Friday, 11 May 2012

Anja rubik legs


At a certain point, these celebrity models’ plunging necklines are going to dip so low that they actually connect with their sky-high slit.

Supermodel Anja Rubik turned heads recently in a risqué Anthony Vaccarello gown that she donned for the 2012 Met Gala. The hipbone baring number left little to the imagination with its wrap around neckline and crotch brushing slit.

Rubik is far from the first model or celebrity to venture out into public (or onto the red carpet) half naked. Supermodel Anne V and socialite Irina Shayk set the standard for revealing outfits earlier this year. You can see all three scandalous gowns below.

So what do you think? Which gal gave more away?

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Anja Rubik
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Anne V unsecured loans
http://www.celebgossipz.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Irina-Shayk-2.jpg
bad credit loans

Friday, 4 May 2012

british soap awards


What better way to brighten up a wet and windy Saturday than by going to the British Soap Awards? We were beside ourselves with excitement when the invitation arrived and donned our best rainy-day gladrags before heading off to the star-studded event…

As we arrive, we’re led to the swanky pre-show drinks reception. This is where the fun really starts as we get our first glimpse of the celebs.

Corrie’s Michelle Keegan (who’s about to win Sexiest Female for the fourth year in a row), and EastEnders glamour girls Jessie Wallace and Jacqueline Jossa file in and we can feel the excitement. We won’t lie, there’s a whiff of nerves too as time ticks closer to finding out who’s won what…

After a glass of champagne we’re whisked off to the recording of the show, then back again for the post-awards cocktails (ooh, we’re starting to feel a bit tipsy!). unsecured loans

There are enormous bowls of sweets dotted around, so we help ourselves to a jellybean as beaming Best Actress winner Alison King walks past.

Now we’ve got the nibbles so we check out the giant popcorn stand in the corner. We bump into Jake Wood and Jo Joyner, who have had the same idea, and congratulate the pair on ’Enders’ wins.

The dancing gets going and Katherine Kelly throws some shapes with her old Corrie pals. Gorgeous Gemma Merna and Steph Waring are among the Hollyoaks honeys having a boogie.

Then the lights come up and it’s all over… Time to head back out into the rainy night. We’ve had a fantastic time and we’ve still got our packed goodie bag to rifle through – is that a giant bag of crisps we see?! bad credit loans

fhm sexiest women

With the men’s magazine breaking out its annual special issue, Tulisa Contostavlos took the top spot in the June 2012 edition of FHM’s ’100 Sexiest Women In The World’.

Speaking about her win, 23-year-old British singer-songwriter appreciatively said, “Thank you so much for voting for me. It’s a true honour and definitely a lovely confidence boost. I’m proud of me and I am who I am. I know that I’m Marmite and I wouldn’t wanna be anything less or anything more, I’m just myself.” Tulisa continued, ‘The FHM shoot is without a doubt the sexiest thing I’ve ever done. bad credit loans

I believe in embracing being sexy but I’m not one to agree with stripping off for the cameras, I like to be more subtle than that as these shots show. This is an award that will stay on the mantelpiece probably for the rest of my life.” Also featured in the special installment is former “Celebrity Big Brother” contestant Georgia Salpa, who gushed of being included, “People always talk about the 100 Sexiest – girls as well – and to think that you’d actually be in it!” As for whhich ladies Miss Salpa finds the most alluring, the Irish hottie revealed, “I like Rosie Huntington-Whiteley – she won last year, didn’t she? She’s amazing, I love her.  unsecured loans

scarlett johansson get hollywood star


Scarlett Johansson may only be 27 years old, but she received a huge honor on Wednesday by getting her own star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Johansson, accompanied by her Avengers co-star Jeremy Renner, earned the 2,470th star on the Walk of Fame.
"We are thrilled to honor an actress who has graced the screen and stage since she was 8 years old," said Ana Martinez, Hollywood Walk of Fame producer, according to The Daily Mail. "Over the past 18 years Scarlett has matured into a recognized cinematic presence with an impressive body of work."
Scarlett, before kneeling down to touch her star and pose for pictures, took to the podium to thank family, friends, fans, and colleagues, according to The Daily Mail. Jeremy Renner also made a speech.
Prior to getting her star on Wednesday, she said in a recent interview that she was “thrilled” to be honored with a star.
“I guess, they nominate you and then you receive a star, which is very exciting for me,” she had explained of the process. “I was totally unsecured loans thrilled, of course, because I feel very nostalgic about that kind of thing. It's a wonderful tradition and I felt like I finally made it. I really did! I was like, ‘Wow! I've been in the industry for twenty years and I've worked since I was a kid.’ It felt like a big milestone.”
She added, “I'll be on the pavement with my hands and everything. It's funny.” bad credit loans

Thursday, 3 May 2012

Natasha Richardson

Natasha Richardson, the luminous British actress from one of the world's great acting families, whose performances ranged from the high-brow drama "The Handmaid's Tale" to the lightweight comedy "The Parent Trap" and the Tony-winning Broadway production of "Cabaret," died Wednesday. She was 45.

The wife of "Schindler's List" actor Liam Neeson and daughter of actress Vanessa Redgrave and the late film director Tony Richardson died at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York. The cause of death was not announced, but she had been hospitalized after suffering a devastating brain injury while skiing Monday.

"Liam Neeson, his sons and the entire family are shocked and devastated by the tragic death of their beloved Natasha," said a statement released by publicist Alan Nierob. "They are profoundly grateful for the support, love and prayers of everyone, and ask for privacy during this very difficult time." unsecured loans

Richardson was injured at Mont Tremblant, a luxury resort in Canada. The actress was taking a lesson on a beginner's run near the bottom of the ski area and was not wearing a helmet when she had what first appeared to be a minor accident.

She initially reported that she was well, but soon started to complain of a headache. Hours after the fall, the star of a number of acclaimed stage plays -- including "Anna Christie," "A Streetcar Named Desire" and "Closer" -- slipped into unconsciousness, and she was transported Tuesday from a Montreal hospital back to New York, where she was surrounded by family and friends.

The actress' most recent film credits came in last year's "Wild Child" opposite Emma Roberts and 2007's "Evening" with Meryl Streep, Claire Danes and Redgrave. The "Evening" part was one of a number of recent roles Richardson had had in productions with her closest relatives. On television, she appeared as a guest judge on the just-concluded season of the cooking show "Top Chef."

Richardson was born in London on May 11, 1963. In addition to Redgrave, other actors in her family include sister Joely Richardson, a star of the television series "Nip/Tuck," and aunt Lynn Redgrave, whose film credits include "Georgy Girl" and "Gods and Monsters." Richardson's grandfather was legendary Shakespearean actor Michael Redgrave.

Her father was an acclaimed writer, director and producer who won the directing and best picture Oscar for 1963's "Tom Jones." Tony Richardson, who died in 1991 at age 63, also directed "Look Back in Anger" and "A Taste of Honey."

The actress' 72-year-old mother, who won the supporting actress Academy Award for 1977's "Julia," still acts in theater and film.

Just before the skiing accident, Richardson was considering a Broadway revival of Stephen Sondheim's "A Little Night Music" with her mother, after a highly praised one-night January staging at New York's Studio 54.

Although Richardson may have come from royal show business blood, she did not try to use her ancestry to advance her career, but rather saw her family's creative business as something of a classroom.

"I know the pressures of being the daughter of a great actress," Richardson said in a 2005 interview with London's Independent newspaper. "But it's inspiring. You learn so much that other people don't get to learn until later on. My father being a director, I [learned] a real work ethic. You think: 'One day, I'd like to be as good as that.' But when I was starting out professionally, I had a level of attention put on me that I didn't deserve or wasn't ready for. And it was hard, particularly in England, to make my way."

Richardson trained at London's Central School of Speech and Drama, hiding her family connections, and subsequently picked up minor parts in little-known theater and television productions. In 1985, she made her West End debut, playing the troubled young actress Nina in Anton Chekhov's "The Seagull." A year later, Richardson was cast in her first prominent movie role, starring in director Ken Russell's "Gothic" as "Frankenstein" author Mary Shelley.

A variety of more prominent movie and stage roles followed, but Richardson often gravitated toward artier film productions, with mainstream movies more exception than rule. Despite her British roots, she often played iconic American characters -- including Patty Hearst (in a movie of the same name), Blanche DuBois in Tennessee Williams' "A Streetcar Named Desire" and the title role in Eugene O'Neill's "Anna Christie."

With a gravelly, seductive voice (once compared to a combination of honey and iron filings), Richardson was frequently willing to play emotionally vulnerable roles. "I just feel for her," she told the Times in 1993 about Anna Christie. "Her anger and her loneliness and her pain." bad credit loans

Richardson's movie choices in 1990 exemplified her creative taste. That year, she starred in "The Comfort of Strangers," a drama about a couple (Richardson and Rupert Everett) trying to repair a failing relationship, and "The Handmaid's Tale," an adaptation of Margaret Atwood's novel about a future theocracy. Hinting at her growing interest in theater, the screenplays for both movies were written by the playwright Harold Pinter.

Richardson made her Broadway debut in 1993, playing opposite Neeson in "Anna Christie." She was married to producer Robert Fox at the time; they divorced that year, and she married Neeson in 1994. The couple had two sons together, Micheal and Daniel, and Richardson left acting for three years when they were born.

"I have a famous mother, and it took me years to get over that," she once told London's Mirror. "Now I have this really famous husband. I definitely feel a loss of confidence. Perhaps that's partly why I love living in New York, being free of all that family baggage, being open to all sorts of possibilities."

Richardson continued to appear in movies, with the highest-profile roles coming in the 1998 remake of "The Parent Trap" opposite Lindsay Lohan and Dennis Quaid, and 2002's romantic comedy "Maid in Manhattan" with Jennifer Lopez.

Wednesday, 2 May 2012

damian lewis interview


The British actor discusses his Golden Globe-nominated role in psychological thriller Homeland, which is screening on TV3.


Damian Lewis in Homeland
In Britain, Damian Lewis is known as a stage actor and star of low-key television treasures such as The Forsyte Saga and Friends and Crocodiles. But over in the US, he shot to fame in the Steven Spielberg-produced Band of Brothers. After starring in cop show Life, he was nominated for a Golden Globe this year for his role in Homeland, a psychological thriller in which he plays Marine Sergeant Nicholas Brody who, after eight years in captivity, may be a sleeper agent for al Qaeda.

This is a tough role: Brody is tortured during captivity and may be a security threat to America. Did the producers let you know what you were getting yourself in for? They were very open that they were offering me a controversial role in an ambitious project and about the fact that he was more than likely going to be a threat – in fact, the danger had to come from him; otherwise the series falls apart.



Yeah, you’re not playing Brody for laughs. No, not this time, although I’m looking forward to Homeland the Musical.


Do you think the series made Americans think about their foreign policy? There’s a much greater introspection in America. I’ve worked there a lot in the past five years, and I see a more self-analytical side to America, and Obama as the president embodies that. There’s been a massive sea change – for the good, I would argue –  and the politics of the show tap into unsecured loans that. I think politically, if you wanted to use labels, it’s a liberal show, it poses these questions – what defines terrorism? There’s terror perpetrated by military groups and then there’s state terrorism.


More than 10 years after 9/11 was it the right time to explore these issues? [Producers] Alex [Gansa] and Howard [Gordon] have said publicly that they weren’t sure if there was an appetite still for this kind of thing, but even though it doesn’t dominate the papers in quite the same way, everyone knows there are different rogue elements that have sprung up everywhere now. It’s created almost more uncertainty and I think that’s what the show taps into. And it taps into bad credit loans uncertainty of our own governments and the way in which Western governments went about advocating the war on terror. It’s massively symbolic that a US marine might be enraged enough by what he sees and what he’s being asked to do that he finds cause to switch sides. It’s real and particularly alarming and I think that’s arresting for people.

Tulisa sexiest woman, what. a. joke.


Tulisa has usurped Rosie Huntington-Whiteley and Cheryl Cole to be named the world’s sexiest woman.

The X Factor judge, 23, who recently hit the headlines when a sex tape appeared online showing her sharing an “intimate moment” with a former boyfriend, tops the annual FHM list.

Two-time winner Cheryl takes second place, followed by pop star Rihanna and glamour model Rosie Jones.
Model and Transformers star Rosie drops down to 18th place from top of the list in 2011. unsecured loans

Irish model and Celebrity Big Brother contestant Georgia Salpa is fifth, followed by US pop star and Russell Brand’s ex Katy Perry. Actress Megan Fox, glamour model Keeley Hazell, Friends With Benefits star Mila Kunis and Inbetweeners actress Emily Atack complete the top 10.

Pippa Middleton makes FHM’s 100 Sexiest Women In The World list at 11, while her sister the Duchess of Cambridge is 32nd.

Singer Pixie Lott is 12th, followed by model Daisy Lowe (13), and The Saturdays singer Mollie King (14). Her bandmate Frankie Sandford is 19. bad credit loans

The top 20 is completed by Made In Chelsea star Millie Mackintosh (15), The Voice judge Jessie J (16), actress Zooey Deschanel (17), and model Kelly Brook (20).

“I’m proud of me and I am who I am. I know that I’m Marmite and I wouldn’t want to be anything less or anything more, I’m just myself,” Tulisa said. “This is an award that will stay on the mantelpiece probably for the rest of my life.”

The full list, voted for by FHM readers, comes with the June edition of FHM, on sale now.

Tuesday, 1 May 2012

Hidden Talent


A diving instructor from Peasedown St John will be putting 900 members of the public to the test when she appears on a new prime-time Channel 4 show.

Emma Farrell, 38, will be on Hidden Talent, hunting for someone with no prior experience to train to become an expert diver in just a matter of weeks.
Across the series nine participants will go from total novice to top performer in a variety of skills including freediving, opera singing, lie detecting and speaking foreign languages.

The rigorous large-scale testing of hundreds of people around the country is undertaken, overseen by scientists and academics, to find out if people have special physical, mental, sensory or creative talents that they were totally unaware of.

Emma, who is the author of the book One Breath, a Reflection unsecured loans on Freediving, is the series expert on freediving. She devised unique tests to find out if 900 members of the public had a hidden talent and then trained the winning participant.

She said: "The first issue was that I had to get through up to 300 people a day, none of whom were allowed to know they were being tested for freediving and in a room with no water.

"I had to invent a test for equalisation that could be done anywhere and then use specific medical questions to determine if a person might be any good.

"When I asked people to hum and move their jaw forward to see if it gets louder in one or both ears many people thought they were being tested for singing.

"I looked for healthy ears, sinuses and equalisation ability and then took one or two people each hour to perform a breath-hold walking test with a heart rate monitor to see if they had a strong mammalian dive reflex. bad credit loans

"It was so exciting to see people with no knowledge of their hidden ability shine."
Twelve candidates were then selected to join Emma for in-water tests at Crystal Palace before six joined her for two days at Vobster Quay for final in-water physical and psychological tests.
Emma then chose one individual to train .

She said: "Although I can't say who they are and what they did, I can say that I was incredibly proud of what they achieved in such a short space of time.

"The project represented the first time ever that so many people have been tested for a latent ability to freedive and shows what amazing hidden talents are out there."

During the programme the winner also takes part in yoga classes at Universal Yoga, where Emma is a teacher, to help improve their breathing, strength and flexibility.

Emma will appear Hidden Talent on May 1 at 9pm and again on May 29 with the winning candidate. She is also taking part in a live web-chat immediately after the episode on May 1.

Emma, who teaches freedving at Vobster Quay, has also taught TV chef Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall to dive for River Cottage and has appeared on Britain's Secret Seas.

She hopes to dispel the myth that freediving is only suitable for very fit people.

Emma, who first began diving 12 years ago, said: "I first got involved because it looked really relaxing and peaceful. There is a common misconception that it is only for fit or young people.

 Anyone can give it a go; in fact there is a world free diving record holder who did not learn to dive till she was in her 50s."

Zac Efron new film


The Lucky One

The new romance "The Lucky One," starring Zac Efron as a weary Marine and Taylor Schilling as a beautiful stranger, is the latest in a line of film adaptations of Nicholas Sparks' weepy novels. (In case you've forgotten, the list includes "Dear John," "The Last Song" and most famously "The Notebook.") As is often the case with Sparks' movies and their imitators (including "The Vow" earlier this year), critics agree that "The Lucky One" is a tear-jerker best left to hard-core romance fans. unsecured loans

In one of the more positive reviews, the Los Angeles Times' Betsy Sharkey calls "The Lucky One" a "sweet but not too syrupy romance" and "the best Sparks-inspired film to come along since 'The Notebook.' " It's certainly not perfect: "Without much tension, the film becomes more of an extended music video of Logan and Beth's [Efron and Schilling's characters] rocky road to love," Sharkey writes. But the film is "beautifully captured by director of photography Alar Kivilo," she says, while Efron is "in his wheelhouse," Schilling is "moving," and director Scott Hicks "keeps 'The Lucky One' from turning into complete mush."

The Washington Post's Ann Hornaday is less impressed and describes the film as a "tepid, inert enterprise." "The Lucky One," she continues, is "devoid of genuine tension, conflict or combustible chemistry between its two stars," and "just prettily sits there." So does Efron, for that matter: "The role of a stoic, expressionless philosopher-soldier requires that he tamp down his natural exuberance and physical grace, a regrettable misuse of his native talents." Invoking "The Notebook," Hornaday concludes that "'The Lucky One' tries hard to re-bottle that lightning, to no avail."

Hearst film critic Amy Biancolli echoes Hornaday, writing that "there isn't much of anything going on in 'The Lucky One,' a lazy (in all ways) Nicholas Sparks romance that's as pretty and vacant as its hero." Efron's problem, Biancolli says, isn't one of ability but of execution: "I'm not saying the boy can't act (I've seen him do it). I'm saying he doesn't." Meanwhile, "Where Efron under-emotes, Schilling over-emotes, giving their scenes together an out-of-whack thespian asymmetry." The result, Biancholli says, is "all very pretty, and all very dull."

A.O. Scott, of New York Times, offers less a review of "The Lucky One" than an anatomization of the genre he refers to as "the Nicholas Sparks movie": "The setting is the coastal South … A young man and a young woman will fall in love, but there will be complications. … Desperate yearning will erupt into urgent kissing." Check, check and check. The film is directed "gracefully enough," Scott says, and Efron is "reasonably credible," but "if realism is what you’re after, you’ll do better at 'The Three Stooges.' 'The Lucky One' is where you will find death, redemption and kisses in the rain."

In the Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert also tackles the Sparks formula: "They usually involve the triumph of love over adversity, are usually set in beautiful natural settings, usually involve such coincidences as finding a message in a bottle, and usually make me stir restlessly, because such escapism is shameless." Shameless or not, Ebert concedes, "credit must be given to a film that delivers the goods, and if you've ever liked a Nicholas Sparks movie, you're likely to enjoy this one." bad credit loans

For those averse to sudsy romances, however, expecting to enjoy this one might be pushing your luck.