Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Elton John wants Timberlake to play him

Elton John wants Justin Timberlake to play him on the silver screen!

The 64-year-old singer told the Los Angeles Times that Timberlake, 30, is his "number one" pick to star in a biopic about his life.?

PHOTOS: Meet my big screen twin

"He played me before in a David LaChapelle video of 'Rocket Man' and it was superb," John continued. (Rolling Stone pointed out that Timberlake actually appeared as John in a video for the song "This Train Don?t Stop There Anymore.")

Slideshow: Justin Timberlake (on this page)

PHOTOS: Justin's style evolution

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So what kind of film is John planning to make about his life? "It's going to be a surreal look at my life, and not just a factual look at my life, more in the manner of a 'Moulin Rouge,'" he told the Los Angeles Times. "I just don't want it to be a normal biopic because my life hasn't been like that. And it only goes up to when I go into rehab in 1990. It starts with me going into rehab and ends when I come out."

PHOTOS: The ladies JT has romanced!

John added that he'd be "making an announcement about (the film) very, very soon" and already has a director on board. "It's just going to be a matter of getting the script exactly the way we want it ... then we'll start trying to cast and plan."

Copyright 2012 Us Weekly

Source: http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/45856902/ns/today-entertainment/

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Condoleezza Rice On California Ballot: 'I Worry About The Complexity'

Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was once charged with spreading democracy across the Middle East, doing diplomatic battle with dictators and smoothing things over when countries got testy with each other.

So what's got this multi-lingual, concert pianist Stanford professor confused? Why, it's the California ballot.

In an interview with the Sacramento Bee, Rice admits, "Every time I vote in California, and the whole referendum process, I really have my reservations about it."

She goes on to add, "I think I'm an informed voter, and I sometimes have to read the measures six or seven times, and then sometimes I still don't understand them."

Yes, we would also have to say that the woman who was once one of the U.S. President's closest advisors is probably an informed voter. And if California's infamously complex ballot system has Professor Rice stumped, then it's probably stumping regular Californians too.

California ballots are made up of two types of measures: things that are put forth by the state legislature, and any initiatives or referenda that have gathered a certain number of signatures from regular California voters. If a voter wanted to propose an initiative statute, 504,760 signatures are required to get it on a statewide ballot. If a voter wanted to pass a Constitutional amendment, only 807,615 signatures are required. And in a state with an estimated 37 million residents (as of 2010), those numbers are a pittance.

Depending on your political persuasion, you may have cheered for Proposition 13 (a permanent change to how property taxes are calculated), Proposition 8 (a constitutional ban on same-sex marriage), or Proposition 215 (legalizing medical marijuana), but each has drastically changed California in ways voters may not have predicted or understood -- all with a simple majority vote.

To make matters worse, according to the Center for Governmental studies (PDF), 33% of all ballot initiatives between 2000 and 2006 clocked in at over 5,000 words, which leaves the average voter (who won't read the entire measure) at a loss for how to decide on an issue. This leaves the ballot initiative system rife with exploitation from big business and other powerful interests to toy with California legislation. Case in point: Amazon's battle against California sales tax.

But it's not like Rice is necessarily a voice of reason on this issue. She's a member of the Think Long Committee for California, which is championing a ballot initiative to (somehow) raise state tax revenue while reducing personal and corporate tax rates.

As California chairman of the Democratic party John Burton put it in a recent Daily Show spot, our ballot initiative system is "totally f**ked up."

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/03/condoleezza-rice-california-ballot_n_1182267.html

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

GOP candidates vie for voters' trust in fluid Iowa

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, accompanied by his wife Ann, speaks during a caucus day rally at the Temple for Performing Arts, Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2012, in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Republican presidential candidate, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, accompanied by his wife Ann, speaks during a caucus day rally at the Temple for Performing Arts, Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2012, in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Republican presidential candidate, Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas speaks during a campaign stop at Valley High School, Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2012, in West Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Republican presidential candidate, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum reacts to a question from the media at a campaign stop at Valley High School, Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2012, in West Des Moines, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

Republican presidential candidate, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, campaigns at Elly's Coffee Tea and Coffee House in Muscatine, Iowa, Tuesday, Jan. 3, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)

Republican presidential candidate Texas Gov. Rick Perry speaks to local residents during a campaign stop at the Hotel Pattee, Monday, Jan. 2, 2012, in Perry, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

(AP) ? Throwing elbows to the end, Republican candidates jostled over their conservative credentials and appealed to Iowa residents who were casting the first votes of the 2012 presidential race on Tuesday for a strong send-off into the long campaign season ahead.

Mitt Romney, a confident-but-cautious front-runner for the GOP nomination, looked past his Republican rivals to President Barack Obama in his final pitch to Iowa voters.

"This has been a failed presidency," he told voters in a Des Moines ballroom. "I will go to work to get Americans back to work."

With large numbers of likely caucus-goers still undecided or willing to change their minds, the outcome in Iowa was uncertain to the finish in a race that has elevated and then discarded a head-snapping assortment of front-runners.

The two who appeared most likely to challenge Romney for victory in Iowa were former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum and libertarian Rep. Ron Paul of Texas ? neither of whom is likely to present as serious a challenge to Romney over the long haul as would former House speaker Newt Gingrich or Texas Gov. Rick Perry.

"It might come down to the speeches at the caucuses," said Phil Ubben, of Sioux City. "I want to support someone who can go all the way and defeat the Democrats in November."

The candidates pinned their final hopes on such voters.

"I think anybody can come in first," Gingrich said. That was most likely wishful thinking for the former House speaker, who lost momentum after rising to the front of the GOP pack just weeks ago.

Training their sights on the pack leader, Gingrich, Santorum and other GOP rivals questioned Romney's conservative convictions and predicted Obama would, to use Gingrich's words, "tear him apart."

Santorum, enjoying a late surge in polls, offered himself as a reliable conservative and the only candidate who could solve "the intractable problem of exploding government." The 76-year-old Paul, looking to connect with young voters, dangled the name of pop singer Kelly Clarkson, who has endorsed him ? but admitted he didn't know much about her.

Romney answered persistent questions about whether he's a solid conservative by pointing to the 2008 race, casting himself as a "conservative alternative to John McCain" in the Republican primaries that year.

"I've got a record, and it's a conservative record," he said on Fox News Channel.

On Tuesday night, Republicans will gather in living rooms, high school gymnasiums and local libraries for caucuses that start the process of picking the GOP nominee. In each precinct caucus, voters will urge their friends and neighbors to support a preferred candidate. For all of the attention paid to the caucuses, they are essentially a nonbinding straw poll that awards no delegates. Republicans do that at county and district conventions later in the year.

Twenty-five delegates are at stake in Iowa, out of 1,144 needed to win the Republican nomination ? what Romney called "the whole enchilada."

Romney's campaign announced Tuesday it is going up with TV ads in Florida, which votes Jan. 31, sending a message he's got the money and organization to endure.

Obama isn't ceding the stage to the Republicans while they sort themselves out: The president, fresh off a 10-day Hawaiian vacation, made plans to host an evening live video teleconference with supporters in Iowa as the caucuses were under way.

And Mitch Stewart, a top Obama campaign aide, said in a morning email to the president's supporters: "Most of us will watch what happens on TV ? but, as you do, remember that the end of this story is up to you."

For all the talk of trust and electability, candidates in both parties know the economy is sure to be the central issue this election year: Obama was traveling to Cleveland on Wednesday for an event focused on the economy. Romney, for his part, said he's running to get the country back on track after Obama's mistakes.

Most polls in recent days have put Romney and Paul atop the GOP field in Iowa, with Santorum in third and gaining ground. More than a third of all potential caucus-goers said they could yet change their minds. Perry, Gingrich and Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann all trailed.

Romney faces the same challenge he did in 2008: winning over a conservative base that's uncomfortable with his moderate past. In 2008, socially conservative voters united behind former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, denying Romney a first-place finish and contributing to his eventual defeat.

Romney's 2012 rivals kept up their questions about his conservative convictions. Perry, speaking to Fox News on Tuesday, dismissed Romney as a "conservative of convenience." Bachmann offered herself as the "one true conservative."

Gingrich said Romney should "level with the American people" about his moderate political views. Asked on CBS if he was calling the former Massachusetts governor a liar, Gingrich said flatly, "Yes."

Emotions ? and rhetoric ? were hot in the campaign's final hours.

Santorum, blaming the Paul campaign for recorded phone calls questioning his policies on guns and abortion, told reporters at Fox News that "Ron Paul is disgusting."

Romney said he can handle any criticism his Republican rivals heap on him, calling it only a warm-up to whatever will come from Obama's camp. "My shoulders are wide," he insisted on Fox.

How many people turn out to vote will help drive the results. In 2008, more than 120,000 Republicans showed up, a record. Weather could be a factor this year. Iowa hasn't had much snow this winter, and there were clear but cold forecasts across the state.

After Tuesday's vote, Romney, Gingrich and Santorum planned to depart immediately for New Hampshire. Romney holds a commanding lead in polls there, and will be in a strong position to win even if he doesn't pull out a victory in Iowa. Paul plans to join his rivals in New Hampshire later in the week. The primary is Jan. 10.

Perry and Bachmann, both short-lived front-runners, don't plan to compete in New Hampshire, instead heading straight from Iowa to the first-in-the-South primary, set for Jan. 21 in South Carolina. Bachmann pronounced herself ready to move on: "This election is far from over," she said. "This is the opening chapter. Tonight is the first vote. We've got a long road to go."

Perry tried to buck up disheartened supporters by comparing caucus day to historic military campaigns of yore: "This is Concord," he said. "This is Omaha Beach."

Romney also plans to visit South Carolina this week, with campaign stops Thursday and Friday.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2012-01-03-GOP%20Campaign/id-b4773d192a314cf8a2cd851a42bc2600

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Microsoft MVP for year 2012

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?

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Just received an email from Microsoft that I'm being nominated for Microsoft Most Valuable Professional (Microsoft MVP) for the second consecutive year.This is great news for me It feels so great for me. I am very thankful to all friends, community member and team members. Special thanks to Rick Anderson(ASP.NET MVC Team member). ?

Source: http://weblogs.asp.net/imranbaloch/archive/2012/01/01/microsoft-mvp-for-year-2012.aspx

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Monday, January 2, 2012

What Stories Will 'Pop' In 2012?1676582

From music to TV to celebrity babies, MTV News looks ahead to all of the big releases expected in the coming months.
By Jocelyn Vena


Beyonce
Photo: Getty Images

It's a new year and that means that there's lots of ooey-gooey pop goodness all ready to pour out in 2012. Between celebrity babies, music and Hollywood, fans should gear up for some really big stuff in the coming year. But if history has taught us anything, as hard as we might plan, pop culture always has a way of sneaking up and surprising us. Not that we're complaining. So get your planners out: MTV News is looking ahead at what to expect in the world of pop culture.

Music
There are lots of big album releases slated for 2012. Crossover queen Nicki Minaj will release Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded just in time to show her Barbz and Kenz some love on Valentine's Day. Madonna already has confirmed that she will drop her next album come spring. Fans already got a taste of it when the single "Gimme All Your Luvin' " leaked on the Internet. "American Idol" alum Adam Lambert is readying the release of his next album, Trespassing, set to drop in March. Willow Smith's fans should whip their hair back and forth as the tween's long-simmering debut album, Knees and Elbows, will finally drop in April. Justin Bieber has teased his Believe album for a summer release. He's shared that it will pick up where Justin Timberlake left off before he decided to focus on his acting. Basically, he's bringing sexy back. There are two forthcoming albums that don't have exact release dates but are highly anticipated nonetheless. Lady Gaga is already thinking about her next album and recently revealed to MTV News that she even has a title for her Born This Way follow-up in mind. Taylor Swift is knee-deep in and working hard on her follow-up to her phenomenally successful Speak Now. TV
In between pumping out tunes, some big shows will also return in 2012. Everything from "The Secret Circle" to "2 Broke Girls" to "New Girl" will be back for more fun come the new year. After a break, "Pretty Little Liars" will be back midseason. Will we finally find out who "A" is when season 2 resumes on January 2? Well, only that texting antagonist knows the answer. There are many other mysteries on "The Vampire Diaries" that will also have to be resolved once that show picks up again on January 5. And if all that drama is too much to handle, "Glee" will be back for more sing-along good times on January 17, with the Michael Jackson tribute episode airing one week later.

Celebrity Babies
2012 is poised to be a big year for famous babies. OK, so 2011 saw Mariah Carey and Dem Babies, but some of the most famous ladies in La La Land and beyond will become first-time moms in the new year, giving MC and her family a run for their money. Beyoncé and Jay-Z will welcome their first child into the world any day now. The twosome revealed they were in the family way at the VMAs back in August. Jessica Simpson and her fiancé, Eric Johnson, will also welcome their first little bundle of joy. The news of the pregnancy came after a lot of speculation about Simpson's expanding midsection. As it turns out, it's a big year for triple-threat moms-to-be, with Hilary Duff also expecting a baby come 2012.

Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1676582/pop-culture-news-2012-beyonce-lady-gaga.jhtml

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NFL Playoff Scenarios: Ravens Will Clinch Bye and Knock Out Bengals

The hard-hitting Baltimore Ravens can clinch a first-round bye with a win over the division rival Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday. Not only will they accomplish that task, but Ray Lewis and Co. will also eliminate the Bengals in the process.

Lewis hasn't looked like his usual dominating self since suffering a toe injury in November. That makes securing a week off even more important for the Ravens, who are 8-0 inside of M&T Bank Stadium this season.

Baltimore won the first game between the two teams thanks to a big game from Torrey Smith. The rookie wide receiver poses a matchup problem for Cincinnati and could be in line for another huge outing on Sunday.

The Ravens own a tiebreaker advantage over the Pittsburgh Steelers due to the team's two head-to-head victories. They have rarely shown such elite form in other games, though, which is a concern.

It shouldn't be a major problem against Cincinnati because the Bengals haven't been able to pick up any marquee wins this season. They have taken advantage of an easy schedule to get into the position they are currently in.

They don't have any room for error with three teams just one game back. A loss would put their playoff spot in serious jeopardy. Since the Ravens are one of the NFL's most competitive teams, knowing a win could send another team packing is another layer of motivation.

Which team will win this crucial game?

    Which team will win this crucial game?

  • Baltimore Ravens

  • Cincinnati Bengals

The key to the game will be Joe Flacco protecting the ball. There have only been two games all season that the four-year QB hasn't turned it over at least once.

In critical games like the Ravens will face in the postseason, every turnover could end a team's season. A high-pressure situation like the Bengals game will be a good trail run for Flacco. Especially since he's struggled against them in the past.

Knowing the importance of the game, the Ravens defense will rise to the occasion like so many times in the past. Cincinnati doesn't have enough game-breakers outside of A.J. Green to cause issues for Baltimore.

Look for the Bengals to put up a fight into the second half before the Ravens take control in the fourth quarter. At that point, Ray Rice will do what he does best and finish off Cincinnati.

Aside from clinching a bye for themselves, the Ravens will also open up a spot for the Oakland Raiders to sneak into the playoffs.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1004333-nfl-playoff-scenarios-ravens-will-clinch-bye-and-knock-out-bengals

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Sunday, January 1, 2012

tonnellato: @Abhinew that's why I don't get along well with people who claim Windows is superior simply because OS X's finder lacks power.

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@Abhinew that's why I don't get along well with people who claim Windows is superior simply because OS X's finder lacks power. tonnellato

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Source: http://twitter.com/tonnellato/statuses/153333760979517440

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