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Monday, December 31, 2012

Top 5 brother-sister duos of Bollywood

1. Soha and Saif Ali Khan

Saif & Soha, star kids of yesteryears' actress Sharmila Tagore, resemble a lot and that's not all, this duo shares quite a lovely relationship with each other. Both are an integral part of the film industry though their career graphs have gone different ways. Saif has definitely been able to carve a niche for himself while Soha's presence on screen has been very limited. They are yet to share the screen space.
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2. Zoya and Farhan Akhtar

Born to veteran lyricist Javed Akhtar, both Zoya and Farhan have come across as immensely talented individuals. The duo is young, energetic and manages to strike a chord with the youth by the means of their work. Filmmaker Zoya Akhtar, followed her brother, to venture into the arena of direction, where her brother is a pro. Recently, the two of them worked together in 'Zindagi Milegi Na Dobara' which turned out to be a monster hit. 
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3. Ekta and Tusshar Kapoor

Children of one of the top yester year actors, this duo has been rocking Bollywood for quite some time now. While Ekta is the queen of TV soaps, Tusshar too is gradually gaining ground in the industry. Recently, they collaborated in 'Shor in the City' which won huge critical acclaim all over. Ekta Kapoor also roped in her brother Tusshar Kapoor for her home project 'Dirty Picture'.
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4. Farah and Sajid Khan

While Farah is one of the most celebrated choreographers and directors in the industry, Sajid too has enjoyed a good degree of success as a director, after having failed to perform well as an actor. The two are known for their affable relationship and are spotted at several parties and events. The duo has churned out quite a few hits in the past, some of them being - 'Housefull', 'Main Hoon Na' and 'Om Shanti Om'. Farah also choreographed a song for Sajid's 'Housefull'. 
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5. Kareena and Ranbir Kapoor

Quintessentially the most successful brother-sister duo in Bollywood. It's another matter that they happen to be first cousins and are not born to the same parents. Both have demonstrated their fine acting skills in their respective careers and are two of the most sought after actors in Bollywood. Interestingly, once when the actress was asked if she was willing to be paired romantically opposite Ranbir in a film, the actress admitted that she wouldn't mind doing the role if the audience wanted to see the pair on-screen. 
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Jamshed rains on Dhoni's party

Pakistan win first ODI at Chepauk by six wickets.

CHENNAI:
Opener Nasir Jamshed's dogged century overshadowed Man of the Match MS Dhoni’s retaliatory brilliance in a six-wicket win for Pakistan over India in the first ODI at Chepauk on an overcast Sunday.  The Indian captain’s fighting 113 not out had pulled India up from a precarious 29/5 to set a respectable 227 target after they were sent in by Misbah ul Haq, but Pakistan’s batting line up proved up to the chase. Jamshed (101*) and Younis Khan (58) added 112 after the loss of two early wickets and a series of fortunate events ensured the target was overhauled with 11 balls to spare. Left-arm fast bowler Junaid Khan had earlier brought India to their knees with his four-wicket haul in the morning.
If Pakistan’s trump card was their pace, India’s undoing was their reliance on part-timers performing the crucial role of a fifth bowler. The visitors were rocked by debutant Bhuvaneshwar Kumar’s strikes – including the dangerous Mohammad Hafeez on the first ball of the pursuit – but the slower bowlers surrendered the initiative by giving away 77 in ten overs. It was a patchy chase by the neighbours. Jamshed was handed two reprieves - a poor decision and a dropped catch by Yuvraj Singh - and Shoaib Malik (34) was caught behind off R. Ashwin's no ball. Malik survived again when Virender Sehwag at mid wicket lost his skier in the lights, and in the end Pakistan staggered into the series lead on the back of a decisive 56-run stand between the two. In fact, Dhoni was also dropped by his counterpart Misbah when he had scored 16. Virat Kohli, who twisted his ankle and injured his knee while bowling, was taken off the field late in Pakistan's innings.
Chennai boys to the fore
It was a Chennai Super Kings get together after India’s top half had fallen to the deadly left arm pace of Junaid and Irfan. Dhoni initiated the first installment of damage control with Suresh Raina (43) and completed what he’d begun through dizzying acceleration in the later stages in the company of R. Ashwin (31). The two alliances gained 198 runs – 73 and a record 125 – and were starkly contrasting. The first was a crawl to safety as off-spinners Saeed Ajmal and Hafeez came on and gave nothing away. The second was a tearaway sprint towards a competitive total as a tired Dhoni went for his shots. The feature century too comprised contrasting sections. The first fifty came off 86 balls, while the second took just 39, and by the end of his unbeaten, seventh ODI hundred Dhoni looked as drained as basin with the stopper out. But his tiredness and cramps had had an invigorating effect and his recourse to big shots ensured 81 runs in the last 10 overs, 52 in the last five.
Junaid scythes through
India would have settled for far less when on an overcast morning and a moist pitch Junaid and Irfan clean bowled four of the top five. There was instant drama when play began an hour late.  Sehwag didn’t move his feet and lost his off stump; fellow opener Gautam Gambhir drove futilely as the ball rattled into the furniture; Kohli was castled by just the perfect amount of inswing; while Yuvraj was done in by a beauty that whizzed through him before he could get the bat down.  Rohit Sharma was the fifth batsman down when he was taken superbly by a diving Hafeez at third slip. The team may well have folded within 100 had it not been for the CSK trio.  The India captain was dropped by Misbah at midwicket when he was on 16 and the reprieve made him even more watchful. A long, quiet phase was endured before Hafeez – who had given virtually nothing away – skidded one through Raina on the second ball of the batting Powerplay. With India now six down for 102, Pakistan would have hoped for a quick, decisive end.
Dhoni turns it on
But Ashwin supported his leader ably, allowing the senior batsman to cut loose as the fag end neared. Dhoni smashed a free hit off Irfan for the first six of the innings over long on and then carted Ajmal out of the park. The penultimate over, bowled by the hulking left arm fast bowler, was broken open with successive fours followed by a cover driven six – a shot that gave Dhoni his century in 118 balls. The Jharkhand batsman also crossed 7,000 ODI runs in the match, becoming the seventh Indian to the landmark.
Dream debut, again
After a rocking Twenty20 debut last week, Bhuvaneshwar claimed a wicket on his first ODI delivery when he swung one into the dangerous Hafeez. Pakistan had crawled to 21 after the Powerplay before Kumar jolted them again – No.3 Azhar Ali (9) dragging one outside off to Rohit at midwicket.  The young Uttar Pradesh bowler moved the ball both ways and conceded just five in his first five overs. Younis and Jamshed played out the pace battery and accelerated when the part-timers came on.
Yuvraj spills it
Yuvraj went for boundaries, and the batsmen each picked sixes of Suresh Raina as the 100 partnership came up. It took Dinda’s reintroduction and a good catch by Ashwin to get the breakthrough. Younis hit an attempted yorker to mid-wicket where the off-spinner scooped the ball off the ground – a verdict arrived at after some consultation with the third umpire. Dinda could have had another in his next, but Yuvraj dropped a straightforward chance of Jamshed - then on 68 -  at point. Although Misbah was out bowled by an Ishant Sharma slower ball with over 50 still needed, Malik made the best of his chances and stayed with Jamshed to the end.

Hugh Hefner's Many Exes

Before Playboy mogul Hugh Hefner takes a trip to the altar to marry on-again, off-again girlfriend Crystal Harris, take a trip down memory lane with omg! as we look back at some of Hef's gal pals from over the years.
Mildred Williams
It’s hard to imagine Hef with someone his own age, but long before he was a media mogul, Hef married fellow 23-year-old Mildred Williams in 1949. The couple went on to have two children – daughter Christie, now 60, and son David, now 57 – before divorcing in 1959. Christie would grow up to become chairwoman and CEO of Playboy Enterprises.
Hugh Hefner 
Barbi Benton
Beauty Barbi Benton became Hefner’s main squeeze in the late ‘60s after meeting him while working as a model on his TV show “Playboy After Dark,” when Benton was just 18 and the magazine publisher was 42. Benton eventually released a few country music albums, starred in iconic TV series “Hee-Haw,” and appeared on the cover of Playboy a whopping four times, including in 1982, six years after she and Hef broke up.
Hugh Hefner, Barbara Benton 
Shannon Tweed
Before she became Kiss guitarist Gene Simmons’ better half, actress Shannon Tweed, who was bestowed with the honor of Playboy’s Playmate of the Year in 1982, was hoping to become Mrs. Hugh Hefner. "When Shannon says 'Why don't we get married?' and I say no, she punches me. I think having kids is a reason for getting married. I've had two," Hef told People in December 1982, after the couple had been dating for 14 months. "Shannon [27 at the time] is unusually mature and I'm not the average 56-year-old. A lot of the boy is left in me." Tweed moved on to Simmons the following year and married him 28 years later … in a wedding ceremony Hef attended! 
Hugh Hefner, Shannon Tweed 
Carrie Leigh
Though Hugh Hefner has a knack for remaining friendly with many of his exes, 1983 Playboy cover girl Carrie Leigh wasn’t one of them. Leigh, who started dating Hef in 1983 – when she was 19 and he was 57 – moved into her new boyfriend's fabled mansion and sued Hefner for $5 million in palimony after the two broke up. “He promised to marry me, he promised to have a child with me, promised to support me," she said at a press conference. She later got married to someone else and dropped the suit. 
Hugh Hefner, Carrie Leigh 
Kimberly Conrad
After 30 years of living as a bachelor (and a busy one at that), Hef decided to make another trip down the aisle at age 63, this time to marry a 1988 Playmate of the Month, Kimberly Conrad, who was just 27 at the time. Conrad gave birth to Hef’s other two children, sons Maston and Cooper, now 22 and 21 respectively. Hef and his second wife split after nine years together, but Hef didn’t actually file for divorce until 2009, shortly after Cooper turned 18, when he asked a judge to reduce his spousal support from $40,000 to $20,000 a month. Throughout their separation, Conrad had lived with the couple’s sons in a house conveniently located next door to the Playboy mansion.
Kimberley Conrad, Hugh Hefner 
Sandy and Mandy Bentley
After Hefner’s second marriage ended in 1998, he was “beat up emotionally and bruised,” he later told The Daily Beast, and sought comfort in numbers. Two of the women he started seeing were Illinois-born twin sisters Mandy and Sandy Bentley, who quickly became residents of the Playboy Mansion and were featured on the cover of the lad mag in May 2000. However, Sandy reportedly didn’t want to be tied down to one person either, and when Hefner found out she was seeing someone behind his back, he showed her the door
Sandy and Mandy Bentley 
Tina Jordan
Single mother and former loan officer Tina Jordan also moved into the Playboy Mansion when she met Hefner (46 years her senior) in 2001 and became Playmate of the Month in March 2002, when she was 29. The couple broke things off in 2004.
Hugh Hefner, Tina Jordan 
Brande Roderick
If you blinked, you might have missed Brande Roderick in the sea of blond girlfriends Hef has had over the last decade. The now 38-year-old dated the icon around 2000-2001 and (what do you know?) became a Playboy Playmate in 2001. After she and Hef broke things off, Roderick began an acting career and eventually married former NFL linebacker Glenn Cadrez, with whom she has a 2-year-old son.
Brande Roderick, Hugh Hefner 
Izabella St. James
Polish-born Izabella St. James met Hefner at a Los Angeles nightclub in 2000, while she was a law school student at Pepperdine University. After getting her degree, she didn’t follow in the typical lawyer’s footsteps – instead she moved into the Playboy Mansion! She later went on to write the book Bunny Tales: Behind Closed Doors at the Playboy Mansion about being a housemate, which didn’t exactly endear her to Hefner. “Quite simply, Izabella … was one of a number of girls that I dated and lived at the house in the early part of 2001,” Hef later told The Daily Beast. “Despite what she writes, she didn’t leave of her own volition. She left because she was asked to leave because she didn’t get along with some of the other girls. She was in conflict with some of the nicer girls like Holly [Madison] and Bridget [Marquardt], and I kind of cleaned house.”
Izabella St. James 
Holly Madison, Bridget Marquardt, and Kendra Wilkinson
And when Hefner "cleaned house," he was left with these three ladies: Holly Madison, Bridget Marquardt, and Kendra Wilkinson. Each woman caught his eye at various times, but they came together in 2005 for a reality series about life at the famed abode called “The Girls Next Door.” For six seasons, they shared their lives behind the walls at the mansion, but Hefner's relationship with each woman started to unravel. First, Wilkinson fell in love with NFL player Hank Baskett, who she went on to marry; Madison, his No. 1 girlfriend, dumped Hefner when he told her he didn’t want to get married again or any have more children (she's currently pregnant); and Marquardt was the last to leave, in 2009, because she wanted to become her own person. Although the romances fizzled, Hef has remained on (mostly) friendly terms with the trio of women. 
Hugh Hefner Crystal Harris
In 2008, Hefner met Crystal Harris at his annual Halloween bash at the Playboy Mansion. Just months later she moved in along with the Shannon Twins and quickly slipped into the role of No. 1 girlfriend. While Madison couldn’t get Hefner to commit to marriage, Harris did. Hefner popped the question over Christmas in 2010 and she said yes. However, the road to the altar wasn’t smooth. Weeks before their June 2011 wedding, Harris called it off and left Hefner red faced as he had already put her on the cover of the June issue of Playboy with the headline: "Introducing America's Princess, Mrs. Crystal Hefner." Oops! Although he swore off marriage (again!), he reunited with Harris a year later and in early December 2012 they announced that they were once again engaged. The star-studded nuptials are set to take place at the mansion on New Year’s Eve – though, as we’ve learned, anything can happen. Hugh Hefner, Crystal Harris

Liberal arts colleges forced to evolve with market

In this 2012 photo provided by Adrian College, members of the school's Bulldog football team warm up before homecoming in Adrian, Mich. Adrian's president, Jeffrey Docking, has added seven sports and two pre-professional degree programs to the liberal arts college since arriving in 2005 _ and nearly doubled enrollment to about 1,750. (AP Photo/Adrian College, Matt Gaidica Photography)ADRIAN, Mich. (AP) They're the places you think of when you think of "college"  leafy campuses, small classes, small towns. Liberal arts colleges are where students ponder life's big questions, and learn to think en route to successful careers and richer lives, if not always to the best-paying first jobs. But today's increasingly career-focused students mostly aren't buying the idea that a liberal arts education is good value, and many small liberal arts colleges are struggling. The survivors are shedding their liberal arts identity, if not the label. A study published earlier this year found that of 212 such institutions identified in 1990, only 130 still meet the criteria of a "true liberal arts college." Most that fell off the list remained in business, but had shifted toward a pre-professional curriculum.
These distinctively American institutions — educating at most 2 percent of college students but punching far above their weight in accomplished graduates — can't turn back the clock. But schools like Adrian College, 75 miles southwest of Detroit and back from a recent near-death experience, offer something of a playbook. First, get students in the door by offering what they do want, namely sports and extracurricular opportunities that might elude them at bigger schools. Offer vocational subjects like business, criminal justice and exercise science that students and parents think rightly or wrongly will lead to better jobs.
Then, once they're enrolled, look for other ways to sprinkle the liberal arts magic these colleges still believe in, even if it requires a growing stretch to call yourself a liberal arts college. "We're liberal arts-aholics," says Adrian President Jeffrey Docking, who has added seven sports and two pre-professional degree programs since arriving in 2005 — and nearly doubled enrollment to about 1,750.
But he's also a realist.
"I say this with regret," said Docking, an ethicist by training. But "you really take your life into your own hands thinking that a pure liberal arts degree is going to be attractive enough to enough 18-year-olds that you fill your freshman classes."
In ancient Greece, liberal arts were the subjects that men free from work were at leisure to pursue. Today, the squishy definition still includes subjects that don't prepare for a particular job (but can be useful for many). English, history, philosophy, and other arts and sciences are the traditional mainstays. But these days, some prefer a more, well, liberal definition that's more about teaching style than subject matter.
"I refer to it as learning on a human scale," said William Spellman, a University of North Carolina-Asheville historian who directs a group of 27 public liberal arts colleges. "It's about small classes, access to faculty, the old tutorial model of being connected with somebody who's not interested only in their disciplinary area but culture broadly defined."
Does it work? It's true that research tying college majors to salaries can make the generic liberal arts degrees look unappealing. But technical training can become obsolete, and students are likely to change careers several times. These schools argue you're better off, both in life and work, simply learning to think.
Research does point to broader benefits of studying liberal arts in small settings, in areas like leadership, lifelong learning and civic engagement. Liberal arts colleges are proven launching pads to the top of business, government and academia (graduating 12 U.S. presidents, six chief justices and 12 of 53 Nobel laureates over a recent decade who attended American colleges, by one researcher's count). Foreign delegations often visit to observe, and big U.S. universities are trying to recreate mini-liberal arts colleges within their campuses.
But outside a secure tier of elites with 10-figure endowments — the Swarthmores, Amhersts, Wellesleys of the world — many schools are in trouble. The liberal arts still account for about one-third of bachelor's degrees, but the experience of getting one in these small settings is increasingly atypical. Definitions vary, but liberal arts colleges today probably account for between 100,000 and 300,000 of the country's roughly 17 million undergraduates. There are more students at the University of Phoenix, alone.
These schools "are all getting to around $40,000 a year, in some cases $50,000, and students and their families are just saying 'we can't do it,'" Docking said. Small classes make these schools among them most expensive places in higher education, though they often offer discounts to fill seats (Adrian's list price is $38,602, including room and board, but the average student pays $19,000).
Other pressures are geographic and generational. Many liberal arts colleges are clustered in the Northeast and Midwest, in towns like Adrian, founded by optimistic 18th- and 19th-century settlers who started colleges practically as soon as they arrived. But where the country is growing now is the South and West, where the private college tradition isn't as deep. Meanwhile, students these days expect the climbing walls and high-end dorms that smaller, poorer schools can't afford. And a growing proportion of college students are the first generation in their family to attend. They've proved a tougher sell on the idea they can afford to spend four years of college "exploring." In UCLA's massive national survey of college freshman, "getting a better job" recently surpassed "learning about things that interest me" as the top reason for going to college. The percentage calling job preparation a very important reason rose to 86 percent, up from 70 percent in 2006, before the economy tanked.
Politicians have reinforced the message. Florida Republican Gov. Rick Scott recently proposed public colleges charge more for degrees in subjects like anthropology that he said were less economically valuable to the state than science and engineering (though in fact, those subjects usually cost much more to teach).
So, with varying reluctance, colleges have adjusted. In his 2011 book "Liberal Arts at the Brink," former Beloit College president Victor Ferrall calculated that in 1986-87, just 30 of 225 liberal arts colleges awarded 30 percent or more of their degrees in vocational subjects. By 2007-2008, 118 did so. Even at a consortium called the Annapolis Group, comprised of the supposedly purest liberal arts colleges, the percentage of vocational degrees jumped from 6 percent to 17 percent.
"What's new in the past few years," said Richard Ekman, president of the Council of Independent Colleges, "is people are beginning to wonder in the places that have remained liberal arts colleges whether that's enough." Schools like Adrian that had already shifted to a more vocational approach "are asking whether the balance is right, whether they need to tip more to the professional side." Adrian was weed-strewn, demoralized and down to its last 840 students when Docking arrived in 2005.
"We borrowed 30 million bucks and said, 'if this doesn't work out, we're done,'" he recalled. First, Docking built up facilities and added teams, notably in sports like hockey and lacrosse that tilt toward more affluent students. No niche market was too small: Adrian started one of the country's only synchronized skating teams. At the nearby University of Michigan, almost nobody walks onto the football team or even the marching band, but you can at Adrian. And everybody recruits. Docking's band director has to bring in 20 kids a year, the symphony director 10. He has fired coaches who don't meet their quotas. (This year, about 700 of Adrian's 1,756 students play varsity sports, more than 40 percent. At the University of Michigan, there are 881 student-athletes — or 3 percent of the 27,500 undergraduates.)
Docking worried Adrian would become a "jock factory," and the number of students wearing team gear on campus is striking. But, he said: "They come in as hockey players, and they leave as chemists and journalists and business leaders." Michael Allen, a longtime theater professor, says the athletics culture has turned out better than he feared, saying most athletes who persist are (or get) serious academically.
Pre-professional programs weren't new to Adrian, but it's recently added athletic training and sports management. The two most popular majors are business and exercise science. So is Adrian still a "liberal arts college?" Some would scoff, but Docking say yes. He notes the top minors include chemistry, English and religion/philosophy. He talks up "institutes" on campus — devoted to ethics, study abroad and other areas — that try to inject liberal arts-style learning around even the pre-professional curriculum. That curriculum still includes liberal arts distribution requirements majors, and he insists liberal arts skills can be taught in other types of classes, and even through extra-curriculars.
Vicki Baker, a professor at nearby Albion College, who co-authored the recent study tracking the 39 percent decline in liberal arts colleges since 1990, also thinks these colleges can retain their value even as they evolve. Her Albion business classes include debates, presentations and other teaching techniques that were impossible when she taught 400 at Penn State.
Liberal arts colleges "appeal to a certain kind of student who really flourishes in that environment," and who might not otherwise succeed in college, Baker said. "It would be a loss to see that vanish." Senior Kyle Cordova chose Adrian half for the chance to play baseball, half for its small size. He was leaning toward a liberal arts major but ended up in criminal justice to prepare for a law enforcement career. He's had the same half-dozen or so professors year after year. "They know me, they know how I work, what I'm weak in, what I'm strong in, how to help me better," he said. "That's better than going to Michigan State."
Communications major Garrett Beitelschies said his professors meet with him on every paper and "you're actually talking in front of the room, having to defend your stance." He's also partaken of an extracurricular feast unimaginable at the bigger schools he considered: president of his fraternity and the senior class, radio, theater, homecoming king and even dressing up as Bruiser the Bulldog mascot at football games. With financial aid Adrian ended up costing him less than some state schools.
Both students said they'd learned broader skills — Cordova cited the complex skills involved in learning to interview witnesses.
But neither said they'd taken a class where the syllabus entailed reading, say, a set of novels. Liberal arts colleges talk constantly — and perhaps with more urgency lately — about better pitching their case to the public. But until they do, they'll have to respond to what that public wants. Docking says the survival recipe will vary (hockey helps here but won't in for Florida colleges). But the basic formula is the same.
"You need to be able to offer more than simply strong academics or you're going to have difficulty attracting students," he said. "There's a lot of competition. You'd better have something to distinguish yourself."

2012 YEAR IN REVIEW

Top News Stories: #1 Election 2012
The 2012 election the most searched news topic on allfamousthings.blogspot.com! dominated news coverage and online conversation this year. Voters may have complained about the negative campaigning, but they heavily followed local, state and national races. On Nov. 6, citizens set their own records: The "youth" vote (ages 18 to 29) turned out in the same numbers as in 2008, in higher proportion than seniors, and may have helped to decide the election in swing states. The gender gap was the greatest in history. More Latinos than ever before registered, Across the nation, early voting surged. President Barack Obama beat Republican challenger Mitt Romney to win a second term, winning 332 electoral votes to Romney's 206. 
President Barack Obama earned a second term after defeating Republican challenger Mitt Romney. America's first black president vowed to finish the job he started four years ago. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters) Top News Stories: #2 Whitney Houston
Legendary singer and actress Whitney Houston was found dead on Feb. 11 in a Beverly Hills hotel. Tragically, the singer had just talked about overcoming her much-publicized struggle with drugs and alcohol. The movie in which she made her big-screen comeback, "Sparkle," was released after her death. Her funeral was attended by celebrities and dignitaries and broadcast to millions around the world. News of Houston's death quickly spread through social media sites. Mediabistro noted the following: "On Twitter, hashtags related to Houston and her name itself dominated the trending topics. YouTube's News channel featured her videos. Fan pages were created on Facebook."
Singer and actress Whitney Houston was found dead in a Beverly Hills, Calif., hotel. Houston had overcome a public battle with drug addiction and was returning to the big screen with "Sparkle." (Mel Evans/AP Photo) Top News Stories: #3 Hurricane Sandy
Hurricane Sandy crashed into the Eastern Seaboard on Oct. 29, killing at least 128 people and leaving more than $71 billion worth of destruction in its wake.Sandy was dubbed a superstorm as it continued its progression over the East Coast. The torrential wind and rain knocked out power to some parts of New York City, leaving homes and businesses in the dark for days and blacking out half the nighttime skyline of Manhattan.
Hurricane Sandy swept through the East Coast, leaving 128 people dead and causing an estimated $71 billion in damage. The superstorm destroyed seaside amusement parks in New York and New Jersey. (Mark Lennihan/AP Photo)Top News Stories: #4 Gas prices
As politicians offered their positions on the economy (or, at least, who was to blame for its slow recovery), voters kept a wary eye on gas prices. By December, prices at the pump dropped slightly, and the month began with a national average of $3.40. Even if that marked a month-over-month decline, it continued the streak of highest-on-record days that began in late August.
Gas prices went on a roller-coaster ride in some parts of the country. 2012 saw some places with near-record-high prices that would dip, only to rise again. (Mike Segar/Reuters)Top News Stories: #5 Trayvon Martin case
A chance-encounter killing caught the country's attention when George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch volunteer, allegedly followed 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, a black teenager in a hooded sweatshirt, walking in a gated community in Sanford, Fla. After a call to a 911 operator, who advised Zimmerman to wait for police, he instead confronted the unarmed teen. Within minutes, Trayvon was dead. A charge might not have been filed, but Trayvon's parents made the case public by filing a petition through Change.org, asking that charges be brought. Many showed support for Trayvon by wearing hoodies over their heads. Others organized a Million Hoodie March. Emerging from this incident was the debate over the "stand your ground" defense, which allows a person to defend himself with lethal force anywhere it's legal for that person to be. Zimmerman was charged with second-degree murder, but the case has been marked by conflicting reports of the encounter between Zimmerman and Trayvon. The trial for Zimmerman is set for June 10, 2013.
George Zimmerman was charged in the death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in Sanford, Fla. Zimmerman claimed he was attacked by the young man, who was wearing a hoodie. Trayvon was unarmed. (Lucas Jackson/Reuters) 
Top News Stories: #6 Colorado shooting
Spree killings are rare, and yet 2012 witnessed a surge of them, from the Oikos University massacre in Oakland, Calif., to the Sikh temple killings in Oak Creek, Wis. Among them was the Aurora, Colo., shooting, one of the worst massacres since Columbine. Confusion and chaos reigned on July 20, when an early showing of the Batman movie "The Dark Knight Rises" turned deadly. The gunman fired rounds of bullets in the theater, killing 12 people and wounding 58. The criminal case against the suspect, James Holmes, is in a preliminary stage with no trial date set.In one of the deadliest shootings in the U.S., a gunman opened fire in a theater in Aurora, Colo. Twelve people were killed and 58 were wounded. The suspect, James Holmes (pictured), was charged in the killings. (RJ Sangosti-Pool/Getty Images) Top News Stories: #7 Jerry Sandusky trial
Several high-profile cases of child molestation came to light in 2012. In one case, a high-ranking Catholic cleric was given a prison sentence for turning a blind eye to priests' abuse (in a prelude to the trial of the alleged molesters). And the Boy Scouts were ordered to release hundreds of so-called perversion files.
The most notorious event was the trial of Jerry Sandusky on charges that he abused young men and boys while an assistant coach for the Nittany Lions. Also facing judgment was the legendary Penn State football coach Joe Paterno, who failed to act on reports of the abuse. The university quietly removed a statue of Paterno from campus and Nike rechristened a childhood development center named after the coach. Penn State's storied football program was stripped of many football victories because of the school's improper handling of reports of Sandusky's abuse. Sandusky, who denied the charges throughout his trial, was sentenced to 442 years in prison.
Jerry Sandusky, a former assistant football coach at Penn State, was found guilty of sexually abusing young men. He not only ruined the lives of his victims, he also tarnished the storied university. (Aggie Kenny/AP Photo) 
Top News Stories: #8 Joran van der Sloot
On Jan. 13, the Dutch citizen Joran van der Sloot was sentenced to 28 years in prison after pleading guilty to the 2010 robbery and murder of Stephany Tatiana Flores Ramirez, a 21-year-old Peruvian woman he had met in Lima. Van der Sloot has been a suspect in the disappearance of Natalee Holloway in 2005 in Aruba.Joran van der Sloot was sentenced to 28 years in prison after pleading guilty to the 2010 murder of a 21-year-old Peruvian woman he met in Lima. He was a suspect in the disappearance of Natalee Holloway. (Karel Navarro/AP Photo)Top News Stories: #9 Connecticut school shootings
On Dec. 14, a spree shooting left 28 dead in the Connecticut town of Newtown.
America had already been roiled by eight rampages in 2012 among them the shootings at Oikos University in Oakland, Calif., (7 dead); the movie theater in Aurora, Colo., (12 dead); and the Sikh temple in Oak Creek, Wis., (6 dead). The horror in Newtown—which saw its last homicide in 1984—unfolded among its most vulnerable residents. The gunman, Adam Lanza, shot his mother, Nancy Lanza, in her bed. With his mother's guns—a Glock, a Sig Sauer and a semiautomatic .223 Bushmaster—Lanza then headed to Sandy Hook Elementary School, where his mother is said to have volunteered and where he had once briefly attended. There, he allegedly shot 20 children and six adults, then killed himself after police arrived. The investigation into his motives has surfaced questions about his mental capacity (Lanza was reportedly a genius diagnosed with Asperger syndrome) and his motives (rumors are surfacing about his mother's possible intention to move him elsewhere). Debate about gun control flared again, and President Barack Obama has appointed Vice President Joe Biden to look into the issue.
The more paramount concern in Newtown—and across the United States—was mourning the lost and honoring last heroic acts. The names and ages of Sandy Hook's dead: Charlotte Bacon (6), Daniel Barden (7), Rachel Davino (29), Olivia Engel (6), Josephine Gay (7), Ana M Marquez-Greene (6), Dylan Hockley (6), Dawn Hochsprung (47), Madeline F. Hsu (6), Catherine V. Hubbard (6), Chase Kowalski (7), Jesse Lewis (6), James Mattioli (6), Grace McDonnell (7), Anne Marie Murphy (52), Emilie Parker (6), Jack Pinto (6), Noah Pozner (6), Caroline Previdi (6), Jessica Rekos (6), Avielle Richman (6), Lauren Rousseau (30), Mary Sherlach (56), Victoria Soto (27), Benjamin Wheeler (6), Allison N Wyatt (6).
A sign set up in honor of the victims of the recent shooting in Sandy Hook Village in Newtown, Connecticut on December 18, 2012. (Reuters/Lucas Jackson) Top News Stories: #10 Miami cannibal attack
A series of bizarre killings, led by the so-called Miami cannibal attack on May 26, triggered an outbreak of searches such as "zombie apocalypse." The story of Ronald Poppo, a South Florida homeless man, generated lurid attention for days because his attacker, Rudy Eugene, was nude when he attacked Poppo by chewing off much of his face. A police officer shot and killed Eugene, and no motive has surfaced.
Speculation ran high that inexpensive synthetic drugs, or "bath salts," were involved, but an autopsy revealed that was not the case. Poppo shockingly survived and has even given interviews about his attack, telling a Miami TV station, "He just ripped me to ribbons."
A gruesome attack by Rudy Eugene (pictured, left) left homeless man Ronald Poppo (pictured, right) blind and missing pieces of his face. Eugene was eventually shot and killed by a police officer. The attack appeared random. (Miami-Dade Police Dept./AP Photo)

9 killed, more than 2 dozen hurt when charter tour bus veers off icy highway in eastern Oregon

Emergency personnel respond to the scene of a multiple-fatality accident where a tour bus careened through a guardrail along an icy highway and several hundred feet down a steep embankment, authorities said, Sunday, Dec. 30, 2012 about 15 miles east of Pendleton, Ore. The charter bus carrying about 40 people lost control around 10:30 a.m. on the snow- and ice-covered lanes of Interstate 84, according to the Oregon State Police. (AP Photo/East Oregonian, Tim Trainor)PENDLETON, Ore. - RCMP in British Columbia were asked Sunday to help notify the relatives of people on a Vancouver-bound tour bus that crashed in Oregon Sunday morning, killing nine people.
Police were asked to notify relatives in the Vancouver-area, said RCMP Sgt. Peter Thiessen. "Oregon state police has requested our assistance in regards to that tragic crash in their jurisdiction and requested that we assist in some of the next of kin notifications that may need to be done here in the Lower Mainland or even outside the Lower Mainland," said Thiessen in an interview.
"So as we do them, those notifications, we will be supporting those families that are affected and will be providing information back to the Oregon State Police in regards to those next of kin notifications." Thiessen declined to answer questions about the nationalities of the victims.
Police say the tour bus was owned by a Vancouver company called Mi Joo Tour & Travel and had been headed to Vancouver from Las Vegas with 40 people on board.
It lost control around 10:30 a.m. on snow- and ice-covered lanes of Interstate 84 in eastern Oregon. Oregon State Police said it crashed through a guardrail and plunged about 30 metres down a steep embankment. The bus landed upright at the bottom of the snowy slope, with little or no debris visible around the crash site.
More than a dozen rescue workers descended the hill and used ropes to help retrieve people from the wreckage in freezing weather. The bus driver was among the survivors, but had not yet spoken to police because of the severity of the injuries the driver had suffered.
St. Anthony Hospital in Pendleton treated 26 people from the accident, said hospital spokesman Larry Blanc. Five of those treated at St. Anthony were transported to other facilities. Blanc did not elaborate on the nature of the injuries but told the Oregonian that the hospital brought in additional staff to handle the rush of patients and did a lot of X-ray imaging.
Lt. Greg Hastings said the bus crashed along the west end of the Blue Mountains, and west of an area called Deadman Pass. The area is so dangerous the state transportation department published specific warnings for truck drivers, advising it had "some of the most changeable and severe weather conditions in the Northwest" and can lead to slick conditions and poor visibility. The East Oregonian said it spoke with two South Korean passengers, ages 16 and 17. Both said through a translator that they were seated near the rear of the bus when it swerved a few times, hit the guardrail and flipped. They described breaking glass and seeing passengers pinned by their seats as the bus slid down the hill. Both said that they feared for their lives.
The paper said that the teens, one of whom injured a knee and the other suffered a broken collarbone, were staying at a hotel arranged by the Red Cross.
I-84 is a major east-west highway through Oregon that follows the Columbia River Gorge.
A bus safety website run by the U.S. Department of Transportation said Mi Joo Tour & Travel has six buses, none of which have been involved in any accidents in at least the past two years. The bus crash was the second fatal accident on the same highway in Oregon on Sunday. A 69-year-old man died in a rollover accident about 30 miles west of the area where the bus crashed.
A spokesman for the American Bus Association said buses carry more than 700 million passengers a year in the United States. "The industry as a whole is a very safe industry," said Dan Ronan of the Washington, D.C.,-based group. "There are only a handful of accidents every year. Comparatively speaking, we're the safest form of surface transportation."
The bus crash comes more than two months after another chartered tour bus in October veered off a highway in northern Arizona, killing the driver and injuring dozens of passengers who were mostly tourists from Asia and Europe. Authorities say the driver likely had a medical episode.

AP IMPACT: Al-Qaida carves out own country in Mali

FILE - In this Sept. 16, 2012 file photo, fighters from Islamist group Ansar Dine leave after performing a public amputation, severing the hand of a young man found guilty of stealing rice, in Timbuktu, Mali. In recent months, al-Qaida and its allies have taken advantage of political instability within Mali to push out of their hiding place and into the towns, taking over an enormous territory which they are using to stock arms, train forces and prepare for global jihad. And as 2012 draws to a close and the world hesitates, delaying a military intervention, the extremists who seized control of the area earlier this year are preparing for a war they boast will be worse than the decade-old struggle in Afghanistan. (AP Photo/File)

MOPTI, Mali (AP) — Deep inside caves, in remote desert bases, in the escarpments and cliff faces of northern Mali, Islamic fighters are burrowing into the earth, erecting a formidable set of defenses to protect what has essentially become al-Qaida's new country.
They have used the bulldozers, earth movers and Caterpillar machines left behind by fleeing construction crews to dig what residents and local officials describe as an elaborate network of tunnels, trenches, shafts and ramparts. In just one case, inside a cave large enough to drive trucks into, they have stored up to 100 drums of gasoline, guaranteeing their fuel supply in the face of a foreign intervention, according to experts.
Northern Mali is now the biggest territory held by al-Qaida and its allies. And as the world hesitates, delaying a military intervention, the extremists who seized control of the area earlier this year are preparing for a war they boast will be worse than the decade-old struggle in Afghanistan. "Al-Qaida never owned Afghanistan," said former United Nations diplomat Robert Fowler, a Canadian kidnapped and held for 130 days by al-Qaida's local chapter, whose fighters now control the main cities in the north. "They do own northern Mali." Al-Qaida's affiliate in Africa has been a shadowy presence for years in the forests and deserts of Mali, a country hobbled by poverty and a relentless cycle of hunger. In recent months, the terror syndicate and its allies have taken advantage of political instability within the country to push out of their hiding place and into the towns, taking over an enormous territory which they are using to stock arms, train forces and prepare for global jihad.
The catalyst for the Islamic fighters was a military coup nine months ago that transformed Mali from a once-stable nation to the failed state it is today. On March 21, disgruntled soldiers invaded the presidential palace. The fall of the nation's democratically elected government at the hands of junior officers destroyed the military's command-and-control structure, creating the vacuum which allowed a mix of rebel groups to move in.
With no clear instructions from their higher-ups, the humiliated soldiers left to defend those towns tore off their uniforms, piled into trucks and beat a retreat as far as Mopti, roughly in the center of Mali. They abandoned everything north of this town to the advancing rebels, handing them an area that stretches over more than 620,000 square kilometers (240,000 square miles). It's a territory larger than Texas or France — and it's almost exactly the size of Afghanistan.
Turbaned fighters now control all the major towns in the north, carrying out amputations in public squares like the Taliban did. Just as in Afghanistan, they are flogging women for not covering up. Since taking control of Timbuktu, they have destroyed seven of the 16 mausoleums listed as world heritage sites. The area under their rule is mostly desert and sparsely populated, but analysts say that due to its size and the hostile nature of the terrain, rooting out the extremists here could prove even more difficult than it did in Afghanistan. Mali's former president has acknowledged, diplomatic cables show, that the country cannot patrol a frontier twice the length of the border between the United States and Mexico.
Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, known as AQIM, operates not just in Mali, but in a corridor along much of the northern Sahel. This 7,000-kilometer (4,300-mile) long ribbon of land runs across the widest part of Africa, and includes sections of Mauritania, Niger, Algeria, Libya, Burkina Faso and Chad. "One could come up with a conceivable containment strategy for the Swat Valley," said Africa expert Peter Pham, an adviser to the U.S. military's African command center, referring to the region of Pakistan where the Pakistan Taliban have been based. "There's no containment strategy for the Sahel, which runs from the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea."
Earlier this year, the 15 nations in West Africa, including Mali, agreed on a proposal for the military to take back the north, and sought backing from the United Nations. Earlier this month, the Security Council authorized the intervention but imposed certain conditions, including training Mali's military, which is accused of serious human rights abuses since the coup. Diplomats say the intervention will likely not happen before September of 2013. In the meantime, the Islamists are getting ready, according to elected officials and residents in Kidal, Timbuktu and Gao, including a day laborer hired by al-Qaida's local chapter to clear rocks and debris for one of their defenses. They spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear for their safety at the hands of the Islamists, who have previously accused those who speak to reporters of espionage.
The al-Qaida affiliate, which became part of the terror network in 2006, is one of three Islamist groups in northern Mali. The others are the Movement for the Unity and Jihad in West Africa, or MUJAO, based in Gao, and Ansar Dine, based in Kidal. Analysts agree that there is considerable overlap between the groups, and that all three can be considered sympathizers, even extensions, of al-Qaida.
The Islamic fighters have stolen equipment from construction companies, including more than $11 million worth from a French company called SOGEA-SATOM, according to Elie Arama, who works with the European Development Fund. The company had been contracted to build a European Union-financed highway in the north between Timbuktu and the village of Goma Coura. An employee of SOGEA-SATOM in Bamako declined to comment. The official from Kidal said his constituents have reported seeing Islamic fighters with construction equipment riding in convoys behind 4-by-4 trucks draped with their signature black flag. His contacts among the fighters, including friends from secondary school, have told him they have created two bases, around 200 to 300 kilometers (120 and 180 miles) north of Kidal, in the austere, rocky desert.
The first base is occupied by al-Qaida's local fighters in the hills of Teghergharte, a region the official compared to Afghanistan's Tora Bora.
"The Islamists have dug tunnels, made roads, they've brought in generators, and solar panels in order to have electricity," he said. "They live inside the rocks."
Still further north, near Boghassa, is the second base, created by fighters from Ansar Dine. They too have used seized explosives, bulldozers and sledgehammers to make passages in the hills, he said.
In addition to creating defenses, the fighters are amassing supplies, experts said. A local who was taken by Islamists into a cave in the region of Kidal described an enormous room, where several cars were parked. Along the walls, he counted up to 100 barrels of gasoline, according to the man's testimony to New York-based Human Rights Watch.
In Timbuktu, the fighters are becoming more entrenched with each passing day, warned Mayor Ousmane Halle. Earlier in the year, he said, the Islamists left his city in a hurry after France called for an imminent military intervention. They returned when the U.N. released a report arguing for a more cautious approach.
"At first you could see that they were anxious," said Halle by telephone. "The more the date is pushed back, the more reinforcements they are able to get, the more prepared they become."
In the regional capital of Gao, a young man told The Associated Press that he and several others were offered 10,000 francs a day by al-Qaida's local commanders (around $20), a rate several times the normal wage, to clear rocks and debris, and dig trenches. The youth said he saw Caterpillars and earth movers inside an Islamist camp at a former Malian military base 7 kilometers (4 miles) from Gao.
The fighters are piling mountains of sand from the ground along the dirt roads to force cars onto the pavement, where they have checkpoints everywhere, he said. In addition, they are modifying their all-terrain vehicles to mount them with arms.
"On the backs of their cars, it looks like they are mounting pipes," he said, describing a shape he thinks might be a rocket or missile launcher. "They are preparing themselves. Everyone is scared."
A university student from Gao confirmed seeing the modified cars. He said he also saw deep holes dug on the sides of the highway, possibly to give protection to fighters shooting at cars, along with cement barriers with small holes for guns.
In Gao, residents routinely see Moktar Belmoktar, the one-eyed emir of the al-Qaida-linked cell that grabbed Fowler in 2008. Belmoktar, a native Algerian, traveled to Afghanistan in the 1980s and trained in Osama bin Laden's camp in Jalalabad, according to research by the Jamestown Foundation. His lieutenant Oumar Ould Hamaha, whom Fowler identified as one of his captors, brushed off questions about the tunnels and caves but said the fighters are prepared.
"We consider this land our land. It's an Islamic territory," he said, reached by telephone in an undisclosed location. "Right now our field of operation is Mali. If they bomb us, we are going to hit back everywhere."
He added that the threat of military intervention has helped recruit new fighters, including from Western countries. In December, two U.S. citizens from Alabama were arrested on terrorism charges, accused of planning to fly to Morocco and travel by land to Mali to wage jihad, or holy war. Two French nationals have also been detained on suspicion of trying to travel to northern Mali to join the Islamists. Hamaha himself said he spent a month in France preaching his fundamentalist version of Islam in Parisian mosques after receiving a visa for all European Union countries in 2001.
Hamaha indicated the Islamists have inherited stores of Russian-made arms from former Malian army bases, as well as from the arsenal of toppled Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi, a claim that military experts have confirmed.
Those weapons include the SA-7 and SA-2 surface-to-air missiles, according to Hamaha, which can shoot down aircrafts. His claim could not be verified, but Rudolph Atallah, the former counterterrorism director for Africa in the Office of the Secretary of Defense, said it makes sense. "Gadhafi bought everything under the sun," said Atallah, a retired U.S. Air Force lieutenant colonel, who was a defense attache at the U.S. Embassy in Mali. "His weapons depots were packed with all kinds of stuff, so it's plausible that AQIM now has surface-to-air missiles."
Depending on the model, these missiles can range far enough to bring down planes used by ill-equipped African air forces, although not those used by U.S. and other Western forces, he said. There is significant disagreement in the international community on whether Western countries will carry out the planned bombardments.
The Islamists' recent advances draw on al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb's near decade of experience in Mali's northern desert, where Fowler and his fellow U.N. colleague were held captive for four months in 2008, an experience he recounts in his recent book, "A Season in Hell." Originally from Algeria, the fighters fled across the border into Mali in 2003, after kidnapping 32 European tourists. Over the next decade, they used the country's vast northern desert to hold French, Spanish, Swiss, German, British, Austrian, Italian and Canadian hostages, raising an estimated $89 million in ransom payments, according to Stratfor, a global intelligence company. During this time, they also established relationships with local clans, nurturing the ties that now protect them. Several commanders have taken local wives, and Hamaha, whose family is from Kidal, confirmed that Belmoktar is married to his niece.
Fowler described being driven for days by jihadists who knew Mali's featureless terrain by heart, navigating valleys of identical dunes with nothing more than the direction of the sun as their map. He saw them drive up to a thorn tree in the middle of nowhere to find barrels of diesel fuel. Elsewhere, he saw them dig a pit in the sand and bury a bag of boots, marking the spot on a GPS for future use. In his four-month-long captivity, Fowler never saw his captors refill at a gas station, or shop in a market. Yet they never ran out of gas. And although their diet was meager, they never ran out of food, a testament to the extensive supply network which they set up and are now refining and expanding.
Among the many challenges an invading army will face is the inhospitable terrain, Fowler said, which is so hot that at times "it was difficult to draw breath." A cable published by WikiLeaks from the U.S. Embassy in Bamako described how even the Malian troops deployed in the north before the coup could only work from 4 a.m. to 10 a.m., and spent the sunlight hours in the shade of their vehicles.
Yet Fowler said he saw al-Qaida fighters chant Quranic verses under the Sahara sun for hours, just one sign of their deep, ideological commitment.
"I have never seen a more focused group of young men," said Fowler, who now lives in Ottawa, Canada. "No one is sneaking off for R&R. They have left their wives and children behind. They believe they are on their way to paradise."

Musicians' Worst Stage Outfits Of 2012

Miley Cyrus did us fashion editors a solid by throwing in her worst outfit of the year in December, just in time to make the 2012 list. Performing at a concert called, no lie, "Christmas Creampies," the singer put together a look that really belonged on Amber Rose. Cyrus hit the stage with a barrage of sketchy pieces: an even shorter buzzcut, a barely-there halter top, a key chain-ish body necklace, high-waisted pants that zipped all the way down and around, and boots that looked an awful lot like the PETA-riling snakeskin ones Rihanna wore in August. But we have to admit, we’re kind of loving Miley’s drastic change in the past few months. She keeps us on our toes! 
Miley Cyrus 
I know, we're confused too. Rihanna seemed to raid Kanye West's closet for her Unapologetic record-release event and fan meet-and-greet in NYC. The pop star came dressed in what looked like an oversized leather shirt, matching shorts-almost-gauchos, a leather beanie, and ankle-strapped, pointy-toed heels. We certainly don't expect an apology for this questionable look, but hey, at least Rihanna was actually wearing clothes this time! 
Rihanna 
Demi Lovato's multifaceted disaster from July 2012's Teen Choice Awards could've been avoided if she had nixed a one or two of her ensemble's clashing materials and patterns. She also should've saved that hyper-extended ponytail for a fishing trip; the singer and "X Factor" judge looked like she was catching bass instead of exuding class!
Demi Lovato 
Nicki Minaj’s style has always been a mess for success—like Lady Gaga, we’ve come to expect no less than outrageous from Her Minajesty. But her look for "The Tonight Show" last July just seemed flat-out lazy. The star wore an ill-advised nude look adorned with doilies and a top that just Did. Not. Fit. Look how far those pasties were sticking out! And on national television! Plus the peacock feathers that looked just thrown on last minute? No girl, just no. 
Nicki Minaj  
She may be the queen of pop, but Her Madgesty isn't immune to a terrible outfit. Madonna surprised Avicii's audience at the Ultra Music Festival in March with a little speech, a new remix, and a completely thrown-together ensemble. The off-duty cheerleader look was so wrong for the 53-year-old Material Girl, who certainly would’ve benefited from more material on her posterior. But then again, she's Madonna, and she pretty much gets a free pass for any and all shenanigans. World peace! *mic drop.Madonna   
How can someone be so poorly dressed when wearing barely anything at all? Look to Katy Perry's MuchMusic Awards performance costume from this past June. Shedding a tattered Les Mis-ish cloak to reveal a strategically bedazzled nude bodysuit, the singer seemed fine performing in the borderline NSFW look. But when it came time to accept an award in the same outfit, on the same stage, in front of the same people, Katy suddenly got bashful. Think it through, honey! Katy PerryKe$ha has a permanently reserved spot on Worst-Dressed lists, because no one does mess like Ke$h. It’s kind of her hook, right? While her red-carpet game has been looking pretty clean this year, her performance looks are as dubious as ever. Her ensemble from the American Music Awards in November was a hot glue-gunned disaster paired with long, messy, feather-adorned braids, resulting in a look that resembled a kindergarten Thanksgiving centerpiece. And the worst part? She wore the same outfit a month later for her Jingle Ball performance! 
Kesha
Bonus round! These outfit may not have been worn onstage, but for Lady Gaga, the world is a stage—a huge, confusing, terrifying stage. Gaga’s performance looks in 2012 were actually pretty snooze-worthy (Latex dresses? Yawn. Another meat outfit? Zzz...), but she had some real doozies at the street level. The singer was seen in NYC wearing what looked like a gold bondage birdcage on her head while leaving a hotel in December. A few months earlier, Gaga was seen wearing an utterly unexplainable Flat Stanley/Candyland look while leaving her hotel in Paris. Apparently the walk from a hotel lobby to a chauffeured car is her new runway! 
Lady Gaga

Torii Hunter: Having an openly gay teammate would ‘be difficult and uncomfortable’


Citing his religious upbringing, Detroit Tigers slugger Torii Hunter told the Los Angeles Times that having an openly homosexual teammate would be tough to deal with. And it would be a divisive issue for any Major League Baseball team.
Quoted by reporter Kevin Baxter of the Times in his Sunday story "In pro sports, gay athletes still feel unwelcome"  Hunter indicated he would not or could not be supportive of a teammate with a different sexual orientation than his own:
... Hunter, among baseball's most thoughtful and intelligent players, isn't kidding when he says an "out" teammate could divide a team.
"For me, as a Christian … I will be uncomfortable because in all my teachings and all my learning, biblically, it's not right," he says. "It will be difficult and uncomfortable."
Kudos to Hunter for his honesty. But he needs to realize a few things.

One, after playing nearly 2,000 major league games, Hunter probably has had at least one gay teammate already. Two, when has the sexual orientation of any teammate (assuming they've all been straight) mattered in how many games a team has won? Did the Tigers get to the World Series in 2012 because Justin Verlander is in a relationship with Kate Upton? How would it matter if Verlander dated someone named Bob Upton?
Three, using Christianity to hide behind bigotry is totally unfair to Christians who don't consider being gay "not right." And even a literal, so-called "fundamental" reading of the Bible requires some interpretation. People believe what they want to believe. Saying you don't like gays because you also say you're Christian just isn't good enough.
Hunter might be right about the issue being divisive. A major league clubhouse can very much be a boys club, overflowing with testosterone and full of jocular "humor" that might threaten a gay person. But ballplayers aren't dumb. As soon as they realize a gay teammate can hit a home run just like a straight one can, they'll ignore whatever details they might find disagreeable. They might even come to like or love the teammate. And if Hunter is as devoted to the Bible as he says, he might find reading material in there about that, too.

Five New Year’s dating resolutions

Five New Year’s dating resolutions
Ah, the New Year. It reeks of opportunity, doesn’t it? This year, I’ll get in shape. I’ll call my mother more often. Heck, maybe I’ll actually take a vacation, you say to yourself. And what are you planning to do this year about finding the love you want?
If a relationship’s on your list of things to do in the next 12 months, then these resolutions should provide some inspiration while you get busy crafting your own:
Resolution #1: Start living in the future
“Stop basing the potential relationship of your future to your relationships of the past,” says Carole Brody Fleet, author of Widows Wear Stilettos. “We have all suffered our fair share of losers, liars, bad matches, and so on. So, resolve to laugh and let them go. Open your mind to the possibilities of your future and don’t automatically condemn someone new based on your past experiences.”
How to get started: Write the names of any painful exes down on strips of paper and burn them on New Year’s Eve. It’s a powerful (and harmless) gesture that can help you start off the new year with a clean slate emotionally.
Resolution #2: End unhealthy relationships, platonic and otherwise
If you’re too emotionally drained from hanging out with toxic friends, or mired in a relationship that’s going nowhere, resolve to get yourself out of them as soon as possible. That’s the plan Charlotte Millot of Gotham, NY chose for herself this year: “I have resolved to end any relationships that are not healthy, supportive, or functional,” she says. She also resolves to stop looking for The One. Wait, what? “The relationships that have been the most meaningful were not the ones that I found,” Charlotte explains. “They just sort of happened. I usually tend to be living my life, enjoying myself... and then one day, I get hit over the head by someone I simply have to be with, who also has to be with me. Our hearts do the dance, and we both take it from there.”
How to get started: Put the focus on doing anything and everything to make yourself happy — and busy — starting on January 1. Take that photography class you’ve been thinking about, play with your pooch at the nearby dog park every Sunday, or join a volunteer group and get to know your neighbors while doing things that benefit your community together. Just set a schedule that includes activities you normally don’t do, and stick to it.
Resolution #3: Get back in the dating game
This one seems obvious, but it bears repeating. If you’re suffering from a broken heart, the best way to mend it is to get out there and date other people. That’s what MaryAnn Lowry is doing — which is no small feat after the end of her 31-year marriage. “I had my last official date in 1975. I never forgot how to ride a bike, so using hypothetical reasoning, it can be assumed that I didn’t forget how to behave on a date and earn a nice kiss on the lips by the end of the evening,” says MaryAnn.
How to get started: If it’s been decades since you handed anyone your number, asking friends to set you up with someone is one way to ease yourself back into the dating pool while avoiding the bars and clubs. However, if it’s a particularly toxic ex you’re hung up on, sharing your woes with a therapist might help speed the healing process before you start dating someone new. Whichever route you choose to take, be sure to avoid your usual haunts; pick places you’ve never been to before when arranging to meet dates for the first time; not only will it help you keep your private haunts sacred, it will also reduce your chances of running into a former flame. And if you’re suddenly single in midlife, take heart: According to current U.S. Census data, one-third of all adults aged 46-59 were single in 2010; you have more contemporaries out there to date now than you might have had in your 20s and 30s.
Resolution #4: Go out more often, and where other singles tend to gather
You’re not going to meet your dream date sitting at home — cute UPS carriers and pizza-delivery types aside. So, make it a priority to go where the single men and women are and start socializing with them. “I’m resolving to go out with my friends during the week more, so we can maybe meet some people we wouldn’t see out on the weekend,” says Davie Alexander of Chicago, IL.
How to get started: Option 1: Sign up for online dating and get networked with millions of other single people you wouldn’t otherwise meet. Option 2: Go out and sit at a restaurant patio or cafe. The wait staff or barista will help keep you company — and, if you ask, he or she might introduce you to other single patrons, too. One more idea to consider: Join a friendly local sports league or sign up for a singles-only tour or trip through your local travel agency (websites like bestsingletravel.com even group experiences by age range and interest type, if you’re not sure where to look).
Resolution #5: Ditch the negative self-talk and deadline pressure around meeting The One
If this isn’t your first time ringing in the New Year single, you might be getting a little panicky about finding love sooner rather than later. “It’s so easy to feed into these self-destructive patterns, but it affords us an opportunity for self-reflection, introspection, and getting in touch with ourselves in a real way,” says Doree Lewak, author of The Panic Years. “Give yourself a break and ease up on yourself. It’s bad enough when we have to contend with external pressures – to marry, to bring that special someone home to mom and dad for the holidays – but to add internal pressure is downright cruel. The less we think (and obsess) about our marriage timeline, the more we’ll let our relationships breathe naturally. And only then can we enable ourselves and our relationships to progress in a real way.”
How to get started: Schedule time for a workout before heading out to meet potential dates (and if you don’t exercise regularly now, consider making it a permanent addition to your weekly routine). New research shows that adding just a few extra minutes to your workout or hitting the gym a bit harder than usual can improve your mood, self-esteem, and ability to deal with stressful social events, so finding time for exercise is a must.
Now that you’ve read these resolutions, it’s time to make some of your own. Do it now and get ready for love in the upcoming year!
Margot Carmichael Lester is a North Carolina-based freelance writer whose work also appears in Go magazine.