Friday

Kardashian confronts tradition at elite Vienna ball


At 24, Olga Goreglyad is a veteran of society balls around Europe but her ambition will not be fulfilled until she dances on Thursday night as a debutante at Vienna's Opera Ball - something celebrity guest Kim Kardashian will not be doing.

Almost every social group and profession in Austria, from confectioners to firefighters and pharmacists to refugees, holds its own ball, but the Opera Ball is the most elite, with a presidential opening and top-class music and ballet.

"It's an event where the opera can present itself. It's an important platform," opera director Dominique Meyer told Reuters.

But each year, the fine classical performances of the Vienna Philharmonic and State Ballet are overshadowed in the Austrian media by the paid celebrity guests invited by Viennese millionaire mall developer Richard Lugner.

Lugner's past guests have included singer Geri Halliwell and actors Larry Hagman and Pamela Anderson. This year, reality-TV star Kardashian is his main guest.

"Dancing is not my thing," she said at an autograph and question session on Thursday when asked whether she was having waltz lessons. Asked how she kept in shape, she replied: "Armenian genes and squats."

The 144 debutants and debutantes who will open the ball, on the other hand, have spent weeks in intensive rehearsals for a performance that lasts just three or four minutes but has a huge audience on television at home and abroad.

PROTESTS AND HIGH PRICES

"I'm actually addicted to dancing," said debutante Goreglyad, who works as a commercial producer in Moscow.

"I figured it was about time to stop being a debutante, but where to stop? It had to be the highest point, the Opera Ball," she told Reuters during a get-together at a vineyard in the Vienna Woods.

The tradition so admired by viewers from afar is not universally appreciated in Vienna. In past years, it has attracted large protests against its perceived decadence, as well as against some of the guests.

But much of the protesters' attention has switched to the so-called Academics' Ball organised by the far-right Freedom Party (FPOe). Opera Ball organiser Desiree Treichl-Stuergkh said she had hired some former Opera Ball protesters as DJs as part of a careful modernisation.

Treichl-Stuergkh said she was careful to maintain traditions treasured by guests able to afford prices that range from 250 euros ($340) for a regular ticket to 1,850 euros for a box - and that's before even a single glass of champagne.

She said the event was still a rite of passage for modern debutantes, even if it is no longer the formal entree into society it once was.

"Today a young girl of 18 has done almost everything," she said, "apart from opening the Opera Ball." -- Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

And the winner is... memorable Oscars moments


HOLLYWOOD -- From winners sobbing uncontrollably to shocking political outbursts, bizarre snubs and streakers, the Oscars have seen it all -- and Sunday's Academy Awards ceremony could provide fresh drama.

Organizers of Hollywood's biggest night are white-knuckled as they brace for more unscripted moments that could anger television viewers or throw the finely calibrated global telecast off schedule.

With a worldwide television audience in the hundreds of millions, the temptation to use the event as a platform for political statements has proved irresistible for past winners.



Boos rang out around the Kodak Theater in 2003 when maverick filmmaker Michael Moore launched a vitriolic attack on then-US president George W. Bush for waging war in Iraq.

But Moore was only following the tradition of turning the Oscars podium into a bully pulpit.

Arguably, the most famous example came in 1973, when a woman calling herself Sacheen Littlefeather stood before the stunned audience to collect Marlon Brando's best actor Oscar for "The Godfather."

Littlefeather promptly refused to collect the award on Brando's behalf to protest the movie industry's treatment of native Americans.

Four years later, Vanessa Redgrave drew gasps and boos from the Oscars faithful when she thanked the Academy for honoring her in "Julia" despite "the threats of a small bunch of Zionist hoodlums."

Oscars presenter Paddy Chayefsky chastised her to much applause: "I am sick and tired of people exploiting the Academy Awards for the propagation of their own personal propaganda.

"I would like to suggest to Miss Redgrave that her winning an Academy Award is not a pivotal moment in history, does not require a proclamation, and a simple 'thank you' would have sufficed."

Sometimes, the choice of awards recipients can stoke controversy.

The decision to grant director Elia Kazan a lifetime achievement award in 1999 divided the glitterati, with dozens of stars refusing to rise or applaud, in protest at the filmmaker's decision to cooperate with the authorities during the 1950s communist witch-hunts.

- Streakers and kisses -

Politics aside, Oscars night has been littered with memorable one-offs.

In 1974, a naked man invaded the stage as actor David Niven was hosting the show, prompting him to quip: "The only laugh that man will ever get in his life is by stripping... and showing his shortcomings."

More recently, Italian Roberto Benigni euphorically leapt from seat-back to seat-back when he won best foreign film for "Life Is Beautiful" in 1999 -- the same year Gwyneth Paltrow famously sobbed her way through her victory speech.

Then in 2003, actor Adrien Brody stunned viewers and superstar Halle Berry by kissing her passionately on the lips as she presented his best actor statuette, creating an Oscars signature moment.

In 2011, Melissa Leo forgot she was on primetime television when accepting her best supporting actress Oscar for "The Fighter."

Referring to Kate Winslet's past win, she said: "When I watched Kate two years ago, it looked so (...) easy," clamping her hand to her mouth almost immediately. ABC bleeped out the expletive on the time-delayed live broadcast.

The following year, Sacha Baron Cohen turned up in character as the star of his then film "The Dictator," holding a golden urn purportedly containing the ashes of late North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il -- which he proceeded to "accidentally" pour down the front of a visibly-irritated celebrity host Ryan Seacrest.

And this year? Who knows. We'll have to wait for Sunday night... -- Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com

Britain's banana price wars come at a cost to growers


LONDON – When a banana flown half-way round the world costs half the price of a locally-grown apple, many in Britain wonder whether Latin American banana producers are getting a fair deal.

The British love eating bananas. Like milk or bread, it is considered a shopping essential, a reason why consumers choose one shop over another and a battleground in the supermarket price wars.

Britain's Fairtrade Foundation charity, which promotes fair wages for developing world producers, kicked off a campaign in London this week to declare a truce in the battle that ends up with growers, mostly in Latin America, selling their bananas at below the cost of production.



Britain is the only country among the bigger European states where bananas are now cheaper than they were a decade ago. In Germany, France and Italy, prices have risen.

A banana that cost 18 pence ($0.30, €0.22) in Britain in 2002 now costs 11 pence around half the price of a locally-grown apple, according to the French Agricultural Research Centre for International Development.

Fairtrade Foundation chief executive Michael Gidney said: "Small farmers and plantation workers are the collateral damage in supermarket price wars.

"The poorest people are bearing the cost of our cheap bananas and they have to work harder as what they earn is worth less and less in their communities," he told a London press conference.

"As a result, a product that is worth billions of pounds in global trade relies on poverty-level income for the people who grow it."

Alfonso Cantillo, a Colombian banana producer from the north coast Magdalena area who sells to Britain, was invited to London by Fairtrade to highlight the issue.

He said he receives $8.15 (€5.95 ) per 18-kilogram box – when his production costs are $9.

"We get no real benefit for what we invest. It's very frustrating," Cantillo said.

"When banana prices fall, we suffer from the impact. Our living conditions go down. We need price stability."

Britons eat 100 bananas per year

Not even the supermarkets are making money on bananas. Fairtrade said retailer representatives estimate the big chains may be losing hundreds of thousands of pounds a week as a result of banana price competition.

Each Briton eats around 100 bananas per year. Most are from Latin America: 28 percent from Colombia; 24 percent from the Dominican Republic; 16 percent from Ecuador and the remaining 32 percent from other countries.

The British reliance on bananas is a fairly new phenomenon, all thanks to refrigerated transport allowing them to be imported from across the Atlantic in huge volumes.

The nearest place where they grow is Spain's Canary Islands, off the northwest coast of Africa.

The British government instigated a national banana day in 1946, in which each child received a ration of one banana when imports resumed again.

It was a joyous way to lift the national mood after the hardships of World War II – but not for Auberon Waugh and his sisters, whose father, the novelist Evelyn Waugh, ate theirs.

"It would be absurd to say that I never forgave him, but he was permanently marked down in my estimation from that moment," a traumatized Auberon Waugh wrote in his memoirs.

Fairtrade has focused on bananas rather than other produce because "what has happened on the price of bananas is quite extraordinary," said Barbara Crowther, their director of policy and public affairs.

Unlike bananas, says Fairtrade, the price of eggs, bread and sugar – to name three basic foodstuffs – have increased by between 40 percent and 120 percent since 2002.

The organization blames a structural problem: competition laws prevent supermarkets from agreeing a minimum price, while the European Union has opened up its markets to ever more growers.

Fairtrade has written to Britain's business minister Vince Cable pushing for a probe.

"We are calling on you to urgently investigate retailer price wars on bananas, evaluate the impact on the long-term interests of banana producers and UK consumers and take action on the findings," says the letter from Gidney.

Of several major British supermarket chains contacted by AFP, only Sainsbury's would comment.

"Not all supermarkets are the same, and everyone who buys a banana from Sainsbury's knows the grower is getting a fair price, as set by Fairtrade," said Judith Batchelar, director of Sainsbury's Brand. – Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com

Global warming slowdown likely to be brief – US, UK science bodies


OSLO - A slowdown in the pace of global warming so far this century is likely to be only a pause in a longer-term trend of rising temperatures, the science academies of the United States and Britain said on Thursday.

Since an exceptionally warm 1998, there has been "a short-term slowdown in the warming of Earth's surface," Britain's Royal Society and the U.S. National Academy of Sciences said in a report.

But, they said, that "does not invalidate our understanding of long-term changes in global temperature arising from human-induced changes in greenhouse gases."

The warming slowdown has emboldened those who question the evidence about climate change and ask whether a shift in investments towards renewable energies such as wind and solar power, advocated by many experts, is really needed.

But the report said that scientists were "very confident" that the planet would warm further this century, causing more extreme heatwaves, droughts and rising seas.

A build-up of greenhouse gases from human activities, mainly the burning of fossil fuels, is warming the atmosphere and the oceans, raising sea levels and melting Arctic ice, the report said, supporting the long-held view of a U.N. panel of climate scientists.

It projected that temperatures would rise by between 2.6 and 4.8 Celsius (4.7-8.6 F) by 2100 unless governments took strong action to limit rising emissions of greenhouse gases, broadly in line with U.N. estimates.

Temperatures have gained about 0.8 C (1.4 F) since the 19th century.

STAIRCASE

Almost 200 nations have agreed to work out a deal by the end of 2015 to combat climate change. So far there has been little progress in negotiations, partly because weak economic growth has sapped government interest.

Policy decisions were only possible if "based on the best possible advice about the science of climate change," Paul Nurse, President of the Royal Society, told a briefing.

The warming hiatus may be caused by shifts in the oceans that are absorbing more heat from the atmosphere, the report said. Other studies suggest that sun-dimming volcanic eruptions or a lower output from the sun may contribute.

Brian Hoskins, of Imperial College London, said warming trends in past decades had varied a lot despite rising greenhouse gas emissions. "It's a staircase rather than a gentle trend upwards," he said.

Among signs of rising temperatures, the report said that record heatwaves had hit Australia in 2013, the United States in 2012, Russia in 2010 and Europe in 2003. There had been fewer cold snaps, like in the United States this winter.

"It is now more certain than ever, based on many lines of evidence, that humans are changing Earth's climate," it said.

Last year, the U.N.'s panel on climate science raised the probability that human activities, rather than natural variations, were the main cause of warming since the 1950s, to at least 95 percent from 90 in a previous assessment in 2007.  — Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

2 Pinoys among 12 dead in Qatar restaurant gas explosion


DOHA - Twelve people including two Filipinos and two children were killed on Thursday when a gas tank exploded at a Turkish restaurant in the Qatari capital Doha, authorities in the Gulf Arab state reported.

About 30 others, including two Filipinos, were injured in the blast at the Istanbul Restaurant that one security source said was accidental.

Qatar officials have also ruled out terrorism in the blast, radio dzBB's Qatar stringer Manny Flores reported early Friday.

The report cited information from the Philippine Overseas Labor Office indicating one of the fatalities was a worker in a grocery store.

Both Filipino fatalities' bodies remained at a morgue as of Friday, the report said.

The two wounded are in the intensive care unit of Hamad Hospital, the report added.

On the other hand, the report also said one of the wounded asked Philippine officials not to notify relatives at home as the Philippine national's mother has a medical condition.

Citing initial reports, Flores said authorities have yet to determine if the two Filipino fatalities were inside the restaurant or were just passing by when the explosion occurred.

The two wounded Filipinos were reportedly just passing by the area and were hit by debris.

Major General Saad bin Jassim al-Khalifi, Qatar's head of public security, said non-Qatari Arabs, Asians and one Qatari were among the dead and wounded.

Another security source at the scene said two Asian children were among the dead.

Preliminary investigation suggested a gas tank exploded, setting off a fire and causing part of the building to collapse, he told a news conference. But investigations were continuing to discover why the gas tank exploded.

"It was a very big blast," he said. "It blew away cars and shrapnel was scattered 50 to 100 meters away."

Chunks of masonry, metal debris and shattered glass lay outside the restaurant in a northwestern district of the city. Cars nearby were apparently crumpled by the explosion.

The incident was the deadliest in Qatar since May 2012, when at least 19 foreign nationals, including 13 children, were killed by a fire in an upscale shopping mall.

In a separate incident on Thursday, medics and security sources at the Hamad medical city in Doha said dozens of people were hurt in the afternoon due to a gas leak at a chemical plant in an industrial area near Doha.

They gave no figures or details on their condition, but said helicopters were dispatched to fly victims of the leak to the Hamad medical centre quickly as ambulances had been caught in heavy traffic caused by the restaurant incident.

The gas- and oil-rich Gulf Arab state with an estimated national population of at least 200,000 has one of the highest standards of living in the world. The bulk of the 2 million population of Qatar are foreigners.

The restaurant is on the outskirts of the capital near Landmark mall, a well-known shopping complex usually busy with families.

"I was eating in a restaurant close by and suddenly heard a big (blast) and everything around me exploded," Abdul-Rahman Abdul-Kareem, an Indian driver, told Reuters at Hamad hospital. "I have too much damage now, my legs are broken and my head is (wounded)." — with Reuters/ELR, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Thursday

Even kids can make their own 'Flappy Bird' game in 15 minutes with this simple tool


What better way to celebrate a flappy, er, happy first birthday than teaching children to make their own "Flappy Bird" game?

A US-based organization advocating computer science education did just that, posting on its website the code for making a "Flappy Game."

"Flappy Bird is a simple game, and using the basics of computer science, any student can create their own version with endless possibilities," Code.org said on its website.

With the code, it said children can build their own Flappy game, "whether it’s Flappy Bird, or Flappy Easter Bunny, Flappy Santa, Flappy Shark with Lasers, Flappy Fairy or Flappy Underwater Unicorn."


It also said that with the code, any student can create his or her own variation of the popular but now-defunct mobile game "with endless possibilities."





"You can make your own rules, and make your flappy game as easy or as hard as you want. You can even reverse the scoring or make it change randomly as you play," Code.org said.

But best of all, it said students can share the code with one click so their friends can play the game on any computer or phone, or even inside Facebook or Twitter.

Meanwhile, Code.org also marked its birthday with one billion lines of code written by students in under three months.

"Since we launched the Hour of Code and its follow-up course in December, over 27 million users, in 34 languages, across 170 countries together wrote one billion lines of code in our tutorials," it said.

In 15 minutes

A separate report on GeekWire said the code allows children to develop their own "Flappy Bird" game in 15 minutes.

It quoted Code.org co-founder Hadi Partovi, a Seattle entrepreneur who founded Code.org with his brother Ali, as saying the idea for a "Flappy Bird" tutorial came about during a Code.org employee happy hour.

"The entire group was playing Flappy Bird competitively when they realized they could not only play this fun game, but also let others create it," it said.

“We already know that the chance to ‘make an app’ is something people aspire to, but they think it’s out of reach. We want to give kids something that lets them express a degree of creativeness,” Partovi said.

“There are endless possibilities and kids can try them and realize the creativity involved in computer science within just 20 minutes,” Partovi added.

Code.org described itself as a "non-profit dedicated to expanding participation in computer science education by making it available in more schools, and increasing participation by women and underrepresented students of color."

"Our vision is that every student in every school should have the opportunity to learn computer programming. We believe computer science should be part of the core curriculum in education, alongside other science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) courses, such as biology, physics, chemistry and algebra," it said. — VC/TJD, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Evening workouts don’t disturb sleep


NEW YORK - Couch potatoes looking for a reason to forgo working out in the evening may no longer be able to use difficulty sleeping afterward as an excuse, according to a recent study.

Researchers found that people who exercised in the evening reported sleeping just as well as those who weren't active in the hours before bed. People who worked out in the morning reported getting the best sleep, on average.

"Sleep recommendations suggest avoiding exercise prior to bed," said Matthew Buman, lead author of the study from Arizona State University in Phoenix. "We found evidence to the contrary suggesting that individuals need not avoid exercise at night."

He and his colleagues analyzed responses collected from 1,000 adults participating in the 2013 National Sleep Foundation Sleep in America Poll. The telephone- and web-based questionnaire asked participants how well they felt they slept, how long they slept each night, how much time it took them to fall asleep, and whether they felt refreshed after waking up in the morning.

The poll also asked participants about their exercise habits, such as whether they worked out regularly and, if so, whether they were active in the morning, afternoon or evening. Evening was considered to be within four hours of going to sleep.

Based on the types of physical activity participants performed regularly, like tai chi, running or yard work, workouts were categorized by intensity as light, moderate or vigorous.

People who exercised vigorously in the morning were 88 percent more likely to report good sleep quality than non-exercisers and 44 percent less likely to say they woke up feeling unrefreshed.

Moderate-intensity morning exercisers were 53 percent more likely to say they slept well overall, compared to people who didn't exercise.

There was no difference in any of the sleep measures between moderate or vigorous evening exercisers and non-exercisers, according to findings published in the journal Sleep Medicine.

Experts said the study's poll-based methods may not necessarily be the most accurate gauge of sleep quality, however.

"As strange as it may seem, self-reported sleep—whether good or bad—is not a very reliable indicator of what's actually happening by objective measures with a person's sleep," Dr. Matt Bianchi said. He directs the sleep laboratory at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and was not involved in the new study.

"For example, only half of people with sleep apnea will feel sleepy or non-refreshed about their sleep—and sleep apnea is a fairly dramatic kind of sleep problem. I take with a grain of salt any ‘survey'-based studies such as this one," Bianchi said.

Although the National Sleep Foundation's sleep hygiene recommendations don't preclude pre-bedtime workouts, they do advise sticking to relaxing exercises, such as yoga, in the evening hours.

Researchers said the online or printed resources to which some doctors direct patients advise against evening workouts.

"Generally, physicians do have patients get a sleep hygiene resource, and often not exercising close to bedtime will be on there," said Dr. James Mojica, director of the Spaulding Sleep Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Mojica, who is also a sleep specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital, was not involved in the study.

Representatives from the National Sleep Foundation were not available for comment.

It's important to remember that sleep is different for each person; what helps one person's slumber may lead to insomnia in someone else, researchers said.

"Sleep hygiene recommendations are just that—things that might work in general. They are not written in stone," Bianchi told Reuters Health. He recommends people who are having trouble sleeping be "thoughtful and introspective about finding patterns in their own lives."

"Each patient may find by trial and error the best combination of things to do or to avoid," he said. —Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Bieber bodyguard charged with snatching camera at Georgia arcade


One of pop singer Justin Bieber's bodyguards has been arrested and charged with stealing a photographer's $10,000 camera outside an arcade in an Atlanta suburb, police said on Wednesday.

The 32-year-old guard, Hugo Hesny, was outside a children's play center and party business called the Funhouse late on Tuesday when he warned a photographer that he was too close to the teenage entertainer, the Sandy Springs Police Department said in a statement.

"A confrontation ensued and the photographer attempted to leave the location, but at some point, the security guard caught up and took the camera," the police statement said.

The incident was the latest in a string of legal problems involving 19-year-old Bieber, who last month was charged with driving under the influence, resisting arrest and using an expired license after Miami Beach police say they caught him drag racing. He has pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Local authorities on Wednesday released to the media several hours of video surveillance footage of Bieber while he was in police custody, but clips of him giving a urine sample were withheld for review by a judge.

In the latest run-in with law enforcement, Bieber's guard put the camera into a Cadillac Escalade, which police said they stopped as its driver entered a house in the area rented by the Canadian singer.

The guard and the driver were arrested and charged with felony theft, but charges were later dropped against the driver after it was determined he did not know about the camera snatching, police said.

Hesny admitted to police that he took the camera but said he only meant to delete pictures from it, not keep it, according to a police report.

Police said they recovered the camera, as well as a small amount of marijuana and "small pipes commonly used to smoke marijuana" from inside the Escalade.

"Due to the small amount, no charges were filed related to the marijuana," police said.

Bieber, whose private life has taken a tumultuous turn in the past year, also was charged last month with assaulting a limousine driver in Toronto in December. -- Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

One Direction's Louis Tomlinson to make football debut


One Directon singer Louis Tomlinson will trade packed out music arenas for the Keepmoat Stadium on Wednesday when he makes his reserve team debut for English second-tier side Doncaster Rovers.

"We've sold more than 4,000 tickets," Doncaster spokesman Steve Uttley was quoted as saying on the BBC. "The usual turnout for a match like this would be about 100."

The 22-year-old joined the Championship side on a non-contract basis in August but was injured in a charity match which prevented him making his debut.

Tomlinson, a lifelong Doncaster fan, will now feature in the Final Third Development League fixture against Rotherham United with the proceeds going to charity. — Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Wednesday

California couple finds $10M in buried treasure while walking dog


LOS ANGELES - A trove of rare Gold Rush-era coins unearthed in California last year by a couple as they walked their dog may be the greatest buried treasure ever found in the United States, worth more than $10 million, a currency firm representing the pair said on Tuesday.

The 1,400 gold pieces, dating to the mid- to late 1800s and still in nearly mint condition, were discovered buried in eight decaying metal cans on the couple's land last April, said coin expert David McCarthy of currency firm Kagin's.

"We've seen shipwrecks in the past where thousands of gold coins were found in very high grade, but a buried treasure of this sort is unheard of," McCarthy said. "I've never seen this face value in North America and you never see coins in the condition we have here."

Kagin's has declined to identify the couple, who according to the firm want to remain anonymous for fear treasure hunters will descend on their property in Northern California's so-called Gold Country, named after the state's 1849 Gold Rush.

The couple had been walking their dog when they came across a rusty metal can sticking out of the ground and dug it out. After finding gold coins inside they searched further and found the rest of the cache.

Also unclear is who hid the gold pieces, which were minted between 1847 and 1894, in a variety of 19th-century metal cans on land that eventually became part of the couple's yard.

McCarthy said it was curious that the containers were discovered scattered across one section of the property at different depths, suggesting that they were not all put there at the same time.

The $20 gold pieces appeared to have been new when they went into the ground and had suffered little damage from being in the soil for so long.

McCarthy said the couple wisely refrained from cleaning the coins themselves and brought a sampling of them to him in little baggies, still covered in soil.

"I picked up one of bags. It was an 1890 $20 gold piece. It was covered in dirt," McCarthy said, recalling when he first saw one of the gold pieces. "An area of the coin was exposed and the metal looked as if it had just been struck yesterday."

His company took what became known as the "Saddle Ridge Hoard" to an independent coin-grading service, which found that it was comprised of nearly 1,400 $20 gold pieces, 50 $10 gold pieces and four $5 gold pieces. One of the coins, a so-called 1866-S No Motto Double Eagle, is said to be valued at $1 million on its own.

"The Saddle Ridge Hoard discovery is one of the most amazing numismatic stories I've ever heard," said Don Willis, president of Professional Coin Grading Service. "This will be regarded as one of the best stories in the history of our hobby."

McCarthy said Kagin's will sell most of the coins on Amazon for the couple and that a sampling will be displayed at the upcoming American Numismatic Association show in Atlanta later this month. — Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Oscars pit gravitas of 'Slave' against pull of 'Gravity'


LOS ANGELES - To historian Brenda Stevenson, a scholar on American slavery, "12 Years a Slave" is a masterful cinematic work that achieves more than any other film on slavery, so worthy that she plans to screen it in classes at her university, UCLA.

It's the kind of validation "12 Years a Slave" has been earning from experts, critics, audiences and the film industry for six months now. Even so, the acclaimed drama may falter in the final test, losing out on the most coveted of movie prizes, the Academy Award for best picture.

The film from British director Steve McQueen appears to be the frontrunner for film's highest honor at Sunday's ceremony but has at least three factors conspiring against it: another high-quality, groundbreaking movie called "Gravity," the tricky math of Oscar voting and the film's own brutal depiction of American slavery.

"I think it is a hard film to watch," said Stevenson. "One of the things I think Steve McQueen does extremely well is capture the violence of the institution."

That unflinching portrayal of a real American story, that of the free black man Solomon Northup who is tricked and sold into slavery, may win on the gravitas scale. But sometimes the 6,000-plus voting members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences just want to reward enjoyable entertainment and "Gravity" gives that in spades.

If this year's nine best picture nominees add up to the strongest year for film in recent memory, they also have injected a good dose of uncertainty into Hollywood's biggest night. Voters had a good and varied lot from which to choose, with big successes such as "American Hustle" and "The Wolf of Wall Street," and smaller films "Nebraska" and "Philomena."

"In the 12-13 years that I have been doing this stuff seriously, I can't remember a best picture race in which there was less certainty than there is this year," said Scott Feinberg, awards analyst at The Hollywood Reporter.

Over at the other trade publication, Variety, awards editor Tim Gray said that "more than ever, I'm totally flummoxed."

"I think best picture is between '12 Years a Slave' and 'Gravity' but I wouldn't bet money on that," Gray said.

In a telling sign of the tight battle, the two films had an exact tie in one of the most reliable predictors of the Oscar best picture, the Producers Guild Award.

The heightened drama around the big prize could give viewers an extra reason to tune in to the live ABC telecast of the glamorous event, hosted this year by comedian Ellen DeGeneres.

The cliffhanger category also stands in contrast to more predictable outcomes in the top acting races. Cate Blanchett should win best actress for "Blue Jasmine," while Matthew McConaughey is favored for best actor for "Dallas Buyers Club" and co-star Jared Leto has a lock on best supporting actor.

The best supporting actress category could see favorite Lupita Nyong'o, the slave Patsey in "12 Years a Slave," upset by Jennifer Lawrence's loopy wife in 1970s caper "American Hustle."

For best animated film, the tale of Nordic princesses "Frozen" is expected to give the Disney Animation Studios its first Oscar in that category since it was added in 2002.

IT'S TIME?

"American Hustle" and "Gravity" lead nominations with 10 nods a piece, followed by "12 Years a Slave" with nine. But if the best picture award were decided at the box office, "Gravity" from Warner Bros. and Mexican director Alfonso Guaron would be the winner.

The outer-space thriller starring Sandra Bullock, for which Cuaron pushed the technical and visual effects boundaries, has brought in $270 million in North America and $703 million worldwide. That's nearly as much as the $780 million earned collectively by the nine best picture nominees in the U.S. and Canada. For his feats, Cuaron is favored to win best director.

"12 Years a Slave," in comparison, has pulled in $49 million at the domestic box office, a respectable figure for a hard-to-watch picture that features bloody whippings, lynchings and evil slave masters.

Even the studio feared members of the Academy might skip it, compelling Fox Searchlight Pictures to goad them into seeing the film with ads during the Feb 12-25 voting period showing slaves embraced with the tagline "It's time." Some Oscar watchers said the ambiguous phrase could also be seen as shaming voters.

The voting system for best picture also complicates the fortunes of the slave drama. It is a so-called preferential ballot in which members rank their top films rather than vote for just one and the consensus can emerge from films that are many people's second or third choices.

But if history is a lesson, the Academy voters should go for the more serious subject matter.

"They generally are not looking to just reward the most fun movie, they are looking to reward the movie that has something meaningful to say," said Feinberg.

"And if that is the case this year, the winner would clearly be '12 Years a Slave.'"

The Academy would also make its own history with that choice: "12 Years a Slave" would be the first best picture from a black director in 86 years of awards.  — Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Apple beset by Angry Birds malware


It may take no less than these Angry Birds to remind users of Apple computers running OS X that their machines are not invulnerable to malware.

A new wave of malware is disguising itself as cracked versions of Angry Birds, as well as popular apps such as Pixelmator, security researcher Graham Cluley said.

"(M)alware experts at ESET labs have also seen OSX/CoinThief spread through torrents as cracked versions of (several) popular Mac OS X applications," Cluley, who had worked for security firms including Sophos, said in a blog post.

He said OSX/CoinThief, first discovered earlier this month by SecureMac researchers, threatens to steal Bitcoin-related login credentials via malicious browser add-ons.

On the other hand, he said ESET researchers had warned Mac users against downloading pirated software from file-sharing peer-to-peer networks lest these contain similar malware.

"There is clearly strong evidence that the trojan was specifically designed to profit from the current Bitcoin craze and fluctuating exchange rates," he added.

Cluley said the malware disguised as cracked apps other than Angry Birds include:

BBEdit: an OS X text editor
Pixelmator: a graphics editor
Delicious Library: a media cataloguing application

Citing data from ESET, Cluley said the threat is particularly active among Mac users based in the United States.

"Whether you’re a Bitcoin-enthusiast or not, it’s essential that you protect your Mac with an up-to-date anti-virus product, and resist the temptation to download cracked and pirated software," he said. — TJD, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Food and drink industry makes progress on development – Oxfam


BERLIN – Many of the world's top food and drink companies are taking steps to improve their social and environmental impact on poor countries, although there is still much more to do, development group Oxfam said on Wednesday.

Oxfam launched its "Behind the Brands" campaign a year ago to try to assess the real impact of food and drink companies on the countries where they source raw materials, especially given a proliferation of public commitments to sustainability.

Oxfam said the companies it ranked as most responsible – Nestle, Unilever and Coca-Cola – had extended their lead over the others, while General Mills had replaced Associated British Foods in last place.

Big food and beverage companies have come under increasing scrutiny in recent years over their sourcing of raw materials, courting criticism on issues ranging from child labor on cocoa farms to the impact of palm oil plantations on rain forests.

Oxfam said its campaign had been helped by thousands of consumers bombarding brands with messages calling for action as well as a joint statement from 31 investment funds representing nearly $1.5 trillion of assets reiterating the Oxfam demands.

"Those that are not moving fast enough will pay a price with the public, investors and communities in the field," Chris Jochnick, director of Oxfam's private sector work, told Reuters.

"Those companies that move first should see benefits in long-term access to sustainable supply chains which should be reflected in their share price."

Oxfam said the biggest 10 food and beverage companies it studied had huge impact given that their annual revenues of more than $450 billion are equivalent to the national income of all the world's low-income countries combined.

Oxfam ranked the firms on their policies in areas it sees as critical to sustainable agriculture: women, small-scale farmers, farm workers, water, land, climate change and transparency.

Reputational concern

Nestle came first, Unilever second, Coca-Cola third, Mondelez International and PepsiCo joint fourth, Mars and Danone joint sixth, Kellogg Co. eighth, AB Foods ninth and General Mills in 10th place.

Jochnick said General Mills had lost ground due to a lower score for transparency as it was not publishing as much information as before on its water policies.

General Mills said it had a strong focus on sustainability and believed its efforts merited a better score, noting the Oxfam score was based only on publicly available information.

"We are working to conserve and protect the resources upon which our business depends around the world, and we continue to improve our products and practices broadly across our supply chain," it said in an emailed statement.

AB Foods said it had taken note of the report and that the company was working hard to ensure suppliers met the highest ethical standards. "We continue to place ethical behavior and practice at the heart of what we do," a spokesman said.

Oxfam said the biggest improvements in company policies had come on policies over land, gender equality and climate change.

"What initially sparks companies' attention is reputational concern but as they dig into these issues they have started to find financial reasons to do the right thing," Jochnick said. – Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Tuesday

Vine community mourns loss of comedian Nick Spears


The community of users of Vine, Twitter's six-second video service, are mourning the loss of Nick Spears, the comedian-writer who provided them with his entertaining spiels.

Spears, who was much-loved in the social-media community, died at age 35 from apparent heart complications last Friday, tech site Mashable reported.

"In addition to his social-media and standup comedy, the Los Angeles, Calif. resident was an active volunteer for F*ck Cancer, a non-profit organization that seeks to raise awareness, and end cancer through early medical detection," it said.


Vine sensation and cancer fighter Ryan McHenry became close with Spears via the social network, although the two never met in real life.

"He sent me F*ck Cancer t-shirts, wristbands, stickers and messaged me with some great advice on how to stay well and positive," McHenry told Mashable via Twitter. "He was so wonderful and kind-hearted, really helped me through a lot ... His comedy was unique and hilarious, and I can't believe he's gone."

Mashable cited a Vine video showing Spears dressed as Thor, fighting against smoking.

Mashable noted Spears gained 113,000 followers on Vine, after entertaining netizens with his "feel-good jokes, delightfully crass voiceovers and character-driven comedy."

Many of his followers naturally posted their messages of sympathy on Vine.

"Despite its more than 40 million users, Vine's most popular users are known for their close friendships and collaborations, especially within the comedy community. In response to the news of Spears' death, dozens of users took to Vine and Twitter to express their memories and condolences," Mashable said. — VC, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

A cold night of amazing music at the 7107 International Music Festival


The cold night did not bother the guests who spent their Sunday at the Logistics Park in Angeles City, Pampanga, to witness three big international musical acts as the 7107 International Music Festival came to a close.

The festival was held in an enormous field. Upon entering, the guests were welcomed by local acts performing on the second stage, while nearby were food stalls where you could buy expensive beer (P100) and water (P80).

While there were clearly fewer people than the producers anticipated to fill the park's hundred-plus hectares of land, the crowd that was there partied the night away in great festival fashion.

The majority of the attendees—both men and women—went for the safest formula: sleeveless tops and above-the-knee shorts. It was amusing to see men showing some skin at the event, despite the freezing weather. As for the ladies, bra tops and dangkal shorts were definitely 7107's uniform look. Others even wore 7107 looks with aviators and round sunglasses at night.

Health and injuries

With an event as big as the 7107, injuries were inevitable. During Empire of the Sun's set, a girl dressed in a white sleeveless top passed out. She later covered her face with her hair as security put her in a wheelchair and assisted her out.

According to a Medical City representative, sprain, fracture, and dehydration were the most frequently reported conditions at the event. Moreover, more of them occurred on the first day than on the second.

7017 and the pyrotechnics

The crowd seemed tired after Kendrick Lamar's set, yet most of them were eager to see the spectacle of Empire of the Sun, while anxiously waiting for the festival's pride and joy, the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Lamar's one-hour set was cool—dressed in a black and white ensemble, the Grammy-nominated rapper performed his hit songs alongside his DJ on the stage. He also sent a message to the crowd, saying "I will be back" as the crowd went even wilder and shouted for more.

"Super solid! Hip-hop definitely has a place here in the country," Iconn Cayabyab, a guest in the general admissions area, said to GMA News Online. "He played his famous songs from his Grammy-nominated album 'good kid, m.A.A.d city' and some from his old album, 'Section 80'."

"Everyone was pumped up when he played his famous songs. And when he challenged the crowd to shout out loud, everyone was game," he added.

Empire of the Sun's performance was a different ball game. The Australian duo showed the crowd what it felt like to watch a concert in full theatrics, with four backup dancers all dressed in white spacesuits.







The band also rocked the stage in their over-the-top costumes. Luke Steele went with his signature headdress that looked like the rays of the sun, while Nick Littlemore kept thanking Manila (even though the festival was set in Pampanga) for the warm welcome.

Their finale song was a smash. Performing their hit song and party-anthem "Alive," the crowd were on their feet and singing along.

"Theyre the only artist who had stage props and effects! No dead moment kasi all their songs are upbeat," concert-goer Nikki Santos said. "Even if people don't know the lyrics, they're still dancing!"

During the Red Hot Chili Peppers' set, the main stage area was filled by a much larger crowd, with the VIP guests waving LED lights in the air and the rest singing to the band's opening number.

The crowd went wild when the band performed "Dani California," "Under The Bridge," and "Californication." Almost everyone was on their feet singing their lungs out, while some lay down on the grass, unmindful of the empty beer cans, used tissues, and water bottles and just looking up at the stars while enjoying the awesome music.





7107 concluded with beautiful fireworks the same time the RHCP closed their show with "Give It Away." Upon exiting the field, the attendees seemed happy about the line-up of performers who gave their best at the controversial, but still somewhat successful, 7107 International Music Festival. It was surprisingly a night to remember. — BM, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Monday

HSBC warns of choppy emerging markets as profit misses forecasts


LONDON – HSBC reported a 9 percent increase in annual pretax profit on Monday, which missed market expectations, and warned of greater volatility in emerging markets this year, sending its stock price sharply lower.

Europe's largest bank has axed tens of thousands of jobs and sold or closed 60 businesses over the past three years to cut costs but is under pressure to show how it can boost revenues in the face of slowing growth.

Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver's warning of choppy markets this year sent HSBC's shares down more than 4 percent in mid-morning trade.

The bank reported a 2013 pretax profit of $22.6 billion, up from $20.6 billion in 2012 but below the average forecast of $24.3 billion in a Thomson Reuters poll. Revenues fell 5 percent, partly reflecting the disposal of some businesses.

Operating expenses dropped by $4.3 billion last year, below the $5 billion drop anticipated by analysts. – Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Mark Zuckerberg stars in the mobile industry's biggest fair Monday


BARCELONA - Billionaire 29-year-old Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg stars in the mobile industry's biggest fair Monday, fresh from his $19 billion (14-billion-euro) takeover of smartphone messenger WhatsApp.

The keynote speaker on the opening day of the February 24-27 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, Zuckerberg has come a long way in the mobile world in a short time.

When Facebook sold its shares to the public in an initial public offering in May 2012, "it literally had no mobile advertising revenues," said Eden Zoller, analyst at the research house Ovum.

"It did actually have a pretty strong mobile user base at IPO but what it had failed to do at that time was actually monetise those mobile users," she said.

At the time of the float, worries over the lack of money coming in from the mobile business sent Facebook's shares sliding.

But the social network — boasting more than 1.2 billion members — quickly repaired its strategy.

By the end of 2013, mobile devices accounted for 53 percent of Facebook's advertising revenue, bringing in $1.2 billion in the last quarter and more than $3 billion over the whole year.

However mobile advertising can be "highly intrusive", Zoller cautioned, especially if it interrupts a user's engagement with an application.

"You have to be very careful."

Nevertheless, the social network needs to keep up the momentum, the analyst said.

"It can't be complacent. On the mobile front it is particularly important. Consumers have an increasing number of social media and social messaging alternatives to Facebook."

The company still has a weak point, however, she added: its failure to carve out a strong position in mobile payment systems, which are expected to show strong growth in the next few years.

Nonetheless, Facebook is clearly building a base for further revenue growth.

On Wednesday, the social network announced its takeover of WhatsApp, which followed last year's smaller purchase of online photograph-sharing site Instagram.
 
Half a billion users on WhatsApp
 

"Facebook is paying for one of the fastest growing audiences in history — WhatsApp is now nearing half a billion users globally — and the monetisation potential that that brings," said Guillermo Escofet of research house Informa.

Facebook has captured 18.4 percent of the mobile publicity market, making it the number two force after Google, according to digital media analysts eMarketer.

"They performed a remarkable turnaround from about two years ago," said Escofet, recalling the social network's early reluctance to push advertising to mobile devices.

"The reason for that is because they did not want to compromise the user experience on mobile and they did not want to cram the small mobile screen with ads," he said.

Facebook's solution was to integrate advertising into its users' news stream, where members read the latest events in their "friends"' lives.

It has proven an efficient strategy. Of Facebook's 1.23 billion users who are active at least once a month, three-quarters access the site from their smartphones.

Today, it is a "mobile company", declared Sephi Shapira, chief executive of advertising platform MassiveImpact, a Facebook partner.

"We are very happy with them," he said.

MassiveImpact's clients publicise on Facebook but only pay when a user clicks on the advertisement and then actually buys the product.

For products such as insurance, the percentage of users who make a purchase after clicking on a web advertisement is often in single digits, but for mobile apps that figure can rise to 20 or 30 percent.

"For app promotion, I think they're definitely the best," Shapira said.

Many advertisers now devote all their publicity to mobile devices, not even spending on Internet advertising, he said.

But "I think we should not get too excited," Shapira cautioned.

"You have to run just to stay alive. So in this market, you have to constantly be innovating and developing new technologies just to survive, if you don't, you disappear." — Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com

Pope tells cardinals to shun intrigue, cliques of a royal court


VATICAN CITY - Pope Francis urged cardinals, who make up the top echelon of the Roman Catholic Church, on Sunday to shun the intrigue, gossip and cliques typical of a royal court.

Since his election nearly a year ago, Francis has often told his top aides not to live or behave like a privileged class. The eight-year papacy of his predecessor, Benedict, was marked by mishaps and missteps, which were often blamed on a dysfunctional Vatican bureaucracy and intrigue befitting a Renaissance court.

On Sunday, Francis celebrated a mass with 18 of the 19 new cardinals who were elevated to that rank on Saturday. One could not attend because of illness.

"A cardinal enters the Church of Rome, not a royal court," Francis said in his sermon, welcoming the men into the elite group that help him run the Church in the Vatican and around the world.

"May all of us avoid, and help others to avoid, habits and ways of acting typical of a court: intrigue, gossip, cliques, favouritism and preferences," he said during a solemn ceremony in St. Peter's Basilica.

It was the second consecutive day that Francis had warned cardinals to shun worldly temptations in the corridors of clerical power, either at home or in the nerve centre of the 1.2 billion-member Church.

At the induction ceremony on Saturday, which was attended by ex-pope Benedict, Francis urged the cardinals to avoid rivalries and factions. It was the first time Francis and Benedict, who resigned on Feb. 28, 2013, had been together for a liturgical celebration.

The "Vatileaks" scandal, in which Benedict's butler was arrested for leaking the pope's private papers to the media, alleged corruption in the Holy See, something the Vatican denied.

"Jesus did not come to teach us good manners or to behave as if we were at a social gathering," Francis told them.

United in simplicity and service

He asked the new cardinals to remain united among themselves and with him as they advise and help him run the Church in the Vatican and beyond in a spirit of simplicity and service.

Since his election last March as the first non-European pope in 1,300 years, Francis has attempted to infuse the Vatican and the Church with his simple style.

Last month, when he announced the names of the new cardinals, he quickly followed up with a letter to each asking that they not see their appointment as a promotion and not to waste money holding celebratory parties.

Francis, who has called for a "poor Church, and for the poor", has set the example himself. He has opted to live in a simple boarding house rather than the Apostolic Palace, and travels in a blue Ford Focus rather than a luxury car.

Cardinals are the pope's closest advisers in the Vatican and around the world. Apart from being Church leaders in their home countries, those who are not based in the Vatican are members of key committees in Rome that decide policies that can affect the lives of all Roman Catholics.

Sixteen of the new appointees are "cardinal electors" who join 106 existing cardinals who are also under 80 and thus eligible to enter a conclave to elect a pope from among their own ranks.

They come from Italy, Germany, Britain, Nicaragua, Canada, Ivory Coast, Brazil, Argentina, South Korea, Chile, Burkina Faso, the Philippines and Haiti. The non-electors come from Italy, Spain and Saint Lucia. — Reuters

Samsung's new smartwatches have fitness features


BARCELONA, Spain —Samsung unveiled two new computerized wristwatches on Sunday, this time including health sensors and related fitness features to give people a reason to buy one.

Samsung's first Galaxy Gear smartwatch came out last fall amid much fanfare, but it landed with a thud in the marketplace. Samsung and its smartwatch rivals had failed to persuade many consumers that they need to be able to constantly check messages from their wrists. Wearable devices that succeeded tended to be fitness products such as the Fitbit.

The new Gear 2 and Gear 2 Neo will have a heart rate sensor, a pedometer and various tools to measure exercise, sleep and stress levels. The low-resolution, 2-megapixel camera on the Gear 2 is being moved to the main body; it was on the strap on the original Gear. The Gear 2 Neo has no camera and is slightly larger, but lighter. Available colors are also slightly different.

It's unclear whether the new watches will continually display the time. In the original Gear, that was shut off to save battery, which lasted just a day. The new watches promise two or three days under normal use, putting them more in line with what rivals offer.

Samsung didn't announce prices for the new watches, but said they would be available in April. The original cost $300.

Samsung Electronics Co. announced the new watches Sunday before the Mobile World Congress wireless show in Barcelona. Samsung has a major event Monday evening, during which it is expected to announce a successor to its popular Galaxy S4 smartphone.

The company decided to make the latest smartwatches with a little-known operating system called Tizen OS, instead of the Android system from Google used in the original Gear, as the South Korean electronics company tries to break the dominance Google has on mobile devices.

The move gives some credence to a fledging system that Samsung and other backers want to see on all sorts of devices, including televisions, refrigerators and cars. Samsung already has a Tizen camera out, but a Tizen phone has yet to emerge, despite expectations of one last year. For now, Samsung is putting Tizen on a smartwatch instead.

Although Google gives away Android for any manufacturer to use in its gadgets, it's loaded with a range of Google services, including stores for apps, music and video. Samsung is trying to promote its own stores as well and ends up confusing users by including two of everything.

To prevent Google from having a similar dominance in wearable devices and other gadgets beyond phones and tablets, Samsung is pushing Tizen OS as an alternative.

But before Tizen can take off, Samsung needs the new Gear to be a success.

The original Gear worked with selected Samsung phones to display email and text alerts. It also had a camera on the strap for low-resolution photos and a speakerphone on the watch to make calls, Dick Tracy-style. The Gear's 1.6-inch screen keeps the watch small enough — at least for men — to work as a fashion accessory. Straps came in six colors.

The device had many shortcomings, however.

Its $300 price tag was 50 percent higher than what Sony Corp. charges for its SmartWatch 2. And the Gear worked only with selected Samsung phones — in fact just one model when it launched — while watches from Sony and Qualcomm Inc. work with a greater pool of Android devices from a variety of manufacturers.

In addition, app selection on the Gear was limited, while the apps that were available fell short on functionality. Although the Gear was supposed to offer quick access to information so you don't have to constantly pull out your phone, many of the alerts simply tell you to return to the phone to read a new message.

source: daytondailynews.com

Sunday

One dead, 27 made ill by carbon monoxide at New York mall


One man died and dozens more were treated in hospitals or at the scene after suffering carbon monoxide poisoning at a mall restaurant on New York's Long Island on Saturday evening, police said.

Police responding to a call about an injured woman at the Legal Seafood restaurant in Huntington Station, New York, found the 55-year-old manager unconscious in the basement, Suffolk County Police said.

The manager, Steven Nelson, died of cardiac arrest as he was being transferred by ambulance said Julie Robinson-Tingue, a spokeswoman for Huntington Hospital.

Soon after arriving, police and emergency personnel felt nauseous and dizzy and recognized the symptoms as a carbon monoxide event, Suffolk County police said.

At least three people taken to the hospital remained in a stable condition while at least six were treated and released, she said.

In all, 27 people were taken to hospital, according to Suffolk County police.

Most victims were restaurant employees, but three police officers and four ambulance employees were among those who fell ill, Suffolk police said.

Homicide and arson squad detectives were investigating, with focus on the restaurant's heating system.

Neither representatives for the mall nor the restaurant could be reached for comment. — Reuters

Saturday

Records show Fed on edge during darkest days of 2008 crisis


Federal Reserve policymakers, in a tense meeting on one of the darkest days of the financial crisis, worried Lehman Brothers' failure would wreak havoc on a teetering financial system but feared cutting interest rates might prove an over-reaction.

At a meeting the day after the investment bank filed for bankruptcy, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke flatly told colleagues he was philosophically torn about how the U.S. central bank should respond, if at all, to the turmoil set off by Lehman's collapse.

The revelation came in transcripts of the Fed's 2008 policy deliberations released on Friday. The 1,865 pages throw light on a debate over whether to loosen monetary policy to battle a crisis that was fast engulfing global financial markets.

In a year that saw the United States and most of the developed world sink deep into a brutal recession whose scars still linger, U.S. central bankers wrestled with how to respond to panicked markets and economic data that sent mixed signals.

At the time, some officials thought the maelstrom would be resolved quickly, and many were wringing their hands over a run-up in inflation and hesitant to come to the aid of the economy.

At the Sept. 16 meeting, Bernanke struggled to weigh the moral hazard of "ad hoc" decisions to help failing banks against the possibility of "very severe consequences for the financial system and, therefore, for the economy of not taking action."

"Frankly, I am decidedly confused and very muddled about this," he said. "I think it is very difficult to make strong, bright lines given that we don't have a structure that has been well communicated and well established for how to deal with these conditions."

In the end, the Fed stood pat. Within a month, however, it had entered full crisis-fighting mode, and by the end of the year it had cut rates to near zero and launched the first of its several controversial bond-buying programs.

On Sept. 16, the day the Fed Board authorized a $85 billion loan to prevent the bankruptcy of insurer American International Group, policymakers were torn: inflation was running high, but signs of economic weakness were everywhere.

People in the tony suburbs across the bay from San Francisco were even deferring cosmetic surgery, joked then San Francisco Fed chief Janet Yellen, who succeeded Bernanke at the Fed's helm earlier this month.

Most of all, officials felt largely unable to gauge the likely fallout so soon after Lehman's bankruptcy, which turned out to be the beginning of a market sell-off that would cut the value of U.S. stocks almost in half.

Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren was one of the few who seemed certain of the fallout.

"This is already a historic week, and the week has just begun," he said, predicting firms would dump risky assets "with a vengeance."

He was the only official to call for a rate cut; others wanted to wait and see.

"Money doesn't talk; it swears," the Dallas Fed's Richard Fisher said, quoting Bob Dylan. "When you swear, you get emotional. If you blaspheme, you lose control. I think the main thing we must do in this policy decision today is not to lose control, to show a steady hand."

Bernanke, likewise, cautioned against rash action.

"We should be very certain about that change before we undertake it because I would be concerned, for example, about the implications for the dollar, commodity prices, and the like," Bernanke told the group as he summed up the discussion.

"So it is a step we should take only if we are very confident that is the direction in which we want to go."

Letting Lehman fail

As the worst recession in decades deepened, the U.S. economy shrank at an 8.3 percent rate in the fourth quarter of 2008. The unemployment rate soared to 10 percent the following year.

While the recovery has been erratic, growth has been strong enough and the jobless rate has fallen enough to prompt the Fed to start to unwind its extraordinary stimulus.

But in 2008, the crisis in the U.S. subprime mortgage market and in over-leveraged Wall Street banks quickly cascaded around the world, sparking investor panic.

On Sept. 16, tension was thick as the debate over the course of monetary policy turned to the issue of whether the Fed and the U.S. Treasury were right to let Lehman fail.

"I'm seriously interested in knowing what you ... think is the appropriate stage, if any, at which fiscal intervention becomes necessary," Bernanke asked Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker.

Lacker's response: let failing banks fail and leave it to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to pick up the pieces.

"We have a legislated program of fiscal intervention - deposit insurance - and the boundaries around that are very clear," Lacker said.

Kansas City Fed President Tom Hoenig, who is now vice chairman of the FDIC, concurred, and argued that easing policy to cushion the blow would merely compound the problem.

Rosengren, who like Lacker remains a Fed policy maker, countered that it was too soon to know whether letting Lehman collapse was the right thing to do.

"Given that the Treasury didn't want to put money in, what happened was that we had no choice. But we took a calculated bet ... We did what we had to do, but I hope we will find a way to not get into this position again."

In the end, only two of the five U.S. investment firms, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, survived the financial crisis - and only because of an unpopular taxpayer-funded bailout. The AIG bailout, which totaled $182 billion, also drew public scorn.

Bright side of life

Tension was also high in the lead up to JPMorgan's buyout of investment bank Bear Stearns in March, a deal guaranteed by the Fed.

On an unscheduled Jan. 9 conference call, Bernanke began the meeting by saying he thought rates needed to come down, but it would be appropriate to wait until a meeting at month's end.

Yellen said she could support a half-point rate cut "in the near future," but said she preferred to cut rates by a quarter-point immediately.

By the Jan. 21 meeting, Bernanke struck a much more urgent tone in advocating a rate-cut of three-quarters of a point, which the Fed carried out. "At this point we are facing potentially a broad-based crisis," he said. "We have to try to get it under control."

At a meeting a week later, some policymakers tried to look at positive signs, but Fed Governor Frederic Mishkin said those efforts reminded him of the Monty Python film that ends with characters that are being crucified, singing, "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life."

After an April interest rate cut of a small quarter-point to 2 percent, things looked less dire.

Indeed, the transcripts show top Fed officials thought their work was largely done. At a meeting in June, Yellen said she could see the Fed raising rates before year-end.

The market turmoil that followed the collapse of Lehman upended those expectations.

"I should say that this comes as a surprise to me," Bernanke said during an Oct. 7 call to line up support for a half-point cut. "I very much expected that we could stay at 2 percent for a long time, and then when the economy began to recover, we could begin to normalize interest rates."

"Clearly things have gone off in a direction that is quite worrisome." — Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Gui Adorno, wagi sa 'You're My Foreignoy' ng 'Eat Bulaga!'


First runner-up naman si James Sumner mula sa England, at second runner-up naman ang Italyanong si Diego Furoni.

Nakamit ni Gui ang  P200,000 cash prize, habang nag-uwi naman si P75,000 si James, at P50,000 kay Diego bilang premyo.

Kasama rin sa grand finals sina Eduardo Fagundes (Brazil), Petar Sajko (Croatia), Richard Hwan (Hong Kong), Christian Arno Williams (England), Reza Kianifar (Iran).

Nakamit ni Richard ang Dabarkads Choice Award, habang Best in Talent naman si Sumner dahil sa pagkanta niya ng "Lord, Patawad."

Nagsilbing judge sa You're My Foreignoy Grand Finals sina Jessica Soho, Lordinio Vergara, Gloria Diaz, Ruffa Gutierrez, at Joey De Leon. -- FRJ, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Japan gamers finally get PS4 at midnight launch


TOKYO - Diehard gamers in Japan who began queuing earlier this week finally got their hands on a new PlayStation 4 as Sony unleashed its console on home turf in a midnight launch.

The long-awaited Japanese launch comes after a stellar debut in the United States and Europe where more than 5.4 million units have been shifted since November, offering a bright ray of hope to Sony after years of gloomy sales of its key consumer electronics goods.

At midnight (1500 GMT Friday), the first 100 customers were allowed to take home a new console from Sony Building, a flagship display venue in Tokyo's bustling district of Ginza, putting the lucky few fans hours ahead of a nationwide mass release.

"Thank you for coming to this launch despite the cold," Andrew House, CEO of Sony Computer Entertainment, said to the first buyers.

Some of the eager fans had queued for the past two days to be among the first in Japan to own the new console.

"I want to play games with state-of-the-art technology," said Tetsuya Tamura, a 44-year-old IT engineer who arrived on Wednesday with his son, Shion, 19, to take first place in the queue.

Early adopters of the PS4 in Europe and the US have enthused over its vast computing capacity and the cinematic graphics it makes possible.

"I played on a trial one and found that its processing speed is fast and it's easy to play," said Shion, who had brought his PlayStation Portable to pass the time.

In the coveted US market, Sony boasted that video game industry sales data, reported last week by NPD Group, showed PS4 is far outselling Microsoft's Xbox One consoles, also released in November.

Analysts say sales at home are expected to widen the lead.

Sony's domestic rival, Nintendo, launched its new Wii U console in November 2012. It took more than a year for the video game giant to sell 5.86 million units.

PS4, Wii U and Xbox One are fighting to be at the heart of digital home entertainment at a time when consoles are under intense pressure to prove their worth as people increasingly turn to smartphones or tablets for games and videos.

Sony's gaming division has emerged as a potential savior for the once-mighty giant, which is struggling to reinvent itself in the digital age, having been left in the dust by its nimbler rivals like South Korea's Samsung.

Potential savior
The company, whose iconic Walkman changed the way people listened to music, has failed to repeat its earlier successes and this year warned it would book a $1.08 billion annual loss as it cuts 5,000 jobs and exits the stagnant PC market.

Moody's downgraded the firm's credit rating to junk, saying the maker of Bravia televisions had more work to do if it wanted to fix the holes in its tattered balance sheet.

It is not alone. Domestic rivals like Sharp and Panasonic have also suffered at the hands of US giant Apple and Samsung, and found themselves outplayed in the smartphone and low-margin television business.

But analysts said the PS4 might just help Sony turn the corner.

"Sony may not be able to see a sizable contribution for the current fiscal year, but is likely to harvest fruit later if the brisk sales continue," Hideki Yasuda, analyst at Ace Securities, told AFP.

"PS4 has a chance to establish a virtuous circle -- strong sales leading to popular titles," which would create more demand for the console, Yasuda said.

"It can be a potential cash cow for Sony." — Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com

Nicki Minaj's former stylist seeks $30M in wig dispute


ATLANTA - A celebrity hair stylist has accused rapper and former "American Idol" judge Nicki Minaj of stealing his designs for the colorful wigs that helped boost her career, according to a federal lawsuit filed on Friday seeking $30 million in compensation.

Terrence Davidson, whose celebrity clients include singers Patti LaBelle and Jennifer Hudson, began working for Minaj in 2010 and designed her wigs for high-profile events worldwide, the suit filed in Atlanta said.

The rapper also wore Davidson-designed wigs in a music video for the song "Super Bass," according to the lawsuit. One of Minaj's best-known wigs is called the "Pink Upper Bun."

Davidson, 41, said he and Minaj's staff discussed a joint business venture that would include selling wigs and creating a reality television show about a celebrity wig stylist.

But the performer and her representatives in 2012 "took active steps to isolate Mr. Davidson and preclude him from the notoriety he deserved for his wig designs," the lawsuit said.

Davidson stopped working for Minaj more than a year ago, and now the pop star is copying his wig designs and selling them online, he alleged.

Minaj "took a number of his popular wig designs, without his consent, and used them to start her own wig line," said the lawsuit.

Davidson's representatives claim it is the first-ever intellectual property dispute over wigs.

A spokesperson for Minaj could not immediately be reached for comment.

Minaj, who also is known for her extravagant stage performances, won the American Music Awards' favorite rap/hip hop artist and rap/hip hop album of the year for "Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded" in 2012. — Reuters

source: gmanetwork.com

Friday

Roberto Cavalli slams celebrity endorsements, commends Instagram


MILAN - Roberto Cavalli wants the world of fashion to turn its back on celebrity endorsements, and likes to use Instagram to stay in touch with his customers, the flamboyant Italian designer said at Milan fashion week on Thursday.

Speaking before unveiling a womens' autumn-winter collection for his youth-focused Just Cavalli line, the designer said he gave his clothes to famous people, but refused to engage a celebrity to promote his brand—a role known as a testimonial.

"I want fashion to be different from the way it is today, less linked to publicity, less tied to all those stars," Cavalli said backstage before his show at Milan's Arco della Pace monument.

Fashion and luxury brands have long allied themselves with celebrities to get media and consumer attention.

Recently, fashion house Versace chose Lady Gaga to appear in its campaigns, while down jacket maker Moncler featured US rapper Pharrell Williams in adverts for its sunglasses.

"I don't have testimonials. If they want pieces they call me and I give them willingly—and I don't make them pay."

But Cavalli admitted he was pleased when celebrities wore his clothes.

"I received a beautiful photo of Jennifer Lopez wearing Cavalli. I wasn't expecting it!" he beamed.

Cavalli said it was important to stay in close contact with his customers to find out what styles they want.

"I go and talk to the shop assistants. This helps me to understand people's desires.

The 73 year-old has also found a more technologically advanced way to sound out his clients' preferences.

"If I'm unsure about two things, like a bag or a color I put both on Instagram," Cavalli chuckled. "Then I write: which one do you prefer?"

Cavalli's show on Thursday was themed on a "rock renaissance" inspired by his native Florence. Models strutted around a rectangular runway wearing shaggy fur coats, tight patterned trousers and fringed suede boots which disappeared under short, asymmetric hemlines.

Diesel jeans founder Renzo Rosso, whose Staff International unit makes and distributes clothes for Just Cavalli, praised the collection and said the brand's sales were growing fast.

"I liked the connection between Roberto Cavalli's creativity and his technological capabilities," Rosso said, adding he was personally dressed in Cavalli-branded clothes.
"We are growing at a double digit rate with Cavalli."

Elsewhere in Milan on Thursday, Blugirl designer Anna Molinari presented a collection themed on "Swinging London" in the 1970s and Italian fashion powerhouse Prada showed shearling coats with contrasting woolly trim over translucent dresses that revealed cartoonish patterned underpants.

Designer Miuccia Prada, who is known for making statements on issues including women's rights with her catwalk collections, said after the show, "I don't want to do politics, it's fashion. I want to reflect on life."

Milan's biannual women's fashion week continues on Friday with shows for veteran designer Giorgio Armani's Emporio Armani line, and storied brand Versace. —Reuters

US Stocks- Futures edge higher with tech shares in focus


NEW YORK - U.S. stock index futures pointed to a higher open on Friday, indicating that a rally that lifted the S&P 500 close to record levels in the previous session could continue following some strong results from technology companies.

Market participants are looking ahead to data on January existing home sales, due at 10:00 a.m. EST (1500 GMT), which will give the latest glimpse into how the economy is faring as the U.S. Federal Reserve dials back its stimulus. Sales are seen falling 4.3 percent.

Recent economic data has been mixed, with many metrics - including housing starts on Wednesday - indicating softness, though analysts have largely shrugged that off, pinning the weakness to frigid weather rather than softening fundamentals. Thursday's rally was partially fueled by a bullish read on factory activity, which seemed to support that view.

Tech shares will be in focus a day after both Hewlett Packard Co and Priceline.com Inc reported results that topped expectations. Computer maker HP also raised its 2014 profit view, sending shares up 0.7 percent to $30.40 in premarket trading. Priceline rose 2.6 percent to $1,315.93.

Traders continued to watch the political situation in Ukraine, with EU mediators expecting an agreement between Ukraine's pro-European opposition and Russian-backed President Viktor Yanukovich, though the former was seeking last-minute changes to the deal. Geopolitical concerns may increase next week, where there will be few U.S. earnings and data releases to otherwise drive trading.

S&P 500 futures rose 2.8 points and were above fair value, a formula that evaluates pricing by taking into account interest rates, dividends and time to expiration on the contract. Dow Jones industrial average futures added 22 points and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 6.75 points.

For the week, the Dow is down 0.1 percent, the S&P 500 is up less than 0.1 percent and the Nasdaq is up 0.6 percent. All three indexes are gunning for their third straight weekly gain.

In company news, Groupon Inc slumped 12.5 percent to $8.89 in premarket trading a day after unexpectedly forecasting a quarterly loss, even as it reported revenue that was ahead of expectations.

Pharmacy benefit manager Express Scripts Holding Co late Thursday forecast 2014 earnings in line with Wall Street expectations and said it expects long-term earnings growth of up to 20 percent per year.

Tesla Motors Inc Chief Executive Elon Musk told Bloomberg TV that the company has had "conversations" with Apple Inc, responding to speculation that the iPhone and iPad maker had shown interest in the electric car company. Musk declined to describe the talks, though he said it was "very unlikely" that Tesla would be bought by any company. — Reuters

Nets working out openly gay free agent center Jason Collins - ESPN


NEW YORK - Jason Collins, who revealed his homosexuality last April, could become the first openly gay player in the NBA by signing a 10-day contract with the Brooklyn Nets, ESPN reported Thursday (Friday, PHL time).

Citing unnamed sources, the sport television network's website reported that the Nets worked out the free agent center this week in Los Angeles.

The Nets did not make a deal for a big man Tuesday at the NBA trade deadline, leaving open the possibility they might add the 35-year-old American to their front court in a short-term trial deal after watching him in a private workout.

Collins was praised for his courage in coming out as gay by US President Barack Obama, former president Bill Clinton and many players in the NBA.

If he takes the court in an NBA game, Collins would be the first openly gay man to play in one of the four major North American pro sports leagues.

Los Angeles Galaxy midfielder Robbie Rogers became the first openly gay male athlete to play in a US league when he took the field for a Major League Soccer match last May, three months after revealing he was gay.

In addition, University of Missouri defensive end Michael Sam, a US college star in American football who is likely to be selected in the NFL Draft later this year, announced earlier this month that he is gay but his first chance to play in the NFL could not come until an exhibition game in August at the earliest.

Collins called Sam "a great young man who has shown tremendous courage and leadership" in a tweet after Sam's announcement.

Collins played for the Nets in his first six seasons in the league, helping take the team to the 2002 and 2003 NBA Finals when it was based in nearby New Jersey.

At Brooklyn, Collins would be united with former Nets teammate Jason Kidd, now the Nets' coach.

Brooklyn officials wanted to see how fit Collins was since he had not played in the NBA since his revelation just after last season, when he had played out his contract with the Washington Wizards.

The Nets, 25-27 and fighting to hold onto a playoff position in the Eastern Conference, are on a five-game western road trip and could add Collins during the swing. - AFP

source: gmanetwork.com

Thursday

Is Samsung's smartwatch ditching Android for Tizen?


Google may no longer have a stranglehold on Samsung's "Gear" wearable gadgets in the same way it dominated the Korean firm's smartphones and tablets.

A report on USA Today said the next generation of "Gear" smartwatches will run on the open-source Tizen instead of Google's Android operating system.

Citing at least three people familiar with the situation, the report said Samsung will unveil the updated Gear watch and a new HTML5 version of Tizen at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.

The first version of the Gear smartwatch ran on Android.

Tizen is a software platform for smartphones and other connected devices, but had a rough start last year as some members dropped out.

"Replacing Android with Tizen for the new version of the Gear gadget suggests that Samsung is not giving up on Tizen despite recent setbacks," the report said.

With the HTML5 version of Tizen, the report said Samsung "may be able to attract more Web developers to develop new apps for its smartwatch."

"But it is also a risk because, in the past, HTML5 apps have not performed as well as so-called native apps that run on more traditional mobile platforms such as Android and Apple's iOS, one of the people said," it added.

Too much power

The report said the move indicates Samsung is trying to avoid giving Google too much power. Google itself is developing the Glass wearable tech.

"Samsung is trying to protect its own long-term interests, not fortifying Google's Android camp while building their own camp around Tizen," said Stuart Richens, vice president of digital media at Network Communications.

Network Communications owns Apartment Finder, a mobile app that helps people track down the best places to live.

A separate report on CNET said Samsung initially planned to launch a high-end, Tizen-powered handset by September 2013, but delayed the release.  — TJD, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Poor sleep linked to widespread pain


Regularly feeling tired and worn out after a night's sleep was the strongest predictor of also developing widespread pain in a new study of UK adults over the age of 50.

"In older adults widespread pain, that is pain that affects multiple sites in the body, is common and is associated with morbidity and disability including poor mental health and reduced physical functioning," said Ross Wilkie, the study's senior author.

Wilkie is a researcher with the Arthritis Research UK Primary Care Center of Keele University in Staffordshire.

"In this study, reporting musculoskeletal pain was common with just under half of participants reporting some pain and one quarter reporting widespread pain," Wilkie told Reuters Health in an email.

"Non-restorative sleep was the strongest predictor of new onset widespread pain," he said, and "sleep is a modifiable target," so improving it might improve the outcomes of these people, he said.

"In addition to sleep, osteoarthritis, cognitive impairment, anxiety and physical health independently predicted the onset of widespread pain and are important treatment targets," he added.

Widespread pain is the main feature of fibromyalgia, a condition affecting 15 percent of women and 10 percent of men over the age of 50, according to Wilkie and his colleagues, who published their report in the journal Arthritis and Rheumatology.

But the factors that influence who develops widespread pain with age are poorly understood, they write. To investigate, the researchers analyzed data on 4,326 adults from North Staffordshire, England.

All were over age 50 and free of widespread pain at the start of the study, although 2,764 had some localized pain.

Participants were surveyed about their pain, their physical and emotional health and lifestyle factors at the beginning of the study. Then they took the same survey again three years later.

At the follow-up, 19 percent reported new widespread pain, with women more likely to have experienced the onset of widespread pain than men.

When the researchers looked for factors linked to developing widespread pain during the time between surveys, they found that having reported some pain on the original survey, as well as having anxiety, physical health or cognitive problems and osteoarthritis were all predictors.

But regularly having poor, "non-restorative" sleep showed the strongest link, making a person almost twice as likely to experience the onset of widespread pain compared to people without sleep problems.

The study cannot prove that unrestful sleep is either a cause or effect of widespread pain, but more research is needed to understand the relationship, Wilkie and his colleagues write. That may also offer targets for reducing pain.

At present, current management and treatment of musculoskeletal pain in older adults is less than optimal, Wilkie said.

"Clinical approaches that target multiple sites of osteoarthritis may be useful," he said. "However, the clinical approach to managing widespread pain in older adults may need to move beyond focusing on treatment of osteoarthritis and consider combined interventions."

Treatment options to improve sleep are limited, Wilkie added, and existing pharmacological sleep aids can be problematic in older adults.

"Psychological and other non-pharmacological treatments may be beneficial," Wilkie said, but there's a need for both drug and non-drug treatments to be more thoroughly tested in clinical trials.

"It's interesting because they looked at people who were pain-free and they followed them over time" to see who developed widespread pain, Dr. Babak Mokhlesi said, "I think that's what gives (the study) so much strength."

Mokhlesi is director of the Sleep Disorders Center as well as the Sleep Medicine Fellowship training program at the University of Chicago. He was not involved in the UK study.

"Typically what happens is that you don't know what came first - does bad sleep cause pain or is the pain causing bad sleep - you don't know what's causing what," Mokhlesi told Reuters Health.

Retired and elderly people frequently come to his office and ask why they can't sleep more than eight hours, he said.

Among the things he tells them is to avoid "reducing time in bed" by going to sleep late or getting up early "so that you can get enough hours of sleep," he said.

On the other hand, spending a lot of time in bed with lights, televisions and other electronic devices on is also not conducive to rest, he said.

"Engaging in behavior like that can actually promote insomnia, so I always tell people, ‘you don't want to spend excessive amounts of time in bed or go to bed when you're not sleepy because that creates a vicious cycle for insomnia'," he said.

"The other thing that we always tell people is that as a society as we've been gaining weight and we're an aging society, that also brings about increased risk for other sleep disorders like sleep breathing disorders like sleep apnea, restless legs, and insomnia," Mokhlesi said.

He added that those are things that people typically don't pay attention to and they don't even discuss it with their physicians.

"There might be a lot of opportunity there for physicians to help their patients to improve their sleep," he said.—Reuters