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Bodhi Dharma Biography - 7am Arivu




The evolution of Asian martial arts as they are known today is thought to have originated around 500 A.D., when an Indian Buddhist monk named  Bodhidharma arrived in China.

Legend has it that he taught Indian fighting exercises to the Chinese monks in order to improve their physical condition.  All kung-fu is thought to have evolved from this beginning, and from kung-fu came karate.

The Bodhidharma legend has been examined in detail by Michael Spiesbach (“Bodhidharma: meditating monk, martial  arts master or make-believe?” Journal of Asian Martial Arts, 1992, vol. 1, no. 4, p. 10-27).  The question of Bodhidharma's actual contribution to the martial arts, and even of his very existence, has been the subject of controversy among martial arts historians for many years.  Because he is such an important figure, we will review what is thought to be known about him in some detail : The earliest historical reference to Bodhidharma is the Luoyang jia lan ji, (“The History of the Monasteries of Luoyang”) written by Yang Xuanzhi in 547 A.D.  Yang claims to have personally visited the Yong Ning Temple and to  have met there an old Persian “Barbarian” (foreigner) named Sramana Bodhidharma, who stated that he was 150 years old.


The Buddhist scholar Guifeng Zongni (780-841) quoted an old Buddhist Koan (riddle) that asks, “Why did Bodhidharma come from the West?”  Dao Zuan's Xu gao seng zhuan (“Biographies of Eminent Tang Monks”), written in 645, gives the earliest record of Bodhidharma's life.  The second most important biography is Dao Yuan's Jing de zhuan deng lu (“The Records of Transmission 1of the Lamp”), compiled in 1004.  Many writings have traditionally been credited to Bodhidharma himself, but current scholarly opinion maintains that none is authentic.

 Mainstream Buddhist tradition holds that Bodhidharma arrived in China in 520, although there are historical indications that he may have arrived in 470, or even as early as 420.  There is no agreement as to the route he traveled or where he arrived first.  Some say he traveled by sea, “risking his life over the towering waves,” from Madras in southern India to Guangzhou and then by land to Nanjing.  Other scholars believe that he walked a well-beaten trail over the Pamir Plateau, across the desert and along the Yellow River to Luoyang, the provincial capital and center of Chinese Buddhist culture.  In any case, the journey from India is agreed to have been long and dangerous.

Bodhidharma is thought to have been born in Kanchipuram, near Madras, India, the third son of a local king and therefore a member of the caste of warriors and rulers.  At the age of seven he purportedly began making observations  of precocious wisdom  (e.g. “The mind is a jewel”).  His teacher, Prajnatara, changed the boy's name from Bodhitara to Bodhidharma. Following his father's death, Bodhidharma served Prajnatara for many years spreading Buddhism. Upon Prajnatara's death Bodhidharma left his monastery in  India to follow his master's last wish that he go to China and spread the teaching.

Bodhidharma crossing the Yanstze Rover on a reed Bodhidharma is said to have resided a while in the court of the Emperor Wu Dai (465-550), but left after deciding that the emperor was not sufficiently appreciative of his teaching.  He traveled to the northern part of the province by crossing the Yangtze River (according to one version, by miraculously standing on a reed), arriving finally at Luoyang, an active center of Buddhist scholarship.  There  he made himself unpopular by asserting that the Buddhist scriptures were only a tool for achieving enlightenment and need not be studied indefinitely for their own sake.  Hated, abused and slandered in Luoyang, he was forced to live by begging for food. He then traveled to Mount Song for a period of ascetic contemplation, and from there moved on finally to the Shaolin Temple in Henan Province.  (Not to be confused with other Shaolin temples, such as the one in Fujian Province associated so closely with the origin of  Okinawan karate in the 18thand 19th centuries).  The temple, built in 495, was already a focal point for Indian Buddhist monks who came there to work at translating the Indian sutras into Chinese.  He was not welcomed there either, however, so he took up “wall-gazing” meditation in a cave facing a high cliff opposite the Shaolin monastery.  Legend says he meditated there in 34silence for nine years as a demonstration of the true reality of Buddhism.  During this time he was approached by a Chinese monk named Shen Guang, who convinced Bodhidharma of his sincerity and was accepted as Bodhidharma's disciple and successor. There are many mutually incompatible stories of Bodhidharma's death and burial place.


According to what is apparently a mostly oral tradition, Bodhidharma initiated training programs at the Shaolin temple which related to martial arts.  Bodhidharma taught his brand of dhyana meditation to monks at the temple, but found that they did not possess the necessary stamina.  They were so weak that they tended to fall asleep during meditation lessons. In order to strengthen their “flaccid and emaciated  bodies” he instituted calisthenics, breathing exercises and Indian fighting exercises.  His emphasis was said to be the cultivation of intrinsic bioenergy (called ki in karate) through breath control.  Bodhidharma is supposed to have been well versed in these techniques as a result of  the training given all members of the Indian warrior caste in their youth.  The famous  Sanchin kata, incorporated today in over a dozen Okinawan karate styles, is often attributed directly to Bodhidharma.  In the Uechi-ryu karate style, the goal of Sanchin practice is actually stated to be nothing less than enlightenment!


Another component of present-day karate attributed to Bodhidharma is the kiba dachi, or “horse stance,” which is used  as a physical exercise as well  as a meditation stance.  Monks were originally expected to remain in the low horse stance while meditating for the length of time it took a stick of incense to burn, about one hour.  The horse-stance has been called one of “Bodhidharma's Treasures.”

 Disciplines and martial exercises instituted by Bodhidharma were supposedly transmitted orally for centuries, and were not actually written down until a thousand years later when the Yi Jin Jing  (“Muscle-changing-Classic”), the  Xi Sui Jing (“Marrow-cleansing Classic”), and the Shi Ba Luo Han Shou (“Eighteen Hand Movements of  Luohan”) were composed.  The “Muscle-changing Classic” consists of exercises for strengthening the “external” (arm and leg) muscles and also the “internal” (torso) muscles.  After the “Muscle-changing Classic” was mastered, students were to move on to the “Marrow-cleansing Classic,” which was designed to clean the bone marrow and blood, strengthen the immune system, and  energize the brain to facilitate enlightenment.

 Bodhidharma (also known as  Taishi Daruma in Japan) eventually became revered as the founder of Zen Buddhism.  Whether his legends hold an element of truth, or are the products of later Zen scholars attempting to flesh out a believable patriarch, he remains today a prime symbol of the will-power, determination and self-discipline that are essential to success in the martial arts.  Following his example, the modern martial artist strives to “endure what is most difficult to do, and practice what is most difficult to practice.”  Bodhidharma's example of the Master-student relationship for teaching the way to enlightenment also endures today throughout the martial arts.  Consequently, through the hard evidence for his existence and his martial arts contributions is entirely lacking, he is still widely and beneficially accepted as the Father of the Asian Martial Arts.
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Charlie Chaplin... Happy World For All






A smile is a curve that sets everything straight. 

A tramp with toothbrush mustache, undersized bowler hat and bamboo cane who struggled to survive while keeping his dignity in a world with great social injustice.Highly descriptive facial expressions, which made world laugh ,cry and made happy for decades, who can he be none other than Sir Charlie Chaplin, on his 122nd birth day I wish the world an infinite smiles on every ones face and being in good mood and moral .Here is brief trivia , and few quotes by Charlie Chaplin.


The world always looks brighter from behind a smile. 

Sir Charles Spencer "Charlie" Chaplin, born 16 April in 1889 – Died on Christmas day at his siwss residency, 25 December, 1977

• He became one of the most famous film stars in the world before the end of World War I. Chaplin used mime, slapstick & other visual comedy routines, and continued well into the era of the talkies.

• His most famous role was that of The Tramp, which he first played in the Keystone comedy Kid Auto Races at Venice in 1914.

• From the April 1914 one-reeler Twenty Minutes of Love onwards he was writing and directing most of his films, by 1916 he was also producing them, and from 1918 he was even composing the music .

• With Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks and D. W. Griffith, he co-founded United Artists in 1919.

• In 1999, the American Film Institute ranked Chaplin the 10th greatest male screen legend of all time.

• In 1915, he burst onto a war-torn world bringing it the gift of comedy, laughter and relief while it was tearing itself apart through World War I. Over the next 25 years, through the Great Depression and the rise of Adolf Hitler, he stayed on the job.

• It is doubtful any individual has ever given more entertainment, pleasure and relief to so many human beings when they needed it the most.

• He was born four days before Adolf Hitler, in 1889. He had bright blue eyes.

• In 1925, he was the first actor to appear on the cover of Time magazine.

• At the height of his popularity, he failed to win a Charlie Chaplin look-a-like contest.

• His imprints were removed (and subsequently lost) from the Hollywood walk of fame because of his suspected communist views.

• Although Adolf Hitler despised Chaplin, he was aware of his popularity, and grew the Chaplin mustache to endear himself to the people.


• He never became a U.S. citizen.

• He composed about 500 melodies, including Smile.

• The last film he saw, in 1976, was Rocky.

• In 1978, his dead body was stolen for over two months. When it was recovered, it was re-buried in a vault encased in cement.

• Charlie Chaplin had 12 Children from 4 wives.

• He was 29 years old when he wed Mildred Harris; she was 17.

He was 35 years old when he wed Lita Grey; Lita was 16.

He was 47 years old when he wed Paulette Goddard; Paulette was 26.

He was 54 years old when he wed Oona O'Neill (Oona Chaplin); Oona was 17.


Charlie Chaplin quotes...

"A day without laughter is a day wasted." — Charlie Chaplin

"You'll never find a rainbow if you're looking down" — Charlie Chaplin

"I always like walking in the rain, so no one can see me crying." —Charlie Chaplin

"Nothing is permanent in this wicked world, not even our troubles." —Charlie Chaplin

"Failure is unimportant. It takes courage to make a fool of yourself" —Charlie Chaplin

"A man's true character comes out when he's drunk." — Charlie Chaplin

"To truly laugh, you must be able to take your pain, and play with it." —Charlie Chaplin

"In the end, everything is a gag." — Charlie Chaplin

"That's the trouble with the world. We all despise ourselves." — Charlie Chaplin

"In the light of our egos, we are all dethroned monarchs" — Charlie Chaplin

"What do you want meaning for? Life is desire, not meaning." — Charlie Chaplin



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Don 2 vs Billa 2: Behind the Screen. A Preview


Don (1978) was one the movie with most number of versions.

Don (1978)
Producers: Nariman Films
Direction : Chandra Barot
Story: Salim Javed
Music Director: Kalyanji Anandji
Editing: Wamanrao
Cinematography: Nariman A Irani
Starring: Amitabh Bachchan, Zeenat Aman, Helan, Pran
Studio: Nariman Films
Release Date: 20th, April 1978
Language : Hindi
Genre : Action

Other versions.

1. Yugandhar (Telugu) : NTR and Jayasudha, 1979
2. Billa (Tamil) : Rajinikanth, 1980
3. Sobharaj (Malayalam) : Mohanlal, 1986
4. Dev Pech (Hindi) : Jitendra, 1989
5. Don (Hindi) : Shahrukh Khan, 2006
6. Billa (Tamil) : Ajith Kumar, 2007
7. Billa (Telugu) : Prabhas, 2009


* A Sequel to Don (2006, Hindi) is under production stage naming: Don 2 The chase continues
* A Prequel to Billa (2007, Tamil) is under production stage naming: Billa 2
* There is no connection between Billa 2 and Don 2 other than that both are part 2 of Don (1978)/Billa(1980).



DON 2 : The chase continues



Producers: Farhan Akhtar and Ritesh
                    Sidhwani
Story and direction: Farhan Akhtar
Executive Producer: Miriam Joseph
Music Director: Shankar - Ehsaan - Loy
Lyricist: Javed Akhtar
Cinematography: Jason West
Starring: Shahrukh Khan, Priyanka Chopra, Lara Dutta, Boman Irani, Kunal Kapoor, Om Puri
Art: T P Abid
Costume Design: Jaimal Odedera
Editing: Anand Subaya
Banner: Excel Entertainment
Release Date: December 23, 2011
Language: Hindi
Genre: Action



Billa 2



Producers: L Suresh, George Pius, Sunir Khetrapal
Story and direction: Chakri Toleti
Music Director: Yuvan Shankar Raja
Editing: Sreekar Prasad
Cinematography: Hemant Chaturvedi
Starring: Ajith Kumar, Bruna Abdullah, Prabhu, Rahman, Hima Qureshi
Studio: Wide Angle Creations
Release Date: January, 2012
Language: Tamil
Genre: Action



Don 2 vs Billa 2

* Don 2 is a sequel to Don (2006)
* Billa 2 is a prequal to Billa (2007)
* Climax of Billa (2007) and Don (2006) was different, as Billa sticked to the original climax of 1978's movies, while Don added a twists at the end
* Billa (2007) and Don (2006) was released within a gap of one year and one month
* While Don 2 (Dec, 2011) and Billa 2 (Jan, 2012) will hit the screen within a gap of few days

The anticipation is very high on both the movies because of the huge box-office result the part 1 made in respective regions. If Don 2 is a version is 'What happened after Don?', then Billa 2's story is 'how he became Don?'.


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Falling rupee a serious concern: Commerce minister


The rupee's continued slide against the dollar is "a serious concern", Commerce Minister Anand Sharma said Wednesday.

"Increased dollar demand, especially by oil companies, is making the currency go up and down. Our oil bill is also on the higher side," Sharma told reporters here adding: "Indian exports are not going up. Our endeavour should be to boost exports.

The rupee hit a record low of 56 against the dollar Wednesday.

"I have discussed the issue with the prime minister (Manmohan Singh) and the finance minister (Pranab Mukherjee), he said.

"There is global uncertainty and India is no exception," Sharma said. "The government is taking a series of steps. It (the rupee volatility) is more market related... Market forces are uncertain."

Sharma was here to review the central government schemes being run in Himachal Pradesh.

On a query over inflation, he said it was "a global phenomenon".

"Unfortunately, India is not self-sufficient in food grain production and has to import lots of items, including pulses. But the impact of (global) petroleum prices is mainly responsible for inflation. The RBI (Reserve Bank of India) has taken a lot of initiatives but there is a lot of pressure on the rupee, he said.

He said India was annually importing 9 million tonnes of edible oil, up to 5 million tonne of pulses and its oil (petroleum) bill was $154 billion.
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Russia says Iran ready to discuss nuclear gestures


Russia said on Wednesday that Iran appears ready to agree specific steps to end a standoff over its nuclear programme but warned that additional U.S. sanctions would undermine efforts to ensure Tehran does not develop atomic weapons.

 Speaking in Moscow as a meeting between Iran and six global powers began in Baghdad, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said expert-level meetings had indicated Tehran, often accused by Western states of playing for time, was now prepared for serious negotiations.

 "We got the clear impression from these preliminary contacts that the Iranian side is ready to seek agreement on concrete actions within the framework of an approach based on the principles of gradual, reciprocal steps," Lavrov said.

 Russia advocates a "step-by-step" approach under which Iran would take measures to ease concerns it is seeking nuclear weapons in exchange for relief from sanctions imposed by the U.N. Security Council as well as by Western nations.

 Moscow opposes any new sanctions on Iran, and Lavrov suggested U.S. President Barack Obama should veto additional punitive economic measures approved by the U.S. Senate on Monday if they reach his desk for signature.

 The proposed U.S. sanctions "are aimed not at combatting possible risks of proliferation of weapons of mass destruction but in essence at the economic strangulation of Iran," he said at a briefing after talks with his Sri Lankan counterpart.

 "I hope this excess by the American lawmakers will be met with a ... responsible approach by the U.S. administration and the U.S. president," said Lavrov, warning the sanctions would undermine unity among the nations leading diplomacy with Iran - the United States, Russia, China, Britain, France and Germany.
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Special police team to probe Reebok India fraud


A Special Investigation Team (SIT) has been set up in Gurgaon to look into a complaint about a multi-crore-rupee fraud in sporting goods company Reebok India, police said Wednesday.

A complaint was lodged by the company Sunday night against two former employees of the company for forgery, cheating, criminal conspiracy and criminal breach of trust.

Assistant Commissioner of Police (Crime) Rajesh Phogat would head the SIT that would probe the allegations of fraudulent activities against Reebok India's former managing director Subhinder Singh Prem and chief operating officer Vishnu Bhagat, an official said.

Cyber crime experts and officers from the economic offences wing would also assist the team, he said.

According to police, Prem and Bhagat served in the company for over 15 years before being removed March 26.

The company in its complaint filed with police said that in an internal inquiry it was established that the duo had been indulging in fraudulent activities over several years and were involved in cheating and defrauding the company of hundreds of crores of rupees.

Deputy Commissioner of Police (East) Maheshwar Dayal told IANS that the exact amount of money involved in the suspected fraud would be known only after investigation.
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Internet content: Court considers summoning US firms


A Delhi court Wednesday directed a complainant to apprise it about the method of summoning some US-based companies, including Facebook and YouTube, named by him as accused in a case related to objectionable content on internet.

Metropolitan Magistrate Jay Thareja said: "Put up for method of service of process of summoning of Facebook, Youtube and other US-based companies for June 8."

The court was hearing a criminal case filed by journalist Vinay Rai seeking removal of derogatory contents from around 20 social networking sites and websites.

The magistrate told the complainant that service of summons would also be effected through the external affairs ministry.
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The Blockbuster That Ate Hollywood: Why 'Avengers' Is Crowding the Box Office



“The Avengers” is a bona fide box office phenomenon – but is it crowding out every other movie at the cineplex?

In the past, the superheroes' moneymaking powers would have been good news for other summertime movies, like “Dark Shadows,” ‘The Dictator” and, yes, “Battleship," the argument being that a rising tide lifts all boats.


Instead those movies have struggled to stay afloat, with “Battleship” opening to a dismal $25 million.

Starting with "The Hunger Games" and now “The Avengers" – two massive franchise pictures have dominated the box office and made it impossible for other movies to secure huge openings.

“'Avengers created an undeniable excitement world-wide and dwarfed other films that attempted to create an event,” Kevin Goetz, founder and CEO of market research company ScreenEngine, told TheWrap.

Also read: 'Men in Black 3' Review: Will Smith, Tommy Lee Jones Drag Down a Cool Party

Studios are finding that in a packed season there is less breathing room than ever before.

“When you have ‘Titanic' or ‘The Avengers,' it becomes difficult to grow the business for the other films opening -- there's only so much the marketplace will expand,” Universal Pictures domestic distribution chief Nikki Rocco, whose studio distributed “Battleship," told TheWrap.

“In my heart of hearts I feel 'Battleship' would have fared much better if in its third week 'Avengers' wasn't doing $55 million."

Last weekend's frosty reception to "Battleship" is in marked contrast to the grosses for second-tier blockbusters a year ago, when “Captain America: The First Avenger” opened to $65 million the weekend after “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” debuted to a then-record-breaking $169.2 million. In 2009, “Sherlock Holmes” racked up $62 million despite opening the week after the highest grossing movie ever -- “Avatar.”

Now, all eyes will turn to “Men in Black 3” to see if the sequel to the popular science fiction comedy can break “The Avengers” stranglehold on the multiplexes. The film is currently on pace to earn between $70 million to $80 million over the holiday weekend.

Also read: From 'Dark Knight' to 'Dark Shadows': The 10 Most Anticipated Summer Movies

Still, this marks the second straight quarter in which one movie swallowed up a series of other potential hits.

The monster debut of “The Hunger Games” appears to be partly to blame for “American Reunion” and “Wrath of the Titans” opening to roughly $5 million to $10 million below where they were expected to debut, while “The Avengers” performed a similar hat trick with the three major studio movies that opened in its wake.

“There seems to be a price sensitivity that has crept into consumer consciousness that only began appearing about two to three years ago. As 3D reaches a critical mass, moviegoers' are using phrases like “I can't wait to see THAT movie,” versus “THAT movie's not worth the money," Goetz said.

The rise of mass appeal event films, such as “The Avengers” and “The Hunger Games,” poses serious problems for the other big-budget movies that open in their wake.

Some studio executives fear this kind of ripple effect could be felt again when “The Dark Knight Rises” hits theaters on July 20. Or after such hotly anticipated films as the “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn -- Part 2” or “The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey” debut this winter.

“Moviegoers have to make a decision about when they're going to spend that $11 or $12 in normal 2D, or $14 or $15 in 3D," Goetz said. "It's not enough to just pique interest, there has to be a significant reason to leave your house, a reason to give up multi-tasking activities like texting and working on the computer and commit to a single task.”

There's also the issue of demographics and cost. Now that studios are committed to releasing fewer films overall, most of the slates aren't as diverse as they had been before.

Big-budget action movies, often involving a superhero, will bow almost every weekend this summer. Comedies and movies aimed at women, which might have attracted different audiences, are few and far between.

The good news for studios, increasingly looking to expand into the global market, is that the event picture cannibalization is not apparent at the overseas box office. Staggered openings contrast with the packed domestic schedule, enabling "Battleship" to lock in $200 million before it even opened stateside.

Yet with the average costs of movies on the rise, the definition of what constitutes a good opening for a movie has become skewed.


“All these movies cost a little too much,” a studio executive who declined to be identified, told TheWrap. “A $200 million budget has become the new $100 million. In some cases, $300 million is the new $200 million. But the movies are performing like they did in past summers, which was great when they actually cost $100 million, but is not so hot anymore.”

Right now it may be trendy to blame Earth's Mightiest Heroes for the lackluster debuts of other recent blockbuster hopefuls. However, some analysts caution that lack of enthusiasm for the films themselves were more to blame for the failure of “Dark Shadows” and “Battleship” than the dominance of “The Avengers.”

“The movies didn't do well because they weren't good movies,” a studio distribution executive who declined to be identified, told TheWrap.

Overall, the breakaway success of movies like “The Avengers” and “The Hunger Games,” has had a positive effect on box office grosses in this country, with the domestic tally up 14 percent through last weekend to over $4 billion.

However, the wealth is not evenly distributed and attendance is in decline. Beneath the gaudy grosses, a small crop of movies, paired with higher ticket prices for 3D and Imax screenings, are driving the industry's success.

The key may be to release big-budget movies that boast top-shelf stars and talent, but lack a Harry Potter or a Batman, in the spring or fall.

“Hollywood needs to see this as 52-week release schedule and they don't do that,” Phil Contrino, editor of Boxoffice.com, told TheWrap. “Instead it just turns into a pissing contest in the summer.”

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Lisa Marie Presley returns with rootsy third album



After moving across an ocean to rural England, Lisa Marie Presley found herself as close as she's ever been to her father, at least musically.

The only child of Elvis and Priscilla Presley started writing music again after moving to Kent, southeast of London, several years ago. That led to her third album, "Storm & Grace," produced by T Bone Burnett with a slow-rolling, swampy but warm Americana sound.

It's more quiet, deliberate and intimate than her pop-rock-oriented "To Whom It May Concern" from 2003 and 2005's "Now What."

She's settled down personally as well. Once known for turbulent, brief marriages to Michael Jackson and Nicolas Cage, she's now raising 3-year-old twin daughters Finley and Harper with her husband of six years, guitarist Michael Lockwood. She also has two adult children, model-actress Riley Keough and son Benjamin, from her first marriage.

The 44-year-old singer-songwriter said in a recent interview that she'd long been actively trying to dodge her father's legacy, but now feels more comfortable following in his footsteps — at least on her own terms.

____

The Associated Press: Do you feel like the album represents your Southern roots?

Presley: It does, but I didn't intend it to do so. It wasn't like I was trying to go create a rootsy Southern record. I was given a lot of freedom and space to write, and I did. And that's what ended up happening oddly in England of all places. So — ironic. ... It's a good bed for my lyrics and vocals to lie in, that sort of vibe — whatever this is, this record.

AP: How much does your father's music influence you? Are you listening to it lately, and do you hear it differently now than you did when you were younger?

Presley: Of course. The babies have to hear Elvis satellite radio all the time in the car. They love that. Of course. He's always been a huge influence on me my whole life — always. It's the first thing I ever heard. ... It's not something that I now listen to and it's different, although I might listen closer. But I've remained consistent on the fact that I've always been an admirer.

AP: And an album like this is more early Elvis than a later Elvis.

Presley: It could very well be looked at that way. That's fine. I don't mind that. I embrace it. But it wasn't intended to go there. Actually the first two (albums), I was intending not to go there on purpose. That's why this time, it's OK with me because it was natural.

AP: How do you feel like you've grown from those first two albums? Are you proud of them?

Presley: I love those songs. They came from the same place all my songs come from. ... But ... I had a lot going on around me that was not good. It was a lot of kicking and yelling. ... I needed to go through that for whatever reason. I needed to prove something to somebody somewhere, I don't know what. ... Nothing was ever smooth. It didn't go very well. I just mean marketing-wise, I just felt like — it just never felt like I had the right suit on me. I was still struggling to find it.

AP: When do you think you broke out of that?

Presley: Probably like five years ago, I broke out of everything. I just stopped. I just had an awakening, a crash and then a rediscovery period. And yeah, I just needed to get rid of things that I thought were good that weren't and I needed to go far away and just be around simple people that had a decent — I don't know — just simple things.

AP: What's day-to-day life like now for you?

Presley: When I'm in England, I think I needed to see and just kind of start from ground zero and just needed to see and discover life again ... and just simplicity. When I'm there it tends to be cooking, walking. I love the people in my village. They're super sweet. It's a very simple life.

AP: The album's lyrics focus on religion on several songs. "So Long" includes the lines: "religion so corrupt and running lives" and "churches they don't have a soul." How were you thinking about religion as you were writing this? Is it something that is on your mind (Presley has long been identified as a Scientologist)?

Presley: So many things were on my mind. As intriguing as the question might be, I typically don't talk about what specifically my songs are about. And I also don't discuss politics and religion — just as a general rule. But I also write very metaphorically. And I'll write with whatever is on my mind and it's not always literal. But I wrote what I wrote. ... It's an open canvas for everyone to draw on, the listener.
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'Dark Knight Rises' Poster Signals the Beginning of the End




Warner Brothers released a final one-sheet Monday for The Dark Knight Rises via the film’s Facebook page. Accompanied by the tagline “The Legend Ends,” the poster features Batman front and center as the skyline of Gotham City is engulfed in flames behind him.

The poster resembles its predecessor, a teaser in which a shot of the Gotham skyline resembles a giant bat. Beneath the phrase “A Fire Will Rise,” Batman stands in partial shadow while debris and fire pours down from above.

VIDEO: New The Dark Knight Rises Trailer Teases More Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Anne Hathaway

It remains to be seen whether Warner Brothers will release individual character posters as it has done in the past. In the meantime, the studio clearly has chosen to emphasize the hero of the series, rather than high-profile villains which have throughout its history overshadowed his importance.

The Dark Knight Rises opens nationwide July 20, 2012.
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US missiles 'kill four in Pakistan'


US missiles killed four militants in a Taliban stronghold of Pakistan on Wednesday, officials said, amid increasing strains with the West over a six-month blockade on NATO supplies into Afghanistan.

A drone targeted a compound near Miranshah, the main town of the tribal district where Pakistan has resisted US pressure to launch a sweeping offensive against militants fighting US troops in neighbouring Afghanistan.

"The drone fired two missiles on a house in the Tabai area near Miranshah," one of the security officials told AFP on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the media, adding that four militants were killed.

"It is not immediately known if an important target is among those killed," he said.

The area is a stronghold of the Haqqani network -- Afghan insurgents blamed for a series of spectacular attacks on Western targets in Kabul -- and Pakistani Taliban chief Hakimullah Mehsud.

Islamabad denies any support for Haqqani activities, but the former chief US military officer, Admiral Mike Mullen, called them a "veritable arm" of the Pakistan Inter-Services Intelligence agency.

US officials say its leaders are based in Waziristan, the most notorious militant stronghold in Pakistan's semi-autonomous northwestern tribal belt.

Washington considers the area the main hub of Taliban and Al-Qaeda plotting attacks on the West and in Afghanistan. US officials have accused Pakistani intelligence agents of playing a double game in supporting or at least turning a blind eye to Afghan insurgents.

A local administration official and another intelligence official confirmed Wednesday's drone strike and casualties.

Residents said the bodies had been charred badly and militants had cordoned off the area and were sifting through the rubble.

It was the third US drone strike reported in Pakistan since parliament in March demanded an end to the attacks on Pakistani territory, as part of new guidelines for Islamabad's often stormy relationship with Washington.

Relations plummeted into deep crisis after US air strikes killed 24 Pakistani soldiers on November 26, prompting Islamabad to shut its Afghan border to NATO supplies and evict US personnel from an airbase reportedly used as a hub for drones.

Pakistan says the missile attacks are counter productive, violate its sovereignty, kill civilians and fuel anti-US sentiment.

The frequency of the drone strikes has diminished since November, but US officials are believed to consider them too useful to stop altogether.

They have argued that drone strikes are a valuable weapon in the war against Al-Qaeda and other Islamist militants.

Pakistan signalled last week that it was prepared to end the NATO blockade, but hopes of clinching a deal appeared to break down over the cost of transit rights.

US President Barack Obama snubbed Pakistan at this week's NATO summit in Chicago, only seeing President Asif Ali Zardari in passing and voicing frustration with Pakistan.

Islamabad has been incensed by Washington's refusal to apologise for the November air strikes and US officials have so far rejected Pakistani proposals to charge several thousand dollars for each alliance truck crossing the border.

The blockade has forced NATO to rely on longer, more expensive routes through Russia and Central Asia, even as it plans a large-scale withdrawal of combat troops and hardware from Afghanistan by the end of 2014.

According to an AFP tally, 45 US missile strikes were reported in Pakistan's tribal belt in 2009, the year Obama took office, 101 in 2010 and 64 in 2011.

The New America Foundation think-tank in Washington says drone strikes have killed between 1,715 and 2,680 people in Pakistan in the past eight years.
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Regulators probe bank's role in Facebook IPO



Regulators are examining whether Morgan Stanley, the investment bank that shepherded Facebook through its highly publicized stock offering last week, selectively informed clients of an analyst's negative report about the company before the stock started trading.

Rick Ketchum, the head of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, the self-policing body for the securities industry, said Tuesday that the question is "a matter of regulatory concern" for his organization and the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The top securities regulator for Massachusetts, William Galvin, said he had subpoenaed Morgan Stanley. Galvin said his office is investigating whether Morgan Stanley divulged to only some clients that one of its analysts had cut his revenue estimates for Facebook before the stock hit the market on Friday.

The bank said late Tuesday that it "followed the same procedures for the Facebook offering that it follows for all IPOs," referring to initial public offerings of stock. It said that its procedures complied with regulations.

The questions about the role played by Morgan Stanley, the lead underwriter for the deal, add to the confusion surrounding Facebook's IPO. In the most hotly anticipated stock debut in years, the offering raised $16 billion for the social networking company, valuing it at $104 billion

On Tuesday, Robert Greifeld, the CEO of the Nasdaq Stock Market, acknowledged to shareholders of Nasdaq's parent company that "clearly we had mistakes within the Facebook listing."

The stock debut, originally set for 11 a.m. EDT Friday, was delayed more than half an hour because of technical problems at Nasdaq. Some brokerages were still sorting out the aftermath on Tuesday.

"Unfortunately, our clients continue to feel the effects of this in some cases," said Stephen Austin, a spokesman for Fidelity Investments, one of the country's largest brokerages. Fidelity was still waiting for some Facebook stock orders that it placed on Friday to be executed. Fidelity's systems had performed normally, Austin said.

In the meantime, Facebook stock itself has been a disappointment. It fell $3.03 on Tuesday to close at $31 and has now fallen $7, or more than 18 percent, from its offering price of $38. It managed to add just 23 cents in its first hours of trading on Friday, then suffered a big decline on Monday.

The Reuters news service reported Tuesday that a Morgan Stanley analyst, Scott Devitt, cut his estimate for Facebook's revenue this year to $4.85 billion from more than $5 billion earlier. Reuters reported that it was unclear whether Morgan Stanley had told only select clients about the reduced estimate.

Reuters reported that the analyst cut his figures for Facebook while the company's executives, including founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, were shopping the stock to potential investors in the weeks ahead of the IPO, a process known in investing as a road show.

Morgan Stanley, in its statement, did not specifically address which clients might have been told about a reduced estimate from one of its analysts. It said that "a significant number" of analysts, including those from other firms underwriting the stock issue, had reduced their estimates for Facebook to reflect publicly available information about the company.

That was a reference to a May 9 regulatory filing in which Facebook said a shift by many Facebook users toward mobile devices might limit its revenue growth. Social media companies have struggled to make as much money as they would like from mobile advertising. Advertising accounts for more than 80 percent of Facebook's overall revenue.

Morgan Stanley also said that revised analyst views were taken into account in setting the stock offering price at $38 per share. Facebook, working with Morgan Stanley, first set a range of $28 to $35 for the offering price, then raised the range to $34 to $38 before setting it at $38 on the night before the IPO.

When the stock started trading Friday, it jumped several dollars, but quickly fell back toward $38. It never crossed below that level on its first day, and outside analysts said that was probably because Morgan Stanley, eager to avoid the embarrassment of a first-day decline in the stock price, had rushed in with thousands of buy orders at $38.

The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday night that Facebook's chief financial officer, David Ebersman, decided shortly before the stock debut to raise the number of shares the company would offer by 25 percent. The Journal, citing people familiar with the planning of the stock offering, also reported that Morgan Stanley had assured Ebersman there was plenty of demand for the stock.

A spokesman for Facebook Inc., which is based in Menlo Park, Calif., said late Tuesday that the company had no comment.

The SEC had already said on Friday that it was looking into problems surrounding the IPO. On Tuesday, the agency's chairman, Mary Schapiro, said: "I think there is a lot of reason to have confidence in our markets and in the integrity of how they operate, but there are issues that we need to look at specifically with respect to Facebook."
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General Info while using ATM





When a thief forced you to take money from the ATM, do not argue or resist, you might not know what he or she might do to you. What you should do is to punch your PIN in the reverse...

Eg: If your PIN is 1234, you punch 4321.

The moment you punch in the reverse, the money will come out, but will be stuck into the machine half way out and it will alert the police without the notice of the thief.

Every ATM has it; It is specially made to signify danger and help. Not everyone is aware of this. SHARE THIS TO ALL YOUR FRIENDS
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A Minute With: Barry Sonnenfeld about "Men in Black 3"




Filmmaker Barry Sonnenfeld, who worked with Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones on the 1997 film "Men in Black," has united with the duo for "Men in Black 3," which will be released in theaters on Friday.

 In the latest film in the franchise about the exploits of two secret agents who maintain order among aliens living on Earth disguised as humans, Smith's Agent J must travel back in time to 1969 to save his partner, Agent K, played by Jones in the present and Josh Brolin in the past.

 Sonnenfeld spoke to Reuters about the latest collaboration, the addition of Brolin to the cast and the three films.

 Q: The last "Men in Black" film came out 10 years ago. What took so long?

 A: "I don't know exactly why this one took 10 years ... The funny thing is, the idea for 'Men in Black 3' is based on an idea that Will pitched to me while we were on the set of 'Men in Black 2.' One night Will said, 'It would be fun on the next one for me to go back in time and save Tommy Lee Jones from something that happens to him in the past, which makes Tommy Lee Jones dead in the present.'"

 Q: How did Brolin pull off such an uncanny performance?

 A: "Many people ask me if I dubbed Tommy Lee's voice over Josh's performance, which we didn't do. Josh watched all of Tommy's movies. He had a tape recorder on the set which he would listen to of Tommy's performance in the first two movies. He just channeled him."

 Q: Did you worry that maybe too much time has passed between installments and audiences won't remember the previous films?

 A: "Since it will have been 15 years since the first one, in some cases kids who loved these movies are now adults and are going to be able to bring their own kids to this one. The previous films have had a really great life theatrically, on DVD and on television, so I think people are excited to see this one. Agent K and J are a beloved couple that audiences look forward to seeing again. There's a lot of love between the two characters, although it's never expressed."

 Q: Much has been reported about how difficult the entire production was - how it started shooting before there was a completed script and a built-in hiatus that dragged on longer than it should. What are the facts?

 A: "It's not nearly as big a deal as people think it is. We needed to start shooting when we did for several reasons. One was (to take advantage of) the tax investment credit from New York State (that was going to expire). Secondly, Will Smith had been circling several movies and we wanted 'Men in Black 3' to be his next movie."

 Q: But isn't shooting without a completed script a Hollywood no-no?

 A: "We had a script and knew where we were going, but only the first act was ready to shoot. So we shot the first act up until just before Christmas. We scheduled the movie to have a several-month hiatus because the other acts still needed additional pre-production. So instead of coming back from Christmas break two weeks later, we came back and started preproduction on those next two thirds of the movie. We didn't start shooting for another six or eight weeks after that."

 Q: What were some of the issues that needed to be addressed?

 A: "The biggest challenge when doing a time travel movie is to lock down all the rules of time travel so the audience understands them, appreciates them and buys into them. We spent many evenings watching 'Back to the Future,' which is the best of the time travel movies, to see just how brilliantly they pulled that off. We didn't want to paint ourselves into a time travel corner."

 Q: What lessons did you learn on the first two that you could apply here?

 A: "On the second one we tried to be too funny. The franchise works beyond the fact that it's a comedy. If you look at the first one, it doesn't play as a comedy. There are funny scenes but it's observational, like Will being thrown around by a pregnant alien with tentacles in the background of a shot. It's not that someone is saying funny things. It's about the characters and the chemistry between them."

 Q: So how is the third one different, besides being in 3D?

 A: "This is the most emotional of the three movies. We learn stuff about Agent J and K at the end of the movie that we don't see coming."

 Q: After 15 years and a couple of kids, has time mellowed out the energetic Will Smith?

 A: "He's still as hyperactive as he's ever been. He's like a six-month old Great Dane puppy. He's got way too much energy, he's way too happy and he's way too rambunctious. He never stops."

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Osian film fest returns, starts July 27


The popular Osian's Cinefan Film Festival is back with a new logo after a two-year hiatus. Bringing the finest films from India, Asia and Arab nations, the 10-day festival starts July 27.

Its last edition was held in 2009.

With 'Freedom of Creative Thought & Expression' as the main theme this time, the 12th edition of the festival will showcase an exciting and bold programme of over 200 films from more than 50 countries, said a statement.

The festival has opted for Turtle as its symbol. The change is an attempt to highlight the festival's increased focus on environmental issues.

A new section called 7.4 has been added and dedicated to the themes of environmental issues. It will be a precursor to a Summit on Natural and Man-made Heritage.

Apart from competition sections, special platforms will be accorded to first features, animation and short films also.
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Cricket: Best called in to replace Gabriel


West Indies paceman Shannon Gabriel has been ruled out of the remainder of the Test series against England because of a back injury, with Tino Best recalled to the squad in his place.

"Shannon made the complaint late in the first Test against England and scans conducted following the match showed a stress reaction in the lower spine," West Indies team physiotherapist C.J. Clark said.

"He was subsequently ruled out of the second Test and, after further consultation, we feel that to prevent this injury developing any further it is in Shannon's best interest for him to return to T&T for rest and rehabilitation to ensure he is fully fit when selected for West Indies in the future."

Gabriel was a surprise call-up for the tour but impressed on his debut at Lord's, returning three for 60 in the first innings and adding the prize scalp of Kevin Pietersen as England chased victory on the final day.

But he managed just five overs in that second innings before leaving the field with back spasms.

Having been assessed by the tourists' medical team ahead of Friday's second Test at Trent Bridge, Gabriel has now been told to fly home.

Best, 30, has 14 Test caps and 12 one-day international appearances to his name, but last represented the Windies in 2009.
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India can play host to Pakistan-Australia ODI series: PCB



Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Chairman Zaka Ashraf has indicated that India could play host to Pakistan's limited-overs series against Australia.

Ashraf, who will be flying to India to attend the Indian Premier League (IPL) final on the invitation of his BCCI counterpart N Srinavasan, said the neighbouring country could be a possible venue for the series scheduled in August.

"We are seeing where the cost will be less," Ashraf said.

PCB is currently considering United Arab Emirates (UAE), Malaysia, South Africa and Zimbabwe as potential venues for the series prior to the World Twenty20 in Sri Lanka in September.

Pakistan has been playing its 'home' series in UAE since 2009, but the cost of hosting matches in the Emirates has reportedly dented the PCB finances, The Dawn reports.

"If the cost is less (in India), there's no harm in organising Pakistan's home series at some good venue," Ashraf has said.

The PCB chief is also hoping to revive bilateral ties with the BCCI during his upcoming tour.

The bilateral series has been suspended since 2008 after the terror attacks in Mumbai that killed 166 people.

Ashraf said he will be talking with his Indian counterparts on resuming cricketing ties. "Slowly the ice is melting," he said.

Pakistan last played India on a neutral venue on March 18, during the Asia Cup 2012.
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Facebook IPO faces US regulatory probe as shares plummet 20pc in two days


American authorities have reportedly launched an investigation into Facebook's multi-billion initial public offering, as the social networking giant rounded off the worst start for a major US flotation in five years.

Facebook shares slumped 8.9 percent in the wake of reports that two of the banks that helped advise Facebook on the IPO cut their sales forecast for the company over the last fortnight.

According to a Wall Street Journal report, the reductions from Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs may not have reached all investors before they bought shares in the 104 billion-dollar float.

Rick Ketchum, the head of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, said that 'the allegations, if true, are a matter of regulatory concern.'

Mary Schapiro, the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission, echoed the view, The Telegraph reports.

"There is a lot of reason to have confidence in our markets and the integrity of how they operate, but there are issues we need to look at specifically with regard to Facebook," the paper quoted Schapiro, as saying.

According to the paper, the state of Massachusetts also said that it is seeking information about discussions that Morgan Stanley had with potential investors over Facebook's future revenues.

The decline in Facebook shares on Tuesday means they have now has now tumbled 18percent since they were sold for 38 dollars a share last week.

That is the worst opening three days for a company raising more than 1 billion dollar in a flotation since 2007.
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