Chelsea FC-Blue Day-With Lyrics 2011

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Chelsea FC-Blue Day-With Lyrics 2011. Former Australian cricketer, beyondblue Ambassador and Perth-based Network TEN Sports presenter Ryan Campbell will join thousands of Australian cricket players on Saturday February 19 for the annual FeBLUary campaign "Blue Day".

Ryan has become a beyondblue Ambassador to speak about his personal experience of depression and to let people know that depression is an illness - not a weakness.

"Depression and anxiety don't discriminate - they can affect anyone at any time, including cricket players."
"I encourage all cricketers to turn blue on February 19 and help break down the stigma. It's vital that the sporting community comes together to create awareness of depression and anxiety, and encourage each other to seek help early," he said.



beyondblue CEO Dawn O'Neil is excited to see sporting organisations taking a leading role in promoting awareness of depression, anxiety and related disorders.

"Asking for help is not a sign of weakness. The sooner you get the right treatment, the sooner you're back in the game," said Dawn.

SACA Cricket Operations Manager, Shane Bernhardt, is proud of the support shown by the cricketing community in South Australia over the past two years and looks forward to cricketers from across Australia getting involved in the 2011 campaign.

"If we can get players talking about their mental health and looking out for one another, then that will have a flow-on effect to the rest of the sporting community," said Shane.

More than three million Australians currently have an anxiety disorder or depression - but with the right treatment, most people recover.

A lesson from David S. Broder

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A lesson from David S. Broder. Over the course of a career that has now spanned over 25 years, I've had a chance to meet and even work with several great and legendary political journalists, including R.W. "Johnny" Apple Jr. of The New York Times; Curtis Wilkie, Robert Healy, David Shribman, and Walter V. Robinson of The Boston Globe; Mary McGrory and David S. Broder of The Washington Post; and Walter R. Mears of The Associated Press.

The last two intersected in an infamous way, during the 1964 presidential campaign, when a group of reporters got to drinking before a late-evening Barry Goldwater speech.


Broder thought Mears had a few too many, so, ever the courtly mid-westerner, he decided to leave Mears a copy of his own story. His aim was to nudge his colleague along for early East Coast deadlines.

Instead, Mears banged out his own story, returned Broder's to him, and said in response, "David, I can write better drunk than you can sober."

But with Broder's death Wednesday at age 81, it's not journalism so much that prompted me to sit back down at my laptop after a long day in a new job.

It was to reflect on the uncommon decency displayed by a veteran worker for a newcomer in their shared profession. It's a lesson for everyone in every industry, and especially for myself as I make the turn from the front- to back-nine of my career.

I can't believe I just wrote those words.

I graduated in 1985 from a small Wisconsin college, Lawrence University, and set out to build a career for myself in journalism. Having a father who was a stock broker and a mother who was a real estate agent, I had no real "in" with the profession, so I worked my way up the ladder.

My first full-time job was at The City News Bureau of Chicago, a legendary news institution that spawned such legendary writers as novelist Kurt Vonnegut, columnist Mike Royko, and investigative reporter Seymour Hersh — still going to this day.

I later moved from The Salem Evening News to The Sun of Lowell, where, in November 1990, I read a story in the Boston Sunday Globe recapping Broder's speech at Colby College. He had just received an honorary doctorate of laws and the Elijah Parish Lovejoy Award.

I had long admired Broder and his reporting on and analysis of national politics, so much so that I subscribed to the Post's then-national weekly edition. It contained the best of the newspaper's stories from the prior week, as well as the columns of writers such as Broder.

"I realized that I have continuously looked to you for compass headings in my quest to be the most ethical and accurate newspaper reporter possible," I wrote in a Nov. 18, 1990, letter to Broder prompted by the story.

"For example, I have paid close attention to your warnings about crisscrossing the boundary between political insider and journalist," I added.

Noting how Broder encouraged all reporters to spend more time speaking with voters than campaign consultants, I felt inspired to ask Broder if I could come to Washington, work for him, and learn at the knee of the master.

"If you ever need a researcher or cohort to assist in the preparation of your column and articles, I hope you would consider me for that position," I wrote.

I sent the letter off, not really expecting a reply, battle-hardened from the challenge of breaking into the industry just five years earlier.

Yet several weeks later, a wide postcard arrived in the mail.

When I flipped it over, it was embossed with the name, "David S. Broder," and emblazoned with the Post's logo.

In between, in hand-typed lettering, Broder responded: "Dear Glen Johnson."

He thanked me for my note, resume, and sample newsclippings, and promptly said there were no researcher openings at the Post. But then, he went further.

"Your work reads to me as if you are past that point," Broder wrote. "You show a lot of skill and confidence in your reporting and I hope you'll let it carry you to the goals you seek, not step back into a researcher role."

He signed off with an affectionate "Yours," and used a pen to write, "David Broder."

Months later, lightning struck. At the height of President George H.W. Bush's popularity following Operating Desert Storm, a former US senator from the hometown of my small newspaper, Lowell's own Paul Tsongas, announced improbably that he'd challenge the incumbent president for re-election in 1992.

The Sun remains a relatively small paper, but it had a big heart, especially for the local story, so, by then as the Lowell city political reporter, the editor sent me out on the trail.

I filled one suitcase with my clothes, the other with a "library" of news clippings, notebooks, batteries, and acoustic couplers for my Radio Shack computer, as well as a copy of The Almanac of American Politics. I was a one-man show, but I got to work in proximity to some of the great or rising young political reporters of the time: Dan Balz of the Post, Cathleen Decker and Ron Brownstein of the Los Angeles Times, and Wilkie himself.

I also was able to cross paths with Broder.

In April 1992, after Tsongas quit the race and "Comeback Kid" Bill Clinton was en route to the Democratic nomination and presidency, I wrote a thank-you note to Broder.

"I wanted to let you know that I enjoyed meeting you while I chased around Paul Tsongas for The Sun," I said.

By 1996, I was working for the AP in Boston and assigned to cover then-Governor William F. Weld's epic US Senate race against the Democratic incumbent, John Kerry. Clinton cruised to re-election against Bob Dole in a campaign that was largely a non-event.

By 2000, though, I had transferred to the AP's Washington bureau and landed a plum assignment covering the presidential campaign of then-Texas Governor George W. Bush in a wide-open race for the presidency. Mid-campaign, I joined the Globe, my hometown newspaper, and again ran into Broder on the trail.

Covering a presidential campaign is hard on everyone involved, from the candidate to the press corps to the legion of college kids who make everything work, from setting up events to unloading baggage from the charter jet.

I was amazed to see Broder, then 71, still schlepping along, listening to the candidate speeches, traipsing through Iowa and New Hampshire, and polishing gems gleaned from those voter conversations about which he always preached.

One day, in Florida as best I can remember it, I found myself trudging into a filing center behind none other than the Dean himself, David S. Broder.

Tericka Dye Hot and Sexy Post

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Tericka Dye Hot and Sexy Post .Tericka Dye made bad choice years ago and today is paying a price. Asking her current job for paid administration leave, former porn star Rikki Andersin hasn’t been seen in schools since she was confronted by a student on Tuesday about her past.



Tericka Dye requested to be on administrative leave for the rest of the school year according to a statement from the Parkway School District in St Louis Missouri. The issue of her past comes from a student who recognized her after asking about porn movies Dye admitted to making while living in California in the mid 1990s.

After admitting her true identity, the bad choice once again snapped the woman who has now twice restarted her life. In a previous school situation in 2006, at Reidland High School in Paducah, Tennessee, the former science and volleyball coach was suspended after parents found out about her past.


Sadly, Tera Dye is paying for a not-so-crime action she did 20 years ago and it doesn’t seem all that fair. The teacher not only has many colleagues who could have done the same thing, it appears people are trying to embarrass her by bringing up her past as though she is alone.

If you haven’t heard of others who have ripped off their clothes for cash, consider Camille Grammer and Vanessa Williams. There are oodles of ladies and none of them have been followed around like Tericka in such an inhumane sort of way. Check out her photos here.

All by Myself Eric Carmen 2011

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All by Myself Eric Carmen 2011. Pia Toscano Performed a Killer Version of All By Myself by Eric Carmen on the March 9, 2011 Edition of American Idol. Here is video of Eric Carmen's 'All By Myself'



Pia Toscano continued her run of strong performances with a version of Eric Carmen's 'All By Myself,' a song recorded by Toscano's idol, Celine Dion.

The Pia Toscano 'All By Myself' performance started off slow with Toscano showing off her low register. She later let her vocals fly with a huge finish that was followed by a standing ovation.

Bethenny Frankel Has Bikini Time in Miami

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Bethenny Frankel Has Bikini Time in Miami. Hollywood was dressed to the nines for the Oscars on Sunday night, but for Bethenny Frankel and her husband Jason Hoppy, it was bikini and beach time.

The happy couple was seen taking a stroll on the beach, with both showing off their incredible physiques, during some relaxation time in Miami over the weekend. Bethenny rocked a pink two-piece bikini like a champ, showing that she’s got absolutely no baby weight left after giving birth to daughter Bryn in May 2010. As for Mr. Hoppy, he’s got nothing to worry about in the body department either, as his six-pack and pecs were on full display for the onlookers.



In what may or may not be curious timing, Bethenny’s new show, Bethenny Ever After, premieres tonight (February 28) on Bravo.

Courteney Cox Films ‘Cougar Town’ in Green Bikini

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Courteney Cox Films ‘Cougar Town’ in Green Bikini. Courteney Cox and Josh Hopkins film scenes for 'Cougar Town' in a pool in Oahu, Hawaii on March 1, 2011.



Another day, another bikini-filled film session for Courteney Cox.

The actress was snapped in a bright green two-piece as she filmed scenes for her hit show Cougar Town in Oahu, Hawaii. The scene included her co-star Josh Hopkins, as the two were seen frolicking in a pool. At one point, Josh lifts Courteney out of the pool and on their way out, you can see his hand on her back.

Gisele Bundchen Performs at Carnival in Rio

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Gisele Bundchen Performs at Carnival in Rio. Supermodel Gisele Bundchen is the star of the world famous Rio de Janeiro Carnival parade, appropriately dressed as Venus, the mythological goddess of love, as she dances atop one of the giant floats for samba school Vila Isabel.

Blake Lively Gets Sexy in First Chanel Ad

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Blake Lively Gets Sexy in First Chanel Ad.  Is that you, Blake Lively. The normally smile-y Gossip Girl actress shows off her high fashion glamorous side in a new ad for Chanel’s Mademoiselle handbags. The ad, shot by Chanel’s Karl Lagerfeld in the luxury brand’s Parisian headquarters, shows Lively gazing at herself in a mirror while wearing a red handbag.


The ad is the first in a series of shots that will be debuting in the April magazines. Chanel has been feting Blake for the past few weeks in preparation for the launch of the new ad campaign. The design house sponsored events in New York and Paris, where Blake sported sexy Chanel dresses and hobnobbed with the fashion elite.

What do you think of Blake’s new ad.

Mardi Gras 2011: The Funniest Passed Out Pranks

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Mardi Gras 2011: The Funniest Passed Out Pranks. It's Fat Tuesday, meaning Mardi Gras 2011 is in full swing. Colorful beads, parades and public intoxication mark this festive celebration, making for some pretty epic parties. It's easy to get carried away and continue your mischief after the party is over and people have gone to sleep, so we thought it'd be appropriate to share some of the funniest passed-out pranks the web has to offer.


Join the party and upload some of your own photos of your passed-out compatriots, or if you're brave, get some catharsis by sharing your own humiliation with the world! Remember: be safe, have fun and show us what kind of partier you are by uploading your favorite pranks to our slideshow!


Have you played a funny (not dangerous!) prank on a passed-out friend, or been the victim of one? Share it with us below.

Worst Celebrity Singers: 12 People Who Shouldn't Quit Their Day Jobs

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Worst Celebrity Singers: 12 People Who Shouldn't Quit Their Day Jobs. OK, sure, who among us hasn't belted out a karaoke hit even though we didn't have the pipes for it? But restraint and common decency dictates that just because we made it through an awful rendition of "More Than A Feeling" we're not going to start thinking we should cut a demo.


Unfortunately, the pixie dust in the air in Hollywood seems to make some people think that because they excel at one thing, they can probably do just as well at something else entirely. For instance, Paris Hilton is terrific at having bangs. Seriously. There's not a bang look heavy, wispy, windswept that she can't rock. But that achievement, impressive as it is, doesn't mean anyone wants to hear her auto tuned within an inch of her life on "Stars Are Blind."

So with that in mind, we present to you the following list of people we wish would stick to the thing they're actually good at. In the case of a few, we respectfully suggest they keep looking for whatever that is.

Known primarily for her talents in the areas of being videotaped naked in night vision and keeping small dogs in purses, Paris Hilton is also a pop singer. Paris sang such cerebral hits as, "My BFF" and "Paris For President". Hilton's music is on par with the exceptional quality entertainment she's usually associated with producing.

Kid Rock's NAACP Award Protested Over Use Of Confederate Flag

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Kid Rock's NAACP Award Protested Over Use Of Confederate Flag. Some people don't think Kid Rock is meeting their great expectations.

The rocker is set to accept the NAACP's Detroit chapter's Great Expectations Award at their annual Freedom Fund dinner in May, and some members of the historic black rights organization are so unhappy about it, they're boycotting the 10,000 person affair.


It's the singer's use of the Confederate flag in his stage shows that has them so upset, according to the Detroit News.

"It's a slap in the face for anyone who fought for civil rights in this country," Adolph Mongo, head of Detroiters for Progress and a boycotting NAACP member told the paper last week. "It's a symbol of hatred and bigotry."

For his part, Rock defended the use of the flag in a 2008 interview with the Guardian. "Why should someone be able to own any image and say what it is?" he said. "Sure, it's definitely got some scars, but I've never had an issue with it. To me it just represents pride in southern rock'n'roll music, plus it just looks cool."

He also spoke about touring with a famed rapper and how it impacted his audience.

"I've got Rev Run [from Run DMC] on tour with me right now - we have fun trying to count the number of black people every night. We're like, 'There's 14 tonight, yeah!'"

Mary Stuart Masterson Is Expecting Twins

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Mary Stuart Masterson Is Expecting Twins. Mary Stuart Masterson is expanding her family – by two.

The actress, 44, and husband Jeremy Davidson are expecting twins this summer. The couple are already parents to a 17-month-old son.

"We are four months along. So balancing career and family is becoming increasingly challenging for me," Davidson, who stars on Army Wives, tells E! Online. "And in five months we are going to have three kids under the age of 2. We are in happy shock about it."

Amanda Bynes Tweets Cleavage, Sexy Photos

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Amanda Bynes Tweets Cleavage, Sexy Photos. Amanda Bynes is back on Twitter. And she's making sure everybody knows it.

The star, who shut down her Twitter account in September, launched a new account in January. At the time, she sent a few strange pictures her navel and a bedazzled starfish included to her loyal re followers. Over this past weekend, she showed even more skin.

Starting March 5th, Bynes tweeted a number of photos, including what she called her super new sunglasses and fun with wigs. The pictures are below.



Crystal Harris Makes Herself at Home

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Crystal Harris Makes Herself at Home. Playmate Crystal Harris met Hugh Hefner at the Mansion’s 2008 Halloween Party, and the two hit it off. “Hef was so humble and easy to talk to, which is one of the things I love about him,” she says. Crystal is now Hef’s girlfriend and lives with the icon.


We recently got these pics of Crystal’s smoking hot Playboy Mansion photo shoot. Enjoy.

Sexy 101: Jaime Pressly

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Sexy 101: Jaime Pressly. So you’ve probably heard by now that Jaime Pressly was arrested on suspicion of drunk driving earlier this week. In keeping with accepted standards of uniformity and petty celebrity bashing, every website and inane tabloid magazine or television show on earth has been piling on with jokes at the lovely and talented actress’ expense.

Well, that’s not how we operate. Seriously, a DUI arrest? Chances are well over half our audience (and approximately 99.7% of the TSJ staff) has gone swerving down that road before*. Call us when Jaime Pressly murders someone or gets nabbed for money laundering or something. That’s interesting. That’s worth talking a little trash about. Until then, she’s still more than alright in our book.


So, if you’re looking for mugshots, go somewhere else. But if you happen to be in the mood to see Jaime Pressly as we know and love her, you’ve come to the right place.

Here are 101 of the sexiest pictures of Jaime Pressly, all gathered into one smoking hot gallery for your viewing pleasure.

Jen Aniston's Sex Tape

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Jen Aniston's Sex Tape. Jennifer Aniston stars in a new spot for Smart Water that employs all the tropes of viral videos - puppies, dancing babies, a double rainbow... and for good measure, Aniston kicking a man in the crotch ("Sorry, apparently that's worth about 100,000 hits," she tells her victim.)

In a final bid for eyeballs, Aniston and her team of "Internet boys" decide to call the video "Jen Aniston's sex tape."

A previous Smart Water Aniston ad has featured her bare, ripped stomac

Mystery over millions of dead fish in US harbour

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Mystery over millions of dead fish in US harbour. New Bangkok hotel deals everyday. Low rates guaranteed. Book now! Agoda.com/Bangkok_Hotels

The sight of millions of dead anchovies floating in a marina just south of Los Angeles has left fishermen and harbour chiefs puzzled about their death.

Experts have suggested that the dead fish, found at a harbour in Redondo Beach, may have died from lack of oxygen due to algae, while locals wondered if high winds overnight might have something to do with it.


"It looks like what happens to goldfish when you don't change the water in the tank, mouth open and belly up," the Daily Telegraph quoted local official Bill Workman as telling the Los Angeles Times.

"There are no visible signs of any toxins that might have caused (the deaths) and our early assessment is that this was oxygen depletion. There are no oil slicks or leaking of substances into the water," he stated.

Locals at Redondo Beach, where the stench from the dead fish hung over King Harbor, suggested that high winds could have driven the fish into the harbour, where their sheer numbers would have reduced the oxygen available.

Researchers have measured critically low oxygen levels in Redondo Beach's King Harbor after a massive die-off in the city's marina.

Brent Scheiwe, program director at the SEA Lab in Redondo Beach, about seven miles south of Los Angeles International Airport, said he took dissolved oxygen level readings in the harbour after the first reports of the dead fish came in and found them at almost zero.

"The levels were critically low. There was pretty much no oxygen in the water," he said.

Scientists are working to determine what caused oxygen levels to drop so steeply that fish estimated to be in the millions suffocated and deposited a silver sheen of carcasses, many of them sardines, among the rows of docked boats.

Marine biologists at the University of Southern California installed oxygen sensors in King Harbor after an algal bloom caused a mass fish die-off in 2005.

Biological sciences professor David Caron said they are now probing the harbour for clues about the cause of the latest kill.

"What we're trying to tease apart is whether it's a consequence of algal build-up, a fish build-up or something toxic in the water," Caron said. (ANI)

Seattle murder rate lowest in half century

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Seattle murder rate lowest in half century. Violent crime in Seattle dropped 9 percent last year compared with 2009, according to Seattle police. Of the 19 homicides in the city last year, detectives made arrests in 15 — plus arrests in four additional "cold-case" killings, including one dating back to 1968, said Assistant Chief Jim Pugel, commander of the department's Investigations Bureau, at a news briefing Tuesday at police headquarters.

The city's homicide rate was the lowest since 1956, "which was the year before I was born, and I'm old," Police Chief John Diaz cracked.Robberies were down 20 percent in 2010 compared with the previous year, Pugel said.

Gang-unit detectives, working with other law-enforcement agencies across the region, also recovered 69 firearms and compiled more than 90 felony cases, many of which were filed in federal court, where gang members face stiffer penalties than in state court, he said. But Diaz said one troubling trend is the slight rise last year in the number of aggravated assaults, crimes that typically involve the use of deadly weapons or result in great bodily harm.


Though the 1,973 aggravated assaults committed was only a 1 percent increase over the 1,945 in 2009, "hidden in those numbers" is a trend showing a disturbing rise in assaults related to domestic violence, Diaz said.Police are working with other city departments and community partners to understand why and determine what to do about it, he said.

Cocaine, both in powder and rock form, remains the predominant drug of choice in the city, but police also are seeing large quantities of white and brown heroin, marijuana and prescription narcotics such as OxyContin, which often make it to the streets after pharmacy robberies, Pugel said.

Assistant Chief Mike Sanford, who commands the Patrol Operations Bureau, said police have been focusing on reducing burglaries, car prowls and auto thefts — and each of the department's five precincts have created lists of their 10 most-wanted suspects in each category.

By concentrating on pattern burglars, for instance, Sanford said North Precinct officers "caught approximately one-third more burglars last year than the year before."

Diaz also noted that car thefts are way down in the city, dropping from 9,500 in 2005 to 3,400 last year. Department statistics show a rise last year from 2009's 3,286.

Though crime fighting remains a top priority, Sanford said officers are doing more to engage in community building and have visited residents in all 17 department-defined neighborhoods in Seattle as part of its Neighborhood View program, aimed at identifying specific concerns in different parts of the city.

Officers are now going door-to-door to "get down to more micro-neighborhoods" to interview residents about their perceptions of safety.

When officers ask residents what single safety concern needs to be addressed in their neighborhood, Sanford said people are most likely to identify simple things  like installing more lighting, painting crosswalks or cleaning up parks  that can impact their sense of security.

Two locals claim big prizes in Hoosier Lottery

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Two locals claim big prizes in Hoosier Lottery. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (WLFI) - A Monticello man and a Peru woman recently claimed cash prizes in the Hoosier Lottery.

According to a Hoosier Lottery news release, Richard Bowsher of Monticello presented a winning scratch-off ticket worth $77,777 to Hoosier Lottery headquarters. Bowsher won the top prize on the Jeweled 7s scratch off game.


Bowsher purchased his $5 ticket from Casey's at 1506 North 6th Street in Monticello last Saturday. Bowsher owns an auto repair shop and teaches automotive mechanics at Ivy Tech Community College in Lafayette.

A Miami County woman also claimed a winning prize recently at Hoosier Lottery headquarters. Idajane Morton of Peru won $100,000 playing the Colts $100,000 Touchdown game.

The Hoosier Lottery said Morton is the fourth lucky player to win the game's top prize. The remaining three top prizes have yet to be claimed. Morton is originally from Maine and said she plans to use her winnings to visit family in there.

John Lewis profits jump 20% to £367.9m in 2010

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John Lewis profits jump 20% to £367.9m in 2010. Department store group John Lewis saw profits rise by 20%, or £61.3m, to £367.9m last year but has warned that 2011 could be more difficult.

Sales at the company, which also includes Waitrose supermarkets, rose by £784.8m to £8.21bn.


Chairman Charlie Mayfield described the figures for the year ending 29 January as a "strong performance".

But he said 2011 would see the impact of higher VAT, rising unemployment, and higher food and raw material costs.