Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Luisana Lopilato Ultimo: Luisana Lopilato Back For Sexy Ultimo Photoshoot

She is the beautiful blonde Argentinian actress who married Michael Bublé in a ceremony last year.
And as of October 2011, she has been the new face – and body – of Ultimo lingerie.
Tonight, the official new campaign starring Argentinian model Luisana Lopilato will be unveiled. The latest photographs will show Luisana modelling the lingerie collection that will launch ahead of Valentine’s day, which without revealing too much, is a line of charming, romantic, feminine pieces.
Ahead of the launch though, MailOnline has secured a glimpse of some behind the scenes photographs taken at the shoot that reveal some of the preparations that went on.
Renowned photographer Dan Kennedy took the shots, at a studio location in Vancouver, Canada, near to the hometown of Luisana’s Canadian husband.
In the behind-the-scenes photographs, Luisana has her hair tended to, while close-up shots show rails of shoes waiting to be tried on and rows of bras and knickers to be modelled.
Ultimo’s founder and CEO Michelle Mone OBE personally picked Luisana as Ultimo’s new cover girl after seeing photographs from her wedding day with Michael BublĂ©.
Michelle admits that she became so fixated on having Luisana as her new Ultimo girl that she would not rest until she had tracked her down.

Gareth Bull & Catherine Bull Wins UK £40Million EuroMillions Jackpot Lottery

BRICKIE Gareth Bull is wall to wall in cash after scooping a massive £40million EuroMillions jackpot.
Gareth, 40, landed the seventh biggest UK lottery win ever after buying a single £2 lucky dip.
The footie fan from Mansfield Woodhouse, Notts, plans to buy an executive box at Old Trafford to watch his beloved Manchester United.
Gareth, who lives with wife Catherine and their two kids, said: “It feels like I’m in cuckoo land.”
Builder Gareth scooped the jackpot — thanks to a drop of rain.
The self-employed brickie was unable to work because it was too wet.
To kill time last Friday he drove to a supermarket and on impulse bought a lottery lucky dip ticket.
Next day Gareth was staggered to discover he was the only person to have all the five main numbers 2, 10, 22, 27 and 28, plus the lucky star numbers 6 and 8.
The prize was a staggering £40,627,241 — but it took a while to grasp how mega-rich he was.
Gareth Bull & Wife Catherine Bull Wins UK £40Million Euromillions Jackpot

His wife Catherine, 35, told how he walked into the room to break the news and was “shaking”.
She said: “Gareth’s face was white. The ticket was shaking in his hand. We said, ‘Surely it’s not £40million?’ My head was in bits and I thought we had won £4,000.
“Then I thought it was £40,000 — but the zeros and commas were in the wrong place and we couldn’t work it out. Then we thought it was £4million. It didn’t seem real.”
Incredibly, the couple decided not to tell anyone immediately and carried on with the weekend as they had intended.
They took sons Declan, nine, and Joel, ten, to their Saturday morning football, went to the cinema and held a sleepover for the lads and their pals.
They now plan to splash out on an executive box at Old Trafford, a Range Rover Sport and a family trip to Disney World in Florida.
The only other treat in store is a new landing carpet to replace the worn one.
Gareth, who bought his ticket at a shop in Aspley, Nottingham, said: “We have no plans to move.
“The neighbours are bang on. We have our dream home, which we built from scratch.
“Ideally I would like to go back to work. I would go out of my mind sat at home.”
Catherine said: “I hate shopping. But I’d like to get my hair done more than twice a year. Our ambition is just to be happy.”
Gareth added: “Thank God for the rain. I only bought the ticket while waiting for it to stop.”
He landed the seventh biggest UK Lottery win ever and is as rich as stars Kylie Minogue, Mick Hucknall and Pete Townshend.
# DID you win last night’s £12million EuroMillions jackpot with 1, 2, 6, 20 and 36. Lucky Stars were 8 and 11.
Gareth Bull & Catherine Bull Wins UK £40Million Euromillions Jackpot

India Eisley T0pless Flaunt: India Eisley Poses T0pless For Flaunt Magazine January 2012

As big breaks go, even by Hollywood standards the one that India Eisley scored is impressive.
The 18-year-old actress who plays Kate Beckinsale’s daughter in Underworld: Awakening, caught the Brit star’s eye while getting coffee in Starbucks.
And looking at the sexy shots of her in the latest issue of Flaunt it’s easy to see why.
The brunette shows off her curves in a series of provocative poses as part of a feature that reveals how she was picked to play Kate’s daughter in the latest installment of the popular movie franchise.
India says the actress and her husband, director Les Wiseman saw her in a Starbucks coffee shop, just a month after she auditioned for the role.
She says: ‘Kate had said to Len: “Oh, you should go up to that girl and ask her if she wants to be in a movie; she’s like a mini-me”.
‘And he said: “Oh my God, I just saw that girl’s audition tape”. So it was just a strange thing.’
In the Flaunt photo shoot India wears a series of revealing outfits.
In one picture she lounges on a velvet sofa, her lace-trimmed dress hitched up to her hip, exposing her legs.
In another photo she wears a tube top that barely covers her breasts, while revealing her midriff.
Despite the sexy shots India says that she is actually ‘quite shy.’
The young woman, who plays Ashley Juergens in the TV series The Secret Life of the American Teenager, says: ‘I kind of prefer it [in Europe] because normally I’m quite shy and here, when you’re shy, they immediately think: “Oh, she’s rude or snobby”.
‘So unless you’re like: “Hey!” and you’re big, you’re unfriendly. They don’t realise that maybe it’s just ’cause you’re quiet.
‘They’re more accepting in other places; they don’t just write you off as being just a snob.’
She tells Flaunt that she knows how to create the ‘illusion’ of confidence on a film set, saying: ‘You just have to go on with your days.’
Although she is 18, India plays Kate’s 14-year-old daughter Eve in the latest Underworld film.
While she may look like an ingenue the actress reveals that she has a crush on a much older man – Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy star, Gary Oldman.
She says of the 53-year-old: ‘I just think he’s handsome. He’s talented. He’s all-round fantastic. I tend to like older [men].’

Zee Cine Awards 2012: Shahrukh Insults Asha @ Zee Cine Awards 2012

Shahrukh Khan as a host is remarkable. He charms his audience with his witty jokes, one liners and interaction with his fans. His fans folllowing around worldwide is unimaginable.
Whenever, he takes the stage, he creates magic. He takes no time to win his fans’ heart. He masters the art of stealing the show but sometimes his funny act hurts one’s sentiments.
SRK’s fans might be okay with all his antics but veteran playback singer Asha Bhosle isn’t someone who would tolerate anyone showing disrespect to her.
Recently, during an award function, the actor walked out of the stage even as Asha was singing. The veteran was requested by the audiences to sing a song and that was when SRK walked away.
Something like this happened at the Zee Cine awards when he went up to the stage when veteran singer Asha Bhosle was on the stage. Shahrukh who hosted the show with Priyanka Chopra walked up to the stage when Asha Bhosle was singing while she came to accept her award.
An onlooker said, “Asha Bhosale was on stage to accept her award. On demand, she obliged the audience by singing one of her songs. She spotted Shah Rukh Khan getting up and walking out while she was still singing. She thus made it a point to ask Shah Rukh backstage if he didn`t like her singing. She almost scolded him. Shah Rukh apologized immediately. He told her what had happened exactly and that he was extremely sorry.”
Well, Shahrukh should be careful next time. His jokes might entertain his mates and fans but seniors might not be very pleased.

Eye (Corneas) Export: Sri Lanka Exports Its Eyes (Corneas) To World

At 10:25 a.m., a dark brown eye was removed from a man whose lids had closed for the last time.
Five hours later, the orb was staring up at the ceiling from a stainless steel tray in an operating room with two blind patients — both waiting to give it a second life.
S.P.D. Siriwardana, 63, remained still under a white sheet as the surgeon delicately replaced the cornea that had gone bad in his right eye following a cataract surgery.
Across the room, patient A.K. Premathilake, 32, waited for the sclera, the white of the eye, to provide precious stem cells and restore some vision after acid scalded his sight away on the job.
‘The eye from this dead person was transplanted to my son’ said A.K. Admon Singho, who guided Premathilake through the hall after the surgery.
‘He’s dead, but he’s still alive. His eye can still see the world.’
This gift of sight is so common here, it’s become an unwritten symbol of pride and culture for Sri Lanka, an island of about 20million people located off the southern coast of India.
Despite recently emerging from a quarter century of civil war, the country is among the world’s largest cornea providers.
It donates about 3,000 corneas a year and has provided tissue to 57 countries over nearly a half century, with Pakistan receiving the biggest share, according to the nonprofit Sri Lanka Eye Donation Society.
The organization began promoting eye donation decades ago, but has since faced allegations of mismanagement and poor quality standards.
The supply of corneas is so great in Sri Lanka that a new, state-of-the-art government eye bank opened last year, funded by Singapore donors.
It has started collecting tissue from patients at one of the country’s largest hospitals, hoping to add an additional 2,000 corneas to those already shipped abroad annually.
Nearly 900,000 people have also signed up to give their eyes in death through the Eye Donation Society’s longstanding eye bank.
‘People ask me, “Can we donate our eyes while we are living? Because we have two eyes, can we donate one?”,’ said Dr. Sisira Liyanage, director of Sri Lanka’s National Eye Hospital in the capital, Colombo, where the new eye bank is based.
‘They are giving just because of the willingness to help others. They are not accepting anything.’
The desire to help transcends social and economic barriers. Prime ministers pass on their corneas here along with the poorest tea farmers. Many Sri Lankans, about 67 per cent of whom are Buddhist, believe that surrendering their eyes at death completes an act of ‘dana’, or giving, which helps them be reincarnated into a better life.
It’s a concept that was first promoted a half century ago by the late Dr Hudson Silva, who was frustrated by the massive shortage of corneas in his native Sri Lanka.
Most eyes back then were harvested from the handful of prisoners hanged each year, leaving little hope for blind patients in need of transplants.
Silva wrote a newspaper piece in the late 1950s pledging to donate his own corneas and appealing to readers to also give ‘Life to a Dead Eye’: the response was overwhelming.
With no lab facilities or high-tech equipment, he and wife Irangani de Silva began harvesting eyes and storing them in their home refrigerator.
They started the Eye Donation Society, and in 1964, the first cornea sent abroad was hand-carried in an ice-packed tea thermos aboard a flight to Singapore. Since then, 60,000 corneas have been donated.
While the Society’s eye bank was a pioneer, questions about quality emerged as international eye banking standards improved over the next 20 to 30 years. Concerns have recently been raised about less advanced screening for HIV and other diseases, and the eye bank has also faced allegations of mismanagement.
Many of its corneas are harvested from the homes of the dead in rural areas across the country, making auditing and quality assurance levels harder to maintain, said Dr. Donald Tan, medical director of Singapore National Eye Center, who helped set up the new eye bank. Once, he said, a blade of grass was found packaged with tissue requested for research.
Eye Donation Society manager Janath Matara Arachchi says the organisation sends ‘only the good and healthy eyes’ and has not received a complaint in 20 years.
Arachchi said the organisation checks for HIV, hepatitis and other sexually transmitted diseases by dipping a strip into blood samples and waiting to see if it changes colour for a positive result. Sri Lanka’s Health Ministry also said it has received no complaints about the eye bank from other countries.
Medical director Dr M.H.S. Cassim denied that anyone from the organisation is making money off donations sent abroad. He said they charge up to $450 – around £290 – per cornea to cover operational costs and the high price of preservatives needed to store the tissue.
The cornea is the dome-shaped transparent part of the eye that covers the iris and pupil. It helps to focus entering light, but can become cloudy from disease or other damage.
Corneas must be carefully extracted from donors to avoid damaging the thin layer of cells on the back that pump water away to keep it clear. They must be harvested within eight hours of death, and can today be preserved and stored in refrigeration for up to 14 days.
Sri Lanka has no official organ donation registry, as is provided in some countries when driver’s licenses are issued. Instead, the idea is passed down from generation to generation.
Eye donation campaigns are organised at temples by Buddhist monks, but people of other faiths also give, including Hindus and Christians.
Future donors simply mail in the bottom half of a consent form distributed by Silva’s Eye Donation Society. The top portion, which looks like an award certificate with a fancy scroll lacing around it, is also filled out and often proudly displayed on the wall — serving as proof to the living that the pledge comes from a generous spirit.
‘Just think if we had that level of organ donation and commitment and belief system in the United States, where we have these long lists of people waiting for hearts, livers and kidneys,’ said Dr. Alfred Sommer of Johns Hopkins University, who spent more than 40 years fighting blindness in the developing world.
‘If we had that level of cultural investment, there would be no lists for organ transplants.’
The U.S. is the world’s biggest cornea provider, sending more than 16,000 corneas to other countries in 2010, according to the Eye Bank Association of America.
But Sri Lanka, which is 15 times smaller, actually donates about triple that number of corneas per capita each year.
There is no waiting list for eye tissue in Sri Lanka, and its people get first access to free corneas. About 40,000 have been transplanted locally since the beginning, but that still leaves a surplus each year.
Pakistan, an Islamic country where followers are typically required to be buried with all parts intact, has received some 20,000 corneas since overseas donations began, Cassim said. Egypt and Japan are two other major recipients, receiving 8,000 and 6,000 corneas respectively to date, he said.
But Sri Lanka cannot meet global demand on its own. An estimated 10million people — 9 out of 10 in poor countries — suffer worldwide from corneal blindness that could be helped by a transplant if tissue and trained surgeons were available, according to U.S.-based SightLife, an eye bank that partners with developing countries. It has been working with Sri Lanka’s new government facility.
‘Sri Lanka has long been known to be a country with an incredible heart for eye donation and a willingness to share surplus corneas to restore sight around the world,’ said SightLife president Monty Montoya.
‘While efforts have been made to share information with other countries, I am not aware of any one location being able to replicate Sri Lanka’s success.’
Where possible, eye tissue should be transplanted within hours of death. That was done in the Colombo operating room where patients Siriwardana and Premathilake were stitched up with what looked like tiny fishing hooks, then bandaged and helped outside.
For Premathilake — whose sight was lost when an open can of acid spilled onto his face while working at a rubber factory — this is his last hope. His right eye still blinks, but there is nothing but an empty pink cavity inside. The stem cells attached to his left eye should help create a new window of sight that he hopes will allow him to go back to work, or at least carry out daily tasks without depending on his parents.
‘I am extremely happy,’ he said. ‘I didn’t know the man who died in his previous life, but I’m always going to say blessings for him during his next births.’

Rushdie Indian Literature Festival: Salman Rushdie Appear By Video At Indian Literature Festival

British author Salman Rushdie is to address an Indian literature festival by videolink after he was forced to pull out in person because of protests by Islamic hardliners.
Organisers said today that Rushdie’s appearance at the Jaipur Literature Festival was cancelled on Friday with the writer, who is of Indian origin, citing alleged threats to his life from underworld gunmen who had been hired to kill him.
An influential Islamic seminary in northern India triggered the controversy by calling for Rushdie to be denied entrance to the country because of his allegedly blasphemous 1988 novel The Satanic Verses.
“Salman Rushdie will address the Jaipur Literature Festival through video conference,” Sanjoy Roy, producer of the festival, told AFP.
Since cancelling his scheduled appearances, Rushdie has accused the police of fabricating the death threat plot to keep him away from the festival, India’s biggest literature event.
In an editorial today, The Hindu newspaper said the author, who was born in Mumbai, was “entitled to a full apology for this shameful episode and to an unconditional assurance that he is welcome in India at any time and place”.
The newspaper said that the three men alleged to have been involved in the assassination plot were not a threat and said the episode had “brought about the humiliation of the country”.
The Satanic Verses, which is banned in India, is seen by many Muslims worldwide as a blasphemous work that insults their religion.
Four authors who read excerpts from the book at the Jaipur event to protest against the treatment of Rushdie have since left on the advice of the organisers, who faced a police investigation.
Rushdie, who appeared at the Jaipur festival without incident in 2007, spent a decade in hiding after Iranian spiritual leader Ayatollah Khomeini issued a fatwa in 1989 calling for his death over the novel.

Shoe Thrown At Rahul: Shoe Thrown On Rahul Gandhi In Rally In Dehradun

A shoe has been thrown at Congress General Secretary and Amethi MP Rahul Gandhi during an election rally in Dehradun. One person has been detained for throwing the shoe.
Rahul Gandhi said that such attacks were not going to deter him.
“If some people think that throwing a shoe will deter me and force me to run away, them they are mistaken. Rahul Gandhi will not run away,” he said.
This is not the first such incident that took place during Rahul Gandhi’s campaign this election session.
On Saturday, January 21 two youths raised black flags and shouted slogans against corruption when Rahul Gandhi was addressing a poll rally at tribal-dominated Duddhi in Sonbhadra district of Uttar Pradesh.
Soon after their act, they were beaten up by some people attending the Adivasi Sashaktikaran Dhanyawad rally.
Police detained one of the youths Ajay Kumar Singh, who is said to be the supporter of yoga guru Ramdev.
Two days before the black flag incident, Rahul Gandhi On Thursday had to abruptly end his speech at a rally in Banda after some youths demonstrated with banners and posters demanding bringing back of black money stashed abroad.
Moreover, this was the second shoe attack that took place in Dehradun within a week.
On Saturday, January 21 a person hurled a shoe at Team Anna member Arvind Kejriwal at a public meeting in Dehradun itself. The shoe was hurled when Kejriwal was on his way to the stage, but before the team could realise anything, the attacker was whisked away by the police.
The man, identified as Kishan Lal, has been arrested. Lal said, allegedly this was in response or a reaction to Anna Hazare’s comment on the slap at Sharad Pawar, and he was reacting to that comment, which he perceived to be very insensitive.