Saturday

One Direction will return, says Tomlinson


One Direction "fully intend" to reform, the British pop phenomenon's Louis Tomlinson said ahead of Saturday's final concert before their planned hiatus.

The four-piece boy band, who have sold more than 50 million records worldwide, are ending their On The Road Again Tour at the Sheffield Arena in northern England.

The group are set to separate for at least a year, leaving the band's enormous global teenage following devastated.

"We fully intend to come back," Tomlinson told ITV television.

"We absolutely love this. We had a little sit down before and we decided that we wanted a break.

"We've had a very intense couple of years so we're just going to have a little bit of breathing time and spend that with our families.

"I don't think anyone could keep this pace up forever so I think it's the most healthy and constructive thing for all of us."

The band consists of Tomlinson, 23, Niall Horan, 22, Liam Payne, 22, and Harry Styles, 21. Zayn Malik, 22, quit due to stress in March.

Horan admitted the last gig of the tour would be difficult.

"We've done almost 1,000 shows or more over the last few years so to think we won't do one for over a year will be strange, so it will be a little bit emotional," he said.

The group's fifth studio album, "Made In The AM" will be released on November 13 and they will make a promotional appearance on US television four days later.

Put together for a British television singing contest in 2010, the group swiftly developed a giant, fiercely loyal following of young girls worldwide.

Malik has signed a new recording deal as a solo artist.

"I am leaving because I want to be a normal 22-year-old who is able to relax and have some private time out of the spotlight," he said at the time.

The Sunday Times newspaper's Rich List 2015 reckoned the band members were worth £25 million ($39 million, 35 million euros) each. —Agence-France Presse

source: gmanetwork.com

What Americans think of AlDub, Eat Bulaga's Kalyeserye


Since the phenomenal love team of Alden Richards and Maine "Yaya Dub" Mendoza broke the internet, more and more people are getting wind of Eat Bulaga's KalyeSerye.

News and lifestyle website BuzzFeed uploaded a video Friday of Americans reacting to AlDub. The video has gained over 10,000 views on YouTube as of this writing.

The Americans whom BuzzFeed invited totally had no idea about the love team at first, with some of them thinking AlDub was a gasoline station or a cute dolphin.

After the first Kalyeserye episode was shown to them, a lot of the reactions were positive.

"He's totally hot," said one woman of Alden Richards.

"This show is totally electric. I don't know what the (expletive) is going on, but it's just like a whirlwind of fun (expletive)," another man mused.

"Say goodbye to your 'Desperate Housewives,' your 'Parks and Recreation,' throw that (expletive) out. Eat Bulaga is coming to the States," the same man added.

—Raffy Cabristante/ALG, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Friday

Crude oil falls after US growth figures disappoint


TOKYO – Crude futures dropped in early Asian trading on Friday after the release of a report showing that US economic growth had slowed sharply, reinforcing concerns about sluggish demand in a world awash with oil.

US economic growth braked sharply in the third quarter as businesses cut back on restocking warehouses to work off an inventory glut, data showed.

Both of the main crude benchmarks are on track to post their first weekly gains in three weeks, but with oil still being added to inventories, prices are likely to be range-bound in the coming weeks, traders and analysts said.

US crude was down 24 cents at $45.82 a barrel at 0140 GMT, after rising 12 cents in the previous session. The benchmark is on track to post a gain of 2.7 percent this week.

Brent crude fell 11 cents to $48.69 a barrel after ending 20 cents lower on Thursday and is heading for an increase of 1.5 percent this week.

The sluggish US growth figures and weak home sales numbers have tempered the market's positive reaction to government figures earlier in the week showing oil stockpiles last week had increased by 3.4 million barrels, which was below the estimate from an industry group.

That had sent prices sharply higher with US crude rallying nearly $3 a barrel. – Reuters

Alden: No P100 million offer for AlDub to endorse politician


Wala pa raw natatanggap na formal offer ang Pambansang Bae na si Alden Richards mula sa concert producer na si Joed Serrano para sa isang Valentine concert sa 2016.

Matatandaang noong October 28 ay sinabi ni Joed sa isang panayam na may 8-digit offer siya kay Alden para sa two-night concert, February 13 and 14, sa Araneta Coliseum.

Read: Alden Richards gets 8-digit offer for major concert in Araneta Coliseum

Pero ayon kay Alden, “Wala pa pong offer, hindi pa po lumalapit sa management.”

Hinihintay lang niyang pormal na mag-alok sa GMA Artist Center si Joed?

Sagot ng Kapuso star, “Kung meron naman po, why not?

“Mapag-uusapan pa. Willing naman po kaming pag-usapan.”

Bukod sa 8-digit offer para sa two-night concert sa Araneta, may kumakalat ding balita na isang political party diumano ang nag-alok kay Alden at sa ka-loveteam niyang si Maine Mendoza ng P100 million para iendorso ang isang presidentiable sa 2016 elections.

Totoo ba ito?

“Hindi po totoo yun,” pagtanggi naman ni Alden.

“Wala pong lumapit to offer that much money.”

Pero allowed ba siyang mag-endorso ng isang pulitiko?

Tugon niya, “Ako po, personally, I really don’t want to endorse po.

“Kasi, kumbaga, let them be.

“Iba po ‘tong showbiz sa politics. I don’t wanna mix it po.”

Dagdag pa ni Alden, “Personally, the management din po, may mga offers din po before, during first two months ng AlDub.

“There have been offers to endorse political party or political person.

“Pero sinabi ko po na baka puwedeng dito na lang tayo sa showbiz mag-concentrate, not the other side po.”

Hindi siya nasisilaw ng pera? Kahit P100 million, P200 million pa ang alok sa kanya ng isang pulitiko, tatanggihan niya?

“Opo, e,” nakangiting sagot ni Alden. —PEP

For the full story, visit PEP.

source: gmanetwork.com

Gay marriage bill signed into law in Ireland


DUBLIN, Ireland - Same-sex marriage was signed into law in Ireland on Thursday, five months after a historic referendum saw the traditionally Catholic nation become the world's first country to vote for gay unions.

In a brief statement, the president's office said "The Presidential Commission today signed the 'Marriage Bill 2015' into law", paving the way for the first weddings within a month.

Ireland voted 62.1 percent in favour of allowing marriage between two people "without distinction as to their sex" in May, the first time anywhere that gay marriage has been legalised in a referendum.

Legal challenges to the result had briefly delayed the legislation from coming into effect.

Senator Katherine Zappone, who had long campaigned for her Canadian marriage to her wife to be recognised in Ireland, called it "a defining moment".

"It is a deeply emotional moment for those of us who have campaigned for so long," Zappone said in a statement. "This victory truly belongs to the nation, it is a moment for us all."  —  Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com

Maine Mendoza as Mother Earth featured in Italy mural


Maine Mendoza gave Mother Earth a face in a mural painted in Galliate, Italy.

The mural was made as part of Filipino environmental activist Naderev "Yeb" Saño's journey to stop climate change.

YouTube user "Woodle Worm" posted a timelapse video showing Saño, along with fellow environmental activists led by his brother AG Saño, creating the mural.

Check out the video

source: gmanetwork.com

Thursday

Bloomberg takes on AlDub’s influence on markets


The phenomenal loveteam of Alden Richards and Maine Mendoza a.k.a. Yaya Dub is undeniably one of the hottest pairings in the Philippine entertainment industry nowadays.

But after a show in the world’s largest indoor arena sold out 55,000 tickets in less than three days, and with a Twitter record of 41 million tweets with its hashtag in one day, AlDub has also caught global attention in both the mainstream and social media.

After the British Broadcasting Company dubbed them as a ‘social media phenomenon,’ international business news platform Bloomberg discussed how the unassuming and ‘bizarre’ Philippine show is affecting sales in different markets.



"The 'AlDub' phenomenon, (and) how it's becoming a mega hit on social media and how it's becoming a gold mine for anyone associated with it," read the blurb of the Bloomberg story.

In the article, Ehden Llave Pelaez, social media manager at iSentia Brandtology, described AlDub and the Kalyeserye segment from Philippines’ longest-running noontime show ‘Eat Bulaga’ as a brand new type of the typical Cinderella love story.

Pelaez said its appeal came from how it responded to the audience.

“Another nice thing, which is probably where social media comes in, is they get to listen to their fans. They story follows what the fans wanted to see. It's an open-ended series,” Pelaez said.

After only months of charming the Filipino audience, AlDub already starred in different commercials for a wide variety of brands, such as fast food, household cleaning agent, a telecommunications company, adult milk brand, cellphone brand, and many more.

Vice President for Marketing Communications at Golden Arches Development Corporation Margot Torres confirmed that the sales of McDonald’s grew significantly following the release of the #ALDUBkoto TV commercial.

"Our  growth is measured based on same-store sales and transactions. If we use the period when we sold Minions (which was a good month) as a base index of 100 and compare the same-store transactions growth figure with the period 3 weeks after we launched our chicken fillet a la king and the AlDub campaign, the figure is 470 versus base index," Torres told GMA News Online.

"This is a nationwide number,” she added.

"Needless to say, the launch of our Chicken Fillet a la King product with the AlDub campaign has positively impacted our business and sales for Chicken Fillet a la King have well exceeded its target," Torres said.

Within 24 hours of posting on September 11, the AlDub TVC was viewed 1.5 million times on the fast food chain’s Facebook page.

According to Pelaez, this remarkable increase in business is brought by the fact that the ‘AlDub phenomenon’ is not restricted to a particular class or industry.

Aside from being talked about in five out of seven continents, the love team’s reach also cuts across different markets because of their wide audience reach assisted not only by television but more importantly, by social media.

“They are cutting across different industries and segments. Beyond McDonald's and Talk N' Text, they have household cleansers and other upcoming TVCs,” Pelaez said.

“Using these people as effective product ambassadors proves that their fanbase also cuts across different markets. So, you're touching different consumers, and it doesn't matter what industry you're in. You are able to connect to different kinds of audience," she added. —Bianca Rose Dabu/NB, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Pizza-tossing record smashed in China


SHANGHAI - More than 500 people tossed pizza dough simultaneously in Shanghai on Wednesday, breaking a world record. 

Participants are required to stretch and toss the pizza dough in a traditional way for a minimum of one minute, maintaining the size of the dough as long as 30.5 centimeters (12 inches).


Some 525 people gathered for the event, held to raise awareness about breast cancer and money for charity, but 14 of them failed to make the challenge according to the rules, Guinness World Record certification officer Cheng Dong said.

"The final result is 511. Congratulations, it's a new Guinness World Record," he said.

The previous record was set in June with 338 people tossing pizza dough in London. — Reuters

Mga lola, sumalisi sa 'isaw party' habang busy sa pagda-dubsmash sina Alden at Maine


Para sa kanilang 15th weeksary, sinurpresa ni Alden Richards si Maine "Yaya Dub" Mendoza  nang bumisita ang binata sa barangay na pinagdadausan ng kalyeserye at "Sugod-Bahay" segment ng Eat Bulaga. Nagdala rin ng pagkain si Alden gaya ng isaw na sinalisihan nina Lola Nidora at Tinidora habang nagda-dubsmash ang AlDub.

source: gmanetwork.com

AlDub loveteam catches BBC’s attention as ‘social media phenomenon’


Dahil sa araw-araw na pagiging top trending topic worldwide ng AlDub hashtags, umaagaw na rin ng atensiyon sa international news websites ang itinuturing na global phenomenon loveteam nina Alden Richards at Maine Mendoza a.k.a. Yaya Dub.

Sina Alden at Yaya Dub ang mga pangunahing karakter sa sinusubaybayang Kalyeserye ng Eat Bulaga.

Ngayong araw, October 28, ay nai-feature ang AlDub sa website ng BBC News, ang bbc.com.

Ang BBC o British Broadcasting Corporation ay ang public-service broadcaster ng United Kingdom, na ang headquarters ay matatagpuan sa London. Ito ang counterpart ng CNN ng USA.

Sa artikulo ni Heather Chen na may titulong "AlDub: A social media phenomenon about love and lip-synching," tinalakay rito ang popularidad ng AlDub sa mga Pinoy at ang pagti-trend nito sa Twitter.

Sabi pa sa artikulo, "And it isn't just the local fans. US politicians and even alternative rock bands, have declared their love for the show and its young stars."

Mayroon ding pahayag ang TV host na si Daphne Oseña-Paez at ang Pinoy BBC presenter na si Rico Hizon, na parehong fan ng Kalyeserye.

Sabi ni Daphne tungkol sa tambalan nina Alden at Yaya Dub, "Actors and actresses are often paired up so fans hope they end up together in real life. But what's different about 'AlDub'... is that it wasn't just the creation of a TV network or movie production."

Ayon naman kay Rico, "They appear very down-to-earth. I believe that one big reason they are so popular is because the actors are very humble despite their massive success—they keep thanking fans as well as everyone who supports their work."

Nabanggit din sa artikulo ang pagiging third fastest-growing celebrity on Twitter ni Maine, "after US singers Taylor Swift and Katy Perry."

Tungkol naman sa pagiging global phenomenon ng AlDub sa Twitter, sabi ni Daphne, "None of it was planned. It's not like the show hired social media experts to strategise a plan—they realised what they had: a new and younger social-media savvy audience."

Samantala, isa pang patunay kung gaano kasikat ngayon ang AlDub ay ang pagiging cover nila sa apat na glossy magazines ngayong Nobyembre: YES!, Preview, Meg para kay Maine, at Mega Man para kay Alden. -PEP.ph

source: gmanetwork.com

Wednesday

Curry drops 40 in reigning champ Warriors' opening night win


League MVP Stephen Curry got his new campaign off to an emphatic start as the 2015-16 NBA season got under way.

Curry became the first reigning MVP in history to score 40 or more points on opening night as the Golden State Warriors began their title defense by thumping the New Orleans Pelicans 111-95.

It was an evening of celebration for Golden State. The players received their 2014-15 championship rings in a pregame ceremony.

The Warriors, a 67-game winner in the regular season a year ago, won without coach Steve Kerr, who attended the ring ceremony but then headed to the Warriors locker room, where he rested an ailing back. Assistant Luke Walton coached the game.

Curry finished with 40 points, seven assists and six rebounds.

He nailed four three-pointers during a 24-point, first-quarter explosion, as the Warriors thrilled a crowd that had just taken its seats following the raising of the franchise's championship banner. —Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com

Breast cancer in men may be rare, but it happens


Breast cancer usually happens to women. In fact, the American Cancer Society said that one out of eight women suffers from breast cancer worldwide.

But men are not immune to breast cancer. Yes, it may be rare, but it happens. The same organization noted that one out of 1,000 men develops breast cancer.

One of them is Ernesto Petil.

It all started with just a "mere insect bite." Little did he know then that it was the first sign of breast cancer.

"Iyong pagkaalam ko, kinagat lang ng ipis or whatever na insekto. Pinabayaan ko pa rin. Hanggang noong napapansin ko nagkaka-kulani na sa may kili-kili," he said in a report on GMA News TV's "News To Go" on Wednesday. 

However, Petil was not surprised when the doctor confirmed that he had breast cancer. It was in his genes. His sisters also suffered from the disease. In 2013, the mass was removed from his chest.

But it has already spread to his lungs and brain. This means he needs another series of treatments.

"Kung may nagmamagandang loob na nanawagan ako. Kailanga ko kasi ang medication kasi nasabi sa akin na ang chemotherapy, sabi sa akin ng doktor, isang milyon," he added.  




According to the American Cancer Society, since men have breast tissue, they can also develop breast cancer.

Although breast cancer is common among women, men may only learn they have the disease at a later stage. Lack of awareness is one of the reasons why.

Just like Petil, many men may ignore possible warning signs such as lumps and changes in their chest. This could delay diagnosis, the American Cancer Soceity said. Thus, the mass will have a chance to grow.

Here are some signs of breast cancer in men:

    A lump or swelling, usually (but not always) painless
    Skin dimpling or puckering
    Nipple retraction (turning inward)
    Redness or scaling of the nipple or breast skin
    Discharge from the nipple


A breast cancer may also spread to lymph nodes under the arm or around the collar bone and cause a lump or swelling.

"Sa lalaki kasi hindi siya common so parang walang recommended screenings for males. Ang lalaki wala namang breast eh. So kung may tutubo sa chest wall nila, makakapa nila agad-agad," oncologist Dr. Ma. Cecilia Pagdanganan pointed out.

Women should still be alarmed

Although breast cancer do exist in men, women are still the main targets of the disease. In fact, breast cancer is so common in women that most, if not all, studies into the causes, prevention, and treatment of the disease are done with women as case studies.

Hurdling out of breast cancer has never been easy. To help others who are battling this disease, breast cancer survivor Christina Terado has been teaching arts and crafts to those undergoing chemotherapy.

"Nagdasal ako para bibigyan ako ng gabay na mapapagtutuunan ko ng pansin para hindi ko maisip ang sakit ko. Nagtuturo na ako sa cancer patients and iba pang grupo kasi nagiging creative kami at saka positibo kami sa buhay," she said.

Pagdanganan recommended women to undergo a mammogram every other year when they hit 40 years of age until they turn 49 years old—even when they don't see any warning signs.

And when cancer hits, Terado has some words of courage: "Kailangan talagang lumaban ka." — Trisha Macas/BM, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Bacon and other processed meats can cause cancer, experts say


PARIS/CHICAGO - Eating processed meats like hot dogs, sausages and bacon can cause colorectal cancer in humans, and red meat is also a likely cause of the disease, World Health Organization (WHO) experts said.

The review by WHO's International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), released on Monday, said additionally that there was some link between the consumption of red meat and pancreatic cancer and prostate cancer.

IARC classified processed meat as "carcinogenic to humans" on its group one list along with tobacco and asbestos, for which there is "sufficient evidence" of cancer links.

Each 50-gram (1.8-ounce) portion of processed meat eaten daily increases the risk of colorectal cancer by 18 percent, the agency estimated.

A 50-gram portion would be the equivalent of eating one hot dog or two slices of bacon. Americans eat about 21.7 grams of processed pork per day, according to a 2011 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.

Red meat was classified as probably carcinogenic in IARC's group 2A list, joining glyphosate, the active ingredient in many weedkillers.

The IARC examined some 800 studies during a meeting of 22 health experts earlier this month.

"For an individual, the risk of developing colorectal (bowel) cancer because of their consumption of processed meat remains small, but this risk increases with the amount of meat consumed," Dr Kurt Straif of the IARC said in a statement.

The classification for red meat, defined as all types of mammalian meat including beef, lamb and pork, reflected "limited evidence" that it causes cancer. The IARC found links mainly with colorectal cancer—which is a cancer that starts either in the colon or rectum—but also observed associations with pancreatic and prostate cancer.

Inconclusive evidence of a link between processed meat and stomach cancer was also observed, it said.

The news prompted animal rights activists People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals to offer free vegan diet starter kits and outraged agriculture groups.

The Canadian Meat Council, which represents meat packers such as Maple Leaf Foods and the Candian-based units of Cargill Ltd. and JBS SA, rejected the findings as simplistic, while trade group North American Meat Institute said the IARC report "defies common sense."

Some scientists and researchers said the news may not add much to long-standing health recommendations to limit consumption of such meat.

The IARC does not compare the level of risk associated with different substances in a given category, so does not suggest eating meat is as dangerous as smoking.

"Nobody is telling people not to eat meat," said David Wallinga, senior health officer for health and environmental advocacy group Natural Resources Defense Council. "What they're saying is if you eat it, eat less of it and buy it from sources that have produced it better."

Meat-heavy diets

Meat suppliers and processors argue that meat provides essential protein, vitamins and minerals.

Shares of most meat companies were little changed on Monday. Tyson Foods Inc fell after a rating cut by JP Morgan to "neutral," which focused on the company's shrinking market share in packaged meat.

"I'm not expecting that report to be a big issue going forward," said Brian Weddington, a vice president of Moody's Investors Service's corporate finance group. "I think there's still going to be a lot of hot dogs sold tomorrow."

The medical community has long thought there could be a link between red or processed meat and colorectal cancer, said Tim Key, a professor at Oxford University.

"Eating a bacon bap every once in a while isn't going to do much harm; having a healthy diet is all about moderation," Key said in a statement from charity Cancer Research UK.

According to estimates cited by the IARC, 34,000 cancer deaths per year worldwide are attributable to diets high in processed meat. About 1 million cancer deaths per year are due to tobacco smoking, it said. —Reuters

Tuesday

Wal-Mart seeks to test drones for home delivery, pickup


CHICAGO - Wal-Mart Stores Inc applied Monday to US regulators for permission to test drones for home delivery, curbside pickup and checking warehouse inventories, a sign it plans to go head-to-head with Amazon in using drones to fill and deliver online orders.

The world's largest retailer by revenue has for several months been conducting indoor tests of small unmanned aircraft systems - the term regulators use for drones - and is now seeking for the first time to test the machines outdoors. It plans to use drones manufactured by China's SZ DJI Technology Co Ltd.

In addition to having drones take inventory of trailers outside its warehouses and perform other tasks aimed at making its distribution system more efficient, Wal-Mart is asking the Federal Aviation Administration for permission to research drone use in "deliveries to customers at Walmart facilities, as well as to consumer homes," according to a copy of the application reviewed by Reuters.

The move comes as Amazon.com Inc, Google and other companies test drones in the expectation that the FAA will soon establish rules for their widespread commercial use. FAA Deputy Administrator Michael Whitaker said in June that the agency expected to finalize regulations within the next 12 months, faster than previously planned. Commercial drone use is currently illegal, though companies can apply for exemptions.

The FAA will review Wal-Mart's petition to determine whether it is similar enough to earlier successful applications to be fast-tracked, or whether it would set a precedent for exemptions, requiring regulators to conduct a detailed risk analysis and seek public comment, agency spokesman Les Dorr said. The FAA normally aims to respond to such petitions in 120 days.

Amazon has said it would be ready to begin delivering packages to customers via drones as soon as federal rules allow.

Wal-Mart spokesman Dan Toporek said the company would move quickly to deploy drones depending on its tests and regulations.

"Drones have a lot of potential to further connect our vast network of stores, distribution centers, fulfillment centers and transportation fleet," he said. "There is a Walmart within five miles of 70 percent of the US population, which creates some unique and interesting possibilities for serving customers with drones."

Finding ways to more efficiently warehouse, transport and deliver goods to customers has taken on new importance for Wal-Mart, which this month projected a surprise decline in earnings next year as it copes with costs to increase wages, beat back price competition and boost online sales.

In the FAA application, Wal-Mart said it wanted to test drones for taking stock of trailers and other items in the parking lot of a warehouse using electronic tagging and other methods. A Wal-Mart distribution center could have hundreds of trailers waiting in its yard, and a drone could potentially be used to quickly account for what each one is holding.

The retailer also wants to test drones for its grocery pickup service, which it has recently expanded to 23 markets with plans to add another 20 markets next year. The test flights would confirm whether a drone could deliver a package to a pick-up point in the parking lot of a store, the application says.

Wal-Mart also said it wants to test home delivery in small residential neighborhoods after obtaining permission from those living in the flight path. The test would see if a drone could be deployed from a truck "to safely deliver a package at a home and then return safely to the same," the application says.

To date the FAA has approved more than 2,100 exemptions allowing for commercial drone testing and use. — Reuters

When Is Bankruptcy Right?


When should a person in Texas file for personal bankruptcy? Is $10,000 enough debt? What about $100,000? The law says that you can declare bankruptcy in the state of Texas if you are in debt for a dollar or for a million dollars. In other words, the bankruptcy law sets no minimum amount. And like almost everything else in the law, the answer to when should you declare bankruptcy is, “It depends.” You can obtain a more precise answer – and have all of your bankruptcy concerns addressed – by speaking as soon as possible with an experienced Dallas bankruptcy lawyer and letting that attorney review your current financial circumstances.

If you are earning only a minimum wage income or a part-time income, $10,000 worth of debt might be enough of a reason to file for bankruptcy. On the other hand, if you have some resources and more than one stream of income, $100,000 worth of debt might not be enough to make bankruptcy right for you. Debts, assets, and income all have to be carefully evaluated, and you’ll also need to consider all of the consequences of a personal bankruptcy. There are no absolute rules, however, so an attorney’s advice is imperative. Everyone’s circumstances are of course different, so you really must consult personally with an experienced Illinois bankruptcy attorney before reaching any final conclusion or taking any kind of irrevocable action.

If bankruptcy is genuinely your best alternative, let a Dallas bankruptcy lawyer help you determine if a Chapter 7 or a Chapter 13 bankruptcy is your best choice. Your attorney can work alongside you and will fully explain all of the requirements and consequences of a bankruptcy. In the Dallas-Fort Worth area, the first thing you must do if you’re considering a bankruptcy is to seek advice from an experienced Dallas bankruptcy lawyer – as quickly as possible.

source: bankruptcyplanning.com

Student Loans And Texas Bankruptcy


If your debts are mounting rapidly and you are considering bankruptcy, you are probably dealing with more than just one debt. Car payments, medical expenses, mortgages, and credit card payments can pile up and swiftly spiral out of control. If you’re considering bankruptcy, you’ll want to discharge much debt as possible. However, bankruptcy isn’t right for everyone, and while many debts (including car loans, credit card debt, and mortgages) can be resolved through the bankruptcy process, bankruptcy cannot restructure or discharge certain other debts.

In the Dallas-Fort Worth area, if you’re thinking about bankruptcy, consult first with an experienced Dallas bankruptcy attorney. You do not want to initiate a bankruptcy only to learn later that it will have little or no effect on your debts. Some debts may not be discharged by either a Chapter 7 or a Chapter 13 bankruptcy. These debts may include child support and alimony payments; fines, judgments, or penalties imposed by any court; student loan debt; income tax debt; and all other tax debts.

A student loan debt is not dischargeable in bankruptcy unless you can prove that you would endure an undue hardship by repaying it. The precise definition of “undue hardship” is different in each state, but because the undue hardship standard is so high in Texas, student loan debts are almost never discharged through the bankruptcy process in this state. Understand that bankruptcy is not the best solution for everyone who’s facing a debt crisis, and a bankruptcy can remain a part of your credit history for up to ten years. If your debts are starting to bury you, and if you are thinking about bankruptcy in the Dallas-Fort Worth area – whether or not a student loan is one of your debts – speak with an experienced Dallas bankruptcy attorney immediately to review your alternatives and to learn more about the bankruptcy process.

source: bankruptcyplanning.com

Don’t Fall For A Debt Settlement Scam


Don’t fall for a debt settlement scam. If you’re struggling with debts in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, a company that promises to make your debts disappear might sound like the perfect answer to your debt troubles. It isn’t. The schemes offered by some debt settlement companies can actually damage your credit and your ability to obtain credit in the future. In the Dallas-Fort Worth area, if you face mounting debts and you can’t see any way to deal with them, ignore the debt settlement companies and consult first with an experienced Dallas bankruptcy lawyer.

Don’t work with any debt settlement company that charges you a fee up front, promises to stop credit harassment, and guarantees to make your debts go away. No company can make such promises, and some of the .people who believed they can have that fallen even deeper into debt. Even a legitimate debt settlement company may not be your best option, but how can you know? In the Dallas-Fort Worth area, those in deep debt should discuss their options with an experienced Dallas bankruptcy lawyer. Bankruptcy is the legal and responsible path to a new financial start, and it’s not just for people like you. Corporations and even big cities are turning more frequently to bankruptcy for a number of financial reasons.

In the greater Dallas-Fort Worth area, if you are unable to pay your debts, get candid advice from someone who routinely handles bankruptcies and helps clients avoid foreclosures and repossessions. Bankruptcy isn’t the best solution for everyone who’s in debt, and it may or may not be the best solution for you. You can only find out by making the effort to discuss your circumstances with an experienced Dallas bankruptcy attorney. A Dallas bankruptcy lawyer can help you make the right decisions and avoid the debt settlement scams. If your debts are mounting, make the call as quickly as you can.

source: bankruptcyplanning.com

Dow, S&P 500 end down slightly as Apple, energy weigh


The Dow and the S&P 500 edged lower on Monday as energy shares dropped with oil prices and Apple retreated a day before its quarterly results.

Investors were cautious ahead of the Federal Reserve's two-day policy meeting, which begins on Tuesday. The market is looking for clues on the outlook for when the Fed may begin raising interest rates.

Apple shares fell 3.2 percent to $115.28, making it the biggest drag on all three major indexes, while a weak outlook from one of its suppliers, Dialog Semiconductor , led a fall in other semiconductors. An index of semiconductors was down 2 percent after three days of gains.

The iPhone maker reports quarterly results after the market closes on Tuesday.

"With Apple, it's more about their forecast and China news and any upgrades they may want to announce," said Rick Meckler, president of LibertyView Capital Management in Jersey City, New Jersey.

The S&P energy sector fell 2.5 percent, leading sector declines for the S&P 500. Crude oil prices slipped as global oversupply pushed fuel storage sites close to capacity. Exxon fell 2.1 percent to $81.22, while Chevron was down 2.7 percent to $88.77.

US stocks have mostly gained in October after a weak third quarter. The S&P 500 is up 7.9 percent for the month so far.

"It's been a pretty big move up, so we're seeing a little bit of consolidation today," Meckler said.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 23.65 points, or 0.13 percent, to 17,623.05, the S&P 500 lost 3.97 points, or 0.19 percent, to 2,071.18 and the Nasdaq Composite added 2.84 points, or 0.06 percent, to 5,034.70.

Among the top Nasdaq gainers, shares of Ctrip.com were up 22.1 percent at $90.78 after the online travel firm said it would merge with Qunar Cayman Islands. Qunar jumped 7.9 percent to $42.65.

Strong quarterly results from tech companies have helped improve expectations for overall US third-quarter earnings.

S&P 500 earnings are forecast to have declined 2.8 percent in the quarter, based on actual results from about 35 percent of the S&P 500 companies and estimates for the rest, compared with a 4.2 percent decline forecast at the start of the month, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Data showed new US home sales fell 11.5 percent in September, suggesting a softening of the housing market. An index of housing shares was down 0.4 percent.

Other gainers included Pep Boys, which jumped 23.4 percent to $14.99 after it agreed to be acquired by Bridgestone for $15 per share.

Piedmont Natural Gas rose 36.9 percent to $57.82 after it agreed to be bought by Duke Energy. Duke Energy fell 2 percent.

After the bell, shares of Hartford Financial fell 4.7 percent to $46.50 following its results.

During the session, NYSE declining issues outnumbered advancers 1,916 to 1,153, for a 1.66-to-1 ratio; on the Nasdaq, 1,749 issues fell and 1,077 advanced, for a 1.62-to-1 ratio favoring decliners.

The S&P 500 posted 36 new 52-week highs and eight lows; the Nasdaq recorded 111 new highs and 73 lows.

About 6.1 billion shares changed hands on US exchanges, below the 7.3 billion daily average for the past 20 trading days, according to Thomson Reuters data. — Reuters

Monday

One-of-a-kind annotated map of Tolkien’s Middle-earth found

A map of Middle-earth covered in notes made by JRR Tolkien himself has been discovered inside a copy of The Lord of the Rings, The Guardian reported on Friday.


The book belonged to illustrator Pauline Baynes, whose notable works include illustrations for both The Lord of the Rings and The Chronicles of Narnia. Notes from Baynes were also written on the discovered map.

According to Tolkien’s notes on the map, Hobbiton is at around the same latitude as Oxford. The map also uses Cyprus, Jerusalem, and Belgrade as reference points. Ravenna, a city in Italy, could also possibly be the inspiration for Minas Tirith.

The map is currently on display at Blackwell’s, a rare book store, and is being sold for £60,000 (around P4.28 million). — Bea Montenegro/BM, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

AlDub's latest commercial for fastfood chain


The phenomenal AlDub tandem once again starred in a new commercial for a top fastfood chain.

The new television ad premiered on Monday at around 1:40 p.m. on GMA-7, just before the Kalyeserye segment started on Eat Bulaga.

This time, the commercial also featured Lola Nidora, Tidora, and Tinidora, making the Kalyeserye gang complete.

Check it out:

source: gmanetwork.com
The phenomenal AlDub tandem once again starred in a new commercial for a top fastfood chain.
The new television ad premiered on Monday at around 1:40 p.m. on GMA-7, just before the Kalyeserye segment started on Eat Bulaga.
This time, the commercial also featured Lola Nidora, Tidora, and Tinidora, making the Kalyeserye gang complete.
Check it out:
- See more at: http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/542001/showbiz/chikaminute/aldub-s-latest-commercial-for-fastfood-chain#sthash.dTGZCvqA.dpuf

The secret lives of teens

There are many tech-savvy parents out there, but there are also those for whom the online world is uncharted territory, who have no idea what goes on when their child is glued to the screen, alternating between social media networks.

For teens, the internet can make it easier to hide from their parents. "Madiskarte na rin kami. Also, mas maalam kami sa social media compared to them. So hindi nila alam na kayang gawin kunwari sa Facebook, puwedeng i-hide mo sa kanila yung specific post," a 19-year-old student told GMA News Online. Another student, also 19, said that many teens even make separate accounts—one for relatives, and another for friends—in order to maintain secrecy.

Clinical child psychologist Dr. Ma. Lourdes Carandang notes that most parents have not really dealt with their children's online lives, because children know more about how to navigate online. "So in that sense, they have more power than the parents. So that's already a big difficulty that we have," Carandang told GMA News Online after delivering a talk at the 2nd Philippine Society for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry National Convention last month.


During her keynote presentation, "Entering the Inner World of Digital Natives and Taking a Closer Look at Adolescent Depression," Carandang urged parents to look into their children's online activities. "Try to look into their games. Try to look into Facebook and Instagram. Just make pakialam because it's really very interesting that they now have the power over us because they know about this and we don't. So let's know a little bit, enough so that we are not ignorant about it. We have to equip ourselves also with some knowledge about it. Be curious to be able to have a little bit of knowledge of what this thing is all about, which is their life now. Talk to them about it," she said.

'Emotional contagion' and cyberbullying

Adolescents in particular are vulnerable to emotional contagion on the internet. As an example, Carandang talked about how some adolescents would post photos of their bleeding wrists, then receive comments from others who would post photos of their own. "It's a contagion. The internet is a very, very potent tool for emotional contagion among the adolescents," she said.

Emotional contagion also leads to the escalation of cyberbullying, which can lead to depression and suicide.

Carandang explained that bullying involves the bully, the bullied, and the bystander. But on the internet, there is no "bystander."

"So who's going to stop it?," she said. "And when it happens, it happens so fast it spreads like wildfire and even when you try to make bawi, ayun na. And that has caused a lot of heartaches, depression, and even suicides among our adolescents."

A recent blog post by a Filipino adolescent reads: "Dearest loves, I've decided that I'll kill myself when I'm 18 but now I think I'll do it earlier." There are many more similar posts that allow a glimpse into the world of the depressed, whether through words, poetry, or art. Carandang emphasized that depression is not just feeling sad, but feeling powerless and worthless.



Dealing with depression

It is important for families to understand what depression is like, so that they can better understand when a loved one is suffering from it—and know that they have to be patient when the depressed person rejects their help. "The patient will push the family member away and sometimes they do not understand. But I think if they know that that's what it is, they won't be rejected. They can take it as part of the situation and can still be empowered to help," Carandang said.

Because depression isolates, it's highly important to stay connected. Carandang recalled one adolescent who attempted to kill herself but said, "I couldn't do it because I was thinking of my mother and her face and how she has cared for me." According to Carandang, it’s this type of connection that needs to be built, even if it isn’t to family. “Connect so that the isolation will be taken care of," she said.

The most important thing for parents and families, however, is to be sensitive to the child's cues. Not all expressions of depression will be as direct as the above examples.

In certain cases, the cues may even hardly visible, such as in one teenager's letter to her parents. "It was a beautiful letter: Dear Mom and Dad, I love you. You've been giving me this and so on and so forth. It looked very positive. Sabi pa nga, this is not a suicide note. But if you look very mindfully, there is a line there that said, 'I wish you had noticed,'" said Carandang.

"Their songs, their poems and other art forms, contain the message. Sometimes they will not tell you, and people say 'Why did this person, who was so wonderful, such a happy girl, etc., suddenly does that?' But when you look at the journal, you look at the poems, the drawings, you see it there. Or in some casual remarks that they say which we ignore, because it's not something we normally talk about. It is still a bit taboo," she said.


Sincere and open communication

Carandang told GMA News Online that more than looking for cues, it is about sincerely caring for the child and communicating honestly with them. "Instead of checking [their online accounts], they need to be more honest with their adolescent and say something like, 'Alam mo, I'm very worried. I noticed something going on and I don't want to miss it. I don't want to let it just go. I want to know because I care that something might happen. I want to know from you.' But talk to them with respect. 'Yun ang gusto nila eh, and be direct with them," she advised.

Similarly, both 19-year-old students' advice to parents is not so much to try to use social media, but to focus on the personal relationship. "Social media is a way to be more connected to people, pero importante pa rin talaga kasi yung in person mo magawa. Hindi ‘yung with something that is in between you," one said.

The other added that the teen should also make an effort to connect to his or her parents. "It takes two to tango. Parents and kids should give time for personal space, hindi lang puro computer. Doon tayo sa technology ngayon, pero kaya pa rin naman 'yun... dapat sanayin pa rin ng both parties na may connection na personal," she said.

Carandang shared a case with one adolescent who at first was reluctant to show her Instagram account, until one day, she asked the girl, "How do you do ba the Instagram?"

"She showed it to me, then she said, 'Look at my posts,'" Carandang said, adding that the teen's openness might have been because she was sincerely interested, as opposed to being interested in order to be able to tell the child what she should do. "It's not so much that, but 'I'm interested because I care what happens to you.' If you communicate that, they will start communicating."

Carandang added that the parent should not be discouraged if the results are not immediate.

Her advice is for parents to set a regular time for their child, during which they don't teach the child anything, but just get to know them. "When that happens, it's magical. It's so interesting how the person starts to open up because first of all, it's regular, so you can depend on it. Talk to them, just say, 'This is our time', and pretty soon they will start opening up," she said.

The best practices for parents are to communicate, give time, and be open to them. "It's about not being judgmental so that they will be open, acceptance and showing them that unconditionally, you're there," she said.

Mindfulness and parenting

Setting limits and being able to deal with the intrusion of technology in family life are well and good, but the more internal and lasting positive change can happen if the child develops the ability to self-regulate through emotional intelligence.

According to Carandang, who trained under meditation master Thich Nhat Hanh, mindfulness training is one way to develop this. She explained the Eastern definition of mindfulness as "paying total attention to what is going on inside you, being aware of what is going on inside you and being aware of what is going on around you in your environment without judgment and criticism, warmed by kindness and spiced by curiosity."

This way of life can be applied to parenting, she said. An example of mindful parenting would be when one is angry about something at work, but not unjustly taking it out on the child. "It's a very common thing: something troublesome happens outside the home, we go home, and the best and easiest target of our anger which we may not be aware of is the child," said Carandang.

"The greatest gift you can give your child is yourself. It might be the best gift, it might be the worst gift, depending on who you are. The child doesn't just follow what you say, the child absorbs what you do. But more than that, the child absorbs what you are—who you are," she said. — BM, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com



In Hurricane Patricia’s wake, torrential rains move into Louisiana


HOUSTON - Torrential rainstorms battered Louisiana on Sunday, leaving thousands without power, after pounding southeastern Texas as the remnants of Hurricane Patricia converged with a second storm.

The heaviest band of rain moved over the Gulf of Mexico, triggering coastal flood warnings and flash flood watches in southwest Louisiana and soaking New Orleans, according to the National Weather Service (NWS).

About 22,000 people were left without power in the greater New Orleans area. Some streets were flooded, while a high tide surge brought some coastal flooding as well.

Rainfall has totaled as much as 7 inches (18 cm) since late Saturday night, and forecasters predicted another 5 inches (13 cm) could fall. The NWS said waterspouts over lakes and tornados over land were both possible into the early morning hours.

"Most of the heavier rain to the west of New Orleans will taper off in the evening ... and for far eastern Louisiana it will probably end closer to midnight," said NWS forecaster Gavin Phillips.

The NWS issued a tornado watch for southeastern Louisiana and coastal Mississippi into early Monday, and warned that severe thunderstorms could develop in the region.

A tornado touched down near the community of Larose, about 45 minutes south of New Orleans, though no serious damage was reported.

Tides along the southern coast of Louisiana were expected to be a few feet above normal at high tide due to sustained winds, likely flooding roads in lower-lying areas, Phillips said.

More than 9 inches (23 cm) of rain swelled rivers and flooded roads around Houston, but no injuries or deaths were reported as flash flood warnings ended.

Petroleum refineries along the US Gulf Coast, which make up more than 40 percent of U.S. capacity, also appeared to be largely undamaged.

In the Eagle Ford and Permian Basin oil fields of south and west Texas, no major production cuts were reported. While the rains were heavy in Houston, they came after a month-long dry spell so flooding was relatively limited.

Texas withstands pummeling

The storms over the past two days drenched a large swath from south of Dallas to the southeast coast, triggering flash flooding in Navarro County, about 50 miles (80 km) south of Dallas, on Saturday.

A Union Pacific freight train carrying cement derailed in Navarro County after a creek overflowed, washing out the tracks. Locomotives and rail cars were pushed on their sides, and a two-person crew was forced to swim to safety.

Repair teams cleared the derailed cars by Sunday morning, but they were not expected to be righted for several hours and the rail line was not due to reopen until Monday at the earliest, Union Pacific spokesman Jeff DeGraff said.

Navarro County was one of the hardest-hit areas. The tiny town of Powell got 20 inches (50 cm) of rain over 30 hours, said meteorologist Brett Rathbun of Accuweather.

Navarro County Sheriff Elmer Tanner reported dozens of rescues from vehicles, homes and businesses since Friday.

In San Antonio, a woman reported her boyfriend was swept into a drainage ditch as he walked his dog early Saturday.

The force of the water washed him out of the underground ditch and he passed out, the San Antonio Fire Department said on Twitter. He later came to and called authorities.

The rain was strengthened by the remnants of Patricia, which was downgraded to a tropical depression after crashing into Mexico's west coast on Friday as a powerful hurricane. —Reuters

Maine Mendoza to grace two magazine covers in November


Proving that she really is 2015's breakout star and the fastest-rising icon in the Philippine entertainment industry, Dubsmash Queen and Kalyeserye sweetheart Maine Mendoza will grace not one, but two magazine covers this coming November.

After several product endorsements and prior to her upcoming movie on December, Eat Bulaga's “Yaya Dub” will be featured in two fashion and lifestyle magazines.

Last week, “Eat Bulaga: Sa Tamang Panahon” gave a behind-the-scenes preview of Maine's photo shoots.

Meg Magazine and Preview Magazine confirmed over the weekend that the phenomenal girl will be featured on their November 2015 issues.


Before having a sold-out show in the world's largest indoor arena on Saturday, the Dubsmash Queen has been active on-screen with Kalyeserye, as well as several commercials and guesting.

Maine already has two McDonald's commercials with Pambansang Bae Alden Richards.

She is also endorsing a telecommunications company, a cellphone brand and a canned sardine product.

The phenomenal AlDub loveteam will also be featured in an upcoming Metro Manila Film Festival movie entry, led by Vic Sotto and Ai-Ai delas Alas. —Bianca Rose Dabu/NB, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Saturday

Maine Mendoza on the cover of fashion magazine's November issue

Maine Mendoza indeed is 2015's "breakout star" with several product endorsements, an upcoming movie and now she will be on the cover of a fashion magazine.

Mendoza, who became famous after taking on the role of "Yaya Dub" in Eat Bulaga's kalyeserye, will be on the cover of Meg magazine's November issue.


Fashion photographer BJ Pascual had announced that he had a shoot with the Eat Bulaga kalyeserye star.

Mendoza already has two McDonald's commercials with Alden Richards.

She is also endorsing a telecommunications company, a cellphone brand and a canned sardine product.

The AlDub loveteam will also be featured in an upcoming Metro Manila Film Festival movie entry, led by Vic Sotto and Ai-Ai delas Alas. —ALG, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com



#ALDubEBTamangPanahon breaches 20 million tweets


Tweets for #ALDubEBTamangPanahon breached the 20 million mark an hour before the end of the most awaited "Tamang Panahon" concert of Eat Bulaga.

As of 2 p.m., tweets for #ALDubEBTamangPanahon has reached 20.2 million.

The AlDub hashtag's current record is 25.6 million for #ALDubEBforLOVE.

The hashtag was for Alden Richards' first visit to Maine "Yaya Dub" Mendoza at Lola Nidora's mansion last September 26.

#ALDubEBTamangPanahon has been trending since early Saturday followed by the hashtag for Eat Bulaga's rival It's Showtime with only 1.32 million. —ALG, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Alden hugs Maine as 'God Gave Me You' moves him to tears again


Alden Richards was moved to tears anew while performing "God Gave Me You" on Saturday at Eat Bulaga's "Tamang Panahon" event at Philippine Arena.

This time, however, he had Maine Mendoza by his side to comfort him for the emotional number.

--JST, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Wally Bayola muling pinuri ng netizens dahil sa galing sa pag-arte at 'bilis magpalit'


Namangha ang mga nanonood sa "Eat Bulaga: Sa Tamang Panahon" nitong Sabado nang magawa ni Wally Bayola na gampanan nang sunod-sunod sa loob ng ilang minuto ang tatlong karakter sa kalyeserye na sina Lola Nidora, Duhrizz at Rihanna.

Mula sa karakter na si Lola Nidora na mahilig magpayo, ilang saglit lang ay nakapagpalit na ito ng anyo para gampanan naman si Duhrizz, ang kontrabidang apo ni Lola Nidora.

Malakas na "no!," ang naging tugon ng mga nanonood sa Philippine Arena nang magtanong si Duhrizz kung mas bagay siya kay Alden kaysa kay Yaya Dub.

Matapos mag-sorry at magpaliwanag na nagawa niyang maging masama dahil sa pag-ibig kay Alden, umalis si Duhrizz at bigla namang sumulpot naman ang karakter ng mayordoma ni Lola Nidora na si Rihanna.

May ipinakita ring footage sa wide screen na sabay-sabay na nag-uusap at magkakasama ang nasabing tatlong karakter na ginampanan ni Wally.

Dahil sa ipinakitang bilis ni Wally na magpalit ng karakter at husay sa pag-arte, dumagsa ang papuri sa kaniya ng netizens.

Bukod sa may mga nagmungkahi na dapat mabigyan ng award si Wally, may nagtanong din kung triple kaya ang talent fee ng aktor dahil sa mga karakter na ginampanan niya.

- FRJ, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Friday

Global Markets: Alphabet set to open at record high; mobile ads drive revenue

New revenue streams such as mobile and video advertising should continue to propel earnings of Google parent Alphabet Inc (GOOGL.O), whose shares were set to open at a record high on Friday following better-than-expected results, analysts said.

The company's search traffic on mobiles surpassed desktop traffic worldwide for the first time in the latest quarter.

Alphabet's shares were up nearly 10 percent at $746.95 in premarket trading, far above the $713.33 record high set by Google - the company's former name - in regular trading in July.


A 10 percent rise equates to about $46 billion in market value. This would give Alphabet a market cap of about $519 billion, cementing its position as the second-most valuable stock after Apple Inc (AAPL.O), worth about $660 billion.

Shares of Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) and Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O), which also posted better-than-expected quarterly results on Thursday, also jumped in premarket trading, pushing up U.S. stock index futures.

At least 14 brokerages raised price targets on Alphabet's stock on Friday. J.P. Morgan and Jefferies were the most bullish, both raising their targets to $900.

"We think it's not long before mobile clicks surpass desktop, which we expect will provide a nice tailwind to cost-per-clicks, magnified by a tighter gap between mobile and desktop ad pricing," J.P. Morgan analyst Doug Anmuth said.

Alphabet said the number of paid clicks, which require advertisers to pay only if a user clicks on the ad, rose 23 percent, compared with 18 percent in the previous quarter.

With rivals such as Facebook Inc (FB.O) nipping at its heels, Alphabet had been trying to pump up advertising revenue from its mobile and video businesses, which have been much less profitable than its desktop business.

In a sign the company was becoming more sensitive to shareholders, Alphabet also announced on Thursday a $5.1 billion share buyback, its first ever.

Alphabet's new transparent reporting structure, to come into effect in the current quarter, also shows the company is becoming more shareholder-friendly, analysts said.

"The market has wanted four things from GOOGL – consistent revenue growth, margin stabilization, greater disclosure and cash back. What the market wants, the market gets," said RBC Capital Markets analyst Mark Mahaney.  — Reuters

Dabarkads Julia Clarete at Paolo Ballesteros ready na sa 'Tamang Panahon' concert bukas!

By AEDRIANE ACAR

All roads lead to the Philippine Arena this Saturday!


Bukas na mapapanood ng buong mundo ang hinandang grand celebration ng 'Eat Bulaga!' para sa lahat ng Dabarkads na walang sawang sumusuporta sa kanila for 36 years.

Nagpapaalala na din ang national government sa lahat ng dadalo sa 'Tamang Panahon' concert sa Bulacan na mag-ingat at maghanda sa matinding trapik.

source: gmanetwork.com





Thursday

Knee replacement surgery works, but so can nonsurgical techniques


Total knee replacement can usually relieve pain and improve function, but a nonsurgical regimen can also be effective in some people without posing the complication risks that can plague people who choose surgery, according to a new study.

The test found that while 85 percent of patients who underwent surgery showed clinically-significant improvement after one year, so did 67 percent assigned to a combination of supervised exercise, use of insoles, pain medication, education and dietary advice.

"It won't do any harm trying the nonsurgical treatment," chief author, Dr. Soren Skou of the University of Southern Denmark in Odense, told Reuters Health. "I hope this will give a more balanced discussion of whether or not to have the surgery."

There's little debate that knee replacement helps many people, and the new test of 100 patients—the first randomized controlled trial ever done on the technique—confirms it. Surgery patients didn't show just some improvement. They registered far less pain and disability than those assigned to the non-surgery group.

Yet the study was needed because as many as 1 percent of surgery patients die within 90 days of their operation and about 1 in 5 have residual pain at least six months after the procedure, said Dr. Jeffrey Katz of Harvard Medical School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in an accompanying editorial in the New England Journal of Medicine. "Until now, we have lacked rigorously controlled comparisons between total knee replacement and its alternatives."

"People need to understand and respect that knee replacement is not without complication. Knee replacement is a big surgical procedure and there are risks associated with it," Dr. Andrew Pollak, chairman of orthopedics at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore, told Reuters Health.

The study "really emphasizes what we suspected all along—total knee replacement works. It will be obvious to many of us who take care of patients. But for patients with significant symptoms and evidence of arthritis, total knee replacement is a very effective way of improving quality of life," said Pollak, who was not associated with the research. "Therapy alone has a role. It does help certain patients. It can certainly prolong the time to when knee replacement is necessary."

More than 670,000 total knee replacements are done in the US each year at a cost of $36.1 billion.

All of the patients in the study had moderate-to-severe knee osteoarthritis. The team measured symptoms, pain and quality of life over a one year period.

Volunteers in the surgery group gained an average of 32.5 points versus 16.0 points for people who received nonsurgical therapy. All started off with a score of about 48 on a 101-point assessment scale.

Individual measures of pain, symptoms, activities of daily living, quality of life, and sports and recreation all showed significant improvement with surgery.

But while there were just six instances of serious adverse events in the 50 patients who didn't receive surgery, there were four times as many among the 50 assigned to have a knee replaced. One third of the problems involved the replaced knee, including three cases each of unacceptable stiffness and deep vein thrombosis requiring anticoagulation, and one case each of deep infection and leg fracture.

Thirteen of the 50 patients assigned to the no-surgery group ended up having their knee replaced anyway during the 12-month follow-up period.

"We've had some patients who had the surgery who did not improve in pain and, in some cases, had worse pain," Skou said. They may improve with longer followup, but, he said, "what struck me is, if you do not go through surgery, you could always have the surgery later." —Reuters

10-year-old Pinay in UK rocks the Internet with guitar videos


Videos of a United Kingdom-based Pinay kid playing heavy and classic rock songs have been making rounds of the Internet.

In the videos uploaded on her YouTube channel, Krizten Centino, 10, is seen covering classic rock songs by Led Zeppelin, The Knack, and Pink Floyd, among others, with her electric guitar.



Some videos show her covering songs by modern-day rock groups like Metallica, Guns 'N' Roses and Iron Maiden, among others.

There is also a video, posted four months ago, showing her jamming with a band of adults, covering the Eagles' classic song "Hotel California."

Krizten's Facebook fan page lists Philippines and UK as her hometown. —KBK, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

From wacky to stunning, Maine Mendoza transforms in one photo shoot with Liz Uy


Ilang beses nang nakakatrabaho ng Dubsmash Queen at Kalyeserye sweetheart na si Maine Mendoza a.k.a. Yaya Dub ang ilan sa mga pinakasikat na celebrity stylists, make up artists, at hairdressers para sa kaliwa't kanan niyang endorsements mula nang maging phenomenon ang Kalyeserye ng Eat Bulaga at ang loveteam nila ni Pambansang Bae Alden Richards.

Nitong linggo, ibinahagi ng celebrity stylist na si Liz Uy ang behind-the-scenes photos ng isa sa pinakabagong photo shoot ng dalaga.

Bukod sa kakaiba niyang talento sa pagpapasaya ng mga manonood at maging lahat ng taong nakakasalamuha niya sa totoong buhay, pinuri rin ni Liz ang versatility ni Maine.

Ayon sa isang Instagram post ng Stylized Studio, “From wacky to stunning.. @mainedcm sure knows how to manage her versatile expressions!”



Sa mga naunang pahayag, ibinahagi ni Liz na masayang kasama at katrabaho si Maine hindi lang dahil sa nakakatuwang personality nito kundi dahil rin sa professionalism ng dalaga at sa pagiging simple at mapagkumbaba nito.

“Maine is very professional, and she delivers. Heard from her first major endorsement that the TVC translated to sales,” ayon sa celebrity stylist.

Dagdag pa niya, “She is very very simple. She is very shy pero at least, slowly she’s warming up na to me. She is very different from her on-cam persona.” —Bianca Rose Dabu/NB, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Wednesday

Google invests in Chinese artificial intelligence firm


Google has taken a stake in a Chinese artificial intelligence startup which is aiming to develop smart wearable technologies, the companies said Tuesday.

The amount on investment in Mobvoi was not disclosed.

But the companies said that the firm, created by a former Google researcher, has now raised $75 million in equity financing.

Google will lead the latest round and hold a minority stake, according to the statement. The move comes five years after Google's highly contentious exit from its Chinese operations over censorship.

"Mobvoi is very excited to welcome Google as an investor as both companies share a long-term view on technologies and are dedicated to deliver an uncompromising user experience through emerging technologies," said Mobvoi founder Zhifei Li.

The new funding is aimed at helping develop "a new generation of wearable experiences and explore consumer-oriented products for the in-vehicle environment" as well as exploring robotics technologies.

“Mobvoi has developed some very unique speech and natural language processing technologies,” said Don Harrison, vice president of corporate development at Google Inc.

"We were impressed by their innovative approach and the early traction that they've seen, which is why we're pleased to support them with this investment."

The two firms announced an agreement earlier this year to bring the Google Android Wear operating system to China. —Agence France-Presse

source: gmanetwork.com

Eat Bulaga offers free shuttle service to ‘Sa Tamang Panahon’ event


Magkakaroon ng libreng bus para sa lahat ng miyembro ng AlDub Nation na manonood ng 'Eat Bulaga: Sa Tamang Panahon' sa Philippine Arena sa darating na Sabado, October 24.

Itinuturing itong isa sa pinakamalaking pagtatanghal sa kasaysayan ng longest-running noontime show na 'Eat Bulaga' matapos ma-soldout ang tickets at tinatayang 55,000 katao ang pupuno sa nasabing venue.

Nitong Miyerkules, inanunsyo nina Tito Sotto at Joey de Leon bago ang episode ng Kalyeserye na magkakaroon ng libreng hatid sa Philippine Arena para sa mga manonood.

Ang tatlong terminal na maaaring puntahan ng mga manonood ay:

    Broadway Centrum sa Aurora Blvd., Quezon City (MDC Buses)
    Cubao Station, First North Lunzon Bus Garage sa EDSA cor. P. Tuazon, Cubao
    Southbound (FLN Buses, Bataan Buses)
    Navotas Terminal Station sa C-4 Road Centennial Park, Navotas City (RRCG Buses, Bus Link Buses, Delta Buses)


Aalis ang first trip sa ganap na 6:00 ng umaga, habang 7:00 ng umaga namna ang alis ng second trip.




Para naman sa mga hindi nakabili ng ticket at sa mga miyembro ng AlDub Nation na nasa ibang bansa, mayroong 'AlDub account' kung saan maaaring mag-donate para sa 'AlDub Library' project ng Eat Bulaga.

Nauna nang sinabi ng Eat Bulaga na lahat ng nalikom na pondo mula sa mga nabiling ticket—na nagkakahalaga ng P150 hanggang P1,200—ay gagamitin sa pagpapatayo ng mga tatawaging "AlDub library" sa iba't ibang bahagi ng bansa.

Pinaalalahanan rin ng Eat Bulaga Dabarkads sa lahat ng mga nais maging bahagi ng makasaysayang kaganapang ito na mag-ingat sa mga mapansamantalang tao na maaaring gamitin ang pagtitipon upang makapanlinlang ng kapwa.

—Bianca Rose Dabu/NB, GMA News

source: gmanetwork.com

Tuesday

Marriage may be bad for your waistline – US study


Need another reason to blame weight gain on your marriage? When one spouse becomes obese, the other’s risk of obesity almost doubles, a US study suggests.

“Normal weight people whose spouses went from being normal weight to obese were more likely to become obese,” said Laura Cobb, who led the study as a researcher at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

“This suggests that changes in one spouse are likely to also be reflected in the other spouse, likely because of similar changes in diet, physical activity or other behaviors that impact obesity,” Cobb said by email.

Plenty of research already links marriage and weight gain, and scientists have firmly established the connection between obesity and heart disease, diabetes, and certain cancers.

What the current study adds is a fresh take on how couples may gain weight in tandem, insight that might help shape more effective obesity prevention and treatment efforts targeting couples, Cobb and colleagues note in the American Journal of Epidemiology.

Researchers followed almost 4,000 couples for up to 25 years, starting between 1987 and 1989. After an initial exam, they had three follow-up visits roughly three years apart, followed by a fifth exam between 2011 and 2013.

At the start of the study, 23 percent of the men and 25 percent of the women were obese.

Non-obese men whose wives became obese between visits in the study were 78 percent more likely to become obese during that period than they would have been had their wives not gained so much weight, the study found.

Having a husband become obese was linked to an 89 percent increased risk of developing obesity for their wives.

Not many people who started out obese lost enough weight to be considered no longer obese, but when they did, their spouse was also more likely to become non-obese.

Shortcomings of the study include the long stretch of time that elapsed between the fourth and fifth exams and the large proportion of people who died or left the study before the final visit, the authors acknowledge.

It’s not unusual for married couples to forge common habits over time that influence their weight, said Ivanka Prichard, a weight loss researcher at Flinders University in Adelaide, Australia.

“Over time, similarities in diet, particularly any unhealthy aspects, may lead to weight changes,” Prichard, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by email. “There are also a range of pressures in life that could impact this such as having children, work, shared health knowledge, time or finances.”

Like unhealthy habits, though, positive lifestyle choices can also be contagious in a marriage, said Debra Umberson, director of the Population Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin.

“When married people get in shape or lose weight, it’s often because one spouse takes the lead and urges the other spouse along,” Umberson, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by email. “Even if the person not taking the lead is resistant, over time they will probably be influenced by the kinds of food and activities their spouse is involved with—especially if the person taking the lead is the one who purchases groceries or prepares meals.” — Reuters

Broadway producer wants Maine Mendoza to star in a musical


Maine Mendoza a.k.a. Yaya Dub’s talent has caught the attention of Broadway producer Shea Arender.

The American singer-songwriter wants to talk to Maine, meet her manager, and discuss the prospect of coming up with a musical starring the Eat Bulaga! Kalyeserye sweetheart.

Shea checked out Maine’s Dubsmash clips when a friend from California told him about her.

“I can’t help but laugh constantly watching those clips [from Eat Bulaga!]. I don’t understand everything, but the facial expression alone is amazing," he told PEP.ph  (Philippine Entertainment Portal) in a presscon on Monday, October 19, at Alab Restaurant in Quezon City.

Shea recalls marvelling at Maine’s versatility and passion in “putting smiles on everyone’s faces.”

“One of the most important things is to bring joy and make people happy, and she’s doing a fantastic job!”

So impressed was Shea with Maine that he wants to linger in the Philippines to explore the possibility of producing a musical, just for the other half of the AlDub (Alden Richards-Yaya Dub/Maine Mendoza) love team.

“I want to have a meeting with people managing Maine’s career. It’s not commonly done here—a Broadway musical based on a TV show,” Shea explains.

He figures it would be sheer fun to capture Maine’s natural humor on stage, and not just in front of the camera.

Shea also wants to act alongside Maine.

“I want to keep this open. There’s so much talent here, so many options. I see myself recording, doing an acting project with her," he reveals. —For the full story, visit PEP

source: gmanetwork.com

Monday

Talking to kids about smoking risks may help parents quit


Parents who quit smoking may be less likely to relapse when they discuss the dangers of cigarettes with their children, a US study suggests.

Researchers followed almost 700 ex-smokers with children for one year. Half of the parents received a series of mailers with educational materials explaining the risks of tobacco and activities to help them discuss these dangers with their children. The other parents served as a control group and didn’t get any help.

After one year, the parents supported by mail were twice as likely to still be abstinent.

More research is needed to explain why this happened because the findings came from a project designed to test something different – whether parents prompted to talk about cigarettes with their kids might help prevent their children from smoking, noted lead study author Christine Jackson.

It’s possible, however, that talking to kids helped parents cement their own identities as non-smokers, or that the conversations created a feeling of cognitive dissonance that made it difficult for participants to advocate against smoking while being smokers themselves, said Jackson, a senior research scientist at RTI International in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina.

“Our research is important because it suggests an entirely new approach to helping adults, specifically adults who are parents of school-aged children, succeed in quitting smoking,” Jackson said by email.

To understand how parent-child conversations about smoking might influence tobacco use, researchers asked parents of children aged 8 to 10 years old to participate in a study when they called a smoking cessation hotline available in 11 US states.

Parents were around 37 years old at the start of the study, and they had typically started smoking when they were about 16.

Most of them had tried to quit at least once before the current attempt and had a previous daily habit of at least 20 cigarettes, or about a pack a day. Many parents also lived in households with at least one or two current smokers.

The parents in the support group received six magazines with tips to prepare them for conversations about smoking with their children, as well as supplies to complete structured anti-smoking activities with their children.

Only 465 out of the original 689 parents remained in the study by the end of the year. When researchers counted all of the dropouts as parents who relapsed, the effect of the mailers remained meaningful, though smaller.

After accounting for the dropouts, parents who received mailers were still 58 percent more likely to remain abstinent by the end of the study, the authors report in Nicotine and Tobacco Research.

In addition to the high dropout rate, other shortcomings of the study include the reliance on parents to accurately report whether they remained abstinent and the lack of data to explain why parents who received mailers were more likely to avoid tobacco.

Even so, the findings suggest that parents may reinforce what they know about the benefits of smoking cessation by teaching these lessons to their children, said Jonathan Bricker, a behavioral scientist at the University of Washington and Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle.

“Humans tend to want to act consistent with what they teach others,” Bricker, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by email. “By teaching your child, you hold yourself more accountable. If you teach it, you are more likely to do it yourself.”

Regarding the experiment's original focus, Bricker noted, previous research has found parents who stop smoking when their children are young may cut the risk that their kids will start smoking by as much as 40 percent.

When parents quit, this can also nearly double the odds that any children who smoke may also quit, he added. — Reuters

Republican candidates Bush and Trump clash over 9/11 remarks


WASHINGTON - Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush transitioned from defense to offense on Sunday after criticism from rival Donald Trump that his brother, former President George W. Bush, carried some blame for the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Trump, the flamboyant front-runner in the 15-candidate Republican field, once again provoked a tit-for-tat with Bush on Friday by saying his brother must share some of the blame for the attacks that occurred during his first year in office.

"Look, my brother responded to a crisis, and he did it as you would hope a president would do," Bush said on CNN's "State of the Union."

"The great majority of Americans believe that. And I don't know why he keeps bringing this up."

Bush said Trump's comments about the Sept. 11 attacks called his credibility into question. The former Florida governor attacked Trump's foreign policy credentials and compared his grip on international issues to a reality television show the billionaire businessman formerly hosted.

"Across the spectrum of foreign policy, Mr. Trump talks about things that -- as though he's still on 'The Apprentice,'" Bush said on CNN.

"Talking about Syria - saying ISIS should take out (Syrian President Bashar al-Assad), then Russia should take out ISIS, as though it was some kind of board game and not a serious approach," he said.

Trump doubled down on his comments during an appearance on "Fox News Sunday," using a oft-repeated Jeb Bush phrase - that his brother "kept us safe" - against him.

"Jeb said 'we were safe with my brother. We were safe.' Well the World Trade Center just fell down," Trump said on Fox.

"I'm not blaming George Bush, but I don't want Jeb Bush to say 'my brother kept us safe,' because September 11th was one of the worst days in the history of this country."

Bush has defended his brother's actions after the Sept. 11 attacks, but his campaign has kept its distance from the unpopular president indelibly linked to the unpopular Iraq war.

He mocked Trump's comments and likened them to blaming President Franklin D. Roosevelt for the World War Two attack on Pearl Harbor.

"Next week, Mr. Trump is probably going to say that FDR was around when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor," he said. "It's what you do after that matters. And that's the sign of leadership." — Reuters

Saturday

Silicon Valley IPO market boom winding down


SAN FRANCISCO -  Last year, many tech IPOs enjoyed soaring valuations in their Wall Street debut, raining cash on the companies and their investors and boosting concerns about another Silicon Valley bubble.

Now, the party is winding down, according to data analyzed by Reuters: Five of the 12 U.S.-based tech companies that went public this year, or 42 percent, priced their shares at a valuation below or nearly the same as their private market value, compared to 24 percent of the 29 that went public in 2014.

"People are no longer out of their minds with valuations and expectations," said Adam Marcus, managing partner at OpenView Venture Partners in Boston.

A recent example is Pure Storage (PSTG.N), whose IPO earlier this month gave the data storage company a $3.1 billion market cap that almost matched its valuation in the private market.

The shift in the investing climate comes as payments company Square filed this week for its own IPO later this year, becoming one of the most prominent of the so-called "unicorns," or private companies valued at more than $1 billion, to try to go public.

Even when valuations increase, they are growing by a smaller amount, according to the data, which was provided by Ipreo, a market intelligence company, and Pitchbook, a venture capital, private equity and M&A data provider, and analyzed by Reuters. Among the companies that saw their values grow in an IPO in 2014, the median increase from their value in the private market was 61 percent. Some companies saw increases of three-, four- and even five-fold.

So far this year, that gain is 32 percent. The data excludes eight companies that went public in 2014 because there was insufficient information to calculate their pre-IPO valuations.

The shrinking difference affects every corner of the pre-IPO market, compelling some companies to delay or withdraw their public-offering plans, bankers and industry analysts said.

And some late-stage investors - while they will still get paid - may see smaller returns than they gambled on. Those who invested in rounds with an eye on a 30 or 40 percent return will more likely get a return similar to the S&P 500 over the past year - about 8 percent, sources said.

According to interviews with bankers, venture capitalists and late-stage investors, this shift in the venture investing climate is just getting underway and likely to accelerate.

It is also an about-face from the last few years, when hot tech companies found no shortage of investors for their private financing and experienced massive valuations, and then demanded an even higher market cap in an IPO.

But now the public market is less willing to play along, venture capitalists said.

To be sure, some delays in going public can be attributed to the surge in funding from late stage investors, allowing tech startups to stay private longer.

As their valuations grew in the private market, a big increase in the value of their shares in an IPO became harder to achieve.

A valuation drop in an IPO doesn't necessarily dim the long-term prospects of a company. Hortonworks' (HDP.O) stock is up more than 34 percent from the IPO price, for instance, after its valuation took a 40 percent cut in its public offering last year.

But lower valuations in the public market raise questions about the future of the nearly 150 companies that have filed confidential IPOs, according to estimates by some investors.

There is not enough market demand, they say, to support so many deals. In a confidential IPO, reserved for companies with less than $1 billion in revenue, companies file a draft registration with the Securities and Exchange Commission that is for non-public review.

UNICORNS

And some "unicorn" tech companies that were expected to go public this year have put those plans off. Among them are online lending company Prosper Marketplace and data storage company Nutanix, according to sources familiar with those companies. After meeting with bankers, Prosper decided to stay private for about the next year, the sources said.

"We take the idea of going public seriously," said CEO Aaron Vermut, "but there are other ways to achieve your goals while staying private longer."

One of Prosper's public counterparts, online business lender OnDeck, saw its valuation fall from $1.3 billion during its IPO to about $624 million, according to Thomson Reuters data, likely contributing to Prosper's decision, bankers told Reuters.

Nutanix is also in a holding pattern, bankers told Reuters, although Nutanix investor Ravi Mhatre of Lightspeed Venture Partners said it "is fully capable of being a public company and operating as a public company."

Neither company has filed publicly for an IPO.

Regardless, many companies will go public in current market conditions, as those that have raised large rounds since 2013 are under pressure to return cash to their investors and employees in the next year.

Square is among those. It filed for a public offering this week, proposing to raise at $275 million.

But it, too, is expected to take a price cut. With its CEO, Jack Dorsey, now also leading Twitter, some investors expect the company's $6 billion valuation will be discounted to compensate for Dorsey's half-time role.  — Reuters