Friday 5 September 2008

BB's Darnell & Sara cuddle before evictions

'Big Brother' housemates Darnell and Sara have been cuddling under a duvet ahead of Friday night's grand finale.

According to the show's official web site, the pair snuggled up together under a eiderdown on a couch in the living room.

Darnell said to Sara: "You were so funny in your rap today."

She replied: "Did you think it was funny?"

He then aforementioned to her: "I thought it was just the cutest thing, your whole look and everything."

"You just looked care that lady friend you hang with when you're 15. Like you rode over on your bike and knocked on my threshold, and my Mom opened the door and you're like, 'Is Darnell there?'."

Read our 'Big Brother' blog here.



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Tuesday 26 August 2008

Download Crashpalace mp3






Crashpalace
   

Artist: Crashpalace: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Other

   







Discography:


Crashpalace
   

 Crashpalace

   Year: 2001   

Tracks: 13






Crash Palace hails from Australia and formed in 1995. Crash Palace (at one time called Paradime), includes Marcus Maloney on vocals/guitar, Jeremy Taylor on lead guitar, John Kelly on sea bass, Dean Thomas on keyboards, and Pete Constantinou on drums. The band claims to be nigh influenced by the British Invasion, '70s rock supergroups, and '90s American understudy rock and roll bands. Crash Palace released their self-titled debut in July 2001. The full-length was produced by Paul Palmer world Health Organization motley Bush's Sixteen Stone and No Doubt's Tragic Kingdom and was released by the like label (Trauma) that is dwelling to both those bands. The modern alternate rock candy band worn out iI eld bit of writing and doing preproduction on their debut only recorded ennead of the LP's 13 songs in trey years. The band shared out the stage at radio receiver station summertime concerts with the likes of Staind, Papa Roach, and Crazytown.






Thursday 7 August 2008

LC to Teen Choice: I'm Not Worthy!

Even Lauren Conrad realizes there's more to life than "The Hills."
LC
TMZ has learned LC is giving up the surfboard she won at this year's Teen Choice Awards for living her life on TV to someone a lot more deserving -- a 13-year-old Leukemia patient who was up for the $100,000 Do Something Award and lost.

Conrad met the kid, Pat Pedraja, at a Teen Choice pre-party Saturday where she presented him with $10,000 check from Do Something for his work recruiting bone marrow squash donors from minorities across the state.

We see she personally slipped him an iPod Touch she filled with her favorite music. It ain't $100,000 bucks -- but we're functional with a reality TV budget here.







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Monday 30 June 2008

Fracture and Neptune

Fracture and Neptune   
Artist: Fracture and Neptune

   Genre(s): 
Drum & Bass
   



Discography:


Bassbin (BB1213)   
 Bassbin (BB1213)

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 2


Inperspective (INP011)   
 Inperspective (INP011)

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 3




 





Coldplay Finally Claim Number One UK Single

Wednesday 25 June 2008

Yeoh, Chang shoot for stars with new agency

Stellar to represent 'Crouching Tiger' star in Asia





HONG KONG -- Actress Michelle Yeoh ("Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon") and producer Terence Chang ("Mission: Impossible II") on Saturday launched a talent agency called Stellar Entertainment to serve the Chinese-language and Asian filmmaking world.


Stellar's CEO is David Tang Zaiyang, a renowned journalist and critic from Taiwan, and the company has opened offices in Hong Kong and Taipei, the founders said at a press conference.


In addition to representing Yeoh across Asia, Stellar will begin with a lineup that includes actress Kelly Lin ("Boarding Gate”) and actors Mark Cheng ("Election 2") and Brandon Chang ("The Touch").


"We aim to nurture new talents and offer guidance to established talents to take them to the next level," Yeoh told The Hollywood Reporter.


Chang said that Stellar will have an informal partnership with Lion Rock Prods., the company he founded with director John Woo in Hollywood, and will offer talent to Woo's next drama, "1949," and also to "Stranglehold," director Stephen Fung's adaptation of the eponymous video game, now in development.


Stellar plans another office in Beijing or Shanghai, and the company hopes to expand to into offices in Japan, Korea, Hollywood and Europe.


"Terence and I have ties in Hollywood and Europe, which we can utilize to further the careers of our talents," Yeoh said.


Apart from actors and actresses, Stellar also has signed a roster of newcomers including Ranee Yuan and Ling Hung, and behind-the-scenes talent such as "Lust, Caution" screenwriter Wang Hui-ling, "Simply Actors" director Patrick Leung, and "Silk" director Su Chao-bin.


The founders denied rumors that Richard Li, chairman of telecommuncations corporation PCCW and son of tycoon Li Ka-Shing, is one of the backers of Stellar.



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Monday 16 June 2008

World to Diddy: No One Cares

Believing that everyone cares what his name is -- or what he's changed it to, Diddy has recorded his own personal YouTube to "clear up" any confusion you might have about what he's decided to call himself now.


Really dude? Get over yourself.



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Sunday 1 June 2008

R. Kelly 'Relaxed ... But Serious' During Trial's First Day




CHICAGO — Another day, another R. Kelly headline, with the next one more salacious than the last.

But when the Chicago Sun-Times' front-page headline on Friday (May 9) alleged that the singer had paid a woman to return a sex tape, just as jury selection was finally starting in Kelly's child-pornography trial, his lawyers cried foul — and not the least of which because the information was supposed to be sealed.


Outside the courthouse, small groups of supporters and protesters shouted alternately, "R. Kelly is innocent!" and "R. Kelly is the world's greatest pedophile!" — one with a megaphone. And once inside the courtroom, Kelly looked like he wanted to hide, originally sitting in the fourth row of the court gallery instead of at the defense table, until the judge reminded him where he could sit.

As Kelly wiped his face, looking worried, one of his attorneys asked the judge once again to delay the trial, investigate the leak, and appoint a special prosecutor to "remedy" the damage done to the prospective jury pool. "This is not the subject of the indictment, this is not the subject of the evidence, this is not part of anything I've ever seen," Kelly attorney Marc Martin told the court. "It's misleading, and the wrong conclusions could be drawn. This is a witness the state does not have, so there's no way to respond. The jury has been irreparably poisoned."

Kelly's attorney accused the newspaper of trying to sabotage the singer, pointing out that it was the Sun-Times that was the "impetus for this prosecution," since the paper had handed the sex tape at the heart of the case over to the police in 2002. "This article is playing chicken with the court," Martin said. "And someone out there is trying to sabotage Robert Kelly's right to a fair trial."

Since the information from the Sun-Times' recent spate of articles came out of closed hearings with a limited amount of people present — essentially the lawyers for both sides and the judge — Martin said whomever leaked the information should be found in contempt of court and banned from the trial. At one point, when a reporter from the Sun-Times was called to the bench, court observers thought he was about to be reprimanded or asked to reveal his source, but no — the judge just wanted to work out some media-coverage logistics for the jury selection.

Judge Vincent Gaughan ruled against the defense for its request for a delay but waited to rule on the request for a special prosecutor to be appointed later. "We don't know the effect the articles may have had," he said, "It's premature, but we have to be flexible. If it comes up [during questioning of prospective jurors], that might be the basis [for a delay]."

To see if the article (or any other issues) would be a problem, jury selection began soon after the brief motions hearing, with 150 prospective jurors showing up to hear the indictment and fill out a preliminary questionnaire. Judge Gaughan introduced the singer to the jury pool as "Robert Kelly," at which point Kelly stood, bowed his head, and said, "Hello," giving them a brief smile, according to NBC sketch artist Verna Sadock, who was the only member of the media allowed to be present for that moment. "He looked very relaxed," she said, "but also very serious. He was rubbing his eyes a lot."

Some reporters were upset that the beginning of jury selection was not made public, as they had been told it would be, and when an ABC reporter asked the judge afterward why they had not been allowed back in the room, Judge Gaughan tersely reminded him that according to the court decorum order, no interviews were to be conducted in the courtroom.

The court is looking to seat 12 jurors and four alternates, and questioning begins Monday.

Don't miss "R. Kelly: When the Gavel Drops," airing on Sunday, May 11, at 2 p.m. ET on MTV2.

For full coverage of the R. Kelly case, see The R. Kelly Reports.






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