Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Kids' Choice Awards 2015: Jennifer Hudson and Iggy Azalea Perform "Trouble ...



Iggy Azalea and Jennifer Hudson took the stage at the Inglewood Forum during the Kids' Choice Awards to perform their new hit, "Trouble."

Azalea strutted around the stage dressed in a yellow inmate jumpsuit, only to be arrested by "Officer Hudson" in a cop outfit and thrown in a bright pink and yellow prison onstage. Hudson locked up Azalea with the help of her fellow female officers, who doubled as backup dancers.

The Australian rapper is nominated for a KCA for favorite new artist.

"Trouble" premiered in late February as a part of the reissue of Azalea's 2014 debut studio album, The New Classic.

Nick Jonas hosts the 28th annual Kids' Choice Awards, which is being broadcast live from the Forum in Inglewood, Calif.

Source: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/kids-choice-awards-2015-jennifer-785077



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Monday, March 30, 2015

Cricket a gentleman's game? No ways, not in South Africa



If it is true that quotas played a part in the selection of South Africa's team to play in their losing semi-final against New Zealand at the Cricket World Cup, Cricket SA board members should bow their heads in shame.

They should also look at themselves in a mirror and ask themselves this question: Are you stupid?

Does transformation come before even a prize such as the World Cup title? Is a World Cup semi-final the place and time to regurgitate the bitterness of the past by going back to a system that should have been scrapped 10 years into the new democracy?

It is simply disgusting to think Chris Nenzani, Norman Arendse and their fellow board members might have perpetrated something like this.

The great Nelson Mandela endorsed the 1995 Springbok rugby team even though only one player of colour was in the World Cup winning lineup -- Chester Williams.

He also called for the springbok emblem to be retained. He knew how sporting success could build a nation.

Now that he has gone, these mealy mouthed little men continue to insult his legacy by allegedly doing repulsive things like this.

Were any of them there when the Springboks won the Rugby World Cup in 1995? Did any of them see the celebrations, the explosion of joy, in the streets around Ellis Park?

The win was celebrated by white, coloured, Indian and black alike, all of them overjoyed that their new democracy had achieved something so great.

I suspect they weren't there. I suspect that some of them even resented that win, because it set back their bitter campaigns.

All the cricketers are under contract. Their livelihood is cricket. Most of them have little else to turn to if they are banned from cricket.

So they can hardly be blamed for the conspiracy of silence following the revelations about the cricket semi-final in Auckland.

AB won't talk, coach Russell Domingo won't talk, it's unlikely Vernon Philander will talk, given that he is the centre of this storm of outrage. Will Kyle Abbott, the man who should have played in Philander's place talk?

It's doubtful. That team is tight. The players support and respect each other. Not one of them would want to do anything to undermine a team-mate.

So, who, apart from the secret sources named in the original story by our cricket writer, Telford Vice, will talk?

The only man who could possibly shed light on this is the convener of the cricket selection committee, Andrew Hudson, one of the most decent gentlemanly players who ever represented South Africa-- in fact, so decent, that getting involved in this kind of thing must leave him appalled -- and probably way out of his depth.

The Hudson we have known isn't this devious, he isn't this deceitful. He would want to play with a straight bat and, if he was ordered to play the unfit, out-of-form Philander, who went for 17 runs in his first over, it must have broken his heart.

Or has being part of cricket's highly politicised hierarchy contaminated him; has he been convinced that the wrong way is the right way?

The next few weeks are likely to be revealing. If he resigns, we will know that he has been unable to reconcile his conscience with the things he might have been forced to do.

If he doesn't, he is the one who will have to tell us: was Philander, who had a dreadful World Cup, a political plant or not.

If there was political intervention, then Cricket SA's radicals - politicians who shouldn't be in sport - will have to take responsibility for sabotaging the process of nation-building that such a big sporting triumph would further -- and, the very thing this country needs more than anything else.

As an afterthought, if a wildly over-extravagant, over-publicised and over dramatised inquiry had to be held into Hansie Cronje's match-fixing antics, then there should be an equally well publicised, judicial inquiry into these charges of political intervention because if there was, it would be every bit as dishonest as Cronje's actions were. Perhaps even more so.

Cricket a gentleman's game? No way; not in South Africa.

Source: http://www.timeslive.co.za/sport/cricket/2015/03/30/cricket-a-gentleman-s-game-no-ways-not-in-south-africa



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Comcast Announces 21 Executive Promotions



Both Comcast Cable and Comcast Corp. announced executive promotions across a number of departments Monday (March 30).

A total of 21 executives received new job titles. Comcast Cable's promotions were at the senior vice president and executive vice president levels in its customer experience, consumer services group, technology and product, enterprise and platform services, government affairs, sales and marketing, and legal departments. Comcast Corp.'s, meanwhile, were at the vice president level in its administration, federal government affairs, legal and strategic intellectual property departments and its assurance and advisory team.

The No. 1 U.S. MSO elevated 13 executives.

Charlie Herrin has been named EVP of customer experience. He most recently led the design team behind the X1 Platform.

Within the consumer services group, Matthew Strauss has been promoted to EVP and general manager, Video Services; and Daniel Herscovici has risen to SVP and GM, Xfinity Home. Strauss previously led Comcast's multiplatform video strategy and oversaw growth in transactional and online video revenue. Herscovici

In Comcast Cable's technology and product, Jan Hofmeyr has been promoted to SVP, X1 Platform; Bridget Kimball has been named SVP, software development & engineering; and Rick Rioboli has become SVP, Comcast Metadata Products and Search Services (CoMPASS). The engineering and platform services group elevated Sherita T. Ceasar to SVP, national video deployment engineering.

In the government affairs department, Klayton Fennell and Rick Smotkin were each elevated to SVP, while Michael Brady was promoted to SVP, state regulatory affairs.

Clem Cheng has been promoted to SVP of human resources for the sales and marketing group; and Kathryn Koles and David Marcus have each been named SVP and deputy general counsel within the legal department.

On the corporate side, Comcast promoted eight people to vice president.

Deborah Buhles was promoted to VP, administration, reporting to administration SVP Karen Buchholz.

Catherine Gray and Anthony DeShan were each elevated to VP on the Comcast assurance and advisory team, reporting to Cynthia Hook, SVP, general auditor and global risk officer.

Juan Otero has risen to VP, federal government affairs, reporting to Melissa Maxfield, SVP.

In the corporate legal department, Matthew Fradin and Derek Squire have each been promoted to VP and senior deputy general counsel, reporting to Marc Rockford, who holds the same position. Brian Rankin has become a VP and senior deputy general counsel reporting to Lynn Charytan, SVP of legal regulatory affairs and senior deputy general counsel.

Mark Dellinger was promoted to VP, strategic intellectual property, reporting to James Finnegan, SVP of the group.

Source: http://www.multichannel.com/news/cable-operators/comcast-announces-21-executive-promotions/389286



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Gonzaga vs. Duke 2015 results: 3 things we learned from Blue Devils' shutdown ...



Duke held Gonzaga without a field goal in the final 6:40 of play on Sunday in Houston.

Duke was looking for its 12th Final Four berth. Gonzaga was looking for its first.

On Sunday in Houston, history repeated itself at NRG Stadium in the South Regional final. No. 1 Duke locked down the Bulldogs on defense and made free throws and clutch shots down the stretch to earn a 66-52 win over No. 2 Gonzaga, along with the last Final Four berth awarded in the 2015 NCAA Tournament.

Talented freshmen carried the day for Duke: Matt Jones (16 points, 4-for-7 from three) fired away from deep, Justise Winslow (16 points) mixed threes and free throws, and Tyus Jones contributed 15 points and six assists. That production made up from another relatively quiet game from Jahlil Okafor, who finished with just nine points and seven rebounds.

But it was defense that made the difference down the stretch for the Blue Devils, who held Gonzaga without a field goal for the final 6:40 of play, building a double-digit lead in the process. Bulldogs big men Przemek Karnowski and Domantas Sabonis combined for just 13 points, and while Kentucky transfer Kyle Wiltjer's 16 points led Gonzaga, only one other Zag, Byron Wesley, scored in double figures.

The victory gives Duke and Mike Krzyzewski 12 Final Four appearances, tying Coach K with John Wooden for the most Final Four appearances by a coach in college basketball history.

Here are three things we learned from Duke's latest Elite Eight win under Krzyzewski.

1. Duke can be great without much from Okafor

In 40 minutes against Gonzaga, Duke committed just three turnovers one in the first half (with 1:44 left on the clock), and two in the second, one of them deliberate. Gonzaga had 11.

That care taken with the ball helped make up for a relatively mortal day by Okafor, who struggled to find a rhythm against Gonzaga's bigs, and underwhelming shooting inside the arc, where the Blue Devils made only slightly more than a third of their shots. Duke took 56 shots to Gonzaga's 50, and 19 free throws to the Zags' nine; keeping the ball for long enough to take shots and get fouled was the main difference there.

2. Duke is immune to shooting struggles in Houston

The NCAA Tournament has made three trips to the Houston Texans' stadium for regional and Final Four play since 2010. The cavernous venue, and the use of huge black curtains to cover seats not sold for those games, have wreaked havoc on shooting percentages most notably in the 2011 NCAA Tournament final, a game in which UConn shot 34.5 percent from the field,nearly doubling Butler's wretched 18.8 percent shooting on the night.

But Duke? Duke has been just fine in Houston.

In four NCAA Tournament games in what was Reliant Stadium in 2010 and is NRG Stadium now, Duke has made 28-of-66 threes, and shot better than 40 percent from distance in three of four tries, including an 8-for-19 performance on Sunday. 10 other teams have had a combined 14 chances to shoot in Houston, and just one of those three-point performances, Baylor's 8-for-17 night against Saint Mary's in 2010, topped the 40 percent mark.

That magic the Blue Devils have at this venue has helped make them a perfect 4-0 in games in Houston since 2010, propelling them to two Final Fours.

3. Gonzaga just didn't have enough

Gonzaga had a chance to tie the game with just under five minutes to play on a Wiltjer layup, but he missed. From that point on, Duke would outscore the Zags 13-1.

And it wasn't shooting that got the Blue Devils those points: Duke made just two field goals in the final 6:40, while Gonzaga made none. But Duke, and especially Winslow, was able to drive on Gonzaga to create scoring opportunities at the line, while Gonzaga simply couldn't do the same with a team lacking in players capable of breaking down a defense off the dribble.

Source: http://www.sbnation.com/2015/3/29/8309351/duke-gonzaga-2015-final-score-ncaa-tournament-elite-eight-results



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Kids' Choice Awards 2015: Jennifer Hudson and Iggy Azalea Perform 'Trouble ...



Iggy Azalea and Jennifer Hudson took the stage at the Inglewood Forum during the Kids' Choice Awards to perform their new hit, "Trouble."

Azalea strutted around the stage dressed in a yellow inmate jumpsuit, only to be arrested by "Officer Hudson" in a cop outfit and thrown in a bright pink and yellow prison onstage. Hudson locked up Azalea with the help of her fellow female officers that served as her background dancers.

The Australian rapper is nominated for a KCA for Favorite New Artist.

"Trouble" premiered in late February, as a part of the reissue of Azalea's 2014 debut studio album, The New Classic.

Nick Jonas hosts the 28th annual Kids' Choice Awards, which is being broadcast live from the Forum.

Source: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/kids-choice-awards-2015-jennifer-785077



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Sunday, March 29, 2015

We #WearYellowForSeth



SAN DIEGO - A 5-year-old British boy born with Severe Combined Immunodeficiency, which has forced him to live most of his life in a hospital, asked the world to wear yellow on Friday, March 27.

And folks did not disappoint.

Seth Lane's request was simple -- wear yellow, take a picture of yourself and then post it on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram with the hashtag #WearYellowForSeth.

10News helped honor his wish -- we all wore yellow... did you?

My son and I #wearyellowforseth! Are you? Sending positive thoughts across the miles! #10News #SanDiegocares pic.twitter.com/Ehfeiy57mg

Luella Mata (@editsweet26) March 27, 2015

We #wearyellowforseth #10News. Take a pic and show us your yellow! @10News @10NewsChen @10NewsMecija pic.twitter.com/pszFkoipQC

Cristin Severance (@10NewsSeverance) March 27, 2015

Wearing yellow for Seth and showing some #OregonDucks pride. #wearyellowforseth #10news pic.twitter.com/2ftZgTJMW5

Shannon Cheesman (@shannchs) March 27, 2015

I'm #wearyellowforseth today! Are you? Help make a brave little boy's day: http://t.co/H44I10ef6n pic.twitter.com/FN8dPY6B6P

Pat Brown (@10NewsPatBrown) March 27, 2015

Getting dressed? We invite you to #WearYellowForSeth Even socks will do it @10NewsJason ! @10News #WearItShareIt pic.twitter.com/APLYZGbpCc

Virginia Cha (@10NewsCha) March 27, 2015

Show support for a brave little boy facing a bone marrow transplant. Join the @10News team #wearyellowforseth pic.twitter.com/v846THiKsy

Marie Coronel (@10NewsCoronel) March 27, 2015

Source: http://www.10news.com/entertainment/around-the-web/bubble-boy-asks-the-world-to-wear-yellow



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Former neighbor describes Aaron Hernandez as 'unpleasant and unfriendly'



FALL RIVER Shortly after the two men moved into the two-bedroom apartment next door, Carol Martin Bailey detected a pungent smell in the hallway. She wasnt surprised the Franklin apartment complex where she lives is near woods and had attracted wild animals before.

Oh, the skunks must be back, Bailey recalled thinking to herself. But when she consulted with some of her younger neighbors, they rolled their eyes.

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Thats weed, they told the retired biology professor.

Bailey was called to the stand Thursday in the Bristol Superior Court murder case against former New England Patriots tight end Aaron Hernandez, who moved into the Franklin apartment complex in May 2013. There, he and his longtime friend, Ernest George Wallace, were often seen.

Bailey, who has lived in the brick housing complex since the 1970s, was their next-door neighbor until June 2013, when Hernandez and Wallace were arrested in the murder of Odin Lloyd, a 27-year-old semiprofessional football player, whose bullet-riddled body was found in an industrial yard in North Attleborough. Wallace and Carlos Ortiz, another Hernandez associate, will be tried separately for the June 17, 2013, killing. They have pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder.

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Live video of the murder trial

The trial of Hernandez has introduced jurors to stone-faced detectives, fingerprint analysts, and cellphone experts. On Thursday, jurors heard from a state trooper who said the rear tire of the Nissan Altima Hernandez drove that night matched a track left at the crime scene, and from a T-mobile representative who testified about the location of Lloyds cellphone.

Steven Senne/Pool

Massachusetts State Police Trooper Todd Girouard held a piece of film with an imprint of a tire track during Aaron Hernandezs trial Thursday.

Baileys testimony, which prosecutors used to show the relationship between Hernandez and Wallace, was an example of how far-reaching the case has become. She is one of about 300 people the prosecution has put on its witness list. Her testimony also gave a glimpse into Hernandezs days in the Franklin apartment, which he rented for $1,200 a month even though he shared a home in nearby North Attleborough with his longtime girlfriend. Prosecutors have said he wanted that apartment to conduct illegal activities like storing guns. The defense has tried to cast Hernandez as a young, fun-loving man with money to spare who partied at the apartment with friends and women.

On the stand, Bailey was restrained by Judge E. Susan Garsh on how much she could say. For example, she could not speculate about the source of the skunky smell.

In a telephone interview after her testimony, Bailey recalled meeting Wallace while she was reading in the courtyard of the complex.

He introduced himself as her new neighbor, George, she said, shook her hand, and told her he was moving in with his cousin, who was with the Patriots. The next day, she saw a tall, well-built man heading to the third-floor apartment. Despite the warm weather, he wore sweatpants and a hooded sweatshirt pulled tight around his face.

Steven Senne/Pool

Judge E. Susan Garsh prevented a witness from speculating about the source of a skunky smell coming from Aaron Hernandezs Franklin apartment.

I said, Hello, you must be my new neighbor. ... You must be Georges cousin, Bailey recalled. He just looked at me and grunted and went in. That was the most ever I got out of him a grunt.

Wallace, however, was solicitous and warm, she said. He often came over to ask for things such as an electrical cord or directions to places in town. When he saw her lugging groceries, he would rush to help. One day, Wallace asked if it would be OK if he placed an air freshener and scented sticks in the common hallway.

It did not help mask the smell of what her neighbors later said was marijuana, but Bailey did not complain.

Im a neighbor who tries to live and let live, she said.

Occasionally, when she passed by their door, Bailey would hear loud male voices yelling expletives and making crude remarks. They said nothing alarming, she said, just the kind of male talk she heard when she was in college and went by the mens locker room.

Residents in the complex, which is made up mostly of retired professionals like Bailey or young couples with children saving for their first house, recognized Hernandez but left him alone.

Around late June, Bailey stopped smelling the skunk-like odor, she said. Then, she saw on television that both her neighbors had been arrested.

I was particularly shocked about George because he had been so cordial, so friendly, so neighborly, she said. Aaron Hernandez had always been sort of unpleasant and unfriendly. That probably was just because he didnt want it to be known who he was. He didnt want a fan club.

Maria Cramer can be reached at mcramer@globe.com. Follow her on Twitter @globemcramer.

Source: http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2015/03/05/hernandez/ZaOSDyvEP9ZRAJRK73cPkL/story.html



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