Thursday, March 31, 2011

Batista's Daughter, in Sex-Tape Scandal video


Jerry Wiseman of the Columbus Pro Wrestling Examiner reports Batista's 18 year old daughter has hit the web in a sex tape scandal. The video which is circulating many websites shows his daughter compromising positions with her reported boyfriend.

Italian prosecutors name 'Ruby' as witness in Berlusconi trial


PROSECUTORS in the upcoming sex trial of the Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi released yesterday a list of 132 witnesses they intend to call, including "Ruby the Heart Stealer," the teenage dancer at the center of the scandal.

Ruby, a Moroccan whose real name is Karima el Mahroug, is on the list of prosecution witness alongside 32 alleged adult prostitutes who attended purported "bunga bunga" sex parties, ANSA news agency reported.

The women were also expected to be named as defense witnesses.

The 74-year-old premier is accused of paying for sex with an underage prostitute and abusing his power by trying to cover it up.

The trial, which opens April 6, centers on the prosecutors' contention that Berlusconi had sex with Ruby 13 times.

Berlusconi and Ruby, who is now 18 but was 17 at the time of the allegations, have both denied having sex. She said that the thousands of euros she received from Berlusconi were gifts.

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Kim Kardashian Sex Tape with Ray J video

Watch Katy Perry's 'E.T.' Video



Watch the Katy Perry “ET” music video here, featuring Katy Perry as you’ve never seen her before!

In the “E.T.” music video, Katy Perry ditches her usual look for an Avatar version of herself in space.

Katy Perry’s “E.T.” features Kanye West and you can check out the Katy Perry ET lyrics below. What do you think of Katy’s newest single?

Watch the Katy Perry ET music video sneak peek below and check back later for the full Katy Perry ET music video after it premieres on MTV.com, VH1.com and LogoTV.com at noon today.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

'Dancing With the Stars' full recap Psycho Killer video , results


The ballroom bid farewell to "Psycho" Mike Catherwood on Tuesday night's Dancing With the Stars, thus setting him up for a lifetime of Dance Center appearances. (I'm guessing.) Mike can now count himself, along with Kenny Mayne and David Hasselhoff, as part of "the Mount Rushmore of terrible dancers." Tom got a huge belly laugh at that one. Loved it. Mike's exit was super classy (until he started dancing again, of course), and I liked how he made Lacey wait for her inevitable, sweeter-than-expected praise. "Lacey's a beautiful person on the outside, but she is even more beautiful on the inside," he gushed. Well, duh -- he had to be around her crazy two-toned hair for the past five weeks. Imagine!

Mike knew it was coming: He wasn't a dancer and didn't have a great fan base. After Monday night's jive with Lacey, Mike told EW he wasn't losing any sleep over the dancing portion of this waking nightmare we call life. "I was losing sleep because my dogs got in a fight, so that sucked," he said. "But all things considered, I was pretty serene." Sounds like it. Also in the bottom three: Sugar Ray Leonard and Anna "always wants it one more time" Tre-BUN-skaya, and Wendy Williams and her professional partner Sparkletooth. These were the bottom three, but Sugar Ray wasn't necessarily in the bottom two, said our fearless hosts. Whatever, dudes.

Lo and behold, last night we were introduced to...the six people we're going to sacrifice to Apollo this year! Just kidding: They're the DWTS Troupe. Or "THE TROUPE," according to what was emblazoned on the ballroom floor in the graphics package. Clearly these kids are the next generation of the ballroom. They are just one among many reasons why Dancing With the Stars is a lot like both Degrassi and Star Trek. But that sounds like a slacker college student's senior thesis, and this is a mere lowly TV recap. Here they are: http://news-786.blogspot.com/

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Wal-Mart opposes big sex-bias case at top court



WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Wal-Mart Stores Inc will argue on Tuesday that the Supreme Court should halt the largest class-action sex-discrimination lawsuit in history by female employees who seek billions of dollars.

The female employees will counter that their lawsuit should be allowed to go to trial against the world's largest retailer for allegedly paying women less and giving them fewer promotions than men at 3,400 U.S. stores since late 1998.

At issue in the Supreme Court showdown is whether the small group of women who began the lawsuit 10 years ago can represent a huge nationwide class of current and former employees that could total millions of women.

The Supreme Court's ruling, expected by late June, could change the legal landscape for workplace and other class-action lawsuits, affecting many other cases, including a similar one against Costco Wholesale Corp.

Wal-Mart's attorney, Theodore Boutrous, who will argue the case, said female employees in different jobs and in different stores do not have enough in common to be in a single class-action lawsuit.

Joseph Sellers, an attorney for the women, will argue the decision by a judge and a U.S. appeals court to certify the class was based on extensive evidence, and should be upheld.

Betty Dukes, a Wal-Mart employee in Pittsburg, California, for whom the case has been named, planned to attend oral arguments, a spokeswoman for the plaintiffs said.

"Without a class action, I wouldn't be able to do anything about the discrimination. Wal-Mart is just too big. A class action gives us a fair shot. That is all we ask for," Dukes said.

Women's groups plan to rally outside the court to show their support for the female employees. They said a Wal-Mart victory could signal a significant retreat for women's rights in the workplace.

Businesses said a Wal-Mart defeat could make every large corporation vulnerable to sweeping allegations of employment bias and would water down class-action requirements.

Large class-action lawsuits make it easier for big groups of plaintiffs to sue corporations and they have led to huge payouts by tobacco, oil and food companies.

Companies have sought to limit such lawsuits to individual or small groups of plaintiffs. The Supreme Court, with a conservative majority, has often agreed, dating back to 1997.

Legal experts and financial analysts said even if Wal-Mart loses in the Supreme Court and at trial, the retailer with more than $400 billion in sales and $16 billion in net income last year has enough cash to make a big payout.

The Supreme Court case is Wal-Mart Stores Inc v. Betty Dukes, No. 10-277

Obama's Libya Speech video



Barack Obama's speech on Libya last night was a curious beast - both ambitious and cautious at once. The president surprised Washington by articulating a big idea about American power. But he may have disappointed Americans by dancing around the challenge that remains in Libya.

Obama was clear enough, to be sure, about why he chose to intervene in Libya. With his army outside Benghazi, Obama said, Moammar Gaddafi was prepared to commit "a massacre that would have reverberated across the region and stained the conscience of the world." That would not just have been a moral abomination, the president argued, but a strategic calamity that might send droves of refugees into Egypt and Tunisia, straining their fragile transitions; it would also set an example to other tyrants that "that violence is the best strategy to cling to power." Moreover, Obama said that to allow Gaddafi to defy the United Nations would be "crippling [to] its future credibility." (See the coalition troops' battle in Libya.)

This was a fulsome explanation, though there's also plenty to critique: The United Nations only took substantive action in Libya at Washington's strong urging; Obama reversed the causality here. It's not self-evident how a wave of refugees would spoil the political transitions in Egypt and Tunisia. And the U.S. is currently propping up another Middle Eastern ruler who has violently repressed protests.

But so what? Those points were largely window dressing for Obama's grander idea about American power abroad. Conservatives have accused of doubting whether America has a special, "exceptional" role in the world. But tonight Obama put the lie to that charge. "For generations, the United States of America has played a unique role as an anchor of global security and advocate for human freedom," Obama said. To allow a slaughter in Benghazi would have been to "brush aside America's responsibility as a leader and... would have been a betrayal of who we are." As Chris Cilizza notes, this happens to be a powerful appeal to America's pride and patriotism. At the same time, Obama also explained that this isn't a license for fighting evil anywhere and everywhere: "We must always measure our interests against the need for action," he said. In Libya, the U.S. had the "unique ability" to act - thanks not only to our military power but also the international support behind it. (See "Libya and Obama's Doctrine: Leading from the Back.")

Such talk will please liberal interventionists and conservative hawks alike. (Yes, John McCain approves.) But for many Americans, some basic questions may remain unanswered. Obama assured the public that the U.S. is taking on a supporting role in NATO operations (though the AP is skeptical) and won't try to remove Gaddafi by force. "To be blunt, we went down that road in Iraq," Obama said, adding that "regime change there took eight years, thousands of American and Iraqi lives, and nearly a trillion dollars. That is not something we can afford to repeat in Libya."

But then what, exactly, are the options in Libya? Obama wants Gaddafi to leave power - and conceded that "until he does, Libya remains dangerous." Yet he was vague about the urgency of this outcome and what he's willing to do to achieve it. Would Obama, for instance, consider supplying arms to the Libyan rebels (in possible violation of a U.N. arms embargo)? If not arms, how about financing? And let's say a stalemate develops between Gadaffi and the rebels - would we be willing to recognize a separate state in the east? (The Arab league might be rather less enthusiastic about that.) And just who are the rebels anyway and what do they believe - does Obama have a clear sense of that? He didn't offer one last night. (See the coalition forces' military technology.)

Finally, what about Colin Powell's famous "Pottery Barn rule"? Imagine that Gaddafi is toppled, and his army and security forces are crushed or melt away. Perhaps tribal warfare rages over the country's oil wealth. Maybe al Qaeda leaps to exploit and aggravate the instability. Violent anarchy could break out around the country. Sound familiar? That's what happened in Iraq. We don't need to invade Libya to see an Iraq-like outcome. And in Libya the result could be a loss of life on a scale potentially greater than the massacre we likely averted in Benghazi. Having facilitated a change in regime, can America really stand by and watch that happen?

Hollywood Actress Nude Pictures , Hot and Sexiest Hollywood Actress Dare to Bare PETA Sexy Photo Shoots and Picture Gallery

Hollywood Actress Nude Pictures | Hottes and Sexiest Hollywood Actress Dare to Bare PETA Sexy Photo Shoots and Picture Gallery

Sophie Monk lies near-nude on a bed of crimson chilli peppers for a PETA ad.

Hollywood Actress Nude Pictures | Hottes and Sexiest Hollywood Actress Dare to Bare PETA Sexy Photo Shoots and Picture Gallery
Here, actress Alicia Silverstone appears naked in a print ad to promote vegetarianism, produced by the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

Hollywood Actress Nude Pictures | Hottes and Sexiest Hollywood Actress Dare to Bare PETA Sexy Photo Shoots and Picture Gallery
Eva Mendes bares all for PETA's anti-fur campaign

Hollywood Actress Nude Pictures | Hottes and Sexiest Hollywood Actress Dare to Bare PETA Sexy Photo Shoots and Picture Gallery
Maggie Q poses in a vegetable lingerie to promote PETA's "Turn Over a New Leaf Try Vegetarian" campaign against the misuse and unethical treatment of animals.

Hollywood Actress Nude Pictures | Hottes and Sexiest Hollywood Actress Dare to Bare PETA Sexy Photo Shoots and Picture Gallery
Actress Sadie Frost appears on a monochrome poster for the 'Turn your back on fur' campaign for PETA.

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Japanese actress Aya Sugimoto poses naked holding a PETA anti-fur sign during a photo session in Tokyo.

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Maggie Q again, this time on a bed of crimson chili peppers with the tagline "Spice Up Your Life, Go Vegetarian."

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Pamela Anderson bares all except for a two piece lettuce lingerie on a Go Veg initiative by PETA.

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Supermoon on March 19th 'may cause natural disasters full detail news video



The phenomenon, called lunar perigee or Supermoon, happens when the moon reaches its absolute closest point to Earth. On March 19, the natural satellite will be only 221,567 miles away from our planet.

There were Supermoons in 1955, 1974, 1992 and 2005, and these years had their share of extreme weather conditions, too. Although there are scientific laws that say the moon affects the Earth, it's still ambiguous whether the lunar perigee and natural disasters is coincidence or not.

Two days after online warnings that the Supermoon might trigger disasters, the devastating Japanese tsunami forced everyone to think - could the movement of the moon cause natural calamities?

"Supermoons have a historical association with strong storms, very high tides, extreme tides and also earthquakes," the Daily Mail quoted astrologer Richard Nolle, who first coined the term in 1979, as saying in an interview with ABC radio.

However, scientists dismiss this as utter nonsense.

Dr David Harland, space historian and author, said, "It's possible that the moon may be a kilometre or two closer to Earth than normal at a perigee, but it's an utterly insignificant event."

Professor George Helffrich, a seismologist at the University of Bristol was equally dismissive.

"Complete nonsense. The moon has no significant effect on earthquake triggering. If the moon triggers "big" earthquakes, it would trigger the many of millions of times more "small" earthquakes that happen daily. There is no time dependence of those; hence no moon effect," he said.

According to Dr Roger Musson, of the British Geological Survey (BGS), the devastating earthquake occurred because the Pacific Plate is plunging underneath Japan.

However, while hoping for a non-disastrous ‘moon giant’, point your eyes and camera lenses toward the night sky on 19th. If the sky is clear, you’re gonna get an exceptional celestial treat.
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Monday, March 28, 2011

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Seadrill Limited (NYSE: SDRL) ordered a newbuild jackup and secured a five year contract for the unit from Conoco Phillips (NYSE: COP), Dahlman Rose reports.

“The rig is scheduled to be completed at the end of the third quarter 2013 for a total project price of $530MM,” Dahlman Rose writes. “The five-year contract with ConocoPhillips is valued at approximately $680MM, implying a dayrate of $370K/d. The jackup is an advanced, ultra large, harsh environment, high-spec unit based on the Gusto MSC CJ70 150A design, Seadrill's West Elara has the same design and is expected to begin working in 4Q11 at $350K/d.

“Both of these units are now part of Seadrill's 75% owned subsidiary, North Atlantic Drilling Limited. We estimate the new unit could earn approximately $100MM in gross EBITDA in 2014.”

Sunday, March 27, 2011

april fools pranks



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We're eating breakfast at home from now on, believe me! No, we're not usually against grabbing an early morning snack at a downtown restaurant, but gullible creatures that we are, we succumbed to every April Fool's trick that sly Henry Rooney pulled this morning.

And Henry, when it comes to pranks, is no slouch. He dug deeply into his bag of tricks today, much deeper than he usually does, and as a result probably only one person out of 10 finished his meal there. Forewarned and in spite of precautions,

we were no match for the smooth-working Irishman who tries to make every day April Fool's day.

Pancakes make for a fair breakfast. So with a cup of coffee that was to be our morning meal at Rooney's Gem Lunch Room, 112 Fifth Ave. N. First we picked up an innocent-looking knife from the counter but it exploded with a sharp crack which caused us to drop it suddenly. A waiter, trying to conceal a smile, apologized and substituted another knife - which was worse because it bent like rubber. And the butter on the counter was, alas, made of wax.

After examining a third knife closely, all was in readiness for our meal. The pancakes, however, were much like manhole covers with syrup. Cardboard had been put in the cakes. Shoving the plate aside, we figured at least the coffee would be okay. Uh huh, just as we thought. The spoon in the sugar bowl was bottomless: Henry's way of enforcing wartime sugar rationing these days.

Another spoon was provided for the transportation of the sugar to the coffee cup but the sugar was mixed with baking soda and the coffee fizzled over the sides. Poor Henry had difficulty concealing his joy in the backroom. Even the saucer stuck to the cup when it was raised to our mouth, a small suction cup doing the trick.

That was the end. So we retired to the far room with Henry and watched as other customers fell victim to a great variety of tricks. One lady screamed when she found a fly (made of wax) in her glass of milk. Another woman jumped when a fake spider on a string was lowered near her face. Even rubber, lifelike mice lurked in the corners of the eatery.

One by one, more tricks were brought into play. Cigarettes exploded, husky males labored on rubber donuts and cupcakes, high school boys chewed on liverwurst sandwiches made of rubber, and other customers gnawed on cotton fried up as breaded veal.

A birthday present was awarded to a woman. But when she opened the gift box it exploded and sent up a shower of paper balls.

We were late for work but it was worth it. So we paid our check without regret and started for the door. "Hmmm. Is that a quarter on the floor?" we wondered. Glancing furtively about, we stooped over and attempted to pick it up. Maybe this would compensate for our spoiled meal. But Henry was one step ahead all the time as the quarter was anchored to the floor. With a sputter we headed into the spring air.

Editor's Note: Henry Rooney, who began his La Crosse restaurant career in 1897, retired from the business in 1947 though he later worked occasionally as a tobacco clerk for the Bodega Restaurant. He died in 1970 at age 93.

vcu : virginia commonwealth university




watch full video click here
UK Basketball is back to the Final Four for the First Time In 13 Years

The Wildcats are one of the most storied programs in men's basketball. They have been lucky enough to have some of the brightest minds in the game coach their team.

Rick Pitino netted them a championship in 1996. His successor Tubby Smith did the same in 1998. That would be it for championships for quite some time. In fact, it has been a while since the Wildcats were welcomed into the hallowed halls of the Final Four. Thirteen years to be exact.

The drought is now over. Kentucky has a new guru of the hardwood. John Calipari has taken the Kentucky program back to the promised land in just his second year.

He is the full package when it comes to college coaches. He is a great recruiter. In his first year at Kentucky he signed an absurdly fantastic class that included John Wall and DeMarcus Cousins.

He has filled the Kentucky roster with talent that can get the job done. His most valued prize currently is Brandon Knight. The guard netted 22 points against North Carolina to ensure the Final Four berth.

You sense that Knight will be one and done like Wall and Cousins before him. I have confidence that Calipari will just restock the arsenal. That is what this man does.

He has showed that he is much more than a recruiter in this tournament though. His guys are playing timely defense and lights out shooting. But it is the job he has done shaping a young team that goes far with me.

This team had three freshman and not many returning players. That may be why they faltered during the season. Yet they began to gel at the right time. As the SEC Tournament heated up, Kentucky figured out how to play with one another.

It is extremely difficult to build a perennial contender in college basketball. You have to contend with a new roster every single season. Calipari has shown that he can command these young men to the highest of levels.

Kentucky is back, all thanks to John Calipari

Friday, March 25, 2011

Formula 1: Australian Grand Prix - Second Practice Results ,video




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Over the past decade, Formula One became a storefront window for many of the world’s major car manufacturers. BMW, Daimler, Ford, Honda, Renault, and Toyota bought teams to show off their brand name, cars and technology. After the economic crisis that started in 2009 hit auto sales worldwide, most of the companies pulled out of the sport, leaving only three last year: Mercedes, Fiat — via the Ferrari team it partly owns — and Renault, although the French manufacturer had sold much of its team.

Just when it looked as if the series would return to its traditional form as a playground for independent teams and private racers, a new car manufacturer trend has begun. And in this fast, high-octane, costly world at the pinnacle of auto racing, the new trend makes more sense than the previous one.

As the series prepares for the first race of the season at the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne on Sunday, half the 12 teams are again associated with or owned by car companies. But this time the accent is on luxury and high-performance sports cars.

“For us the push is on raising Infiniti awareness and using Formula One as a platform to do that,” said Simon Sproule, the head of marketing and communications at Nissan Motor, which owns the Infiniti luxury car brand. The company announced on March 1 that it had joined Red Bull, the reigning Formula One world champion team, as a sponsor and technological partner.

“We looked at the usual suspects — soccer, sailing and all those things,” Sproule added. “And very quickly we arrived at the conclusion that Formula One is still a very, very good place for a major global brand to have a presence. And it’s got the added benefit, of course, that it is related to the automotive business.”

Or as Andy Palmer, senior vice president of Infiniti, said, Formula One complements “Infiniti’s ethos of ‘inspired performance.”’

Infiniti is the biggest and the latest of the luxury car companies to enter the sport. But it will share the spotlight with some tough competition: Ferrari, Mercedes, McLaren, Lotus and Marussia, a Russian sports car company.

Since last autumn, Lotus, Mercedes and Marussia have bought into teams or increased their team-ownership shares. After years as a minority shareholder and engine supplier at McLaren, Daimler completed its buyout of the team that has run under the Mercedes name since last year.

The team that set the standard, of course, was founded on the principle that the others are now imitating: Ferrari, which has raced in the series since it began in 1950, was founded in 1946, and the racing division and the selling of the company’s road cars were always tied together. Success on the track leads to car sales and car sales lead to a budget to go racing.

There is also a close tie between the workers at the Ferrari road car and racing factory in Maranello, Italy, with the two sides working together to improve the models on either side of the divide.

McLaren has long tried to imitate the Ferrari model. After years of producing a sports car with Mercedes, it introduced its own MP4-12C sports car over the winter. The MP4-12C, the McLaren Web site says, is “equally at home on the track or on the road.”

Marussia entered Formula One last year as a sponsor to the Virgin team, but over the winter it, too, bought a large share in the company and intends to use Formula One to sell its cars and make the cars known around the world. Marussia was created in 2007 by Nikolay Fomenko, the company’s president, and Yefim Ostrovsky, and its B1 and B2 models were introduced at the Frankfurt Auto Show in 2009. Marussia’s philosophy for its cars is “innovation built on reliability.”

Formula One will race in Russia in 2014, and this worldwide exposure also attracts the companies.

“If you look at where we want to grow, and where the luxury market is growing now, it is no surprise: It is China, it is Southeast Asia, it is Russia, the emerging markets,” said Sproule, noting that these are the same countries and regions that hold many Formula One races. In Asia alone, their are Grand Prix races in China, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore and South Korea.

Ferrari was not the only traditional team that combined racing and sports car building. Its illustrious history was long matched by the Lotus team, which raced in Formula One from 1958 to 1994. Although the Lotus team, which was founded in 1952, returned to the sport last year with a team called Lotus Racing, the team was not tied to road-car development or sales. For this year, the Malaysian-owned Group Lotus decided to enter into a partnership with the Renault team, as part owner and sponsor. That new team is called Lotus Renault GP.

Behind this is a revival of the Lotus car company and the introduction of several new models of Lotus sports cars. The chief executive of Group Lotus, Dany Bahar, formerly worked at Ferrari. And he hired Donato Coco, a former Ferrari designer, as his chief designer.

“Lotus has been racing since the beginning,” Bahar said. “And I think if you build sports cars you need to be in racing. Because it shows the credibility, it shows that the technology comes from racing. It is the competitive spirit that you give into your sports car.”

But the connection with Formula One is not only about the image of racing and sports cars. It is about technological collaboration. And that, interestingly, has to do not only with making cars go faster, but making them more environmentally friendly.

This year, Formula One is reintroducing the Kinetic Energy Recovery System, or KERS, which stores energy while braking and releases it for power bursts. That is an area in which the needs of the two businesses come together, as the teams work with the manufacturers to develop the best systems and also grapple with the image problem of power in an environmentally conscious world.

“You need to walk and chew gum, as they say,” Sproule said. “You need to have cars that excite people. Because half the challenge about our business is getting people passionate about cars.”

duke basketball : Arizona defeats Duke, setting up showdown vs. UConn





Arizona guard Lamont “MoMo” Jones of Harlem, who never hesitates on the court, paused for nanosecond on Wednesday when he found himself stuck between his best friend Kemba Walker and a hard place.

Jones was talking about how his teammate, Derrick Williams, was the best player in college basketball.

“Better than your best friend?” he was asked.

“They’re two different players, two different positions,” replied Jones.

But now Walker, a point guard, and Williams, a power forward, are in the same lofty position today. They will lead their teams against each other for the right to go to the Final Four.

After Walker dropped 36 on San Diego State in a Connecticut win, Williams last night scored a career-high 32 points and grabbed 13 rebounds to lead the fifth-seeded Wildcats to a stunning 93-77 West Regional upset of No. 1 seed Duke at the Honda Center.

The result means there will be a new champ in college basketball.

The Blue Devils were seeking their fifth crown under coach Mike Krzyzewski, who was looking to become the first coach to post a repeat.

“The tournament is cruel,” Coach K said. “It’s an abrupt ending.”

Krzyzewski entered the game with 900 wins, but now must wait until next season to surpass Bobby Knight as the winningest coach in Division I history. Knight has 902 wins.

It also means tomorrow night will feature a showdown of two of the best point guards the City of Point Guards has ever turned out. Walker, from The Bronx, and Jones, from Harlem, were teammates at Rice High School in Harlem, and consider each other brothers.

“That’s off the court,” Jones said. “When you’re on the court, we’re enemies.”

“I’ve got to go with my teammates, He’s gotta go with his teammates, that’s just the bottom line,” added Jones. “We’re both going to come out and play two great games and try to lead our teams to the Final Four.”

The Huskies, the No. 3 seed (29-9), are going need more than Walker when they face these Men of the Desert. Arizona (30-7), the No. 5 seed, looks like a team on a mission.

Led by the 6-foot-8, 241-pound Williams, these aren’t merely Wildcats, they’re Tough Cats.

They outrebounded the Dukies 40-27, including 16-9 on the offensive boards. Kyrie Irving of West Orange led Duke with 28.

The Blue Devils led by as many as 11 in the first half and 44-38 at halftime, but it should have been more. Williams drained a deep 3 just before the buzzer to give Arizona a huge lift.

With Duke still holding a six-point edge at 53-47, the Wildcats’ athleticism at almost every position took over. They went on 19-2 run to seize a 66-55 lead with 12 minutes left.

Williams, from nearby La Mirada, Calif., arrived at Arizona as a skilled but shy player. Jones, the self-proclaimed trash-talking king of college basketball, made Williams his personal project.

“I called him a skinny bum,” said Jones, who had 16 points, six assists and zero turnovers. “I kept getting into his head, because I saw how good he could be.”

No one saw this coming. Out of the desert comes a storm that blew away the 2010 national champions.

Jersey Shore Season 4 PREVIEW


“Jersey Shore” Season 3 ended last night and already fans are searching for news about “Jersey Shore” season 4. The coming season will be set in Italy, something that has already amused, surprised and horrified some of the citizens of Italy.

For months Italians have been bombarded with stories about Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s soirees with young women. “Jersey Shore’s” arrival may be more reality than the country can stomach.

“That’s the last thing we need,” said Beppe Severgnini, a prominent commentator on the differences between Americans, Italians and Italian-Americans, said about the prospect of “Jersey Shore” coming to Italian shores in an interview with the Journal in January.

According to MTV News, the cast members of the show are eagerly anticipating their European trip. “For some reason, I really want to go on a gondola ride,” “Jersey Shore’s” Deena Cortese said. “Or I would like if we’re in Rome, I would like to see the love fountain, so I’m thinking I’ll steal a coin … maybe I’ll fall in love.”

Here’s a kinda of ridiculous faux photo slideshow of what the “Jersey Shore” Italian trip might be like.

For more, check out our story Italy Braces for ‘Jersey Shore.”

What did you think of the season finale of “Jersey Shore” Are you looking forward to their trip to Italy?

Thursday, March 24, 2011

good morning america video Chris Brown ,Britney Spears' 'GMA'




Brown went into a rage off stage, shattering a window, perhaps with a chair, and leaving ABC's studio without his shirt, all without completing a second scheduled performance.

During the interview, Roberts jumped right into a number of questions about Brown's 2009 arrest for the savage beating of his then-girlfriend, Rihanna. She mentioned that the restraining order that resulted from the incident had recently been relaxed, to which Brown responded: "I mean, it's not really a big deal to me now, as far as that situation, and I think today's the album day, that's what I'm focused on."

When asked what the acronym in the album name stands for, Brown said, "Forgiving all my enemies, and definitely, fans are my everything. That meaning, being able to go through everything I went through and show my fans that I love them."

That opened another opportunity for Roberts to try to bring the beating up, which Brown again preempted by very pointedly emphasizing his album. As the interview ended, Brown emphasized that he couldn't care less what others thought.