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September 18, 2009

Nirvana vs Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give Your Teen Spirit up

do you guys know about rickrollin'?

Chris Chan - Can't Touch This (Autism Mix) DON'T KNOW WHY THIS HAS HEAT, BUT IT SHOULD CUZ IT'S MY FAVORITE VIDEO

AND COME TO THE CHANNEL AND CHECK OUT MY NEW KANYE WEST AND WHITNEY AND KURT COBAIN VIDS. AND PLUG IN CHRIS CHAN ON MY LIJIT BLOG SEARCH AND READ MY IN DEPTH ARTICLE ABOUT HIM. HE'S A MESSSSS

George Bush Doesn't Care About Black People (Music Video)

best video ever

BBC - View from the South Bank: Spelling out the losses

Spelling out the losses

Pauline McLean | 10:29 UK time, Thursday, 17 September 2009

It's been a sad week with the loss of three cultural innovators in as many days.

First, snake-hipped dance god Patrick Swayze, then the man who invented the whole TV chef trend, Keith Floyd, and now the screen writer Troy Kennedy Martin.

The Glasgow-born writer created some of the most classic work on British television over the last few decades - everything from Z Cars to Edge of Darkness.

He was also known for his writing in cinema - in particular, his screenplay for the Italian Job.

And more recently Red Heat, which he co-wrote for Arnold Schwarzengger.

Z-Cars, which he wrote before he was even 30, revolutionised television in the 1960s with a gritty realism which hadn't been attempted before.

He claimed to have the idea of a police series set in patrol cars in the north of England while ill with mumps and listening to real police patrols on VHF radio.

Although he was one of a team of writers on the show, it was he who was credited with its creation, he held the copyright and he got paid a fee for every episode.

He also brought the series to an end in 1978, writing the final episode in which some of the best known characters returned.

In 1985, he wrote Edge of Darkness, a chilling thriller about a nuclear conspiracy in which Bob Peck played a policeman investigating his daughter's murder.

Again, he broke new ground by demanding to be able to write up to the wire, allowing him to include contemporary references and avoid any interference from his paymasters.

It's a way of writing current screenwriters can only dream of and for Kennedy Martin, it was also a short-lived period of freedom.

I spoke to him a few times on the phone, usually about an obituary for one of his many screenwriting friends and colleagues.

Among them John McGrath, who worked with him in the BBC script editors department in the 1960s.

He was always charming and helpful, with an encylopaedic knowledge of British television.

And a writer of his calibre - and a Scot to boot - would have been equally dismayed at the demise of another great Scottish literary institution.

Chambers, who've been publishing their dictionaries in Edinburgh since 1819, will now close their offices in the capital with the loss of 27 jobs.

The dictionary - famous among Scrabble players for including a wider spread of eclectic words than some other dictionaries, will still be published but only in London.

The use of online spell checks has been blamed for the downturn in business.

While the telephone directories and piles of back issues of newspapers may no longer clutter your average newsroom, I'm one of a handful of Luddites who still likes to keep a dictionary, a thesaurus and a few good grammar books to hand.

Too bad there are fewer and fewer of us around.

BBC - View from the South Bank: Spelling out the losses

Rock legend Hendrix dies after party - What Next? ELVIS

Jimi Hendrix
Jimi Hendrix created a revolutionary new sound for electric guitar music


In Context
A coroner recorded an open verdict on the death of Jimi Hendrix.

The inquest heard he had taken nine sleeping pills but there was no evidence of drug addiction.

The guitarist's father, Al Hendrix, a landscape gardener, was the sole beneficiary of the will, estimated to be worth in the region of $500,000.

He set up a company, Experience Hendrix, with the aim of preserving his son's musical legacy.

On his death in 2002, the company was inherited by his step-daughter Janie. But Jimi's brother Leon claimed he had been unfairly written out of the will and launched a lawsuit in 2004 to try to overturn it.

In 2003 a survey by the Rolling Stone magazine named Jimi Hendrix the greatest guitarist in rock history.

BBC ON THIS DAY | 18 | 1970: Rock legend Hendrix dies after party

Paris Hilton joins Confucius and Oscar Wilde in latest Oxford Dictionary of Quotes - Entertainment News - SINA English

Paris Hilton joins Confucius and Oscar Wilde in latest Oxford Dictionary of Quotes

2009-09-10 02:19:39 GMT2009-09-10 10:19:39 (Beijing Time)  SINA.com

Philosophers or whatever: Paris Hilton and Chinese thinker Confucius (right)

She is famous for her love of short skirts and small dogs - not for her wit or wisdom.

But Paris Hilton has somehow joined the ranks of the quotable notables.

The hotel heiress makes a surprise appearance in the latest edition of the Oxford Dictionary of Quotations.

Her pithy observation: 'Dress cute wherever you go, life is too short to blend in', will stand alongside words from luminaries such as Oscar Wilde and Stephen Hawking.

Paris's saying is one of more than 20,000 new quotations to enter the seventh edition of the prestigious tome published today.

Another new entry is from former U.S. vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin, who said: 'What's the difference between a hockey mom and a pitbull? Lipstick.'

Others come from the likes of British authors Terry Pratchett and Philip Pullman, Stephen Hawking, Aung San Suu Kyi and late comedy host and jazzman Humphrey Lyttelton.

Some are not as new as they seem. Barack Obama's contribution, 'The arc of history is long but it bends towards justice', is similar to one used by Martin Luther King in 1968.

The dictionary, which is in its 65th year, has also added several 'new' quotes from the distant past, such as one from Confucius, the 5th century BC Chinese philosopher.

This may be because they have been used or referenced by others in recent years or that the researchers have, after decades, managed to source and verify them as genuine.

Some have taken on new relevance, such as former U.S. president Thomas Jefferson's: 'Banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies', uttered 200 years ago.

The dictionary's editor-Elizabeth Knowles, said: 'Events may give an older utterance very topical significance - for example, Thomas Jefferson has for obvious reasons been quoted quite widely in the last year.'

She added that other quotes from the past sometimes become familiar to new audiences because of the internet. 'Anything quoted today, verbally or "written" in electronic-form, can be and probably will be encountered by people all over the globe,' she said.

'As more data is added to online sources, more voices from the past find a route to us today. The new edition of the dictionary reflects the impact of these changes.'

Tony Blair could perhaps do with a copy of the dictionary in his Christmas stocking. He made an embarrassing error on television in the U.S. this week by wrongly attributing a famous quote to either Winston Churchill or Oscar Wilde.

The line: 'England and America are two countries divided by a common language,' was actually said by playwright George Bernard Shaw. Mr Blair was appearing on the David Letterman show.

Paris Hilton joins Confucius and Oscar Wilde in latest Oxford Dictionary of Quotes - Entertainment News - SINA English

September 17, 2009

Jane Aldridge's New Office Completed in Wangjiing, Beijing - Octopus-Style Sea of Shoes Headquarters - Lifestyle News

Building in shape of octopus

2009-09-13 08:38:15 GMT2009-09-13 16:38:15 (Beijing Time)  Xinhua English

Photo taken on Sept. 12, 2009 shows the bottom of a business building in the shape of an octopus near a crossroad in Wangjing region of Beijing, capital of China. The newly-completed building, featuring its shape character, attracted many citizens. (Xinhua/Fan Jiashan)

Photo taken on Sept. 12, 2009 shows the bottom of a business building in the shape of an octopus near a crossroad in Wangjing region of Beijing, capital of China. The newly-completed building, featuring its shape character, attracted many citizens. (Xinhua/Fan Jiashan)

Photo taken on Sept. 12, 2009 shows the bottom of a business building in the shape of an octopus near a crossroad in Wangjing region of Beijing, capital of China. The newly-completed building, featuring its shape character, attracted many citizens.

A chocolate theme park? - SINA English

A chocolate theme park?

It may sound too good to be true, but a Willy Wonka-style chocolate theme park is about to open in Beijing.

The world chocolate dream park will feature exhibitions with imitation Ming Dynasty porcelain cups made entirely of the sweet stuff, and life-size Terracotta Warriors that are good enough to eat.

It will open in the Olympic Green near the Bird's Nest on Jan 29, adding another sweet layer to the famous Olympic Games venue.

Tina Cheng, general manager of Beijing-based Artsource Planning Co Ltd, which will operate the park, said visitors will be offered a full chocolate experience and be able to see, touch, taste and smell the delicacy.

The park will contain five pavilions and two outdoor sites where chocolate-made objects will be on display, including chocolate versions of famous paintings and even the Great Wall.

Master chocolatiers will run chocolate making courses and sweet tooths will be able to make purchases to take home.

"Our 'chocolate wonderland' will be beyond the imagination," Cheng told Metro.

Plans for the theme park are sure to evoke memories of the film Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, based on the book by Roald Dahl.

In the film, Charlie is introduced to Willy Wonka's workshop where there were edible flowers and a chocolate river.

Su Yan, from the Olympic Park Organizing Committee, said between 10,000 and 20,000 visitors are expected to visit the theme park every day.

Cheng said there is a growing fascination with chocolate among young Chinese and this was one of the reasons she wanted to open the park.

"None of my friends, including myself, could resist the temptation of chocolate," Cheng said.

She said a number of prestigious chocolate makers from Europe, including Belgium, Switzerland and Italy wanted to join the project, but she declined to reveal their names or any details yet.

"There is the potential for a huge market in China in regards to chocolate consumption," she said.

"That's why many overseas chocolate producers are vying to joining our project."

A chocolate theme park? - SINA English

Le Meilleur de la 5ème Nuit Excentrique Nanarland - une vidéo Cinéma

Dailymotion - Le Meilleur de la 5ème Nuit Excentrique Nanarland - une vidéo Cinéma

Annie Le: Yale Student Strangled - Body Hidden in Wall