Monday, November 11, 2013

Real Madrid star Cristiano Ronaldo: 'I'm enjoying playing alongside Gareth Bale'

Since Gareth Bale's record £86m move from Tottenham Hotspur to Real Madrid, he has suffered the intense scrutiny of the global media spotlight but after a good run of form he has picked up the best reference of all - from teammate Cristiano Ronaldo

Real Madrid superstar Cristiano Ronaldo admits he's enjoying playing alongside Welshman Gareth Bale now the Galacticos are starting to click.
The all-star Santiago Bernabeu outfit are currently third in the Primera Liga, behind great rivals Barcelona and Atletico Madrid.
But Carlo Ancelotti's men are starting to click and have won their last three league games, scoring 15 goals in the process.
The Portuguese has bagged eight of those goals, while Bale has chipped in with two.
Both hit the net in last week's Champions League draw with Italian giants Juventus and head into the international break in a rich vein of form.
Ronaldo will face Sweden on Friday night as his nation aims to qualify for Brazil 2014 through the play-offs while Bale will link up with Chris Coleman's Wales squad to face Finland on Wednesday, boosted by some kind comments from his talented teammate.
The former Manchester United star said: “He [Bale] is a player that is starting to feel at home with us now,”
“He is starting to play very well and the fact is I'm enjoying playing alongside him and with Karim [Benzema] as well and [Angel] Di Maria.
“We are all getting to know each other.”
After the break Madrid will face Almería, Galatasaray and Valladolid as they continue their fight to overhaul their domestic rivals and bid for European glory.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Romanian rescue truck ready to roll...over anything

If you see this thing coming, you can be sure of one thing: you’re in big trouble. At least you were.
The Ghe-O Motors Rescue is a true all-terrain vehicle designed to take care of business where other trucks dare not go.
The Romanian-made monster looks like Hummer built for Brobdingnagians, and has giant wheels at its extremities endowing it with approach and departure angles that would make a Jeep Wrangler weep on its Trail Rated badges.
Powered by gas or diesel motors with up to 500 hp, its fully lockable four-wheel-drive system is stout enough for the vehicle to be outfitted as an 11-passenger transport, fully-equipped ambulance or off-road fire truck complete with a 160 gallon water tank.
Stuck in the middle of a lake? No problem, the Rescue can go there, too. It can be waterproofed and fitted with a set of airbags that straps to the wheels to make it float.
Although something as lame as snow doesn’t seem to be much of an issue for it, Ghe-O can also outfit the Rescue with tracks in place of the rear wheels, just in case.
Oh, and if you happen to encounter a lot of electromagenetic pulses where you operate, protection against them is an option.
The price? Sorry, there’s no sticker on the window, and they’ll only reveal it to legitimately interested customers.
If you fit that description, we hear Bucharest is lovely this time of year. Even if it’s not, you should be good in one of these.

MILAN - Ricardo Kakà spoke exclusively to the Milan Channel after this evening’s match at the San Siro:



It was an emotional experience playing again at the San Siro. I’ve been thinking all day about when I was coming onto the pitch. The fans, the welcome… it’s something that I’ll always keep with me. It was fundamental to win here and we did it. Tuesday will be a tough game but we’re getting players back slowly and the team is getting stronger and stronger. We can do very well.
I spent a month not playing and working on getting back and now I’m back. I’m missing match fitness and I don’t know when I be back on form but I hoping to make it as soon as possible.
It’s great to know that the fans expect a lot of you. It’s good to hear what you see from outside, you know me well and have seen good things from me. It’s very pleasing. Gabriel played well and made a great save from the free kick. It’s not easy to come on for Milan at the San Siro but he did well and he has a great future. I’ll try to help the team in any way I can with my attitude and showing that as a team we can go far. We need to be a solid group if we’re to win and that0s what I want to transmit to the team. We can only win as a team, as individuals we can’t do it.
My family is very important. I’m happy that they’re here to see me back playing and see what Milan means to me.”

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Jason Statham Sexy Photos
















Rosie Huntington-Whiteley & Jason Statham Hook Arms in Europe

Rosie Huntington-Whiteley hooks arms with her boyfriend Jason Statham while exiting the Bristol Hotel on Friday (September 27) in Paris, France.

The 26-year-old supermodel and the 46-year-old actor were spotted heading over to Gare du Nord railway station to catch a Eurostar to London.

PHOTOS: Check out the latest pics of Rosie Huntington-Whiteley

The day before, Rosie strutted her stuff at the Balmain Fashion Show as part of the Paris Fashion Week Womenswear Spring/Summer 2014 Show.

10+ pictures inside of Rosie Huntington-Whiteley and Jason Statham stepping out of their Paris hotel together…

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Fast & Furious 7 (2014)

Release Date: July 11, 2014
Rating [ Not Yet Rated ]
Director: James Wan
Written By: Chris Morgan
Cast: Dominic Toretto, Dwayne Johnson, Jason Statham, Luke Hobbs, Paul Walker, Tyrese Gibson, Vin Diesel
Synopsis:
Action star Jason Statham joins the franchise and Dwayne Johnson returns once again in this 7th installment, which will return to LA as the location of the story.


OFFICIAL TRAILER :

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Sylvester Stallone: Jason Statham was unbelievable when Expendables 3 stunt went wrong

Sylvester Stallone has praised Jason Statham for being ‘cool’ after a stunt on the set of The Expendables 3 went horribly wrong.
Statham was shooting a scene on a truck in Bulgaria when it careered out of control into the Black Sea.
Sly, who co-wrote and stars in the movie, said it was ‘unbelievable’ how Statham managed to save himself.
He told Metro.co.uk in an exclusive interview for his forthcoming film The Escape Plan: ‘We had a scene where a truck went out of control and Jason Statham went to the bottom of the river.
‘If all the Expendables had been on that – we were supposed to be on it a minute later – it could have been fatal.’
He praised Statham’s professional behaviour after he managed to escape from the vehicle.
‘The truck went to the bottom of the river taking the camera crew and the camera crane,’ Sly said.
‘We lost a million dollars of equipment in a moment and Jason was unbelievable because he’s in heavy boots and swam to the top.
‘He was cool. He cleaned off. A lot of people would have said, “I’m done”.’
Stallone added: ‘I’m just telling you how dangerous this is. This isn’t a little going into a pond. This was off a 12 foot pier, five foot to the bottom.’
Statham and Stallone star alongside Antonio Banderas, Wesley Snipes, Mel Gibson, Harrison Ford, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Dolph Lundgren in the third instalment of the action franchise.
The Expendables 3 is out on August 15, 2014.

Jason Statham dubbed a ‘bad a**’ after escaping horror accident on The Expendables 3 set

Jason Statham proved he is  a real action hero after surviving a near-death experience when a stunt on the set of The Expendables 3 went wrong.
The cast of Sylvester Stallone’s action movie sequel headed to  Bulgaria but the British actor’s co-star, Terry Crews, revealed one shoot went awry and resulted in Statham being plunged into the Black Sea while stuck behind the wheel of a truck.
Bridesmaids star Crews dubbed his co-star a ‘bad a**’ for surviving his brush with death and claims it was a close call for him too – as he was supposed to be riding on the back of the truck for the scene.
Recounting the drama in an interview with US talk show host Jay Leno, Crews, 45, said: ‘I had a near-death experience.
‘We were doing a stunt and Jason Statham was driving the truck and we were supposed to be on the back of this truck and for some reason we were talking, sipping smoothies and he gets in the truck… on the edge of the Black Sea. He, literally, was supposed to stop the truck. Well, the truck doesn’t stop. The truck rolls over the dock, into the Black Sea with Jason Statham driving!’
Crews went on to reveal: ‘Now, this is the thing… in your mind, you have an action film where you’re like “if that happens I’m gonna grab the truck, I’m gonna do all this stuff”. (But in real life) I’m like (screaming), “Jason! Jason!”
‘I’m in a heap on the ground. He’s in the water, in the truck. Now we are freaking out.’
As workers on the set rushed the crash site, the scene was one of despair, Crews revealed.
‘Everybody’s screaming’, he said. ‘I’m (crying). Then, literally, he (Statham) gets out, swims to the top and the truck is gone. And we’re supposed to be on the back of that thing, I was supposed to be on that. He (Statham) gets back, they dry his clothes, and… they’re just like, “We’re going to shoot it again, we’re going to shoot some more.”
‘I’m like, “What?”’
Crews then heaped praise on Statham, 46, by saying: ‘Let me tell you something.  Jason Statham… he is a true bad, bad, bad a**. That’s my boy! I couldn’t believe it!’
The Expendables 3 is out next year and also stars Sylvester Stallone, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Harrison Ford and Wesley Snipes.

Copyright by metro.co.uk !

Monday, October 28, 2013

Brazil to insist on local Internet data storage after U.S. spying

SAO PAULO/BRASILIA (Reuters) - Brazil, seeking to shield its citizens from alleged U.S. spying, is pushing ahead with its plan to force global Internet companies to store data obtained from Brazilian users inside the country, according to a draft of the law seen by Reuters.
Despite opposition from multinational software, hardware and telecommunications companies, President Dilma Rousseff is pressing lawmakers to vote as early as this week on the law, sparked by disclosures of widespread U.S. spying on Brazilian telecommunications data.
If passed, the new law could impact the way Google, Facebook, Twitter and other Internet giants operate in Latin America's biggest country and one of the largest telecommunications markets in the world.
A draft of the law says "the government can oblige Internet service companies ... to install and use centers for the storage, management and dissemination of data within the national territory."
The government would evaluate the requirement for each company, the draft says, "taking into consideration their size, their revenues in Brazil and the breadth of services they offer the Brazilian public."
Rousseff's insistence follows disclosures of surveillance by the United States in Brazil that went as far as tracking the personal phone calls and emails of Rousseff herself.
It follows recent reports of similar U.S. spying on the leaders and citizens of Germany, France and dozens of other countries.
The disclosures, like the reports of surveillance by U.S. intelligence agencies on American citizens and businesses, come from documents leaked by Edward Snowden, the former contractor for the U.S. National Security Agency.
The spying has given Rousseff, a leftist who is expected to run for another four-year term in 2014, a cause celebre to pursue both at home and on the international stage, especially after Germany said it would back a Brazilian proposal at the United Nations that would seek to strengthen international rules for Internet governance and put limits on foreign surveillance.
Brazil will host a conference in Rio next April to discuss ways to guard Internet privacy from espionage. The meeting will be held by ICAAN, the body that manages web domain names and is considered neutral by many because it includes governments, civil society and industry.
BRAZILIAN DATA
First, though, comes the focus on Brazilian data.
Proponents of the law say in-country data centers would make companies answerable to local privacy rules and other Brazilian laws. They dismiss industry fears that the law would make online activities costly and inefficient and create unnecessary barriers in what is supposed to be a frontier-free Internet.
"We are not regulating the way information flows, just requiring that data on Brazilians be stored in Brazil so it is subject to the jurisdiction of Brazilian courts," Rousseff spokesman Thomas Traumann said. "This has nothing to do with global communications."
Given the outrage felt by many Brazilian lawmakers after the disclosures of American spying, Traumann added, the government is confident it has enough votes to pass the bill. Brazil's lower house of Congress is expected to vote on it as early as Wednesday.
Internet companies have been lobbying hard to try to stop what they see more as a political reaction to U.S. spying than an effective measure to ensure data protection.
Last week, a coalition of business groups representing dozens of Internet companies including Facebook, Google, Microsoft and eBay sent a letter to Brazilian lawmakers. "In-country data storage requirements would detrimentally impact all economic activity that depends on data flows," it read.
Industry sources say forcing companies to have in-country data centers will not address Brazil's privacy concerns, because the same information will be replicated in servers abroad.
Instead, they warn, it could scare companies away, depriving Brazilians of services and causing problems for industries, like finance and air travel, that rely heavily on data storage.
By some calculations, taxes and high costs of energy make data centers in Brazil up to 100 percent more expensive than in the United States, costing an estimated $200 million.
But the government argues the size of the market justifies having part of the infrastructure in the country, especially when companies like Google, which recently built a data center in Chile, are already setting it up nearby.
"The Brazilian market is huge," a senior official said. "There is a consensus within the government that if the market is here it makes sense to have the data centers here too."
Some in the industry believe big companies would eventually comply, if given no choice.
Others, however, say companies could skip Brazil or choose to operate remotely. That's especially true for companies that don't already have a physical presence in Brazil because the law, according to the draft, would apply to foreign companies with offices in the country.
(Editing by Paulo Prada and Sandra Maler)

Czech left leader to start government talks despite party revolt

PRAGUE (Reuters) - The leader of the Czech Republic's center-left Social Democrats said on Monday he would start talks with centrists on forming a government despite the fact that his own party ejected him from its negotiating team after a poor election result.
The Social Democrats won the largest share of votes in the weekend's parliamentary election, but its 20.5 percent score was the worst result since 1992 and a party leadership body has asked the leader, Bohuslav Sobotka, to resign.
Sobotka, 42, has defied what he called an "attempted execution" and told a rally of some 500-1,000 supporters he would push ahead with coalition negotiations with other parties.
"I am ready to start talks on formation of government," Sobotka said.
The party rebellion and Sobotka's refusal to resign has complicated the outlook for forming a government to replace a caretaker administration that has ruled the central European country of 10.5 million people since July.
Sobotka's move means his party will now in effect have two negotiating teams, the other led by the party's no. 2, Michal Hasek.
Sobotka called on his rivals to drop their actions and fall back in line to avoid leading parallel negotiations.
A quarter of a century after the fall of Communism in the 1989 "Velvet Revolution", Czechs have grown disillusioned with the political class and used their votes to protest against established parties, including the Social Democrats, that have been tainted by corruption scandals.
Financial markets have largely ignored the political turmoil that started with the collapse of a center-right government in June, but protracted paralysis could unsettle investors.
President Milos Zeman, who has long expressed a dislike for Sobotka, has in the past hinted he may prefer Hasek as prime minister. He told the weekly Tyden on Monday that if he were in Sobotka's place he would resign.
Sobotka's supporters carried banners at the rally calling on the party to reject "betrayal" by the Hasek faction and President Zeman.
"This was clearly a dirty trick," said Frantisek Dolezal, 67. "It was disunity from Hasek's side that caused the party to lose votes."
Sobotka said he would seek a wider party leadership body to decide his fate, hoping to overturn Sunday's vote by members of the party's elite.
The Social Democrats want to start talks with the centrist party ANO, an anti-corruption movement led by food and agricultural tycoon Andrej Babis, 59, that came second in the election. They also want to negotiate with the centrist Christian Democrats to form a three-party coalition.
ANO said its newly elected deputies and the party leadership would meet on Wednesday to decide the next course of action.
Social Democrat leaders have said they could agree with ANO on anti-corruption measures, such as laws requiring the publishing of public contracts. But they will struggle to follow through on plans to raise taxes for high earners and utilities and banks because of ANO's opposition to tax hikes.
(Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

Britain's Cameron says may act against press over spy leaks

LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister David Cameron threatened on Monday to act to stop newspapers publishing what he called damaging leaks from former U.S. intelligence operative Edward Snowden.
"If they don't demonstrate some social responsibility it will be very difficult for government to stand back and not to act," Cameron told parliament.
Britain's Guardian newspaper had printed damaging material after initially agreeing to destroy other sensitive data, he said.
Cameron on Friday accused Snowden and unnamed newspapers of assisting Britain's enemies by helping them avoid surveillance by its intelligence services, saying it was going to be harder to keep Britain safe as a result.
Disclosures about the activities of Britain's GCHQ eavesdropping agency and its cooperation with America's National Security Agency (NSA) have embarrassed the government and angered many lawmakers in Cameron's ruling Conservative party who believe they have harmed national security.
While making clear his patience was running out, Cameron told lawmakers his preference was not to get heavy-handed with newspapers that published such information and that he hoped they would change their behavior instead.
"I don't want to have to use injunctions or D-notices (publication bans) or the other tougher measures. I think it's much better to appeal to newspapers' sense of social responsibility," he said.

Microsoft shareholders advised to vote against director Thompson

SEATTLE (Reuters) - Proxy advisory firm Glass Lewis has recommended that Microsoft Corp shareholders vote against the re-election of board member John Thompson, the lead independent director who is in charge of the company's efforts to find a new chief executive.
In a research note circulated to its clients on Monday, Glass Lewis, which makes its recommendations based on corporate governance guidelines, expressed concerns about a possible conflict of interests for Thompson in his role as CEO of Virtual Instruments, a cloud-computing firm that sells licenses and devices to Microsoft.
(Reporting by Bill Rigby)

Asian carp reproduce in Great Lakes watershed

Scientists find 1st evidence that invasive Asian carp have reproduced in Great Lakes watershed

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. (AP) — Scientists said Monday they have documented for the first time that an Asian carp species has successfully reproduced within the Great Lakes watershed, an ominous development in the struggle to slam the door on the hungry invaders that could threaten native fish.
An analysis of four grass carp captured last year in Ohio's Sandusky River, a tributary of Lake Erie, found they had spent their entire lives there and were not introduced through means such as stocking, according to researchers with the U.S. Geological Survey and Bowling Green State University.
Grass carp are among four species imported from Asia decades ago to control algae and unwanted plants in controlled settings such as sewage treatment lagoons. They escaped into the wild and have spread into the Mississippi and other rivers and lakes across the nation's heartland.
Of greatest concern in the Great Lakes region are bighead and silver carp, prolific breeders that gobble huge amounts of plankton — tiny plants and animals that are vital to aquatic food chains. Scientists say if they gain a foothold in the lakes, they could spread widely and destabilize a fishing industry valued at $7 billion.
Grass carp are less worrisome because they eat larger plants instead of plankton and don't compete with native species, although they could harm valuable wetland vegetation where some fish spawn.
But because all Asian carp species require similar conditions to reproduce successfully, the Sandusky River discovery suggests it's likely that any of them could spawn there and in many other Great Lakes tributaries, said Duane Chapman, a USGS fisheries biologist and member of the research team.
"It's bad news," Chapman said. "It would have been a lot easier to control these fish if they'd been limited in the number of places where they could spawn. This makes our job harder. It doesn't make it impossible, but it makes it harder."
The Obama administration has spent nearly $200 million to shield the lakes, focusing primarily on an electrified barrier and other measures in Chicago-area waterways that offer a pathway from the carp-infested Mississippi River watershed to Lake Michigan. Critics say more is needed and are pressing to physically separate the two systems.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is scheduled to release a report in coming months on a long-term solution.
John Goss, who heads the White House Council on Environmental Quality's Asian carp program, said sterile grass carp have been found in the Great Lakes for years. But the discovery that they can reproduce within the watershed "reinforces why we must continue to execute the aggressive strategy to keep silver and bighead carp out of the Great Lakes that we have been pursuing for the past three and a half years," he said.
A commercial fisherman captured four small grass carp from the Sandusky River in 2012. Chapman and his colleagues determined they were at least a year old and could become spawning adults.
The scientists also examined bones in the fishes' heads called "otoliths" that indicate the chemistry of the waters they've inhabited, and they compared them with otoliths of farmed fish. The analysis confirmed the grass carp were hatched through natural reproduction in the river.
To spawn successfully, Asian carp need rivers of a certain length with currents that keep their eggs drifting long enough to hatch. Researchers are fine-tuning computer models that can determine the likelihood that a particular river is suitable.
A few years ago, scientists believed that perhaps two dozen rivers in the Great Lakes watershed offered good spawning habitat. But the grass carp analysis and other recent findings suggest the number may be considerably higher, Chapman said. He and others are developing a list.
"It also means that many more reservoirs in the United States are at risk of Asian carp establishment," he said.
The Sandusky River has about 15 miles of flowing waters accessible to the grass carp — a shorter stretch than experts previously believed necessary for spawning.
"This is further evidence that we can't underestimate the flexibility that Asian carps have to become acclimated to and even adapt to environments outside their native range," said Reuben Goforth, a Purdue University scientist who has studied the carp but wasn't involved with the USGS project.
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Follow John Flesher on Twitter at http://twitter.com/JohnFlesher

ABC apologizes for child's joke on Kimmel's show

ABC apologizes to Asian-American group for child's joke on 'Jimmy Kimmel Live' skit

LOS ANGELES (AP) — ABC is apologizing for a segment of "Jimmy Kimmel Live" in which a child joked about killing Chinese people to help erase the U.S. debt.
The boy's unscripted comment came during a comedy bit in which youngsters commented on news events. The skit, aimed at poking fun at childish politicians, aired last week on Kimmel's late-night talk show.
ABC's apology came in response to a complaint from a group called 80-20 that identifies itself as a pan-Asian-American political organization.
In an Oct. 25 letter to the group, ABC said it would never purposefully do anything to upset the Chinese, Asian or other communities. The network says the skit will be edited out of the "Jimmy Kimmel Live" episode for future airings or any other distribution, including online.