Saturday, 13 September 2014

Entertainment: Nikki Gil reacts to Billy's drunken altercation

The 27-year-old actress spoke with reporters on the issue Thursday on the sidelines of a press event held by luxury carmaker Mercedes Benz.

"I wasn't raised to celebrate the misfortune of others." -said Nikki Gil, when asked to react to the drunken altercation involving her past boyfriend of five years, TV host Billy Crawford, who posted bail last Monday after being detained overnight.

"I was asked about it, which I don't understand because I'm not involved in any way," Gil said, referring to Crawford's arrest last Sunday. "But I wasn't raised to celebrate the misfortune of others. I guess that's all I have to say about the issue." - She added.

Gil was also asked for her reaction during her interview to comment about 'That Crawford was never involved in any controversy during their five-year relationship.'

"I don't want to comment on that," Gil said. "I also want to respect the people that we are currently... You know, there are other parties involved din, eh. Respetuhin nalang natin 'yon. I really don't want to comment on that."-she added.


Thursday, 11 September 2014

Entertainment: During the 'Fashion Rocks' event Justin Bieber Booed While Stripping on Stage

The pop star 'Justin Bieber' participated in a very awkward sketch during the Fashion Rocks concert in New York City Tuesday night, when he stripped down to his underwear to showcase his Calvins (talk about product placement). But the crowd didn't seem to enjoy the semi-nudity, booing him from the moment Bieber appeared onstage to when he began flexing in his undies.

Bieber has been accumulating a collection of troubling incidents of late, from ATV accidents to physical altercations with other celebs, plus arrests for house-egging and driving under the influence. His image has been severely tarnished, even when clothed.
During the concert, the singer presented alongside supermodel Lara Stone. He began his sketch by saying, barely audible over the boos, "So, uh, I actually don’t feel comfortable unless I’m in my Calvins, so … is that cool?”

But Bieber, ever the professional, worked through the negativity. He later tweeted and posted a Vine about the moment, saying he "killed 'em with kindness."

Politics: The Anti-selfie bill gets ‘dislike’

Those who have made a habit of showing off to friends in social media like facebook, IG, and twitter where they are at the moment will then have to think about a law that may get an act of “selfie” a court case or a jail sentence.

That is, if the anti-selfie bill or House Bill No. 4807 is passed and encated into law. That bill is titled “An Act protecting against personal intrusion by any person with intent to gain or profit therefrom”taking a “selfie” will not be an innocent and spontaneous gesture anymore.

The so-called “anti-selfie” bill hasn’t received many Likes among congressmen, with both majority and minority members disliking its potential to curtail self-expression and press freedom.

APPROVED ON SECOND READING

Principally authored by administration Rep. Rufus Rodriguez of the 2nd District of Cagayan de Oro, HB No.4807 was approved on second reading in the House of Representative last August 12 and has since gained mainstream attention as the anti-selfie bill.

“We have to carefully study this proposal since some of the grounds constituting the violations are vague and too broad and may constitute prior restraint and may pose further Constitutional problems,” AKO BICOL party-list Rep. Rodel Batocabe said in reaction to HB No. 4807.

But Batocabe, a lawyer and fellow administration ally, said the measure would be more appropriately dubbed as the “anti-paparazzi bill” due to its supposed safeguard on privacy and against the gaining of profit.

INNOCENT UPLOAD

Another member of the House majority, Ifugao Rep. Teddy Brawner Baguilat Jr., lamented that the anti-selfie bill could land unsuspecting mobile phone users in jail with an innocent upload to Facebook or Instagram.

“Just reading the provisions, being a zealous fan and recording a celebrity’s activities could land one in jail. I think regulation in social media is needed but this has to be studied cautiously and thoroughly to make sure that no basic liberties are compromised,” he said.

‘SELFIE’

The “selfie” is a social media-spawned activity where one takes his or her photo, oftentimes with the specific intention to show the background or other elements within the frame.

“I think we need more definitions and qualifications. [Provisions] could be broad but the discussions will clarify things,” said Baguilat who is the chair of the Agrarian Reforms panel.

FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION

Meanwhile, members of the House minority had far harsher things to say about HB No. 4807, which they described as a violation to freedom of expression.

“It’s a clear violation of freedom of expression. The law on “selfie” has no place in a civilized and democratic society,” reckoned 1-BAP party-list Rep. Silvestre Bello III, who is a former solicitor general and Justice secretary.

“Cong. Rufus might as well kiss his national political ambitions goodbye if he insists on this anti-selfie bill. He should have hired good lawyers to vet the constitutionality of his bill,” said Rep. Terry Ridon, a member of the Makabayan bloc that is part of the minority.

Ridon represents the youth sector, undoubtedly the most active with selfies, through his Kabataan party-list.

Other Makabayan bloc solons – Reps. Neri Colmenares and Carlos Zarate of Bayan Muna party-list – didn’t only give the thumbs down on the anti-selfie bill, but said that it should simply be scrapped, at least in its current form.

“We support the position of media groups… to have this bill scrapped because it would really have a chilling effect on media and even curtail freedom of expression in the form of selfies and groupies,” Colmenares said.

On Friday, Zarate released a statement airing his apprehension over the measure which has “serious implications on freedom of expression and press freedom.”

“At first glance, the terms used in these provisions may seem harmless and well meaning. Yet, a deeper look at how they will impact in everyday lives is truly worrisome. It affects not only those in the media profession but everyone,” Zarate pointed out.

Both Colmenares and Zarate said they welcomed the openness of the bill’s authors to bring HB No. 4807 back to the committee level so that it could be carefully reviewed and scrutinized for possible amendments or revision.

Under the proposed bill, the following acts will be considered an intrusion into the personal privacy of another and at the same time presumed to have been committed with the intent to gain or profit:

“1. The capturing by a camera or sound recording instrument of any type of visual image, sound recording or other physical impression of the person

“2. Trespassing on private property in order to capture any type of visual image, sound recording or other physical impression of any person, and

“3. Capturing any type of visual image, sound recording or other physical impression of a person or family activity through the use of a visual or auditory enhancement device even when no physical trespass has occurred, when the visual image, sound recording or other physical impression could not have been captured without a trespass if no enhancement device was used.

Section 4 of the bill says any person whose personal privacy was intruded as defined, may file a civil action against the person who committed the intrusion, obtain any appropriate relief, including compensatory damages, punitive damages, and injunctive and declaratory relief.

In such cases, the plaintiff may either by the person whose visual or auditory impression has been captured or the owner of the private property that was trespassed.

Only “legitimate law enforcement activities” are exempted from the Act.

The co-authors of the bill are Pangasinan 2nd district Rep. Leopoldo Bataoil, Buhay party-list Rep. Lito Atienza Jr., ABAMIN party-list Rep. Maximo Rodriguez Jr., Cebu 3rd District Rep. Gwendolyn Garcia and Bulacan 4th District Rep. Linabelle Ruth Villarica.

Wednesday, 10 September 2014

Tech: iPhone 6 and 6 Plus hit Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, and Singapore on September 19

The new iPhone 6 is larger as expected – and it comes in two variants, the 4.7-inch iPhone 6 and the 5.5-inch iPhone 6 Plus. They both launch in selected countries on September 19. But in Asia-Pacific, only Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, and Singapore get the two new devices during the first wave of launches, Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) confirmed this morning.

In all those eligible countries, iPhone 6 and 6 Plus pre-orders commence on September 12.

Surprisingly, mainland China is out of luck this time. Last year the nation’s shoppers were included in the first round of launches. 

China’s omission from the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus debut looks to be good news for gadget importers who can charge a premium for smuggling the devices in from Hong Kong, thereby avoiding tax at the border.
Here are the official, unlocked prices for the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus in Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, and Singapore:

  • Australia - iPhone 6 starts from A$869 while the iPhone 6 Plus begins at A$999.
  • Hong Kong - iPhone 6 starts from HK$5,588 while the iPhone 6 Plus begins at HK$6,388.
  • Japan - iPhone 6 starts from JPY 67,800 while the iPhone 6 Plus begins at JPY 79,800.
  • Singapore - iPhone 6 starts from S$988 while the iPhone 6 Plus begins at S$1,148.

Tuesday, 9 September 2014

British royal couple expecting second child

LONDON  — Prince George is not going to be an only child for long — the toddler will soon have a baby sister or brother to share his fancy digs at Kensington Palace.

British royal officials said Monday that Prince William and the duchess of Cambridge, the former Kate Middleton, are expecting their second child.

Once again, Kate is being treated for acute morning sickness in the early phases of her pregnancy. The first time she was so ill she required hospitalization.

Now she is being treated by doctors at her residence in Kensington Palace. She canceled a planned engagement in Oxford to rest and receive medical care.

Prince William told well-wishers in Oxford that Kate should be over the worst of her symptoms in a few weeks. He repeatedly thanked people for congratulating him and said Kate was disappointed she could not travel.

The new baby, boy or girl, will become fourth in line to the throne, pushing Prince Harry to fifth. George, who is 13 months old, is third and likely to become Britain's monarch one day. William is second in line, while his father, Prince Charles, is first.

Britain had changed its laws before George's birth so that the couple's first born would be in line for the throne regardless of its sex. Before the change, a girl would have lost her place in line if a boy was born later.

Monday, 8 September 2014

DILG confirms viral EDSA photo is a kidnapping case


The Authorities have confirmed the viral photo that showed gun-toting men along EDSA was an abduction case.

Interior Secretary Mar Roxas says the rescued victim was a businessman from Davao City who had money with him the day he was kidnapped.

Roxas adds one of the suspects, a policeman, was arrested in Manila on Sunday, while follow-up operations are ongoing on the other suspects, who are also believed to be policemen.

A Toyota Hi-Ace van, which was used by the suspects, was recovered today and is now under the custody of the Mandaluyong City Police.

The viral photo that made the rounds in social media last week, showing several men aiming what looked like guns at a vehicle on EDSA.

The image shows at least 4 men surrounding a white SUV-type vehicle in the middle of EDSA. One of the alleged gunmen's vehicles had no plate, while another wore a helmet.

The source of the photo, who requested anonymity, said it happened near a Shell gasoline station.

Comedian Joan Rivers dead at 81

Joan Rivers, the raucous, acid-tongued comedian who crashed the male-dominated realm of late-night talk shows and turned Hollywood red carpets into danger zones for badly dressed celebrities, died Thursday. She was 81.

Rivers died at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, surrounded by family and close friends, daughter Melissa Rivers said. She was hospitalized Aug. 28 after going into cardiac arrest in a doctor's office following a routine procedure. The New York state health department is investigating the circumstances.

"My mother's greatest joy in life was to make people laugh," Melissa Rivers said. "Although that is difficult to do right now, I know her final wish would be that we return to laughing soon."

Upon hearing of her death, reaction poured out from dozens of notables, ranging from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Rivers' peer-in-comedy Don Rickles.
"Knowing her, working with her and enjoying the fun times of life with her was special. She will always be in our hearts," Rickles said in a statement.

Under the immobile, plastic surgery-crafted veneer that became Joan Rivers' unapologetic trademark as she aged, her wit remained as vibrantly raw and unruly as when she first broke her way into a comedy world belonging largely to men.

In a 2010 "Late Show" interview, David Letterman broached the plastic surgery issue: "You don't look exactly like the Joan Rivers I used to know." Rivers didn't flinch.

"Our business is so youthful. ... You do little tweaks, and I think if a woman wants to look good, or a man, do it," she said. "It's not about anybody else."

Fashion and acting were the early dreams of the woman who grew up as a self-described "fatty," but it was humor that paid the bills and ultimately made Rivers a star. She refused to cede the spotlight as the decades passed, working vigorously until her death.

"I have never wanted to be a day less than I am," she said in a 2013 interview with The Associated Press. "People say, 'I wish I were 30 again.' Nahhh! I'm very happy HERE. It's great. It gets better and better. And then, of course, we die," she quipped.

Rivers was a scrapper, rebuilding her career and life after a failed attempt to make it as a late-night host was followed closely by her husband's suicide.

Rivers' style was hard-driving from the start and her material only got sharper. She was ready to slam anyone. A favored target was Elizabeth Taylor's weight ("her favorite food is seconds"), but the comedian kept current with verbal assaults on Miley Cyrus and other newcomers.

With her raspy voice and brash New York accent, Rivers turned the red carpet of the Oscars, Emmys and Golden Globes into a stalking ground for E! Entertainment, where she first began working in 1994. Her familiar query — "Who are you wearing?" — would quickly give way to such snarky commentary as her assessment of Adele's Grammy outfit: The singer looked like she was sitting on a teapot.

The barbs could turn inward as well, with Rivers mocking everything from her proclaimed lack of sex appeal ("my best birth control now is just to leave the lights on") to her own mortality.

In 2007, Rivers and her partner-in-slime, daughter Melissa, were dropped by their new employer, the TV Guide Channel, and replaced by actress Lisa Rinna. But the Rivers' women returned to E! and found new success with "Fashion Police," which Rivers hosted and her daughter produced.

Joan Rivers never relaxed, always looking for the next and better punchline.
"The trouble with me is, I make jokes too often," she told the AP in 2013, just days after the death of her older sister. "I was making jokes yesterday at the funeral home. That's how I get through life. Life is SO difficult — everybody's been through something! But you laugh at it, it becomes smaller."

She had faced true crisis in the mid-1980s. Edgar Rosenberg, her husband of 23 years, committed suicide in 1987 after she was fired from her Fox talk show, which he produced. The show's failure was a major factor, Rivers said. Rosenberg's suicide also temporarily derailed her career.

"Nobody wants to see someone whose husband has killed himself do comedy four weeks later," she told The New York Times in 1990.

Rivers had originally entered show business with the dream of being an actress, but comedy was a way to pay the bills while she auditioned for dramatic roles. "Somebody said, 'You can make six dollars standing up in a club,'" she told the AP, "and I said, 'Here I go!' It was better than typing all day."

In the early 1960s, comedy was a man's game and the only women comics she could look to were Totie Fields and Phyllis Diller. But she worked her way up from local clubs in New York until, in 1965, she landed her big break on "The Tonight Show" after numerous rejections. "God, you're funny. You're going to be a star," host Johnny Carson told her after she had rocked the audience with laughter.

Her nightclub career prospered and by late that year she had recorded her first comedy album, "Joan Rivers Presents Mr. Phyllis and Other Funny Stories." Her personal life picked up as well: She met British producer Rosenberg and they married after a four-day courtship.
Rivers hosted a morning talk show on NBC in 1968 and, the next year, made her Las Vegas debut with female comedians still a relative rarity.

"To control an audience is a very masculine thing," Rivers told the Los Angeles Times in 1977. "The minute a lady is in any form of power, they (the public) totally strip away your femininity — which isn't so. Catherine the Great had a great time."

In 1978, she wrote, directed and co-starred in the movie "Rabbit Test." It had an intriguing premise — Billy Crystal as a man who gets pregnant — but was poorly received. In 1983, though, she scored a coup when she was named permanent guest host for Carson on "Tonight."

Although she drew good ratings, NBC hesitated in renewing her contract three years later. Fledgling network Fox jumped in with an offer of her own late-night show.

She launched "The Late Show Starring Joan Rivers" on Fox in 1986, but the venture lasted just a season and came at a heavy price: Carson cut ties with her when she surprised him by becoming a competitor.

Carson kept publicly silent about her defection but referred obliquely to his new rival in his monologue on the day her show debuted.

"There are a lot of big confrontations this week," Carson said as the audience giggled expectantly. "Reagan and Gorbachev, the Mets versus the Astros, and me versus 'The Honeymooners' lost episodes."

Her show was gone in a year and she would declare that she had been "raped" by Fox; three months later, her husband was found dead.

It took two years to get her career going again, and then she didn't stop. Rivers appeared at clubs and on TV shows including "Hollywood Squares." She appeared on Broadway and released more comedy albums and books, most recently "Diary of a Mad Diva."

She was born Joan Molinsky in Brooklyn to Russian immigrants Meyer Molinsky, a doctor, and Beatrice. Rivers had a privileged upbringing but struggled with weight — she was a self-proclaimed "fatty" as a child — and recalled using make-believe as an escape. After graduating Phi Beta Kappa from Barnard College in 1954, she went to work as a department store fashion coordinator before she turned to comedy clubs. She had a six-month marriage to Jimmy Sanger.

In recent years, Rivers was a familiar face on TV shopping channel QVC, hawking her line of jewelry, and won the reality show "Celebrity Apprentice" by beating out her bitter adversary, poker champ Annie Duke. In 2010, she was featured in the documentary "Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work."

She never let age, or anything, make her sentimental. Earlier in 2014, she got inked: a half-inch-tall tattoo, "6M," on the inside of her arm representing 6 million Jews killed in the Nazi Holocaust. In 2013, she brashly pledged to work "forever."

"You never relax and say, 'Well, here I am!'" she declared. "You always think, 'Is this gonna be OK?' I have never taken anything for granted."

Survivors include her daughter, Melissa and a grandson, Cooper.