cozy pic, but it's working!

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0: Solid, if unspectacular

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) If the iPad mini was Apple's response to the small
tablet craze, then the Galaxy Note 8.0 is Samsung's rebuttal. The
light, slim tablet sports some impressive specifications that slightly
edge out the iPad mini: a 1.6 GHz quad-core Exynos processor, 2
gigabytes of RAM and a 1280x800 pixel display.It's not the impressive
specs that make the Galaxy Note 8.0 stand out, however. The big sell
is productivity, with Samsung pushing its pressure- sensitive "S-Pen"
stylus and dual-window support, allowing you to run two apps
simultaneously. With a stylus and multiple apps running at the same
time, Samsung believes you can regain some of speed and efficiency you
get from a laptop.

Obama , calling attack 'terror ,' shifts to response

Washington (CNN) - The bomb attacks at the finish line of Monday's
Boston Marathon were a "heinous and cowardly act" that the FBI is
investigating as an act of terrorism, President Barack Obama said
Tuesday. "Any time bombs are used to target civilians, it is an act of
terrorism," Obama said, adding that it remained unclear who carried
out the attack and why. It was the first time the president used the
word "terror" to refer to the deadly bombs. Later in the day, Vice
President Joe Biden vowed to "get to the bottom" of Monday's terror
attack, which left three dead and scores wounded. "We don't have any
hard information yet," Biden said on his way to an event on Capitol
Hill. "But I can assure we will find out who did it and bring them to
justice." Asked whether there was a sense among investigators of
whether the attack originated from a foreign or domestic perpetrator,
Biden said, "Not yet." Obama, making his second formal statement
following Monday's blasts, said said investigators do not yet know
"who carried out this attack or why, whether it was planned and
executed by a terrorist organization foreign or domestic or was the
act of a malevolent individual." President Barack Obama receives an
update on the explosions that occurred in Boston, in the Oval Office,
April 16, 2013. Seated, from left, are: Homeland Security Secretary
Janet Napolitano; Tony Blinken, Deputy National Security Advisor; Jake
Sullivan, National Security Advisor to the Vice President; Attorney
General Eric Holder; Lisa Monaco, Assistant to the President for
Homeland Security and Counterterrorism; Chief of Staff Denis
McDonough; and FBI Director Robert Mueller. (Official White House
Photo by Pete Souza) On Monday, as details of the attack were
emerging, Obama delivered a brief statement that avoided the use of
the word "terror." He said then he had ordered the "full resources" of
the federal government to respond to the bombing. "Make no mistake, we
will get to the bottom of this, and we will find out who did this,
we'll find out why they did this," he said. Any individuals or groups
responsible for the "senseless" bombing, he added, will "feel the full
weight of justice." Officials in Washington, who entered the week
prepared for battle over immigration and gun control, shifted focus
Tuesday to the aftermath of the deadly terror bombing. Obama ordered
the flag above the White House lowered to half-staff, while inside he
was huddling with top advisers, receiving the latest details on the
investigation into the attack. CNN spotted Vice President Joe Biden,
FBI Director Robert Mueller, Attorney General Eric Holder and Homeland
Security Secretary Janet Napolitano headed into the White House
Tuesday morning. Other events on his schedule – including a meeting
with Sens. John McCain and Chuck Schumer on immigration reform – were
still slated to go forward. In the afternoon, Obama will honor last
year's NASCAR sprint cut champion Brad Keselowski during a ceremony on
the South Lawn. Cabinet members, along with national security and
counterterrorism staff, will convene Tuesday evening to brief the
president at the White House, though an official said this wasn't a
full Cabinet meeting. Other events in Washington were pushed aside
after Monday's bombing. A planned press conference unveiling of the
Senate's immigration bill was postponed, though the legislation was
still expected to be filed Tuesday. Another top piece of legislation –
gun control – had already been delayed in the Senate as supporters
worked to win over more votes. And two congressmen, Reps. Pete King,
R-New York, and Mike Thomas, D- California, introduced a background
checks bill identical to the Senate measure that was unveiled last
week. But a call-in event on guns sponsored by Organizing for Action,
a political group formed from Obama's presidential campaign, was
scrapped.

Justin Bieber & Selena Gomez's Lives To CROSS PATHS Yet Again - For The Radio Disney Music Awards!

While Justin Bieber and Selena Gomez 's relationship went through a
pretty rocky period of on-again/off- again, it seems apparent by now
that the pair have FINALLY called it quits for good! Which will most
likely make it all the more awkward for them when they walk down the
red carpet April 27th for the Radio Disney Music Awards, as they are
BOTH scheduled to appear!

Show Yahoo investors the money, Marissa Mayer!

Investors are tremendously excited about Yahoo's potential, but the
company has to soon show results to justify the enthusiasm. Shares of
Yahoo are up 22% so far this year and 55% since Marissa Mayer took
over as CEO last July. Shareholders aren't just giddy about Mayer,
however. Yahoo is sitting on an increasingly lucrative 24% stake of
Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba, an improving search business, and
a strong crop of newly redesigned products. When Yahoo reports its
first quarter financials Tuesday afternoon, Wall Street analysts
expect the Internet giant to say that its Asian assets, which include
Alibaba, contributed nicely to its bottom line. Doug Anmuth, a
JPMorgan analyst, said he believes Yahoo's Alibaba stake is now worth
about $14 billion -- and that it is rapidly growing. Yahoo's search
business, which represents about 40% of Yahoo's overall sales, should
also help the company. Although Yahoo and search partner Microsoft
still trail industry leader Google by a wide margin, the good news for
Yahoo is that the amount of advertising revenue it gets per search
likely increased in the first quarter. Colin Gillis, an analyst with
BGC Partners, said he expects Yahoo's search revenue to have grown 7%
in the first quarter. Yahoo also needs a boost beyond search though.
The company has long stressed the importance of being among the
largest Internet properties in the world. But page views haven't
always translated into financial success. Revenue from display
advertising -- banners and videos -- has suffered during the past few
years. Mayer has recently taken steps to address this. Yahoo unveiled
a new homepage, a redesigned Yahoo Mail and a refreshed Flickr
service. All were designed to increase user engagement, but analysts
aren't convinced the design tweaks were enough to boost display
advertising yet. Sales in that business, which represents another 40%
of Yahoo's revenue, are expected to have declined 7% last quarter. So
that would wipe out any gains from search. Overall, analysts surveyed
by Thomson Reuters expect sales and profit to have grown 2% in the
first quarter. Yahoo has generated a significant amount of buzz
lately, backed by rumors that it is negotiating an expanded
relationship with Apple and thinking about dropping Microsoft as a
search partner. If Yahoo's Microsoft Bing partnership doesn't reach a
certain sales threshold -- one the companies are very close to missing
-- then Yahoo has an out clause that it could utilize. Mayer's
well-publicized cultural changes at the company have also given
shareholders reason to believe in Yahoo once again -- even though her
ban on telecommuting may make her less popular with some Yahoo
employees. But with Yahoo's stock nearing five-year highs, the company
needs to prove that all the excitement is well founded.

Terror at Boston Marathon: 3 dead, 144 wounded as witnesses describe horror

It was a gruesome end to what should have been a celebration of
triumph. One man's legs were instantly blown off, yet he kept trying
to stand up. Exhausted marathoners had to muscle the energy to flee
the bloody scene. And more than 140 people were hospitalized, some in
critical condition. As authorities try to figure out who triggered the
deadly bombings Monday at the Boston Marathon, which killed an
8-year-old boy and two others, many are at a loss to explain why
anyone would target the annual event that celebrates thousands of
runners from around the world. A stunning attack Both blasts happened
in quick succession, near the row of international flags that led up
to the finish line. The impact was so powerful, it whipped the limp
flags straight out as if they were caught in a hurricane. It also
knocked 78-year- old runner Bill Iffrig to the ground. Get
up-to-the-minute updates on CNN.com's live blog "I was just
approaching the last straightaway to the finish line, and I had a good
day and was feeling really good, and I got down to within about 15
feet of the finishing apron and just tremendous explosion, sounded
like a bomb went off right next to me," Iffrig said.

The Anne Frank House Cuts Justin Bieber Some Serious SLACK! Read Their Response To The Controversy HERE!

It's nice to see that even despite what we consider to be very
justifiable backlash following his visit, the Anne Frank House is
standing in support of Justin Bieber . As we reported , the troubled
pop sensation managed to cause some pretty serious controversy over
the weekend during his trip to the Amsterdam home in which the
courageous Jewish teenager hid from Nazis and wrote her now- famous
diary, when he wrote in the guest book: "Truly inspiring to be able to
come here. Anne was a great girl. Hopefully she would have been a
belieber." However, despite having the gall to make what have should
have been a solemn, sobering and reflective visit about himself,
representatives from the house stated this morning on their.

Monday, April 15, 2013

Rebel Wilson's Iron Mangina Exposes Herself At The MTV Movie Awards

The hostess with the mostess at tonight's MTV Movie Awards arrived
onto the scene wearing some sexy metal in her " Iron Mangina " suit.
But, what really caught our eye was her pink koala hoodie and matching
sweats, which she later ripped off to reveal bootylicious black
leather corset and leggings. Rebel is sooo rebellious with her risky
fashion choices! We love 'em though. Just as much as we love this
funny lady.