Sunday, February 19, 2017

Winning Nature Photos Capture Triumph and Turmoil in the Animal Kingdom


Disney"s Animal Kingdom 2016 Tour and Overview | Walt Disney World Tour Video

Now in its 60th year, theWorld Press Photo contest highlights images that visually capture events of the prior year. And this year"s winners are no different, including refugees trying to cross the Mediterranean, children wounded by the war in Syria and Olympians pushing through the finish line.

Butthe images also depict triumph and turmoil in the animal world, where many of the winning selections show how humans come into conflict with naturewith plants and animals usually falling on the losing side of the equation.

The winner of the single image nature category, by Spanish photographer Francis Prez, depicts a sea turtle photographed near Tenerife in the Canary Islands wrapped up in afishing net. Despite many attempts tolimit the use of plastics, the troubles with marine debris have persistednot only wrapping around sea lifebut also poisoningthem.

A wild leopard takes a nightime stroll through Sanjay Gandhi National Park, a protected area in the northern part of Mumbai, India, in September 2016 (World Press Photo/Nayan Khanolkar)

the second place image also shows how animals navigate the human-mediated world. The shot, captured with a camera trap by Indian nature photographer Nayan Khanolkar shows a leopard hunting in the alleyways of a village in Sanjay Gandhi National Park, just on the edge of the huge metropolis of Mumbai.

Khanolkar, who has been doing wildlife photography for 20 years, strives to "tell the story of how wildlife is coexisting with city life," he says toVijay Singhl atThe Times of India. The shot capturesan area where humans commonly coexist with leopards, Khanolkar notes. But venturing deeper into the city, where fear of the creatures is high, is hazardous for leopards to prowl.

Monarch butterflies on the forest in El Rosario Butterfly Sanctuary, in Michoacn, Mexico, after strong snowstorm in March, 2016 (World Press Photo/Jaime Rojo)

The third place single image is by Mexican photographer Jamie Rojo depicts the forest floor covered in monarch butterflies that froze to death after an intense winter storm hit their wintering grounds in El Rosario Butterfly Sanctuary, in Michoacn, Mexico, west of Mexico City last March. The storm destroyed 133 acres of pine forests in the core wintering area for the butterflies, killing 6.2 million of the winged insects, about 7.4 percentof the 84 million butterflies that overwinter in Mexico, theAssociated Pressreported at the time. Climate change is a major threat to the butterflies, influencing their migration patterns and weather conditions at their overwintering grounds. That, along withillegal logging and pesticide useare the biggest threats to the species.

Brent Sirtons photographs of poaching and poachers in South Africa, which took the top prize in the nature stories categories, document another human-created threat to animals. On assignment forNational Geographiche took a series of images capturing the rhino-horn trade in south and eastern Africa. Sirton writes that while South Africa is has the largest reserve of rhinos in the world, a battle is taking place along the South Africa and Mozambique border. If an animal crossed into Mozambique, he explains, its life expectancy drops to less than 24 hours.

Sirtons images chronicle the carnage fromthe rhino-horn trade, including a freshly slaughtered black rhino left to rot at a watering hole and the recovery of Lulah, a one-month old black rhino who was attacked by hyenas after her mother was poached. Though she lost her ears, part of her nose and was injured in the legs by the attack, she was expected to recover.

Ye Ye, a 16-year-old giant panda, at a conservation center in Wolong Nature Reserve in China (World Press Photo/Ami Vitale, for National Geographic Magazine)

Not every featured image of human interactions with nature, however, isso negative. Ami Vitales second place story-telling entry chronicles the efforts to breed and return pandas to the wild. Also on assignment forNational Geographic,Vitale documents the techniques perfected by Chinese researchers in the past quarter century tohelp the iconic animals procreateand prepare them for life in the wild. Its a great success story, which resulted in the recent controversial decision todowngrade pandasfrom endangered to vulnerable status.

The third place winner in the story category actively tries to avoid any human interactions with wild animals. Hungarian photographer Bence Mt is known asthe invisible wildlife photographerbecause of the elaborate hidden blinds he constructs to get close to his subjects without their notice.

For his winning series of images of African animals ata watering hole at night,he spent 18 nights at the Mkuze Estate, KwaZulu-Natal, in South Africa, he tellsNational Geographic. Using a remote-control camera, he took about 15,000 images using a 40-second exposure, which capturesghostly images and blurs of his nighttime visitors, including fallow deer, elephants, water buffalo and hippos.

Like this article?SIGN UP for our newsletter

Source: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/see-winning-nature-photos-world-press-photo-competition-180962162/

Continue Reading ..

Missing: $1 million Powerball winner


13 Unbelievable Lottery Winners

Continuing a long-standing trend, millions of dollars worth of winning tickets for popular games like Powerball and Mega Millions went unclaimed during the fiscal year that ended June 30.(Photo: Bonnie Lutzewitz/Post-Crescent Media)Buy Photo

MADISON - Someone who bought a Powerball ticket worth $1 million has until Thursday to cash in.

The ticket was sold in Madison for the Aug. 6Powerball drawing. The ticket matched the first five numbers drawn, but not the Powerball. Still, the combination entitles the owner to $1 million, but the ticket holder needs to act quickly.

The winning numbers of the Aug. 6 drawing were20, 33, 36, 47 and 52 with a Powerball of 12. The Power Play number was 3.

RELATED:Winning lottery ticket set to expire in July

RELATED:Oops! $1M lottery jackpot goes unclaimed

"Once lottery numbers are drawn, winners have 180 days to claim their prize," said Casey Langan, Wisconsin Lottery spokesman.

The ticket owner must claim the prize by 4 p.m. Thursday atthe Wisconsin Lottery"s headquarters at 2135 Rimrock Road in Madison. The owner can also mail the ticket to the state lottery headquarters, but the letter must be postmarked before Friday.

The unclaimed ticket was sold at Kelley"s Market, also known as Aberg Avenue Mobil, at 2601 Shopko Drive in Madison.

"If the ticket goes unclaimed, then the $1 million prize is returned to all Wisconsinites in the form of property tax relief," Langan said in a release.

Arielle Hines:ahines@wausau.gannett.comor 715-845-0658; on Twitter@theariellehines.

Read or share this story: http://wdhne.ws/2jvso50

source: http://www.wausaudailyherald.com/story/news/2017/02/01/missing-1-million-powerball-winner/97335190/

Continue Reading ..

The NBA"s special tribute to Craig Sager showcased the league"s best values


Kevin Durant Announced As OKC"s Own" | Craig Sager Shootout For 500,000 $

After the 3-Point Contest, NBA All-Star Saturday night took an unexpected turn. Reggie Miller stepped into the middle of the court after Eric Gordons victory and began inviting players and celebrities alike to shoot three-pointers to support the Sager Strong Foundation.

Each made shot saw $10,000 donated to the cause. After that, Ernie Johnson asked Stephen Curry to make a shot from halfcourt to take the total amount from $130,000 to $500,000. (When he failed, Johnson called on craig sagers son to finish the job.)

It was a wonderful impromptu moment that exemplified why the NBA thrives beyond the on-court product. The league celebrates its people unabashedly, embracing their abilities and personalities like no other.

There are few better examples than Sager, both during his life and after his death. Sager was a light of his own, but he also symbolized the best of the NBA. He was tremendously professional at his craft, but he also managed to infuse some lightheartedness and style into a normally mundane job doing sideline interviews. The league as a whole the analysts, fans, players, and coaches embraced that combination and lauded it even after his death.

Its hard to imagine something like that 3-point shootout for Sagers charity happening anywhere else, at least not without charging the foundation for the airtime or some corporation secretly funding the competition.

Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images

This same attitude of paying tribute to the leagues personalities was on display during Kobe Bryants retirement season. The second he announced he would step away, the league as a whole made it a mission to show him love and appreciation for his contributions to the games culture.

Teams showed videos of him and gave gifts before games. Fans chanted his name in opposing arenas. Analysts took time to relive his greatest moments. His poor play that year was secondary, though his 60-point performance in his final game capped off the tribute perfectly.

The league bent itself for Kobes story rather than treating him as a worker in the long assembly line of workers. Rather than doing the bare minimum for a tribute, its constituents turned Bryants farewell into a league-wide, year-long event.

The same happened with Kevin Garnett and Tim Duncan (though to a lesser degree to acquiesce to his wishes). It will happen when players like Dirk Nowitzki and Manu Ginobili call it quits.

But the league also showcases the wide range of personalities and oddities in its current stars. Kawhi Leonards stoic nature is as beloved as Russell Westbrooks energetic approach. Westbrooks pre-game dance routine with Cameron Payne is glorified as part of the overall show.

The Warriors get to celebrate threes before they go in without fear of being buried under respectability. Damian Lillard received league-wide support for his rap album. Joel Embiids Twitter game isnt admonished as childish. Activism from players and coaches alike are encouraged. Pregame outfits even get their own SportsCenter spot.

The NBA isnt just diverse; it also tries to be inclusive in a productive manner. The league has people of different walks of life, but rather than accept that as a static fact, it provides a platform where those people can showcase their professional skills and what makes them special as individuals. Theres space for everyone, as long as their actions remain respectable.

The league knows that this is a strength and not a weakness. The differing personalities are an attraction because they appeal to a wider community that is just as diverse itself. Its easy to find an NBA player that relates to you. And when a league is willing to look at its players beyond their on-court performances, it opens a bigger world for marketing purposes.

The NBA has harnessed the simplest truth about sports and life: The people make the product, not the other way around. Its why the league isnt tough on the sharing of GIFs and videos through social media. Those are entry points into the show.

Photo by Jonathan Bachman/Getty Images

This, of course, is why the All-Star game was moved away from Charlotte in the first place. A company that celebrates the differences between people could not have a marquee event in a state thats passed legislation working against those ideals. And though Adam Silver wouldnt commit to future All-Star boycotts of states that have passed similar laws, he did say places like Texas, which has its own version of a bathroom bill on the table, are on notice.

An overall stance like that gives people like Gregg Popovich and Steve Kerr the support to speak out against Donald Trumps discriminatory executive orders. It allows players like LeBron James to protest police brutality. It gives players and teams the room to tweet, Snapchat, and share themselves as much as possible, with limits of course. It creates a world where expression of self is valued as much as ability.

The NBA isnt perfect. It still has to balance the freedom it grants with rules and regulations that prevents it from becoming counter-productive. The personalities must match the end product. It is still a company that has to keep profits first.

But relative to other sports leagues, its far ahead of the game. Before the festivities began on Saturday night, Silver answered a question about Trumps travel ban with the following line:

If you think about what the NBA stands for, it"s the very best all coming together to perform at the highest level, he said.

That is a straightforward truth, but it also does the NBA a disservice. Its not just that people come to perform at the highest level, but theyre able to do what they do best while also knowing that their personalities will be lionized rather than berated.

In such a world, an unscripted three-point competition to raise money for the Sager Foundation doesnt feel out of place. Its instead a perfect illustration of the NBAs belief that its people are worthwhile beyond their jobs.

Source: http://www.sbnation.com/2017/2/19/14661662/craig-sager-tribute-nba-tnt-adam-silver

Continue Reading ..

Selena Gomez Tormented By Mom: "You"re Going To h**l!"


Selena - Amor Prohibido

Troubled Selena Gomez has been slapped with a warning of biblical proportions by her holy roller mom Ditch the drink, drugs and dating or youll have h**l to pay!

But the pop wild child, 24, retaliated by blocking her mother, Mandy Teefey, from playing any role in her career!

As The National ENQUIRER has reported, the Texas-born Good for You singer has dabbled with a cocktail of dangerous drugs, such as Lunesta, Ambien, Klonopin and Xanax and been to rehab twice!

Selenas next spiral is going to be less concealed, and even harder to recover from. Shell get into harder drugs, a source exclusively told the enquirer.

selena Gomez: Pill-Popping Stars l**t For Brad Pitt

Her mom tried to stage a Come to Jesus talk, but Selena wasnt having it.

Mandy even got her record label to book studio time in Texas, but Selena stayed in L.A. and relapsed.

The struggling songbird, whos been diagnosed with lupus, has secretly hired a life coach to help her battle depression. But she hooked up with rapper The Weeknd, 26 whos confessed to using hard drugs to get by.

Selenas trying to focus on getting better, but the temptation to hit the clubs is too much to turn down, spilled a spy.

Source: http://www.nationalenquirer.com/celebrity/selena-gomez-tormented-mom-youre-going-h**l/

Continue Reading ..

NBA D-League Dunk Contest 2017 Live Stream: How to Watch Online


BEST DUNKS of the 2017 Verizon Slam Dunk Contest | 02.18.17

Troy Williams is one of six high-flyers at the 2017 D-League Dunk Contest. (Twitter)

Looking to watch a live stream of the 2017 D-League dunk contest? There are a couple of different ways to watch, even if you dont have a cable subscription.

The six dunkers will compete in the preliminary round on Saturday starting at 12:30 p.m. ET, then the final round will air on NBA TV during halftime of the D-League All-Star Game, which tips at 2 p.m. ET.

Heres a complete rundown of how to watch all the action online or on streaming devices:

2017 d-league dunk contest live stream: preliminary round

the preliminary round, starting at 12:30 p.m. ET, will be streamed via Facebook live. You can watch on your desktop via the NBA D Leagues Facebook, or you can watch on mobile and other streaming devices via the Facebook app.

2017 D-League Dunk Contest Live Stream: Final Round

The final round of the dunk contest will air on NBA TV during halftime of the D-League All-Star game (around 3 p.m. ET). Heres how to watch a stream:

Desktop

While NBA TV doesnt provide a live stream, you can watch NBA TV coverage via Sling TV, an online streaming service that provides access to select channels for a monthly fee. Heres how to sign up for a free 7-day trial:

1) Click here to go to the Sling website

2) Click on Watch Now 7 Days Free

3) Create an account

4) Select the channel package or packages you want. You can choose either base package (Sling Orange or Sling Blue), but make sure to include the Sports Extra add-on, which includes NBA TV

5) Enter your payment information. Sling Orange costs $20 per month, and Sling Blue costs $25 per month, while the Sports Extra add-on is $5, but if you cancel your subscription within seven days of signing up, you will not be charged

6) Download the app for your computer to start watching

Mobile & Streaming Devices

If you have a Sling TV subscription (read above to learn how to start a free trial), you can watch NBA TV on mobile and other compatible devices via the Sling TV app, which is free to download in the following locations:

App Store (or Apple TV)

Google Play Store

Amazon App Store (or Amazon Fire TV)

Roku

Xbox One

You can click here for a complete list of devices compatible with the Sling TV app.

Source: http://heavy.com/sports/2017/02/nba-d-league-dunk-contest-free-live-stream-2017-nba-tv-facebook-live-streaming-online-mobile/

Continue Reading ..

Leah Remini: "If I"m such a liar, why haven"t they sued my a - NZ Herald


Leah Remini on the Cult of Scientology | Real Time with Bill Maher (HBO)

Scientology says she"s a bitter ex-member, lying about a religion that no longer wanted her; who hangs with "deadbeats, admitted liars, self-admitted perjurers, wife beaters and worse".

A "washed-up" actor trying desperately to be "relevant".

Leah Remini is used to the attacks. She was done listening to the church long ago, reports News.com.au.

"If I"m such a liar, why haven"t they sued my a*s?" Ms Remini, who left the church in 2013 after three decades of "indoctrination" says of the attempts to discredit her.

Ms Remini, best known for her role in hit comedy King of Queens, has been lifting the lid on the controversial religion since she left: first with a tell-all book, and now with TV docu-series: Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath.

It features claims of physical, sexual and mental abuse, heartbreak and harassment from former Scientologists whose lives have been affected by the church"s practices, even after they left.

The show, currently airing in Australia, ignited fierce debate in the US. Scientology fought back with legal threats and a statement about Ms Remini.

The A&E Network, which first aired the show, devoted a section on its website to Scientology"s lengthy responses to each episode.

In a video message ahead of the show"s premiere she told the church "when you stop f**king with people"s lives and families, I"ll stop too".

continued below.

related content leah
Remini believes Tom Cruise could "end Scientology", "single-handedly" Songbird Anika Moa ties the knot Rachel Hunter and Joe Naufahu have been spotted getting cosy in Auckland

"They know it"s true or they would have sued the s**t out of me," says Ms Remini.

The show was prompted by responses to Ms Remini"s book Troublemaker: Surviving Hollywood and Scientology.

Credit: Supplied via Youtube / @A&E

Among the flood of messages from other former Scientologists sharing horror stories was that of Amy Scobee, who used to be in charge of Scientology"s Celebrity Centres.

Hearing Ms Scobee"s claims of sexual abuse by her superiors and their families, Ms Remini knew she couldn"t stop.

Scientology will often take steps to silence those who criticise and leave it.But Ms Remini will not be quiet any time soon. It took her 30 years to find her voice.

Fair game

"Am I obsessed? Yes," says Ms Remini. "I"m obsessed with the truth. I am obsessed with people not being victimised."

Those who leave are subjected to Scientology"s "fair game" policy of harassment, she says.

Established by Scientology founder L Ron Hubbard in response to criticism from within and outside his organisation, individuals or groups who are "fair game" are judged to be a threat to the church and can be "punished and harassed using any and all means possible".

The idea, Ms Remini says is "to utterly destroy, at any cost, anyone who publicly criticises Scientology".

Hubbard cancelled the use of the term in 1968. But some say it still operates.

Outspoken ex-Scientologist Mike Rinder practised it as a high-ranking member of the elite Sea Organisation; then suffered at the hands of it when he left after 46 years, she says.

Leaving Leah Remini signs copies of her new book "Troublemaker: Surviving Hollywood and Scientology". Photo / Getty Images

Ms Remini joined at the age of nine, but departures like Mr Rinder"s made her question the "brainwashed" life she was leading.

While Scientology courted her to bring her high profile friends into their ranks, senior members were getting out.

After they left, she said, they"d say the same thing: the church was a cult. The church would brand them liars and criminals.

Alarm bells first rang at the 2006 wedding of Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes.

Scientology"s most powerful figures were at the nuptials of their poster boy, but Shelly Miscavige, the wife of church leader David Miscavige, was not.

Ms Remini"s questions about Shelly went unanswered. She was told she shouldn"t be asking about the leader"s wife.

As her unease grew, so did the repercussions.

High profile former Scientologist, Mike Rinder. Photo / Getty Images

Ms Remini underwent "auditing", hours of interrogations, and fines tens of thousands of dollars in an effort to make her admit her "crimes".

Leaving took six years.

"They got me for a couple of years. I thought it was me with the problem. They said I had evil intentions towards Tom Cruise who single-handedly is saving the planet, and David Miscavige," Ms Remini says.

Leaving almost cost her the relationship with her mother, Bonny.

But they escaped together when Bonny refused the religion"s demands to denounce her daughter.

Fear of losing everything paralyses many. "People are afraid for their lives, afraid for their families," says Ms Remini.

"We were indoctrinated into a cult from a very early age. If you leave you believe not only are you putting yourself at risk for having your soul eternally in h**l, you are also disconnecting from the only technology of saving mankind.

"You believe what your captors have told you and taught you."

The exodus Church of Scientology in Clearwater, Florida. Photo / Getty Images

Scientology"s has long kept the outside world out, says Ms Remini.

High profile departures include David Miscavige"s father, Ron, but "a lot of Scientologists don"t even know a lot of us left," she says.

"They don"t watch the news or seek out this information. If they see a link they"re told not to click on it . that it"s taken out of context, fabricated."

"I do know that the people who were originally in the religion got into it in the 50s, 60s and 70s and had spent their whole lives in it, all of their money, had lost their children to Scientology, finally said "this is bulls**t and I"m walking away."

"What I am really waiting for is for people to step in ... congressman, judges, people who matter ... to stop allowing others to hide behind this being a religion.

"Where that religion is abusive or harmful they should literally get their heads out of their a***s ... and look at what"s really going on.

"The government did step in at one point. I"m sure they were trying to find a way, but these people were brainwashed. I"m sure they (authorities) fear if they did break down those walls or gates those people would say "we don"t want to go, we"re good"."

Life outside Ron Miscavige, Scientology leader David Miscavige"s own father, fled the religion, after years of "intimidation". Photo / Getty Images

Ms Remini never feared for her life: "I don"t want to give them that much power, ever," she says.

"My mother taught me to fight for myself. She left the church with me and I"m very lucky. Not a lot of people have that."

"People choose the church over their own family, over their own sons and daughters.

"That has to stop."

Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath airs on Foxtel"s CI Network channel on Wednesdays at 9.30pm

- news.com.au

Source: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id%3D2%26objectid%3D11803268

Continue Reading ..

Saturday, February 18, 2017

Lisa Marie Presley claims 8-year-old twins are in protective custody


Elvis Presley & Lisa Marie Presley "In the Ghetto"

Lisa Marie Presley says her twins are in protective custody after "disturbing" photos of children were discovered on a computer belonging to her estranged husband, Michael Lockwood, Presley claims in court documents obtained by ET.

The Daily Mail first broke the news of Presley"s claim that her twin daughters, 8-year-old Finley and Harper, were taken into protective custody by California"s Department of Children and Family Services after she alleged that she found "hundreds of inappropriate photos" and disturbing video footage on Lockwood"s computer.

WATCH: Lisa Marie Presley Files for Divorce From Michael Lockwood After 10 Years of Marriage

Elvis Presley"s only daughter said she was "shocked and horrified and sick to my stomach" upon making the alleged discovery in court documents filed on Feb. 7 in Los Angeles, as part of the couple"s ongoing divorce. Presley is asking the court to thus deny Lockwood"s request for spousal support and attorney"s fees. Lockwood requested $40,000 per month in spousal support and $100,000 in attorney"s fees.

Lockwood filed a response to Presley"s request for order on Feb. 14, slamming Presley"s "distasteful" attempt to damage his reputation.

"It is very unfortunate and inappropriate that Ms. Presley chose to file a one-sided, inaccurate version of the facts in the Family Law Court"s publicly accessible files," Lockwood"s lawyer, Jeff Sturman says in a statement to ET, denying the allegations. "Mr. Lockwood is not going to publicly disclose very negative information about ms. presley to retaliate. therefore, while Mr. Lockwood denies the truth of what Ms. Presley chose to put in the press, he has no further statement at this time."

"In June 2016, the Beverly Hills Police Department was notified of alleged child abuse involving the Presley family. It was then determined the allegations stemmed from activity originating in the state of Tennessee," the Beverly Hills Police Department says in a statement to ET, adding they served a search warrant at a resident in the City of Beverly Hills that assisting the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation led to the seizure of several items pursuant to the warrant.

EXCLUSIVE: Lisa Marie Presley Preps for Tour

"At this point, the TBI has not opened an official case in connection to this matter," the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation tells ET, though noting that review of potential evidence of a crime continues.

In the Feb. 7 court docs, Presley says that while Lockwood has "yet to be convicted of crimes" related to his possession of the photos, "that he possessed them is documented evidence of conduct that has destroyed" her "mental or emotional calm." "Accordingly, Respondent"s [Lockwood] request for spousal support must be denied by reason of this conduct alone," states Presley"s attorney, Shelley Albaum.

Additionally, Presley claims that her former business manager failed to pay taxes, and now she owes millions of dollars in back taxes. She also says that her former business manager and Lockwood made large expenses on her accounts that were not authorized by her.

While Presley says she solely pays the salary for two full-time nannies who act as monitors during the children"s day visits with their father, and pays for tuition for her daughters" private school, to save money, she has been living rent-free with her older daughter, Riley Keough, and her husband, Ben Smith-Petersen.

RELATED: Coolest Wedding Ever? Kristen Stewart & Dakota Johnson Star in Elvis Presley"s Granddaughter"s Ceremony

Presley cited irreconcilable differences in divorce papers filed last June. The two had been married since 2006.

ET has reached out to Presley"s lawyer for comment.

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2017/02/18/lisa-marie-presley-claims-8-year-old-twins-are-in-protective-custody.html

Continue Reading ..