Monday, February 28, 2011

Rahm Emanuel faces tough tasks as Chicago mayor

Emanuel, who overwhelmed the race with truckloads of money and friends in high places from Washington to Hollywood, will take control of a city in deep financial trouble with problems ranging from an understaffed Police Department to underperforming schools.

On Tuesday, Emanuel won 55 percent of the vote, easily outdistancing several rivals. He succeeds Mayor Richard M. Daley, who is retiring after 22 years in office as the longest-serving mayor in Chicago's history.

The city Emanuel inherits, though perhaps more beautiful than ever after years of extensive urban improvements, is in financial straits that it hasn't seen since before Daley's father, Mayor Richard J. Daley, came to power in the 1950s.

"Not since the Great Depression have the finances of the city been this precarious," said Dominic Pacyga, a historian and author of "Chicago: A Biography." The city's next budget deficit could again exceed $500 million, mostly the result of reduced tax revenue from the recession, and could reach $1 billion if the city properly funds its pension system.

Emanuel, who takes office May 16, also faces a fractious political landscape.

He'll have to find new leadership for the struggling public school system, as two top interim executives plan to leave. He'll also need a new police chief, having said he would not renew Police Superintendent Jody Weis' contract. Members of the City Council, including a number elected Tuesday, have made clear they will demand more authority after years of domination by Daley.

In 25 years of public life, Emanuel has earned a reputation as a skilled politician and as a political operative, serving in both the Clinton and Obama administrations and as a congressman from Chicago. But the mayor's office will test his mettle as an executive.

This article appeared on page A - 9 of the San Francisco Chronicle

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Oakland city attorney finalist for Alameda manager

Russo's potential move across the Oakland-Alameda estuary comes after months of feuding with Mayor Jean Quan and some council members, who have blamed him for thwarting proposed cannabis cultivation regulations.

Quan's mayoral adviser has also challenged Russo over proposed injunctions to limit the movements of accused gang members. His departure could sink the effort, which is supported by the Oakland Police Department.

Russo declined to comment Friday about the possible move, but he has clearly been unhappy with the political situation in Oakland. The acrimonious relationship he had with elected officials led to rumors, often spread by critics, that Russo planned to leave.

Although he has expressed frustration, Russo has denied he was looking for another job. He is the second city official to seek another job after butting heads with city officials. Police Chief Anthony Batts was recently passed over for the chief's job in San Jose and decided to stay in Oakland after Quan promised her support.

Alameda opened up the application process on Feb. 1, according to two council members. Last Saturday, they interviewed six people and whittled the finalists down to three. A citizens committee will be appointed to interview the candidates, and a final decision is expected in March.

Russo, whose annual salary in Oakland is about $214,000, would probably get a pay raise. Alameda's most recent interim and acting city managers made about $250,000, including benefits, and that could go up.

The job in Alameda would thrust Russo into the contentious issue of developing the former Alameda Naval Air Station, now known as Alameda Point. The property was expected to be a boon to the city after the base closed in 1997, but it has languished unused and remains federal property.

The new city manager in Alameda would also have to hire both a police and fire chief, positions currently being held down on an interim basis.

"We have a lot of pressing issues," Alameda Mayor Marie Gilmore said Friday.

Russo donated $1,750 in the last election to a new council majority of Gilmore and council members Lena Tam and Rob Bonta according to campaign finance records. The three have the power to select the next city attorney.

In Oakland, the divides involving Russo have ostensibly been about two issues: cannabis cultivation regulations, which have been pushed by the council, and gang injunctions, which have been pushed by Russo.

Russo declined to sign a City Council ordinance that would have set regulations for large-scale pot growing. Russo, who supports legalization of marijuana, refused to represent the council on the issue after the Alameda County district attorney and the U.S. Attorney's Office each sent letters to the city saying the ordinance is illegal.

In the aftermath, Quan and council members Rebecca Kaplan, Desley Brooks and Nancy Nadel each criticized Russo, saying he baited federal rebuke by asking for legal advice. His office says he acted at the council's direction.

The issue of gang injunctions, which would, among other things, restrict the movements of gang members within "safety zones," has created the most controversy.

The biggest critic has been Quan's adviser and Councilwoman Jane Brunner's employer, Dan Siegel, who has sought to represent all the accused gang members. The cases are now being handled by Siegel's son, Michael, another employee of Siegel's firm.

Russo said the City Charter makes him the sole attorney for the mayor and the council. Siegel and Quan have so far refused to release two documents relating to disputed issues. They cited attorney-client privilege - a right that Russo says the mayor can have only with the city attorney.

E-mail Matthai Kuruvila at mkuruvila@sfchronicle.com.

This article appeared on page C - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle

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CITY INSIDER / Facebook app speeds access to city services

Lee's administration is rolling out a Facebook application today that will allow residents to report graffiti, request pothole repair and ask for just about anything else the city handles, except, perhaps, a cure for the homeless problem.

Officials are billing it as a first-in-the-nation Facebook app designed to provide city services. It's basically another arm of the 311 Customer Service Center.

Whether the application differs dramatically for users from the current 311 website is a matter of interpretation. It certainly appears to be a quicker and smoother process.

The current website allows you to report graffiti and the rest, but you have to click through multiple pages (at least five to report graffiti). Those "redirects," in tech jargon, can cause people to become frustrated and give up. The Facebook app allows residents to select the service they're requesting, provide brief details, attach photos and submit the request all from a single page.

The app also automatically allows users to import contact information from their Facebook profiles into the 311 system and track progress online.

Users can remain anonymous or use the application if they don't have a Facebook account.

Perhaps the biggest difference is that the city Facebook profile already has more than 258,000 fans. The app allows the city to tap into that base rather than relying on residents to take it upon themselves to search out the 311 website, officials said.

"We know we have a built-in audience on Facebook," said Ron Vinson, director of media for the Department of Technology. "We're basically bringing the application to where people are."

Lee, who before being sworn in as mayor acknowledged "I'm not even a Facebook guy," said the application is "a great opportunity to give residents an easy and efficient way to report the services they need."

- John CotŠ¹

A crowded race: Board of Supervisors President David Chiu is expected to announce his candidacy for mayor today at an 11 a.m. campaign kickoff on the steps of City Hall.

Representing Chinatown, North Beach, Nob Hill and the adjacent neighborhoods in District Three, Chiu landed on the political fast track shortly after his election in 2008 when his colleagues picked him for the top job on the board.

Chiu, first elected to office with the strong backing of San Francisco's left-of-center progressives, won a second term as board president in January, but this time with the crucial support from the moderate faction.

He was derided by some in the progressive bloc for his decision to back City Administrator Ed Lee for interim mayor, the pick of departing mayor Gavin Newsom and the board's moderates.

Chiu, 40, said he still considers himself a progressive - but one who is willing to reach across the aisle. And it is from that position that he is launching his run for mayor. "San Francisco is a great city, but we all believe we can do better," he told the City Insider. "I think we need leadership that can bring people together and actually get things done."

If elected, he promises to run an administration focused on community-based budgeting, planning and policing. Among his top priorities, he said, would be creating jobs and building a world-class transportation system.

Prior to becoming a supervisor, Chiu, a Harvard-trained lawyer, had a stint as a San Francisco prosecutor and as a staff attorney for the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights. He also co-founded and managed a small company that helps nonprofits and political groups organize and deliver their message online, and he served on the city's Small Business Commission.

He joins an increasingly crowded field of mayoral hopefuls: former Supervisors Bevan Dufty and Michela Alioto-Pier, City Assessor-Recorder Phil Ting, City Attorney Dennis Herrera, state Sen. Leland Yee, former Supervisor Tony Hall and political newcomer Joanna Rees, a venture capitalist.

- Rachel Gordon

This week's news

Monday: The Board of Supervisors Land Use Committee will have an informational hearing on the city's local hiring ordinance at its 1 p.m. meeting.

Tuesday: The Municipal Transportation Agency will consider asking a taxi committee to discuss creating a pilot program to allow more taxis to operate during the busiest hours at its 1 p.m. meeting.

E-mail the City Insider team at cityinsider@sfchronicle.com.

This article appeared on page C - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle

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RIA Novosti becomes YouTube’s official partner

Russia’s news and information agency RIA Novosti has become YouTube’s official partner.

“We hope this cooperation will be of interest both for the audience and the agency,” YouTube’s specialist in charge of work with clients Yury Khazanov, said.

RIA Novosti is the first Russian news agency to be granted the status of YouTube’s premium partner.

MOSCOW, February 28 (RIA Novosti)

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James Franco, Lindsay Lohan pose for Terry Richardson photo shoot

James Franco and Terry Richardson: a match made in omnipresent-art-hipster heaven. We hear that on Saturday night, Richardson did a photo shoot with Franco and Lindsay Lohan. "It's like Warhol co-branding with Haring and Basquiat," said an art-world insider of the connections that Franco is cultivating. We're intrigued — but where's LiLo in that analogy?

In any case, after the Friday opening of his "Unfinished" exhibit (a collaboration with Gus Van Sant) at Gagosian in LA, Franco headed to a bungalow at the Chateau Marmont. There he hung out with a crowd that included both family members, like grandmother Mitzi Verne, and R.E.M. members like Michael Stipe and Mike Mills. As Franco sat on a couch in the living room of the bungalow, Stipe (who was wearing a waitress-style nametag reading "Michael Stipe") took pictures of the back of Franco's head.

Also at the party were Harmony Korine, MoMA PS 1 director Klaus Biesenbach and "We Live in Public" filmmaker Ondi Timoner, whom Franco was overheard praising at the party. Timoner reportedly wants Franco to play photographer Robert Mapplethorpe (alongside Charlotte Gainsbourg as Patti Smith) in an upcoming movie.

And once Franco's crazy Oscar frenzy dies down, there's still no rest for the weary: We hear that he's heading back East immediately afterwards to finish a paper on Byron that's due for a class at Yale.

Like? Napster founder skirts around Facebook issue

Sean Parker, the Spotify investor and "Social Network" character, wins the "Roberto Benigni" award for most exuberant performance at an Oscar party: Every few minutes, his laughter could be heard over the din of the crowd at the Weinstein Company's pre-Oscar fete, where J.Lo and Cameron Diaz partied alongside Ron Burkle and Jeff Bezos. Parker was one of the boldfaced names wedged into the party's very VIP corner — and while nearby a cigar-savoring Leo DiCaprio pressed up against Bar Rafaeli, we grilled Parker on his Oscar allegiances.

After all, the Weinsteins put out "The King's Speech": did Parker's presence mean he supported their movie over "The Social Network"? Parker (portrayed by Justin Timberlake in the latter film) guffawed but wouldn't take the bait. "I'm going to evaluate ['The Social Network'] as a work of art and it was a great work of art," he said.

We last saw Parker riding one of his bros horsey-style in the parking garage, saying he was off to party at his "good, good friend" Darren Aronofsky's place.

Ladies and gentlemen, Gov. Jerry Brown

The Governator is gone. Long live Governor Moonbeam — again. Governor Jerry Brown, just elected to his third (nonconsecutive) term as California governor, was the star of the annual picnic luncheon that IAC honcho Barry Diller and his designer wife Diane von Furstenberg threw at their Beverly Hills home right before the Oscars.

The couple pitched a clear tent to deal with the chilly, inclement weather and had rugs covering the grass. Brown walked through the tent "like a star," one luncheongoer said: "Everyone wanted to greet him." Also in attendance was a solo Oprah Winfrey, who was "very warm and friendly" and huddled with former Disney CEO Michael Eisner and current Sony chief Howard Stringer.

Portman gets protective of baby

"Black Swan" was pretty freaky, but apparently ballet psychodrama isn't as bad as facing the press. The pregnant Natalie Portman looked like she was experiencing some serious stage fright as she prepared to walk the carpet at the Independent Spirit Awards on Saturday afternoon: Her face was a mask of tension as she and her handlers approached the scrum of photographers screaming her name. Guess those protective maternal instincts have kicked in big-time. Walking a few steps behind was fianc Benjamin Millepied, who seemed to be carrying her coat.

Contact Gatecrasher: Frank DiGiacomo: fdigiacomo@nydailynews.com
Carson Griffith: cgriffith@nydailynews.com
Molly Fischer: mfischer@nydailynews.com

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Group expert can testify in Ariz. sweat lodge case

Prosecutors will be allowed to call an expert to testify about why dozens of people felt that they couldn't leave a sweat lodge ceremony that turned deadly.

Yavapai County Superior Court Judge Warren Darrow made the ruling Monday, a day before opening statements begin in James Arthur Ray's manslaughter case.

Darrow says Rick Ross can testify about large group awareness as long as prosecutors provide an appropriate foundation.

The judge says defense attorneys can cross-examine Ross on his cult deprogramming practices but not bring up his criminal history.

Darrow also is allowing prosecutors to play parts of an audio recording of Ray's October 2009 "Spiritual Warrior" event that culminated with the sweat lodge ceremony.

Three people who were among the more than 50 in the heated enclosure died.

Ray has pleaded not guilty.

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Oscars 2011: Hathaway, Franco's youth out of place

Partway through the Oscar telecast Sunday night, a well-dressed man and woman informed the worldwide audience that ABC has cut a deal to continue telecasting the Academy Awards through 2020.

But they didn't mean we'll get shows for the next nine years. They meant that at the pace it was moving, Sunday night's show might not finish until 2020.

Oh, don't worry. ABC will break Monday morning and again Tuesday night for the Charlie Sheen interviews.

You know a show had excitement issues when the liveliest microphone moment of the night came from an overcaffeinated NYU film student named Luke Matheny who thanked "the state of Delaware."

GET THE COMPLETE LIST OF OSCAR WINNERS

Runners-up for top microphone moment included cohost Anne Hathaway saying that one of the perks of her gig was "getting to breathe the same air" as Oprah.

Who knew that Oprah has her own air?

Hathaway seemed to spend much of the evening either changing dresses or trying to convert nervous energy into endearing folksiness.

She did fine with the dresses. She'd have had a much better shot at the endearing part if she'd been armed with better material. A song about Hugh Jackman pulling out of a proposed duet performance, for instance, had all the broad, relatable appeal of a song about her caterer delivering the wrong sushi wrap.

She also didn't get a lot of help from her cohost, James Franco, who sometimes looked as if reading the cue cards was the only thing keeping him awake.

Sandra Bullock and Jeff Bridges, in presenting the Best Actress and Actor awards, actually livened up the stage. (AP)

The bigger problem, though, was that they were apparently hired to bring hip looseness to a show that has little or no interest in abandoning its traditional, formal, old-school style.

This made Hathaway and Franco a little like tourists who dance and mug in front of the guards at Buckingham Palace, trying to make them crack a smile. Maybe it's not impossible, but good luck.

It didn't help the Oscars that just two weeks ago the Grammys went the other way, burying the awards and honors part under a barrage of entertainment.

The Oscars aren't going there. This evening is about giving face time to everyone in the biz and giving the winners a chance to thank everyone with whom they worked since third grade.

Almost three hours into the show, Jeff Bridges and Sandra Bullock weren't merely announcing the best actress and actor nominees, but paying individual homage to each.

That's clearly what Hollywood wants, and since Hollywood is picking up the tab for the party, that's what we'll get.

It just didn't make for a lively evening, particularly in a year with no "Titanic" or "Avatar." That is, millions of potential viewers had no horse in the race and thus minimal incentive to hang in for the finish.

For the record, Anne settled down a bit by the end and James stayed awake.

GET THE COMPLETE LIST OF OSCAR WINNERS

NYU student Luke Matheny, who won for his documentary 'God of Love,' started his acceptance speech with 'I should have cut my hair.' (Sayles/AP)

dhinckley@nydailynews.com

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Ted Kennedy rented out an entire Chilean brothel for a night: FBI

The late Edward Kennedy apparently had quite a gallivant through Central and South America in the swinging 1960s while his brother was President.

Recently released FBI files show that Kennedy rented out an entire Chilean brothel and met with Communists across Latin America -- and rubbed a few shoulders the wrong way in the process.

According to a December 1961 State Department memo, Kennedy, who was then the assistant district attorney of Suffolk County, Massacusetts made the trip to Central and South American countries as a "familiarization and orientation tour."

While in Mexico City, the memo stated, he "met with a number of individuals known to have Communist sympathies" and asked an ambassador in Mexico City to "invite left-wingers to the embassy, where he could interview them."

This request was denied by the ambassador, who according to the memo told Kennedy he would have to make the arrangements himself.

Kennedy also made a similar request in Peru, where he was subsequently described as a "pompous and spoiled brat."

When he wasn't trying to meet a few friendly Communists, Kennedy also apparently partied quite hard, according to the memo.

"While Kennedy was in Santiago, he made arrangements to 'rent' a brothel for an entire night," the memo said. "Kennedy allegedly invited one of the embassy chauffeurs to participate in the night's activities."

The memo was released to Judicial Watch late last week following a lawsuit after their Freedom of Information Act was denied. Although it wasn't clear exactly why the FBI was reluctant to release the files, the Judicial Watch said it showed that "it, too, is not above politics."

The FBI files aren't the first to show the late senator in a less-than-favorable light.

In June, secret FBI files were released that claimed he may have taken part in sex parties with Marilyn Monroe and Frank Sinatra at a hotel in New York.

Kennedy, who was elected to the Senate in a special election only a few months after his trip, died in 2009 of brain cancer.

nmandell@nydailynews.com

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Staten Island kids choir closes Oscars

The singing sensations of Staten Island's PS 22 Chorus shined as bright as Tinseltown's biggest stars on Sunday night with a heartwarming performance that closed the Academy Awards.

The fifth-grade phenoms took the stage of the Kodak Theatre and belted out a version of "Over the Rainbow" that won a standing ovation from Hollywood's most elegant elite - and high-fives from actress Anne Hathaway.

"Oh my gosh, oh my gosh, it was really crazy. When we ended on the final note, I started jumping up and down and crying. I cried for a long, long time I was so happy," a breathless Azaria Chamorro, 10, said after the performance.

She saw Whitney Houston and Brad Pitt from the stage, then turned around to meet Best Actress winner Natalie Portman. "I got to hold an Oscar, too. It was really, really heavy," Azaria said.

Choral director Gregg Breinberg, who directed the kids with his trademark flailing arms, called the performance his proudest moment.

"I'm flying so high right now. It was everything we hoped and then some," he said. "I was worried that after they announced Best Picture everyone would start walking out, but that audience really gave the kids the respect they deserve. Everyone came up afterward and said we stole the show."

Students from Staten Island's PS 22 arrive at the Oscars. (Pizzello/AP)

He said some students saw actor Hugh Jackman in the front row and were excited to sing for Wolverine, Jackman's "X-Men" character.

"Getting a standing ovation was the best. I was about to cry, but then I realized I'm on national TV," said Denise Bestman, 10. "It was awesome."

The choir's star turn on Hollywood's biggest stage was beamed to millions of homes in more than 200 countries.

Relatives of chorus member Brianna Crispino screamed when the kids filed onstage wearing their Public School 22 T-shirts and ear-to-ear smiles.

"That's her! That's her," yelled mom Christa Maniglia, 35, pointing at the screen.

"It was a beautiful way to close out the Oscars," she said. "I'm so proud. ... She'll never forget this. She was on TV, but it wasn't just TV, it was the Oscars."

The family - including four former members of the famed choir - feasted on pasta, chicken and corned beef as they sat glued to the show all night.

The 64 student singers, who are YouTube superstars, are scheduled to join Oprah Winfrey for her Oscar special Monday.

ndillon@nydailynews.com

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Medvedev, Pope to discuss religious ties in Vatican

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev will meet with Pope Benedict XVI for the first time on Thursday to discuss bilateral and religious ties, his aide Sergei Prikholdko said.

The sides will discuss global affairs and cooperation within the framework of various international organizations.

The aide to the Russian president also said the president and the Pontiff will discuss dialog between the Russian Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches.

A Russian diplomatic source told RIA Novosti that a meeting between the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Kirill, and the Pope now appears "more realistic" than it did several years ago.

He did not say, however, when or where such meeting would take place.

Neither Pope Benedict nor his predecessor, Pope John Paul II, visited post-communist Russia.

 

MOSCOW, February 17 (RIA Novosti)

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Lady Gaga gets VERY creative in 'Born This Way' video

Finally - Lady Gaga has expressed herself.

In her just-unveiled video for "Born This Way," the star lends something original to a song that sounded like anything but.

While "Born"'s music found La Gaga expressing Madonna's melody and arrangement nearly 20 years too late, the visuals to accompany it look like nothing we've ever seen.

At the clip's core lies a host of oozing, undulating,  sci-fi'd images of the female pelvic area, pulsing and dilating in a way that puts the birth process right in your face. It's a genuine taboo Gaga plays with here, lunging into the full throbbing goo that brings us all into the world without judgment or shame.

For that, she deserves kudos -- though she tests our patience getting there. The video for "Born This Way" lasts a full seven and a half minutes, nearly three of which are spent in a lead up to the music. Think of it as her "Thriller," only blessed, or cursed, with far more conceptual ambition.

Basically, "Born" amounts to Gaga's take on Good vs. Evil, with the former positioned as acceptance and the latter as exclusivity, and/or general meanness.

As a message, that's awfully safe stuff by today's standards. Everyone to the left of Sarah Palin would have no problem with it. But the visual presentation lends it the edge it needs.

It would help if Gaga added more humor to her piece. Most of what exists in it is of the unintentional kind. More, the clip's dancing and choreography isn't going to keep Madonna up at night.

Luckily, none of these drawbacks need to dominate. The clip's wild images of creation have a joyous shock value, as well as the key element the song itself lacks: creativity.

jfarber@nydailynews.com

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Obama lauds Gibbs as 'extraordinary' spokesman

President Barack Obama made a rare appearance in the White House briefing room Friday to mark his longtime aide Robert Gibbs' last day at the White House — and to give Gibbs his old tie back.

Gibbs is leaving the White House after two years as press secretary and one of the president's closest advisers. He'll take some time off to give paid speeches before eventually joining Obama's reelection campaign full time.

Gibbs, 39, has worked for Obama since his 2004 Senate campaign. He was with Obama in Boston during the Democratic convention that year when Obama delivered the keynote address that catapulted him into the national spotlight.

Obama said Friday that it wasn't what he would say in that speech that caused the most concern that night: it was which tie he would wear.

"Then somebody turned and said 'You know what, what about Gibbs' tie? That might look good'," Obama said. "And frankly Robert didn't want to give it up."

Gibbs eventually did hand over the blue tie he was wearing, Obama said. On Friday, Obama gave Gibbs that tie back, framed in a glass case, along with a photo of Obama from the convention.

Obama lauded Gibbs as an "extraordinary" press secretary and a great friend. He joked that Gibbs' departure was not the biggest of the day, a reference to Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak's resignation earlier Friday.

As he ended his final daily briefing with reporters, Gibbs said it was "a tremendous honor and privilege" to serve at the White House. He said he's now looking forward to spending more time with his young son Ethan.

The new press secretary, Jay Carney, starts Monday. He is a former journalist who has spent the last two years as Vice President Joe Biden's communications director.

Oscars 2011: I was first to play the King's Speech lead role

And the Oscar goes . . . not to me. But it's probably as near as I'll ever get to one. Two and a half years before The King’s Speech became a smash hit movie, I stood before an audience in a small north London theatre as the future George VI, stuttering and spluttering my way through the shattering opening speech with which he addressed a bewildered nation.

I had been invited to take part in a rehearsed reading of what has since become the award winning film. The purpose of such a reading is for the writer, producers and any other interested parties to hear the material out loud for the first time. Neither fish nor fowl, the event is slightly more than a reading but rather less than a performance, as script in hand, the actors try to body forth some kind of presentation, broken backed chairs, polystyrene cups and half eaten bananas being their only form of 'set'.

We had three hours in which to familiarise ourselves with the piece before putting it on in front of the invited audience – which hardly seemed possible: big cast, long speeches, a need to acquire a sense of royalty despite bring dressed in no more than jeans and t-shirts.

I have to confess that when Alan Cohen, the director, described the story, I had had some initial doubts as to the dramatic potential of the story. With the best will in the world, would a man with such a pronounced stammer hold the attention of an audience over two hours – even if he was a King? And how entertaining would it be to watch two men indulging in weird, experimental vocal exercises, which, even today, might seem foreign to most of us?

These doubts were as wide of the mark as my initial attempts at His Majesty's stammer. It immediately became clear that it was precisely those two elements that made David Seidler's script so touching: a man who can barely speak but who must do so for the sake of his country meets another man who not only liberates his voice using methods he could never have imagined, but in such a way that Bertie discovers a great deal about himself in the process. What also became clear as we read the script through, sitting in the tiny bar area of the Pleasance theatre in Islington, was that Bertie and Lionel Logue carried the show.

No pressure then.

Before we knew it we were on: 16 actors, comrades in fear, ignorant even of one another’s names, all sitting in a semi-circle on stage, watching as the audience filed in. All sorts of show-business types appeared, taking seats far too close to the stage, and suddenly the three hundred-seat auditorium was heaving.

I don't think I've ever been so nervous. The lights dimmed, and before I knew it I was standing in front of one of those 1940's BBC microphones, pretending to be at the opening ceremony of Wembley stadium and trying to speak, just as Colin Firth was to do so brilliantly in the first scene of the film. I remembered the director's note: Don't rush. Allow the audience to think that you won't make it to the end of the speech . . . I stared out at three hundred blank faces with no idea of what I was about to say, barely able to read the script in the half-light.

The circumstances could not have been better for finding a way into the character of this shy, decent man and discovering how he must have felt as he looked out at that vast arena, full to the brim with an expectant public.

Moments later, we were into the scene where the future King and his future mentor meet for the first time, and as the two disparate characters, Bertie and Lional, started to forge their extraordinary relationship, the two of us, as actors, gradually let the scripts drop to our sides. Somehow, we just played the scene. From that point on the audience was hooked. You could feel it, it was tangible. It was the first glimpse of the power of this untold historical story which, two and a half years later, would go on to find such worldwide appeal.

The theme of family influence, so prevalent throughout The King’s Speech was also crucial to the future of the project. Joan Lane, the dynamic producer of the read-through, invited, among many, an australian contingent to offer their perspective on the Logue/Bertie relationship. One of the couples in the group had a son who was a film director. Today that director,Tom Hooper, has collected an Oscar along with the writer and two actors.

Ok, so I didn't get win an Oscar myself. But I did get my travel expenses to Islington, and the chance to be King for a day. The rest, as they say, is history.

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Girl Scouts protest: Won’t sell cookies if council sells camps (Cookie Video)

MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota – Upset over For Sale signs at some of their favorite campgrounds, Girl Scouts in Minnesota are saying if you sell our camps, we won’t sell your cookies.

The national spokeswoman for the Girl Scouts of the USA explained the difficult decision to sell camps to consolidate 312 local councils into 112 is due to a gradual decline in members and tight funding.

Another attempt to tighten their budget is the council’s decision to sell only six kinds of cookies this year.  So if you have a favorite, this is the year to hoard them. 

Elizabeth Zaiman has broken records selling cookies over the past two years.  Even though she has sold more than 600 boxes, this year she decided not to sell them because she didn’t want the money to go to her council. 

Sources: MSNBC, AP

Watch rocker Ted Nugent’s tribute to Girl Scout Cookies.  Click Play

Pulmonarias: Common, but rather special too

Soldiers and sailors. Joseph and Mary. Spotted dog. Jerusalem cowslip. Lungwort. When a plant has so many common names (and these are just a few) you know that it has been widely grown and much admired. These names refer to the genus pulmonaria, which has been grown in British gardens for centuries. Its charm lies partly in its early flowers, most of which start pink and fade to blue, and also in the almost infinite variety of its foliage – plain green, mottled, speckled, splashed and silvered. Pulmonarias are also robust, reliable and easy to grow.

Pulmonarias are promiscuous plants that self-pollinate and hybridise. As a result, there are far too many named cultivars, often with little to tell them apart. This similarity extends to plants in the wild, and botanists disagree about how many species exist, with the number varying between a dozen and 18. All are found in Europe and parts of Asia, where they grow on the edges of deciduous woodland.

A sign of spring

All pulmonarias flower early in the year before their leaves appear. Although there are usually some remnants of the previous year’s foliage evident when the plants begin to flower, the new foliage starts into growth as the flowers die back. The flower stems usually have small leaves attached but these are not typical of the main flush of foliage that follows.

The first to flower (in December if the weather is mild) are the Pulmonaria rubra cultivars. These differ from most other species in having plain green, rounded leaves and flowers that do not change colour, remaining coral-red throughout their lives. Pulmonaria rubra 'David Ward’, a cultivar introduced by Beth Chatto, has white-edged leaves. The leaves scorch in the sun and the wind, but if you can find a shady, sheltered place for it, this is a beautiful plant.

Pulmonaria longifolia has the long, narrow leaves usually associated with the genus. (One wild form found in southern France, P. longifolia subsp. cevennensis, has leaves about 18in long.) P. longifolia will grow in sunnier situations than other pulmonarias; dozens of selections have been made from this species. For me the best is P. longifolia 'Ankum’, which has a dome of bright blue flowers.

The best blue pulmonarias tend to come from the P. angustifolia cultivars. Plants in this group tend to have unmarked, dark green foliage and purple-blue flowers. 'Blue Ensign’ has the darkest blue flowers of any pulmonaria.

The old cottage-garden plant is P. officinalis, with coarse, hairy leaves and pale pink and blue flowers. It’s vigorous and floriferous, but susceptible to mildew, so most of its old cultivars have been superseded by healthier hybrids.

Until modern plant breeders started to work on the genus, the pulmonarias with the most captivating foliage were cultivars and hybrids of P. saccharata. The leaves tend to be small and rounded with regular silver or pale green markings. P. saccharata 'Dora Bielefeld’ has rose-pink flowers and apple-green leaves spotted with grey.

Live and let grow

I have planted lots of pulmonarias among hellebores and spring-flowering bulbs under hazels. I’ve left them alone for years, and now have no idea what any of them are. The labels are faded and there are seedlings everywhere, even under a walnut tree where conventional wisdom has it that nothing will grow. If you want to keep your plants pure and true, cut the flowers as soon as they are over, before they set seed. I’m happy with my carpet of green, grey and silver leaves covered with spots, speckles and splodges and dotted with pink and blue jewels.

Breeding work

Until recently new pulmonaria hybrids have been the result of keen-eyed gardeners spotting an interesting seedling and propagating it. Vita Sackville-West, for example, found P. 'Sissinghurst White’ in her garden.

A new generation of plant breeders has turned its attention to the genus. In France, Didier Willery introduced P. 'Majesté’, whose silver leaves inspired others to produce plants with similar foliage.

The most extensive breeding of pulmonarias has been done at Terra Nova in the United States by plantsman Dan Heims. In the past decade, Heims has introduced a dozen cultivars. The plants cover the range of pulmonaria forms from the silvered leaves and white flowers of 'Moonshine’ to others with speckled foliage and cobalt-blue flowers, such as 'Trevi Fountain’.

John Hoyland is a plantsman, writer and owner of Pioneer Nurseries, Letchworth, Herts.

Cultivation tips

For pulmonarias to thrive, they need cool, moist growing conditions, preferably in dappled shade. They will not grow well in dry, baked soil.

When you first plant them, dig as much leaf mould or compost as you can into the planting hole and water them well for the first few weeks. If you have leaf mould, mulch around the crown of the plant each year.

Mildew can be a problem in summer. This is usually a sign that the plant is too dry. If it happens every year it probably means you are trying to grow pulmonarias in the wrong place.

Try improving the soil or move them somewhere damper. Cutting off diseased foliage (use shears and cut to the ground) encourages fresh leaves.

Burn the leaves you cut away – don’t put them on the compost heap. 'Blue Ensign’ always seems to get mildew, no matter how well it is grown. Live with it or cut back the affected leaves in the summer.

Cut back with shears in early winter, before the new flower stems start to grow. Getting rid of the previous year’s foliage is the most effective way of tidying the plant. Use shears because the leaves tend to have a central vein that is too strong to be cleared away by hand, as you would the dead foliage of other perennials.

In brief

WHAT

Genus of between 12 and 18 species of perennials, some evergreen.

SIZE

Low-growing – 6in to 18in tall.

CONDITIONS

Most prefer full or partial shade, in moist, humus-rich soil.

SEASON

Some forms bloom from December, but most in late winter and spring. The distinctive foliage is a feature in summer.

ORIGINS

Europe and Asia, in diverse habitats including mountainsides and woodlands.

Where to buy

Vanessa Cook at Stillingfleet Lodge near York has probably the largest collection of pulmonarias in Britain and most can be seen in her garden and nursery. Stewart Lane, Stillingfleet, York YO19 6HP (01904 728506; www.stillingfleetlodgenurseries.co.uk).

Beth Chatto Gardens and Nursery grows and sells good-quality pulmonarias. Elmstead Market, Colchester, Essex CO7 7DB (01206 822007; www.bethchatto.co.uk).

Thanks to Stillingfleet Lodge Nurseries, where the pictures were taken.

Taken from the March issue of Gardens Illustrated. Try three issues for £3 when you subscribe. To order call 0844 844 0260 and quote GITEL211 or visit www.bbcsubscriptions.com/gardensillustrated and quote GITEL211. Offer ends 1 April 2011, UK direct debit only, terms and conditions apply.

Pulmonaria 'Blue Ensign'

Buy this beautiful blue-flowered plant from gardenshop.telegraph.co.uk

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Anne Carey and Epoch Films Partner to Expand Slate

Producer Anne Carey has entered into a strategic partnership with Epoch Films to expand the production company's film and TV operations.

Carey, who recently produced Adventureland, The Savages and The American, will have a new development fund at her disposal to find projects and develop them into an expanded slate along with Epoch founding partner Mindy Goldberg.

“Anne is among the best and brightest producers working in American independent film today,” said Goldberg. “I am confident that by combining Anne’s taste and experience and Epoch’s access to talent and resources we will be an attractive partner for talented directors, writers and producers working in film and television.”

Epoch produced the 2005 comedy Junebug and the 2008 romantic comedy Gigantic. The company is developing Low Down with commercials director Jeff Preiss, an Epoch partner, and Little Children producers Albert Berger and Ron Yerxa.

Carey is also producing projects outside of the Epoch partnership, including Then We Came to the End, which Lynn Shelton will direct from a screenplay by Joshua Ferris; Last Night at the Lobster; and The Listener.

UTA's Rich Klubeck and David Flynn repped Carey in the deal.

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Sunday, February 27, 2011

Darren Aronofsky just trying to stretch as artist

Tim Riley, Grass Valley

Dearest Tim: No. Movies as good as "The Wrestler" and "Black Swan" don't happen by accident. The worst that can be said for Aronofsky is that sometimes his reach exceeds his grasp, but that just means he's striving, which is what artists should do.

Dear Mick: What was Ricky Gervais thinking at the Golden Globes?

Celia Talbot, Santa Rosa

Dear Celia: I have mixed feelings about Gervais at the Golden Globes. On the one hand, he was so nasty that it made me uncomfortable. Yet most of the people he was mocking have such a sense of entitlement that it doesn't exactly pain me to watch them squirm. You see who they really are when they get a little drunk and start making fun of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, which is hosting them. These celebrities are like snotty, popular kids who show up at the nerds' party, eat all their food, drink like slobs, laugh at everybody and then stagger off leaving a mess - and expect to be thanked for having condescended to show up in the first place.

Hi Mick: I enjoy watching silent movies. Are the actors actually speaking when they move their lips?

David Sokolsky, Eureka

Hi David: Yes, they're speaking something like the intertitles, but they're elaborating and paraphrasing. This is the fun extra dimension of silent films - the more you watch a movie, the more you understand.

Dear Mick: What is your take on the importance of one scene in an actor's career?

Jerry Blair, Walnut Creek

Dear Jerry: Different scenes are important for different reasons. There are defining moments, such as when Bogart sits alone getting drunk in "Casablanca" or De Niro talks to himself in the mirror in "Taxi Driver." And there are Oscar-winning scenes, as when Jane Fonda listens to the tape recording in one unbroken take in "Klute." I particularly like scenes from first or early films that imprint a new talent in the public mind: the cafe scene followed by the walk in "Intermezzo," which showcased the young, lovely Ingrid Bergman; or the unforgettable conversation scene between a father and daughter in "A Nos Amours," which introduced the world to the 16-year-old Sandrine Bonnaire.

Dear Mick LaSalle: Thanks for the review of the documentary "The World at War." I've always tried to explain how perfect Laurence Olivier's narration is. He is detached, but compassionate. He conveys real sorrow.

Pete Hale, Petaluma

Dear Pete Hale: I agree. He stretches the convention of the detached narrator just enough so that you remember there's a person on the other side of that voice who remembers these events well and was affected by them. Forty years ago, most adults remembered World War II, so there was a kind of communion there. But now the narration is even more powerful because it feels like a generation's statement to the future.

Dear Mick: A reader asked if the "True Grit" remake was needed, and you replied, "Nope." Is any movie ever "needed"? If so, which ones?

Frank Rinker, Danville

Dear Frank: If you extend the question that far, they're all needed by somebody. Or nothing is ever needed, because one day a meteor will hit the planet and the human race will cease to exist. However, paleontologists now believe that dinosaurs had movies, too - in prehistoric times, there were only Imax theaters, nothing smaller - and while none of those films survive, they seemed to make the dinosaurs happy. Isn't that enough?

Have a question? Ask Mick LaSalle at mlasalle@sfchronicle.com. Include your name and city for publication, and a phone number for verification. Letters may be edited for clarity and length. On SFGate To hear Ask Mick LaSalle with commentary, trivia and lots of extras, download his podcast at sfgate.com/podcasts.

This article appeared on page P - 24 of the San Francisco Chronicle

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Gwyneth Paltrow shares her Oscar performance secret: ‘I have a Guinness’ (Video)

Gwyneth Paltrow took to the stage on Sunday night to sing in front of millions. As an actress first and a musician second, the entertainer readily admitted on the red carpet she was all nerves. This wasn’t the first performance at an award show for Paltrow, but it appeared to be very important to her.

Before entering the Kodak Theater, the actress talked about the nerves and the performance with the Livestream host who was part of AP. When asked about what Paltrow does to help on stage, the actress seemed to give a straight forward answer that had all of us chuckling because we do it too.

“I always have a Guinness [beer]. Always,” Gwyneth Paltrow told the audience. “Well before my three live award shows I had a Guinness before all of them.”

Paltrow’s performance at the Oscars definitely had everyone’s attention.  While she was struggling with the lyrics, there were several places during the song that didn’t necessarily sound like the track from the movie.  If you watched on Sunday night, you might have noticed she rolled her eyes several times when she started to have trouble.

Take a minute to check out the video clip of Gwyneth Paltrow talk about her nerve buster.

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Andre Gardner's 'Breakfast With the Beatles' playlist for 2/27/2011

BREAKFAST WITH THE BEATLES WITH ANDRE GARDNER

SUNDAY MORNINGS 7-9AM

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Chezza gets Cole feet on LA move

CHERYL COLE is already homesick only a few days after flying out to LA.

The singer is calling mum Joan at least three times a day, insisting that everywhere she stays looks like her English home - and even wants her favourite sweets posted out to her.

A source said: "Cheryl was missing Joan just a few hours after she landed."

The Geordie singer is in America for talks with US X Factor bosses and to attend ELTON JOHN's Oscars bash.

She has been in meetings or hanging out with dancer pal DEREK HOUGH and his family, and is realising that a move to the States will be difficult.

The source said: "She reckons it will need visits from her mum at least every fortnight and she will try to fly home every other week – even if just for a couple of days.

"She asks that every room she stays in has similar furnishings and pictures so she doesn't feel too displaced.

"Derek bought her some Haribo the other day and she said even they tasted different, so she's planning on getting her favourite sweets posted over."

It's going to cost a small fortune in stamps the amount she chomps her way through.

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From 'American Idol' to the musical theater stage

Tamyra Gray (Season 1, fourth): Her Broadway credits include the role of Priya in "Bombay Dreams," and Mimi Marquez in a production of "Rent."

Ruben Studdard (Season 2, winner): The Velvet Teddy Bear played Fats Waller in a revival of "Ain't Misbehavin'."

Clay Aiken (Season 2, runner-up): Made his Broadway debut as Sir Robin in "Monty Python's Spamalot."

Fantasia (Season 3, winner): Played Celie in "The Color Purple" on Broadway and in the national tour.

Diana DeGarmo (Season 3, runner-up): DeGarmo, who as a child performed in such Atlanta productions as "Annie," made her post-"Idol" stage debut as Maria in the American Musical Theatre of San Jose's 2005 production of "West Side Story." Her Broadway debut was as Penny Pingleton in "Hairsrpay," and she took on the title role in a national tour of "Brooklyn: The Musical." She's had other credits as well, including Sheila in "Hair," but right now she's playing Doralee Rhodes in the national tour of "9 to 5," which comes to Sacramento on March 8.

LaToya London (Season 3, fourth): The Bay Area's London appeared as Nettie in a national tour of "The Color Purple," including a stop in San Francisco. Also appeared in a Los Angeles production of the retro musical "Beehive."

Taylor Hicks (Season 5, winner): Hicks was on Broadway and in a national touring production (including San Francisco) as Teen Angel in "Grease."

Ace Young (Season 5, seventh): Young also went the "Grease" route, appearing on Broadway as Kenickie and then taking on the role of Danny Zuko in the national tour. He also appeared as Berger in the same Broadway "Hair" production as DeGarmo.

LaKisha Jones (Season 6, fourth): Another "Purple" alum, Jones was a church soloist and also played the role of Sofia during matinees on Broadway.

Jordin Sparks (Season 6, winner): Sparks appeared last year on Broadway as she took over for a limited time the role of Nina Rosario in "In the Heights."

Syesha Mercado (Season 7, third): Just last year, Mercado appeared at the Curran Theatre as Deena Jones in the touring company of "Dreamgirls."

Adam Lambert (Season 8, runner-up): Before his "Idol" run, in which Cowell gave him a too-Broadway attitude at the San Francisco auditions, he had made quite a career with musicals, which included a San Francisco appearance as Fiyero in a national tour of "Wicked." His stage career started when he was 10 and included roles in "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown," "Fiddler on the Roof," "Hello, Dolly!," "Chess," "Camelot," "The Music Man," "Grease" and "Peter Pan."

- Leba Hertz

This article appeared on page P - 17 of the San Francisco Chronicle

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Celebrity Column: Win tickets to Gift of Music concert with Lady Antebellum

Country trio Lady Antebellum took the stage Sunday at one of the biggest musical events of the year — the Grammy Awards show, where they also accepted a field-leading five statues.

Members Charles Kelley, Dave Haywood and Hillary Scott are set to take a hometown stage this Friday, and it's at a far more intimate event. The band will play the Dustin J. Wells Foundation's fourth annual Gift of Music concert at the Wildhorse Saloon (120 Second Ave. N. in Nashville), alongside Dierks Bentley, Brett Eldredge, Joey + Rory, Heidi Newfield and LoCash Cowboys.

It's already sold out — but The Tennessean might have your way in. To enter a random drawing to win two tickets to the event, email your name and contact information to Tennessean.com Contests. We’ll be accepting entries until 6 p.m. Central Thursday, Feb. 17.

Doors open Friday at 6 and music starts at 7:30 p.m.

— STAFF REPORTS

Kid Rock, Sheryl Crow to tape network special in Nashville

Kid Rock, Sheryl Crow, Luke Bryan, Gretchen Wilson and others will tape a network television special today at Nashville Center Stage (514 8th Avenue S.). Specifics about the filming — like the name of the network and program — are hush-hush at the moment, but the public is invited to attend, and admission is free.

Filming begins at 12:30 p.m. with Bryan, and Crow and Kid Rock will follow about 3 p.m. Wilson is set to play around 6 p.m. Potential audience members must be 18 or older and come dressed in summer clothes. Food will be available for purchase, and space is limited.

Kid Rock has other Nashville plans this week, too: He brings his tour to Bridgestone Arena on Friday with guest Jamey Johnson. Tickets ($25, $39.50, $49.50 and $92) were still available at press time, but the show is expected to sell out. Check Tennessean.com/music after the show for a review and photos.

— CINDY WATTS

Christian rocker celebrates baby, Dove nominations

Wednesday was quite the big day for Tenth Avenue North singer Mike Donehey. The Christian rocker's band received four Dove Award nominations, including song and group of the year, but we'll guess he's a little preoccupied with the day's other news: He and wife Kelly welcomed baby girl Nora Kanene, the proud Dad shared via Twitter. Nora joins big sister Eisley Mae, who turned 1 in October.

"My wife is a superhero," Donehey tweeted.

Tenth Avenue North will be on the road with Christian rock mainstays Third Day from March through May, stopping here at the Ryman Auditorium on May 14. Ticket info is forthcoming.

— NICOLE KEIPER

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Belcourt displays illustrator's striking movie posters

Freelance illustrator Lauren Rolwing is a film buff, so it was only natural for her to combine her art background with her passion for cinema. The result is 10 Posters on view at the Belcourt Theatre through March 5. An artist's reception takes place 5 to 6:30 p.m. today.

One of the most striking images in 10 Posters is Rolwing's sublimely sophisticated interpretation of Ingmar Bergman's Seventh Seal. Using only white, black and gray, she evokes the essence of the tale of a knight who challenges Death to a game of chess after returning from the Crusades. Rolwing's design has a skeletal arm reaching across the poster to push a button atop a chess clock.

"I just started cutting some shapes out of paper and laying them together in different ways until the composition came together," Rolwing explains. She generally begins this way — with cut paper, found objects or by painting — before scanning the components into her computer to finish the design.

Each poster is accompanied by a brief summary that reveals no more of the plot than necessary. "I hope to encourage people to watch the films," she says. "If you like the poster, then hopefully you'll like the film, too."

Lauren Rolwing's film posters are on view at Belcourt Theatre through March 5 during box office hours. The theater is at 2102 Belcourt Ave. For information, call the box office at 383-9140 or visit www.belcourt.org.

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Russia ready to hold drills with Ukraine in any format - defense minister

Russia is prepared to hold joint military drills with Ukraine in any format, Russian Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov said on Sunday.

"The Russian side is prepared to hold drills with Ukraine not only at sea but also in the air and on the ground. These can be comprehensive, joint and separate drills, and also exercises with the participation of other countries. We are ready for any format," Serdyukov said at a joint press conference with Ukrainian Defense Minister Mykhaylo Yezhel.

Relations between Russia and Ukraine have improved significantly since Viktor Yanukovych was elected Ukraine's president last year. On April 21, 2010, Moscow and Kiev signed a deal extending the lease on the Russian Black Sea Fleet's base in Sevastopol in Ukraine's Crimea for 25 years after the current lease expires in 2017.

Yezhel said in turn that well-planned Russian-Ukrainian drills, Fairway of Peace, could surpass by scope any other drills between the two countries.

"These can be joint search operations and joint actions for the use of weapons, the closing of water areas and the arrangement of anti-submarine and air defenses," he said.

VLADIVOSTOK, February 27 (RIA Novosti)

 

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Bloated Britney Spears is spotted with zits

I'M beginning to think BRITNEY SPEARS has a body double.

The one spotted yesterday appears to be a very different specimen to the one in the teaser trailer for her new single.

During a trip to a Hollywood recording studio, the Louisiana lass exposed a break out of zits.

The array of pimples, below the right side of her lip, was highlighted by the fact she opted to go au naturale.

Her puffy face also looked bloated, with little definition around her neck and chin.

Britters, 29, revealed more footage from her comeback track Hold It Against Me this week.

In the latest video, the Toxic singer appears with a flawless complexion and toned body.

Her luscious locks look full and healthy, a far cry from the scraggly ponytail in my snap.

Perhaps a few more workouts with BRIAN FRIEDMAN and a bottle of Clearasil might do the trick.

Flawless ... Britney Spears

Splash News/Jive

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Indiana man sues strip club for chipped tooth

A trip to a strip club has landed an Indianapolis man in the dental chair, and as a result, he filed suit against the strip club last week for ‘lifelong dental injuries.”

Jake Quagliaroli, 34, was at PT’s Showclub located Lawrence Indiana, when a strippers shoe flew off and smacked him in the front teeth, reports the Indianapolis Star.

According to a statement made by his attorney, Jake claims he never goes to the strip clubs and he was sitting about 20-feet away when the shoe hit him. The attorney also said that Jake wasn’t really sure what the dancer was doing at the time of the incident.

As a result of the injuries, Jake has had to get veneers and temporary caps which will most likely need to be replaced every 10-15 years, according to his attorney. He may also need a root canal in the future.

Andy Klein, a law professor at the Indiana University School of Law-Indianapolis told the Indianapolis Star, that the incident is similar to getting hit with a foul ball at a baseball game, which could make for a good case.

Jake’s attorney would like for everyone to look past the bizarre story and focus on the fact that his client was just a patron who left a business with lifelong injuries.

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Hi-tech treasure hunt

'There it is,” says Daisy, breaking into a run and pointing at the wall of the pub. She scans the words on the blue plaque and says: “What are we looking for?”

“The year that Charles I stayed in The King’s Head.”

“It was 1646 and he came disguised as a clergyman,” she says with authority while studying the sign. “Where to next?”

I’m with Phil Sturgeon, 43, and his daughter Daisy, who is 10, in Southwell, Nottinghamshire, who are introducing me to the finer points of geocaching – an addictive type of hi-tech treasure hunt.

“We love walking and spend a lot of our time in the countryside,” says Phil as he watches his daughter write a number on a sheet of paper, “and geocaching is an extension of that.”

In short, the pastime involves looking for a container, the geocache, that has been hidden by another avid treasure seeker. This container holds a log book and the coordinates of the cache are posted on a website, enabling it to be found using a global positioning system or GPS receiver.

“It sounds more complicated than it actually is. It’s not rocket science – I’m certainly not the most technical man in the world – and Daisy does all the computer stuff,” Phil says. Geocache expeditions range from 'difficult hikes’ with more cryptic clues, which can often be cleverly camouflaged in woodland or mountainous terrain, to an 'easy adventure’ in an urban or rural setting.

Rocket science or not, we can thank the US military for the satellites that enable a GPS receiver to work. Originally used by the American Defence Department, the system was handed over for unrestricted civil use in 2000. It is now an integral part of our lives and features in everything from satnavs to mobile phones.

The cache that we are looking for today is known as a multi-cache and takes the form of a treasure hunt.

“By logging onto a specific geocache website and entering your postcode you can find caches near you,” Phil says. “This one is called the Southwell Heritage Trail and has been designed to take you around the town finding clues. The answers to these clues are then used to decipher the coordinates to the location of the final cache.”

So far it has taken us to the football club, across the grounds of the imposing Southwell Minster, to the pub where Charles I stayed and on our way to a house once owned by Lord Byron.

This cache was created by Barbara Hastings, 56, and her partner Steve Moses, 59. They have been avid ''cachers’’ for four years.

“Since we started we’ve found 646 caches in 10 countries,” Barbara says. “We also own 61 caches, so we make sure that they are maintained and field questions from people who are trying to find them.”

The craze looks set to grow. It is estimated that there are more than a million active caches all over the world – and five million geocachers hunting for them – from Hong Kong to Norway to Greece. Entering my postcode into the website there were 10 within a mile of my house. Give it a try, you’ll be amazed.

That most venerable of institutions, the National Trust, also has events at its properties throughout the UK.

“They can be stashed anywhere. Deep in the countryside, along rivers, national parks and cities,” she says. The geocaching community has also set up an environmental initiative, Cache In Trash Out, to encourage hunters to pick up rubbish spotted along their trails.

“The location and clues are only limited by the ingenuity of the people who set them up,” Barbara says. “And they can be very, very ingenious.”

With all the clues solved, the flashing arrow on Daisy’s receiver is now pointing us to the final cache.

“Found it!” As her voice rings out, we see that she’s holding a small black plastic box that she’s fished from the undergrowth. Excited fingers grapple with the lid and we all gather around to see what’s inside. There’s a toy car, some crayons and a little book that has been signed by previous cachers. We swap the car for a plastic whistle and scribble our monikers in the book.

“That was great, Dad,” Daisy says. “Can we do another one when we get home? Or how about we set our own cache up? I’ll think of the clues and we can make it really difficult.”

As her chatter fills the early evening air you wouldn’t have thought that she’s been out walking for the best part of two hours. What’s more, neither does she. Now, there’s a great distraction for the children at half term.

GETTING STARTED

First log onto the website www.geocaching.com and enter your postcode. This will give you all of the caches in your area.

Pick one that takes your fancy by looking at its description and comments left by previous users. Log in by creating a user name and password. Print off the sheet with the cache coordinates and clues.

Load these into your GPS receiver and you are ready to go.

GPS RECEIVERS

A good GPS receiver doesn’t need to cost a fortune. Garmin Geko 201, £70, is a small hand-held device that is easy to use and very robust.

Garmin Etrex X, £70 – 17 hours of operation from two AA batteries make this a very efficient piece of kit.  Magellan Triton 1500, £170 – touch-screen technology that is rugged and waterproof.

For more information on how to get started, visit www.geocaching.com and see box, left.

'Geocaching for Dummies’ by Joel McNamara is available for £10.99 plus 99p p&p from Telegraph Books (0844 871 1516; books.telegraph.co.uk).

HALF-TERM DAYS OUT

Get them outdoors

Hide the Xbox and get the family out and about for the day at a number of National Trust events throughout the country. There are seashore safaris and castle quests, scarecrow making and forest art, bug hunts and cookery classes from Cornwall to North Yorkshire. For more information: www.nationaltrust.org.uk/events.

Cookery Classes

Grate, crush, pound, pestle and stir spices at an interactive workshop aimed at children from five to 11, which will immerse them in the smells and flavours of Indian cuisine. The chefs at the Cinnamon Kitchen, London W1, will show them how to use spices including tamarind, liquorice, cardamom, anise, saffron and ginger to great effect, making child-friendly canapés and Indian snacks to add to the family repertoire.

The classes run from February 21, £25 per child for under 11s. For more information: 020 7626 5000; www.cinnamon-kitchen.com.

Dancercise

The Premier Dance Studio offers a half-term dance workshop for all ages. Give hip-hop, disco or lyrical dance a whirl or dancercise the day away. February 21-25; 10am-4pm; Yateley, Hampshire; £18 admission. For more information: www.danceweb.co.uk.

Join the Royals

Be entertained by All the King’s Fools at Hampton Court Palace, Surrey. The Misfits theatre company is staging a promenade performance at half-term. Learn how to stand, dance and play music like the Tudors. From February 24-27; 10am-4pm; £14 adults, £7 children. Call 0844 482 7777 to book tickets.

Dinosaurs Unleashed

Take a tea party with the dinosaurs at The O2, East London, from February 18. Billed as the largest animatronic dinosaur adventure in Britain, the event has more than 22 life-size dinosaurs, interactive displays, a prehistoric aquarium and presentations by wildlife expert Chris Packham. Ideal for budding palaeontologists from ages two to 12. It costs £42 for a family ticket (two adults, two children); £14.20 for an adult single ticket; £11.25 for children.

To book tickets, visit: www.dinosaursunleashed.co.uk

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Elder's Gulf research: 'Grief like war-torn Iraq,' 'Mutated life forms' (video)

As oil continues gushing into the Gulf of Mexico; spraying poison and man-made bacteria continues in the Gulf Region; and its Peoples continue suffering, grieving and dying from toxins, suppression and the cover-up, a  Grandmother Blue Otter, Shamanic Medicine ceremonialist for the Clan of Blue Star Grandmothers, Alchemical Healing teacher and Spirit Dance intercessor spoke Saturday about widespread grief observed during her research recently completed on Gulf Coast catastrophic impacts. 

Charla Hermann, raised in Spiritual arms of Wind River Reservation of Wyoming, is taking a unique perspective that honors ancient traditions and shamanism to Gulf Plague survivors. For over 40 years, Hermann has served with prominent medicine men and women of many nations, providing tools and wisdom teachings to help what she calls "tumultuous Earth Changes of our time."

Now, she is working with singer/songwriter Dr. John, a native of New Orleans, to take tools and wisdom to Gulf Plague survivors according to Chief Phil Lane's Gulf Plague Talking Circle on Saturday. Hermann praised the new free book produced for Gulf Peoples' struggling to survive the Gulf Plague, Coming Clean: From Denial to Detox, saying it needed to be in many more hands.

At the Talking Circle, Hermann brought forth a compassionate message of rebirth, renewal and hope to Gulf Plague survivors. She knows who these survivors are. She has seen their faces. She wept as she described the grief in their faces.

She said that she has never seen anything like the widespread grief along the Gulf coast, except in war-torn Iraq. (See embedded Youtube video, "Elder Hermann's Gulf research: 'Grief like Iraq war zone,' 'confusion,' 'mutated  life forms'")

“7O% of the birds in North America migrate through the Gulf area. So when such a short time later, we have birds dropping out of the sky. - What does that mean?,” Elder Hermann asked.

Hermann said that she comes from a spiritual point of view as an archivist keeper of the stories for the tribes and this ties back to her spiritual background.

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Life-size Fred and Barney kidnapped from Fort Myers jewelry store

A pair of cartoon characters were kidnapped from in front of a Fort Myers storefront last Thursday evening.

The life-size Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble statutes were taken from in front of the Florida Gold Exchange on Fort Myers Beach. The pair have been in front of the store for about 4 months and according to Joe Jaworowski, the stores owner, “They became like a landmark."

"People would stop and take pictures with them. Kids in the neighborhood loved them,” said Jaworowski.

The lifesize characters cost “about a 1,000 each and take about a year to make.”

Jaworowski tells Examiner that “he really just wants them back.”

“I’m offering a reward of about $500, no questions asked if they are returned,” said Jaworowski.

The statues were stolen from Florida Gold Exchange located at the 16000 block of San Carlos Boulevard in Fort Myers Beach.

Anyone with information regarding the stolen statues may contact the Lee County Sheriff’s Office at  239-477-1000.

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Portman dances away with Indie Spirit win

"Black Swan," a ballet melodrama that struggled to get made despite an A-list cast and director, swept the independent film world's version of the Oscars on Saturday, a day before it competes for five prizes at the Academy Awards.

The film picked up four Spirit statuettes, including best feature and best female lead for Natalie Portman, who starred as a childlike ballerina consumed by fear and paranoia.

Darren Aronofsky was named best director for his work on the movie, two years after he was honored for "The Wrestler." It also took the cinematography prize for Matthew Libatique.

All three will compete for Oscars on Sunday, with Portman the favorite to win her race. The film will also vie for best picture and editing.

"Winter's Bone," which led the Spirits field with seven nominations, ended up with two prizes. John Hawkes and Dale Dickey won for their supporting roles as threatening characters in a rural American community ravaged by methamphetamines.

The male lead prize went to Oscars co-host James Franco for his role as a hiker forced to amputate his own arm in the true-life tale "127 Hours."

"The Kids Are All Right," with five nominations, received a solitary win in the screenplay category, for director Lisa Cholodenko and co-writer Stuart Blumberg.

The victory for "Black Swan" is a testament to the risks and rewards of independent filmmaking. Aronofsky and Portman first discussed making "Black Swan" about a decade ago, and when they finally started shooting, the film was on shaky financial ground.

The script also went through dozens of revisions, a financier pulled out, and several Hollywood studios rejected it, including its eventual distributor, Fox Searchlight.

"Any time you try to do something that's not in a box it's a challenge," Aronofsky said of the constant challenge of raising film financing despite his success with such films as "The Wrestler" and "Requiem for a Dream."

Nascent private equity fund Cross Creek Partners came to its rescue, offering to split the $15 million budget in a worldwide deal with News Corp's Fox Searchlight. It turned out to be a lucrative investment. The film has grossed more than $200 million at the worldwide box office to date.

Cross Creek principal Brian Oliver told Reuters he was drawn to Aronofsky's involvement. "I really liked the script and I saw the thriller part of it and I thought it could be one of those movies that could really break out," he said.

The film was also a challenge for Portman and co-star Mila Kunis, who plays her rival in a New York production of "Swan Lake" and a Sapphic fantasy interest. Neither actress is a ballerina, and they trained for months and dieted religiously to get in shape.

The Spirit Awards honor low-budget American films based on such criteria as original, provocative subject matter and the degree of independent financing.

"The King's Speech," which leads the Oscars field with 12 nominations, was named best foreign film at the Spirits. As a British movie, it was not eligible for consideration in the major categories.

Each year, a handful of Spirit winners usually goes on to earn Oscars thanks in part to the success of low-budget films in the mainstream arena. But the awards ceremonies otherwise could not be more different.

The Oscars take place at a theater in a Hollywood shopping mall. Black tie is obligatory, and everyone is on their best behavior at an event oozing with seriousness.

The Spirits, famed for their relaxed and boozy atmosphere, returned to their traditional locale on Santa Monica Beach after an ill-fated switch to a downtown Los Angeles parking building last year. The sun usually smiles on the event, but this year's show was an uncomfortably frigid affair for the stars and guests gathered in a large marquee.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; Editing by Paul Simao)

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Charlie Sheen threatened to kill me, said actress Denise Richards

As if someone complained that there was no male star capable of rivaling Lindsey Lohan's self-destructive saga, actor Charlie Sheen is back in the news causing a feeding frenzy that has eclipsed Lohan's personal drama.

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'Glass Menagerie' at Town Hall Theatre

8 p.m. Thurs.-Sat., 2 p.m. Sun. Through March 19. $22.50-$26.50. Town Hall Theatre, 3535 School St., Lafayette. (925) 283-1557, www.townhalltheatre.com.

This article appeared on page P - 37 of the San Francisco Chronicle

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Russia, Norway to expand cooperation

Russian First Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov, who is in Norway on a working visit, will meet with the country's premier, Jens Stoltenberg, to discuss cooperation.

Zubkov and Norwegian Trade and Industry Minister Trond Giske will hold a meeting of the bilateral commission on economic, industrial, scientific and technological cooperation.

A declaration on partnership for modernization, as well as a plan to intensify border interaction will be signed following the talks.

A Russian government source said efforts should be made to further increase the $2.1 billion bilateral trade in 2010 despite its 12% growth on 2009.

Documents to be signed during the visit will expand the investment, trade and economic elements of Russian-Norwegian partnership, whose key directions were defined in a joint statement by Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Stoltenberg during Medvedev's visit to Norway in April 2010.

 

OSLO, February 28 (RIA Novosti)

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Powerball winning numbers Feb 26: Florida Powerball winner scores $182M

Congratulations to the newest Powerball millionaire! The Florida Lottery sold one winning Powerball lottery ticket in last night's drawing for the $182,100,000 jackpot.

The Powerball results for Saturday, February 26, 2011 are 4, 13, 17, 21, 45, the Power Ball is 10, and the PowerPlay number is X 5.

Powerball Winners Saturday, February 26, 2011

In addition to the Powerball jackpot winner, there were also six (6) Match 5 + 0 winners for $200,000 each. One winner from North Carolina purchased a PowerPlay ticket for an extra dollar and won an instant $1,000,000. The remaining $200,000 winners purchased their Powerball winning tickets in Arizona, Georgia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania.

There were also eighty-two (82) Match 4 + Powerball winners for $10,000 each. Twelve (12) of those also bought PowerPlay tickets which automatically multiplied their winnings by the PowerPlay number of 5 for $50,000 each.

When is the Next Powerball Drawing?

The next Powerball drawing is Wednesday, March 2, 2011 at 10:59pm EST. The Powerball jackpot is reset for a guaranteed $20,000,000. Tickets may be purchased until 9:50pm on drawing nights. Powerball numbers are drawn live each Wednesday and Saturday evening. You can check your numbers against the Powerball winning numbers here, or watch Powerball Live at 10:59pm EST.

Past Florida Lottery Winners

Florida Lottery winner Isabelle Jensen wins Second Chance Royal Caribbean cruise

Florida Mega Money lottery winner Raymond Fetting of St. Petersburg

Florida Powerball winner, October 6, 2010 numbers: Powerball lottery results $61.5 million jackpot

Winning Powerball numbers: Florida Powerball winner scores $73.9 million dollar jackpot

Florida Powerball winner Elizabeth Choras-Hanna finally claims $73.8 million dollar jackpot

Florida Lotto winning numbers July 28, 2010 Tallahassee winner, Powerball numbers and results

Looking for the latest Lottery Winners and Lottery Winning Numbers? Click the SUBSCRIBE BUTTON ABOVE to get an email when the National Lottery Examiner updates the latest breaking Lottery News!

Sources: Powerball.com; Florida Lottery

Photo: www.sxc.hu; penywise

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Japan to curb rare earth dependence on China

The Japanese government and private companies will spend $1.34 billion to curb Japan's dependence on rare-earth imports from China by a third, the Nikkei news report said Friday.

The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry has selected an initial 110 companies that will receive subsidies totaling 33.1 billion yen, as part of efforts to diversify procurement and additionally invest 9 billion yen in other subsidies and encourage more companies to apply for them, the report said.

Rare earth metals have a wide variety of applications. They are used in hybrid car motors, computer hard drives, cell phones, and wind turbines. They are also essential for military equipment. Jet engines, smart bombs and guided missiles, lasers, radar, night vision goggles, and satellites all depend on rare earth metals to function.

The investments are expected to slash Japan's annual imports of rare-earth elements from China by about 10,000 tons from the current 30,000 tons, the paper added.

China suspended exports of rare-earth elements to Japan as an apparent protest to the arrest of a Chinese skipper in early September, following his boat's collision with Japanese coastguard vessels off disputed islets in the East China Sea. Beijing said it re-stared exports in late September, but Japanese traders said shipments resumed only very slowly.

China, has exported 6,000 tons, or 49.8 percent, of its total rare earth to Japan, representing  a 167 percent rise year on year, according to China's Ministry of Commerce.

According to the US Geological Survey's Mineral Commodities Summary, China produces approximately 97 per cent of the world's rare earth. Of the 124,000 tonnes of ore mined in the year 2009, China produced 120,000 tonnes.

China mines about 90 percent of the world's rare earth minerals - which is a collection of seventeen chemical elements and is used to various technological devices, cellular phones, high performance batteries, flat screen televisions, green energy technology, and are critical to the future of hybrid and electric cars, high-tech military applications and superconductors and fiber-optic communication systems.

China has been reducing export quotas of rare earth minerals for the past few years, citing environmental concerns. However, Wang Caifeng, who is in charge of setting up the China Rare Earth Industry Association, stated that China might slightly raise the production cap and export quota next year.

China's monopoly of the rare earths market has allowed it to manipulate this market by restricting production, using export quotas to limit global supply, and increasing taxes on rare earth metals. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development has estimated that non-Chinese producers pay at least 31 percent more for raw rare earth metals than Chinese producers. As a result a black market in rare earths has developed.

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DC Universe Online Review

 After playing this title for more than a month I feel that an accurate and honest review can finally be let out to the public. I say this seeing that almost every review out came just shortly after the game's release or not long after. These reviews couldn't possibly resonate just exactly what can be experienced in the way of action and adventure if you decide to pick up DC Universe Online. But like I always say, I don't read them anyway so I can judge for myself.

From day one the action of this huge world has kept my attention in many different ways. I have found that the weapons and combination of super powers, along with tricks and iconic powers, is so diverse that with even only one character you have a multitude of options. You can easily evolve to the type of action figure you wish to portray. You may even re-spec your power and skill point trees which will cost you some of that hard earned cash. This will give you the opportunity to change some of the things that weren't working so well. At the same time it gives you a chance to try out some of the other powers and weapons available. But only after you have reached level 30 will this become available to you.

Doing all of this will keep you interested for a while. You can picture how much experimenting you can have with multiple characters, heroes and villains, in multiple servers. With every type of character you create, selecting a different special power will open up new moves and tricks to totally change your perspective on the battlefield. Your imagination is the only thing that limits your creations here, the possibilities are endless.

The attack controls and powers including the motion of the characters were really done well. As opposed to the usual button mashing routine that I don't really care for, here you actually have planned out attacks that you choose to unlock while spending your acquired skill and power points. The attacks are formed by combinations of tapping and/or holding square and triangle. An exact number of hits with the combo of these two buttons will be required for a precision finishing move that will have the most damaging effect on your enemies.

At first, leveling up in DC Universe Online goes rather fast. As you progress it starts to slow down, making it more of a challenge to achieve the higher ranks. Every time you do a mission the environment and enemies are totally different, keeping it fresh. I find this to be a pleasant surprise, seeing that most other MMO ranking systems just seem too much like a chore and a never-ending process. The missions get much harder, requiring help from other players is necessary to your success. Some of the bosses are just way too big for even 2 or 3 highly ranked players. Be sure to help others so that you may ask for assistance when the time comes for yourself to face the big boys.

I have heard some say that DCUO is not an original superhero MMO. What they are referring to is the City Of Heroes title while try to legitimize their argument of it not being original. Earlier this month, the original hero MMO announced their animal booster pack is available. This is content that is already available in the DCUO character creation menu, under skins. Meanwhile, the two games just cannot even begin to be compared. The COH has a very repetitive battlefield and seemingly endless bland missions which will wear thin on you very quickly. DCUO, on the other hand, has a giant open world full of player vs player action, new alerts, raids, and duos happening all the time. This, along with added content always in the works, makes its relevance a lot more convincing. So with that I say there can be only one, and it's not a hard choice really.

As far as the complaints of having to play for lengthy amounts of time without being able to heal, I have found that to be a normal part of beating a boss. When you are in a final battle of a boss you will have to find and smash the health barrels because your health doesn't regenerate. This is the only way to stay alive if you don't have any soda or healing powers. The barrels do re-spawn too, so use what you've got.

Though some say that getting to level 30 goes too quickly I have to say I am there now and it really is not the end of the road by any means. Getting here is but a small part of the journey. What lies beyond level 30 is where the real adventure begins. In the watchtower those previously useless transporters come to life with ultra hard missions that only level 30 players can enter. They will send you inside places like The Daily Planet. This is where you get to earn the respect of the various factions and also the marks of the legends that are necessary to purchase the amazingly crazy power suits that are on display.

You may start to participate in the PvP ring wars which are all-out battles between groups of level 30s in one arena at once. There's so much pure madness going on from explosions, people flying around, and overall carnage everywhere, that you have to see it to believe it. Other things that become available to you at the cap are raids and duos. Here you will find a bunch of unique situations that will take all of your strength along with a certain combination of character roles in your group such as tanks and healers to achieve your objectives.

The group function is also a great feature. It allows you to send and receive group invites to people who are in your server. While in the group you will receive your share of the loot including XP, cash, and any items that become available to the players in your group while you are together. This is a much better scenario then the usual smash and grab of not being in a group.

I didn't find much use in the league feature. The invite system seemed to be lacking. There should be a queue for invites to sit in, rather than just a random pop-up window with a choice of yes or no and no time to decide. What I mean is that you get an invite and have to decide to join a league or not before you can even continue playing the game. Also, you should be able to create a league whether you are alone or not. The system only lets you create one when you are grouped. What is the purpose of that? Split second decisions are no way to form teams. On top of this, group invites and league invites are nearly identical. I can't count the amount of times I've accidentally joined a league in the middle of a battle thinking it was a group invite.

DCUO has one of the best character customizing options I have seen thus far. Having a style tab separate from the equipped items is just pure genius. This allows you to collect any item of your choice and add it to your style tab. In return, you may keep the best possible equipment attributes while not sacrificing your character's costume appearance. Once an item is saved under the style tab you may change back and forth to any combination of items and forge a pretty impressive amount of completely different looks.

The graphics and moves are silky smooth even at the high speed of a running Flash or flying Superman orientated character creation. You leave behind a spectrum of colors that you have chosen when traveling at high speeds. When you are in a large group, fighting can get disorientating. This by no means is attributed to the quality of the programming but is actually a compliment to it by showing everything that is going on at once without missing a single frame.

The world itself is full of amazing environments that are highly detailed with every aspect of reality as well as the science fiction twist that is the DC Universe. Metropolis is bright with tall skyscrapers and very detailed inside and out. The trees, oceans, and skylines are fantastic. All of the maps are littered with fully recognizable and destructible items, moving traffic, and civilians roaming the areas. While Gotham City is dark and eerie with nothing lighting the streets but the moon, a few street lights, and the bat signal up in the clouds. The Gothic styled buildings and constant darkness make for a perfectly creepy hangout for the villains, so be aware this is one of their favorite gathering places. All of these environments have the feel of exactly what they are trying to portray and are very well done.

I found the soundtracks to be quite good as well. I kind of got the superhero feeling as I took to the skies and the music started to play. Though a little birdie keeps telling me that it sounds like Final Fantasy music. I keep having to remind the birdie that the superheroes of DC have been around a lot longer than said game and that this was always what the theme music sounded like. Some repetitive dialogue plagues this title. Many games with A.I. conversation also suffer this fate. It is not as bad as some of the complaints that I have been hearing about.

Is it worth the pay to play price model? The replay value from what I am experiencing should be nothing less than eternal. For the amount of cash it will take to keep you online in this ever expanding universe, I would have to say yes. This decision has to be made by every individual's preference. New available quests are already starting to roll in, such as the latest Catwoman missions update. There will be many more to come, not to mention the level cap will continue to increase.

All in all, I will highly recommend giving this game a chance. You will not be disappointed, especially if you are a DC fan. DC Universe Online gives you the chance to walk in the shoes of famous heroes/villains and fight the fight whether it's for good or for evil, that's up to you as you carve your character into the history books one battle at a time.

So until my next update of “This Week In The DC Universe Online”

I say to you “For every hero there will always be a villain lurking in the shadows”

DC Universe Online awaits you !!

Check out the insane intro video here:

See Slide show here:

Score: 5/5

Review Copy Info: A copy of DC Universe Online was provided to the reviewer by the publisher. A 6 month subscription code was also provided by the publisher.

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PS22 Chorus from Staten Island closes the Oscars: ‘Somewhere Over the Rainbow’

The kids who performed at the Oscars finale tonight at the Kodak Theater in Los Angeles, California definitely stole the show. Known as the PS22 Chorus, the Staten island school kids came to Los Angeles and performed the song, ‘Somewhere over the rainbow’ from the Wizard of Oz movie at the end of the show.

Gracing the stage and keeping in perfect pitch, the kids didn’t seem a bit stage fright. As the audience was warned to be enthusiastic for the final number, there was no reason to worry as the performance did something that the awards didn’t do: it brought everyone together in a movie memory of warmth, love and delight. Which is exactly why we celebrate the movies in the first place.

The kids from the PS22 Chorus didn’t just work this week at the Kodak theater rehearsing. In fact, they were sightseeing all around the community. We ran into the smiling faces down at Disneyland earlier in the week and none of the kids looked a bit worried about the live performance on television and they even performed in front of Sleeping Beauty's castle for the locals.

The PS22 Chorus is a fifth-grade school choir has become a YouTube sensation and was invited to sing at the 83rd Annual Academy Awards.

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Film editor Pamela Martin on digital advances

"On 'Spank the Monkey,' we had very long discussions each time we wanted to revamp something because it meant you were going to physically tear up the whole film and put it back together again," she says. But, thanks to digital advances, "editing has become much more free-form in that you can try out ideas quickly."

Martin, also nominated for a 2011 American Cinema Editors award, had plenty of opportunities to experiment while working on "The Fighter." She and Russell tried out multiple versions of individual scenes to prevent the boxing comeback story from becoming melodramatic.

"You don't want anything where you feel like, 'Oh, they're acting,' " Martin says. "You can't have one false moment, and that mostly has to do with performances. It was a matter of finding the best combinations of takes and reactions."

For example, as Mark Wahlberg and Melissa Leo face off during a third-act showdown when the boxing star fires his mother as manager, several questions emerged, Martin says: "What anchors the scene? Is it the mother wanting to say, 'I'll try to do better'? Is it defensiveness? Is it better for Mark to cry or keep a stiff upper lip? We had a wide variety of performances from the actors. Within the framework of the movie we had to decide: Should this be an emotional movement, or should it be a more quiet moment?"

Martin, who says she's become "less judgmental" about onscreen characters such as Leo's fierce Boston matriarch since becoming a mother of two, says, "You could play that confrontation scene three different ways, but you craft the scene to slant a certain way once you realize where it needs to go emotionally."

Unknown sought to portray Tupac

Rapper Tupac Shakur died in a hail of bullets in 1996. Now Morgan Creek Productions and director Antoine Fuqua are bringing Shakur's story to the big screen starting this summer. "We're going to be looking for a relative unknown to play Tupac," says Morgan Creek marketing executive Greg Mielcarz. Next month, the filmmakers will join the SkeeTV website to hold an open casting call that lets anyone upload audition videos. Mielcarz hopes to find a diamond in the rough. "So much weight is going to be placed on the one young actor who can actually pull this off," he says. "He needs the same magic quality that Jamie Foxx brought to playing Ray Charles."

Japan will be setting for film based on book

While living in San Francisco and working as a travel writer in the '80s, filmmaker Alan Brown became so fascinated with Japanese culture that he moved to Japan for seven years. In April, he'll return to that country to make "Audrey Hepburn's Neck."

Based on his Pacific Rim Prize-winning novel, the story draws on Hepburn's intense following among Japanese film fans. "People there have this cross-cultural obsessive thing for Audrey Hepburn," Brown says. "When I was in Japan, 'Roman Holiday' was the most popular foreign film. You can easily imagine a Japanese woman wanting to be thin and dark-haired like Audrey Hepburn, where she wouldn't want to be, say, Marilyn Monroe."

And the neck? "In Japan, the nape of the neck is considered a big erogenous zone," Brown says. "If you look at 19th century woodblock prints of women in kimonos, it's the only skin you see."

Before prepping "Neck," Brown filmed "Private Romeo," an all-male version of "Romeo and Juliet" about cadets studying Shakespeare in a military academy.

"Juliet was so transgressive in this male-dominated society where women did what they were told," Brown says. "I wondered, how can you transfer that transgressive quality to a contemporary setting with a really rigid authoritarian, masculine society? Two guys, of course." {sbox}

E-mail Chronicle correspondent Hugh Hart at pinkletters@sfchronicle.com.

This article appeared on page P - 25 of the San Francisco Chronicle

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