Chủ Nhật, 28 tháng 4, 2013

Fitzgerald's labour of love online

F Scott Fitzgerald Ledger

A ledger owned by Great Gatsby author F. Scott Fitzgerald, in at the University of South Carolina. The university has digitised the ledger and put it online for scholars and readers ahead of the new Baz Luhrmann film. Picture: AP Photo/Jeffrey Collins Source: AP

AN intriguing peek into the daily scribbles and life of author F. Scott Fitzgerald is now available online, just weeks before the opening of the movie The Great Gatsby.

Researchers from the University of South Carolina's Thomas Cooper Library put a digital version of the famed author's handwritten financial ledger on their website last week, making it available for the first time for all readers, students and scholars.

"This is a record of everything Fitzgerald wrote, and what he did with it, in his own hand," said Elizabeth Sudduth, director of the Ernest F. Hollings Library and Rare Books Collection.

During a recent visit to the library's below-ground rare-book vault, Ms Sudduth took the original 200-page book out of its clamshell protective cover.

The ledger's yellowed pages - with Fitzgerald's elegant, measured cursive strokes - are a throwback to life before computer spreadsheets. The ledger shows Fitzgerald's tally of earnings from his works, the most famous of which is the novel The Great Gatsby. The ledger lists his many short stories, books, and adaptations for stage and screen.

With the May 10 release of Australian director Baz Luhrmann's Gatsby movie starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Ms Sudduth says library officials expect an upswing in interest in its Fitzgerald collection. The ledger will be on display at the library for about a month starting May 6, Ms Sudduth said.

The library's Fitzgerald collection is considered the world's most comprehensive, with more than 3000 publications, manuscripts, letters, book editions, screenplays and memorabilia. It also includes Fitzgerald's walking stick, briefcase and an engraved silver flask his wife gave him in 1918.

F. Scott Fitzgerald Zelda Fitzgerald

American author F. Scott Fitzgerald dances with his wife Zelda Fitzgerald and daughter Frances (aka 'Scottie') in front of their Christmas tree in Paris. Picture: Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Some parts of the collection already are online. With the ledger's move to the website and the timing of the movie, Ms Sudduth said, officials hope to call more attention to the collection.

In the ledger, Fitzgerald lists in carefully laid out columns his various pieces of writing, the location they were printed, and the income they produced. Fitzgerald's comments are sprinkled throughout. One describes the year 1919 - when his first novel was accepted for publication and wife Zelda Sayre agreed to marry him, as - "The most important year of life. Every emotion and my life work decided. Miserable and ecstatic but a great success."

By the time Fitzgerald started the ledger, Ms Sudduth said, "he probably knew what he was doing. He left a space for his remarks, and then the final disposition."

With a laugh, she noted: "We know he didn't spell very well. And his arithmetic wasn't much better,"

But the overall document, she said, "shows that he was far more on top of his affairs than people thought," given a reputation in later life as a heavy drinker.

"He was keeping a record of his work for the future," Ms Suddeth said. "He kept it, he updated it."

For the past 30 years, researchers have had to rely on a limited print facsimile of the ledger, which didn't catch the varied inks and scripts in Fitzgerald's hand.

Park Bucker, a USC associate English professor, said he's excited to discuss the new ledger with his students.

"It may be a unique artifact among American authors," Mr Bucker said. "This is going to be an amazing thing for students to pore over and dip into. He created his own database. We do it on computers now, but he did it for himself,"

Mr Bucker also said students are fascinated by seeing something a well-known author penned in his own hand.

"Students always remark how much they love his handwriting," he said. "They think his handwriting is just beautiful, and handwriting isn't valued today."

Mr Bucker pointed out that the ledger shows Fitzgerald made most of his income from short stories and that he was able to earn a living from his literary work.

"It was the rarest of things, an author who made a living," Mr Bucker said.

In 1925, the ledger shows Fitzgerald earned less than $US2000 for the Gatsby book - the same amount he received for a single short story published in The Saturday Evening Post.

In later years, Fitzgerald added more earnings from The Great Gatsby. He sold the foreign motion picture rights for $16,666, as noted in the ledger. In another section, he lists about $5000 in earnings from Gatsby when it ran as a play in New York, Chicago and elsewhere.

USC Professor Matthew Bruccoli began to acquire items for the Fitzgerald collection in the 1950s. He received some, including the ledger, from the author's only child, daughter Frances Scott Fitzgerald, also known as Scottie. Bruccoli wanted the collection to be used as a teaching and research tool, and he gave it to the university in 1994.

Bruccoli has since died, but the collection has continued to grow. It is now is valued at more than $US4 million, Ms Sudduth said.

____

The ledger online:

http://library.sc.edu/digital/collections/fitzledger.html


View the original article here

I feel they're there with me: Barry

Barry Gibb

Clockwise from left: Barry, Robin and Maurice Gibb; Barry performing solo; Barry with wife Linda. Source: Sunday Magazine

THE last surviving Bee Gee, Barry Gibb, has described his emotions on going back on the road without his brothers Robin and Maurice by his side.

Robin died last May, and Maurice in 2003.

The 66-year-old singer/songwriter, who played in Australia earlier this year and will entertain audiences in Britain and Ireland in the autumn, told The Sun: "On stage is hard. One minute you feel they're right with you, the next you know you've got to pull something off yourself.

"The audiences have been incredible, they've been so supportive. They're finding closure as well."

Gibb said his wife Linda had told him to stop moping around the house.

Barry2

Maurice, Robin and Barry Gibb in concert.

"She told me to get off my backside and stop going along with the whole idea that everything was finished for me.

"She said, 'You've got music, so make music!' That was her kicking me, so I decided to jump right in."

The absence of his brothers is eased by having his eldest son Stephen on guitar, and Maurice's daughter Sam singing with him.

He said: "We created this show that really celebrates everything we ever did, or as much as we could put in to a show. I feel good. I felt a lot worse last year with all the stress over Robin.

Surviving Bee Gee Barry Gibb has opened his Australian tour in Sydney.

"Personally, I think Robin knew he was dying. I knew he was ill for a long time, it wasn't just the last couple of years.

"It's a hard reality, but we will all see it at some stage. That's the lesson, it's not unique to any person."

Bee Gees

MAGICAL CHILDHOOD: Robin, Barry and Maurice Gibb pictured in the late 1950s.


View the original article here

Vietnam embraces My Best Gay Friends

My Best Gay Friends

My Best Gay Friends creator Huynh Nguyen Dang Khoa (R) posing in a promotional image in Ho Chi Minh City. Picture: AFP PHOTO/HUYNH NGUYEN DANG KHOA Source: AFP

  • Comedy looks at 20-something gay, lesbian and transgender people
  • First episode of web series has been viewed over one million times
  • Highlights growing support for marriage equality

VIETNAM'S first gay sitcom has become a YouTube sensation, racking up millions of views as support for legalising same-sex marriage strengthens within the communist government.

Homosexuality was once seen as a social evil in Vietnam and the success of My Best Gay Friends, a low-budget series about three people sharing an apartment in southern Ho Chi Minh City, has taken even its creator by surprise.

"I thought it would only interest Vietnam's gay community - but we're hearing that parents, grandparents, whole families watch and love the shows and long for new episodes," Huynh Nguyen Dang Khoa, who also stars in the series said.

Watch the introduction to the hit YouTube soap in Vietnam, 'My best gay friends'. Video: YouTube/dangkhoadeptrai

From moving out of home to work and relationship trouble, the series details life as a typical perpetually-broke twenty-something in Vietnam - but the characters are mostly lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender.

Khoa decided to make the show after hearing about the weird but often very amusing situations faced by a close friend - who also stars in the sitcom- as he came out and began living an openly gay life in Vietnam.

My Best Gay Friends

Huynh Nguyen Dang Khoa (C) seen here in scene from the popular YouTube gay sitcom, My Best Gay Friends. Picture: AFP PHOTO/HUYNH NGUYEN DANG KHOA

"We didn't have much money so everyone chipped in - we had a little cash to cover equipment, and buying food for when we were shooting all day," said Khoa, who used his own digital SLR camera to shoot the whole series.

Most of the characters are played by Khoa's friends - both gay and straight - but Cindy Thai Tai, a well-known transgender singer who was one of the first Vietnamese celebrities to have sex-change surgery, also makes an appearance.

"I wanted to show people that homosexuals have ordinary lives, full of emotion, friends, family - very normal lives," said 22-year-old Khoa, who is himself gay.

While it is not illegal, homosexuality has long been a taboo in Vietnam, where Confucian social mores- with their emphasis on tradition and family - still dominate.

But in a surprise move last year the authoritarian government said it was considering legalising same-sex marriage - a proposal that recently won the support of the Ministry of Health.

"People of the same sex have the right to live... love, find happiness (and) get married," said Deputy Minister of Health Nguyen Viet Tien.

The move would make Vietnam the second country in the Asia Pacific region to legalise such unions after New Zealand.

Some symbolic but non-legally binding same-sex weddings have already been held in Vietnam, with footage of one such event going viral in 2010.

Sociologist Le Quang Binh told AFP that social attitudes towards the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) community were changing rapidly in Vietnam at the moment but it was hard to know how much "My Best Gay Friends" had helped.

"We are lobbying the government on (same-sex weddings). I hope good change will come," said Binh, who has worked on numerous research projects on Vietnam's LGBT community.

Even if Vietnam stops short of allowing gay marriage, any legal change to recognise same-sex unions would catapult the country to the forefront of gay rights in Asia, where traditional values dominate many societies and sodomy is illegal in some.

My Best Gay Friends tackles the issue in episode nine - the most recent episode which has already been watched half a million times - when a lesbian wedding ceremony runs into problems.

"The couple is female! This wedding goes against Vietnamese traditions and customs," the manager of a restaurant says as she forces the wedding party to leave the establishment. "They are violating the law."

When one flamboyant member of the party - played by Cindy Thai Tai - protests, asking "so you think that the homosexuals have no rights to love and wed each other lawfully?" the manager quickly explains the establishment has no choice.

"Please madam, local authorities called us and forced us to cancel this wedding. If we go against the order we'll get a serious fine!" the manager adds.

The wedding is quickly moved to an alternative venue and goes ahead - to the delight of the couple's friends and family present.

The first episode of the low-budget series recently passed the one million views mark and the further eight completed episodes, out of a planned 15, are swiftly accruing hits.

"I feel a lot of sympathy, and admiration, towards the friendship and love they show for each other. I think they live a more beautiful life than ordinary people," read one typical comment from a viewer, posted on YouTube.

In 2011, curious Vietnamese filmgoers streamed into cinemas to catch Lost in Paradise, which chronicled the doomed love affair between a gay prostitute and a book seller, providing a rare glimpse into a usually hidden side of the country.

Despite the online popularity of My Best Gay Friends Khoa said there were no plans to broadcast the series on television as it was "rather sensitive" and did not appeal to networks or their advertisers.


View the original article here

Let's face it, we're over Facebook

Facebook

Users with less time, coupled with an influx of advertising on Facebook has led to thousands of Australians abandoning the site, say experts. Source: AFP

  • Facebook user numbers appear to drop
  • Fatigue has set in, say social media experts
  • 'Too many ads' on Facebook a turn-off

AUSTRALIANS are beginning to suffer from "Facebook fatigue" as new data shows almost 400,000 users have drifted away from the social network since December.

Figures collated from Facebook's publicly accessible ad tools, used by marketers and developers to determine audience reach, show the network's monthly active Australian users fell from about 11.8 million in December to just over 11.5 million in the past week.

The data collected by social media monitoring firm Social Bakers shows about 115,000 less people are logging on to Facebook each month since the new year, with the network losing about 390,000 active users overall.

A spokesperson for Facebook Australia  disputed the figures but refused to give any official user numbers, saying only that the network had 12 million monthly active Australian users at the end of 2012.

The spokesperson said numbers provided by Facebook's own ad tools system - which earlier this week cited its Australian user base as just over 11.5 million - were only an "estimate".

Social media marketing expert at the Queensland University of Technology Business School, Professor Larry Neale, said there had also been a decline in Facebook users in North America and Europe, as "Facebook fatigue" sweeps the globe.

"When Facebook was starting up they got a lot of people on and it was very novel, but the novelty has worn off a little bit, so now people are scaling back use," he said.

"How long people spend on there now has plateaued. There is that element of fatigue."

Prof Neale said the decline could also be attributed to Facebook members of three or more years drifting away from the network as they discover they no longer have time for it.

"Maybe when they started on Facebook they were in university but now they're in the workforce and they don't have the time to spend on it anymore, or they don't think it's the right way to be spending that time," he said.

Adelaide social media consultant Michelle Prak said while more than half the population now owns a Facebook account, the network's ban on members under 13 coupled with older people's general lack of interest in it means it may have reached a stalemate in Australia, with no real potential to grow user numbers any further.

Ms Prak said boredom, a desire to try new technologies and frustration with Facebook's ever increasing use of advertising were helping to drive users away from the network.

"'It may indeed be that some Australians are over Facebook and looking for more adventurous tools to use like Foursquare and Reddit and

"The increasing use of advertising can't be helping. Facebook is on dangerous ground there, when we want to quickly see what our friends are doing but we're served up an ad for online gaming instead, it's extremely frustrating."

QUT social media researcher Dr Christine Satchell said the proliferation of more "open" social media channels, such as link sharing site Reddit, were contributing to users' migration away from Facebook.

"One of the problems with Facebook is you can get very homogenised opinions and views being expressed because you only like certain things and talk to the same people, so you get a very closed view," she said.

"I think now we're seeing new forms of social media emerge which are not as closed off, they're more open to a whole new range of ideas and the discovery of new concepts ... and with that will probably come less use of Facebook."

Communications manager Anika Johnstone, 34, of  Adelaide was an avid user of Facebook for six years until "Facebook fatigue" drove her away from the network in late 2012.

She now rarely logs in, only using it to keep in touch with friends and family overseas, and is considering deleting her account altogether.

"I've gone from using it maybe a couple of times a day to maybe checking in once every 10 days," she said.

"All the advertising just turned me away from it, it felt like spam. The interactions with people became boring, it was always the same old stuff - pictures of babies and pictures of food - that got a bit old."

Facebook fatigue isn't a new phenomenon. In 2011, millions of users in the US and Europe began deactivating their accounts and there were predictions the same would happen in Australia.


View the original article here

Fine line between pleasure and pain

Chrissy Amphlett and Mark McEntee

The relationship of Chrissy Amphlett and Mark McEntee was fuelled by alcohol and drugs. Source: Supplied

BACK in 2005, Chrissy Amphlett documented her extraordinary life in a book called Pleasure and Pain.

It was, of course, titled after the 1985 hit by her band, the Divinyls.

The book was explosive. Those in the Divinyls' inner sanctum knew Amphlett and bandmate Mark McEntee had a fiery relationship, flames fuelled by alcohol and drugs.

Amphlett detailed just how fiery that relationship - professional and romantic - was. And the fieriness that continued long after the relationship was in embers.

In 2006 the pair did their first joint interview in 12 years with this writer. Asked about Amphlett's memoir, McEntee was blunt.

"I don't want to read it, I prefer to do something new," he said. He looked at Amphlett and said: "I haven't read it, sorry. I keep meaning to. I see the book, it's there on the table, and I go, 'Shall I read the book today or shall I go out and have a good time?' "

Amphlett called their relationship her "most intense friendship" but for many years it was hidden not only from the world, but their bandmates.

The pair met in Sydney in 1980. They wouldn't become lovers for another two years - McEntee was married.

"Here at last was someone as manic about music as me," Amphlett wrote in her book about their instant creative attraction. When they finally became intimate, the pair remained clandestine lovers.

Amphlett and McEntee revealed they were a couple to the rest of their band only while recording their debut album, Desperate, in New York in 1982. McEntee had split with his wife, but the pair's romantic relationship was far from harmonious.

With Amphlett drinking heavily and class A drugs in the mix (she'd dabbled with heroin and cocaine in the past), the singer said the pair would attack each other after returning from recording sessions in New York.

"We had screaming matches that sometimes degenerated into physical fights," she said.

"Usually not hard punching or kicking or anything that would do either of us any lasting damage, just slapping and pinching and rumbling."

The Divinyls broke ground in many ways. Inspired by seeing Deborah Harry fronting Blondie, Amphlett knew she wanted to be famous.

"All I wanted was to a be a rock star," Amphlett wrote. "Everything else in my life, relationships, family, friends, came second."

Their manager, Vince Lovegrove, also scored them a major US record deal - rare at the time for Australian bands. Chrysalis, home to Blondie and Pat Benatar, gave the band $250,000 to record a debut album; a wild sum of money.

Amphlett had already created her school girl persona; Lovegrove had worked with AC/DC and saw how Angus Young would use his school uniform to get into character.

Amphlett used her outfit to literally create a monster - a prowling frontwoman who would fight with fans and deal with hecklers.

"As the '80s got under way, Australia needed a monster and I decided I could be it," Amphlett wrote, acutely aware the country had no female rock stars, let alone ones who both thrilled with their talent and terrified with their ferocity.

The dysfunction between the band members - and particularly McEntee and Amphlett - was vital to the Divinyls' dynamics.

Lovegrove said their best performances came when they were "at each other's throats - Chrissy and Mark's weird, foaming-at-the-mouth furious, loving, hopelessly dependent relationship was the magic of Divinyls".

Their default setting was argumentative. By the early '90s the band had failed to crack the US. Chrysalis dumped them, cutting its losses to the tune of more than $1 million.

The band was reborn in 1991 when songwriter Billy Steinberg (who wrote Madonna's Like a Virgin) showed Amphlett a list of potential song titles. One was I Touch Myself. She finished the rest of the song and the band scored at No. 1 in Australia and a No. 3 hit in the US; the video was filmed in a US nunnery.

But Amphlett was struggling in her personal life - she had become an alcoholic.

Amphlett would drink until she blacked out and when drunk would have no problem telling people what she thought of them.

By 1993 the band - and the relationship - was spluttering to a bitter end.

Amphlett wrote: "There was something about each of us that ignited the other, that exacerbated our nastiness and potential to be cruel. That would have happened without the alcohol and drugs, but those substances made us worse. Much worse."

After Divinyls finally split in 1996, she and McEntee were not speaking when the offer came a decade later to be inducted into the ARIA Hall of Fame in 2006.

Releasing Pleasure and Pain in 2005 had caused a new rift between the pair, who by this stage were happily married to new partners. Amphlett had fallen in love with drummer Charley Drayton and was enjoying a new stage career with the role of Judy Garland in The Boy From Oz.

But Amphlett still clearly cared for McEntee, even if she said she couldn't imagine Divinyls ever reforming.

"Mark and I are so dysfunctional," she said. "It's fun for you guys watching it, but for us to live in it . . ."

By 2007 they'd patched up their differences - briefly - and were on the road playing sell-out shows.

"When we play music, when we're together and we perform, that's what it's all about for us," Amphlett said at the Hall of Fame.

"It's where we belong. All the other stuff is the hard work. The music is what brings us back together."


View the original article here

Cyberattack suspect had 'bunker'

Cyber attack identity theft hackers

The 35-year-old Dutch man arrested on charges of launching cyberattacks had a mobile hacking centre set up in his van, police said. Source: Supplied

A DUTCH citizen arrested in northeast Spain on suspicion of launching what is described as the biggest cyberattack in Internet history operated from a bunker and had a van capable of hacking into networks anywhere in the country, officials said.

The suspect traveled in Spain using his van "as a mobile computing office, equipped with various antennas to scan frequencies," an Interior Ministry statement said.

Agents arrested him on Thursday in the city of Granollers, 35 kilometres north of Barcelona, complying with a European arrest warrant issued by Dutch authorities.

He is accused of attacking the Swiss-British anti-spam watchdog group Spamhaus whose main task is to halt ads for counterfeit Viagra and bogus weight-loss pills reaching the world's inboxes.

The statement said officers uncovered the computer hacker's bunker, "from where he even did interviews with different international media."

The 35-year-old, whose birthplace was given as the western Dutch city of Alkmaar, was identified only by his initials: S.K.

The statement said the suspect called himself a diplomat belonging to the "Telecommunications and Foreign Affairs Ministry of the Republic of Cyberbunker."

Spanish police were alerted in March by Dutch authorities of large denial-of-service attacks being launched from Spain that were affecting Internet servers in the Netherlands, United Kingdom and the U.S. These attacks culminated with a major onslaught on Spamhaus.

The Netherlands National Prosecution Office described them as "unprecedentedly serious attacks on the nonprofit organization Spamhaus."

The largest assault clocked in at 300 billion bits per second, according to San Francisco-based CloudFlare Inc., which Spamhaus enlisted to help it weather the onslaught.

Denial-of-service attacks overwhelm a server with traffic, jamming it with incoming messages. Security experts measure the attacks in bits of data per second. Recent cyberattacks - such as the ones that caused persistent outages at US banking sites late last year - have tended to peak at 100 billion bits per second, one third the size of that experienced by Spamhaus.

Netherlands, German, British and US police forces took part in the investigation leading to the arrest, Spain said.

The suspect is expected to be extradited from Spain to face justice in the Netherlands.


View the original article here

Deals website LivingSocial hacked

LivingSocial

The post on the LivignSocial website today urging customers to change their passwords. Source: Supplied

ONLINE deals service LivingSocial says its website was hacked, and the personal data of more than 50 million customers may have been affected.

The company said today that customers' names, email addresses, dates of birth and encrypted passwords may have been compromised by the cyber attack.

But it said the database that stores customer credit-card information was not accessed or affected.

The Washington DC-based company said it was working with law enforcement officials to investigate the attack and was contacting customers in nearly all of the countries where it operates.

A banner on its website today read: "Important notice for customers. If you haven't already updated your LivingSocial password, please update it now."

In an email to customers, company chief executive Tim O'Shaughnessy requested that users reset their passwords, and he reminded them to disregard any emails claiming to be from LivingSocial that seek personal or account information.

"The security of your information is our priority," he wrote.

"We always strive to ensure the security of our customer information, and we are redoubling efforts to prevent any issues in the future."

The company did not immediately explain how the hacking occurred, except to describe it as a cyber attack that "resulted in unauthorised access to some customer data from our servers".

It's the latest bad news for LivingSocial, which offers deals on everything from restaurants to spa sessions.

Last November, the company announced it was cutting 400 jobs worldwide, or about 9 per cent of its workforce, as the deals marked continued to face challenges.

In recent years, online deals have gone from fad to a much-copied business model that's easy to set up but difficult to sustain.

LivingSocial is one of the largest of the online deals companies.


View the original article here

Stones delight fans with LA gig

Rolling Stones

Mick Jagger is readying for an anniversary tour with the Stones. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

FOR one night only, the Rolling Stones were an up-and-coming band again.

The legendary group rocked a small club in Los Angeles on Saturday night for a minuscule crowd compared to the thousands set to see them launch their 50 and Counting anniversary tour a week later on May 3 at the Staples Center.

The band kicked off Saturday's hush-hush 90-minute concert at the Echoplex in the hip Echo Park neighborhood with "You Got Me Rocking" before catapulting into a mix of new and old material, as well as their bluesy covers of classics from Otis Redding ("That's How Strong My Love Is"), Chuck Berry ("Little Queenie") and The Temptations ("Just My Imagination").

"Welcome to Echo Park, a neighborhood that's always coming up - and I'm glad you're here to welcome an up-and-coming band," lead singer Mick Jagger joked after the second song of the evening, "Respectable."

Despite clocking in several decades as a band, Jagger, drummer Charlie Watts and guitarists Keith Richards and Ronnie Wood showed no signs of slowing down on Saturday.

Jagger, who ditched a black-and-white track jacket emblazoned with the band's logo after the first few songs, worked the crowd into a singalong frenzy with "Miss You," complete with a harmonica solo from the strutting frontman.

Tickets to the Echoplex concert were sold earlier in the day for $20 ($A19.45) each - a fraction of what tickets to the tour cost.

Rolling Stones play one-off LA warm-up

Music fans line up to watch The Rolling Stones perform at Echoplex in Los Angeles. Picture: Getty Images/Kevin Mazur

Hundreds of fans lined up outside the El Rey Theatre across town for a chance to attend the spontaneous show.

Buyers were limited to one ticket, and they were required to pay with cash, show a government-issued ID, wear a wristband with their name on it and be photographed. Their names were verified at the venue, which has a capacity of about 700.

Cameras and smartphones weren't allowed inside the Echoplex, which usually plays host to hipster bands and mash-up dance parties. The lack of personal recording devices made the Stones' performance feel even more exclusive and old school, freeing concertgoers' hands of the gizmos that have become commonplace at concerts nowadays and further bonding the crowd, many of whom built up camaraderie during the confusing ticket lottery earlier in the day.

Toward the end of the show, the band was joined by former Stones guitarist Mick Taylor for their version of Robert Johnson's "Love in Vain," as well as "Midnight Rambler."

The band, which was backed by Darryll Jones on bass, Chuck Leavell on keys, Bobby Keys on sax and Bernard Fowler and Lisa Fischer as backup singers, encored with the hits "Brown Sugar" and "Jumpin' Jack Flash."

"(This is) the first show of the tour, probably the best one," Jagger said at the end of the set.

Bruce Willis, Gwen Stefani and Skrillex were among the famous faces in the sold-out crowd.

Rumours of the surprise show spread across social networks last week after the band teased the appearance on their Twitter accounts. The dance-pop band New Build, which was originally scheduled to play the Echoplex on Saturday, was first to leak details about the performance.

"Our gig got shifted b/c the Rolling Stones are playing Echoplex," the band tweeted Friday. They joked that they were looking forward to "having it out" with the Stones.

The Rolling Stones performed a few dates together in London, New York City and Newark, New Jersey, last winter but didn't announce a tour until this month. They will play 17 dates in the United States but may add more down the line. The lowest price for tickets to the show at the Staples Center, which has a capacity of about 20,000, is $250.


View the original article here

Star Wars dubbed for Native Americans

Princess

Carrie Fisher as Princess Leia in Star Wars: A New Hope. The film is set to make its debut in Navajo. Source: Supplied

THE classic Star Wars film that launched a science fiction empire is being dubbed in the Navajo language.

A handful of Navajo speakers have translated the script for Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope and people are now being sought to fill some two dozen roles.

Casting calls are scheduled on Monday in Burbank, California and next Friday and Saturday at the Navajo Nation Museum in Window Rock, Arizona.

Potential actors don't have to sound exactly like Princess Leia or Luke Skywalker but should deliver the lines with character.

Museum director Manuelito Wheeler says he sees the translation as entertaining and a way to preserve the Navajo language.

Wheeler says it's rewarding considering the US once tried to eradicate the language.
 


View the original article here

Pirate Party sails into parliament

Iceland vote

Leaders of the Bright Future and the Left Green Movement join the Independence Party's Bjarni Benediktsson, Pirate Party's Birgita Jonsdottir, the Progressive Party's Sigmundur Gunnlaugsson and the leader of the Social Democratic Alliance for a TV debate on election night in Reykjavk. Picture: Halldor Kolbeins Source: AFP

ICELAND'S Pirate Party, a file-sharing activist movement, had wind in its sails in the country's election, becoming the first of its kind to win seats in a national parliament.

The libertarian movement, modelled on its Swedish namesake which has been campaigning for copyright reform since 2006, garnered 5.1 per cent of the vote, just above the five per cent election threshold, giving it three of the 63 seats in the Icelandic legislature.

The party was already represented in the parliament, known as the Althing, through co-founder Birgitta Jonsdottir, 46, an activist and poet who in the previous election ran under the banner of the Citizen's Movement.

Jonsdottir told public broadcaster RUV the results were "historic".

Founded in November last year, the party is young compared to its Swedish counterpart - which pioneered the movement and has two members of the European Parliament - as well as the German Pirate Party which has won seats in state legislatures.

After an inconspicuous launch, the Icelandic group made a splash in the polls less than a month before the vote, passing the five per cent election threshold that, in addition to Althing representation, gives it access to state funding.

Its internet-based campaign slammed the growing role of corporate interests in politics, appealing to protest voters and stealing some of the supporters who helped elect the Left-Green movement in 2009.

"We're not vying to get a seat in the government. But we're ready to work with any party that will be interested in the issues we've been raising," Jonsdottir told AFP.

Those issues included "21st century laws" on online privacy, freedom of information and government transparency, she said.

"Many people see Iceland as a kind of laboratory for democracy. We have to live up to this reputation," she said.


View the original article here

Meet Baz Luhrmann's wife

CATHERINE Martin, The Great Gatsby's production and costume designer, spills on working with her husband.

Sunday Style: We’re counting sleeps until The Great Gatsby is released (May 30). How are the nerves in the Martin-Luhrmann household?

We’re totally hysterical. It’s like sending your baby off to college. We’re packing the bags. We’ve got the list. Once it premieres we might start to feel distance.

Let’s free-associate! I say “Hollywood power couple”. You…

… burst out laughing! I feel like Baz and I should come into work one day wearing that slogan on our T-shirts. We’re more "squabbling Hollywood couple”.

You’ve collaborated on dozens of films together. Do you bring work home?

Well, it’s not considered kosher in our household to do a sort of ninja-stalk and present material you need signed off at times when the other person appears to be genuinely relaxing – but I’m constantly guilty of it. My husband less so.

How about in the office? Any husband-wife drama over the desk-divider?

Baz is the boss at work – there’s no confusion about that. That’s not to say I don’t have strong opinions, like any feisty executive in a company. I’m no ‘yes-woman’, but ultimately he’s in charge. At home, we have a pretty traditional relationship in the sense that he’s nominally the head of the household. We discuss everything and 100 per cent of decisions are joint, but the hierarchy works and I’m fine with that.

You also collaborated on two children. What do they make of the family business?

I think they like the idea we’re involved with movies, but they’re seven and nine and only just starting to make connections. They play with Tobey Maguire’s children but it took my son six months to say, “Is that Spider-Man?”

Do they enjoy being on set?

They’re most excited about the catering table. To stop them from yelling, “Cut!” I’ll let them have cordial and biscuits, which they never get at home, so that’s exciting. My daughter Lilly will be next to Leonardo DiCaprio at the table, thinking, “Oh my god, Arnott’s Family Assorted!”

Will they follow in your footsteps?

My son thinks he has some good ideas for movies and he’d prefer it if Baz made comedies. William is actually very down on the fact that his father makes movies where people die at the end.

You worked with Miuccia Prada for the Gatsby costumes. Do you get starstruck?

Absolutely! Having lunch with her and pitching ideas I was thinking, “Is this really happening? Am I really doing this?” It was one of the most incredible moments. Mrs Prada is so fast and funny and fantastic, but very human.

Is there such a thing as designers’ block? Does it happen to you?

All the time. All the time. Some days I think, “Well, I have no idea how to do that!” I have terribly frustrating days of just sitting at the computer and nothing happens. But I’ve learnt that if you apply yourself and keep doing it, it will happen. Nothing replaces hard work and considering the problem. And sleeping on it.

It’s nice to imagine you toiling over every single prop, since the finished product is always so crazy-perfect.

I’m very OCD about details. I can barely watch a scene back sometimes because I’ll be thinking, “Ugh, the fricking wallpaper doesn’t match up behind her head! How could I have missed that?”

Can you enjoy your old movies, or is that like looking at photos from the ’80s?

I can, and it’s fun. Certain lines from movies have become part of our story and our culture. If anyone at work ever says, “Oh, that’s going to be hard,” we shout, “Hard? Hard! How hard do you think it’s been for me? Frangipani de la squeegee mop!” [from Strictly Ballroom]

And now you’re working on Strictly Ballroom, the musical! Where do you find the time?

I’ve learnt to do what’s on the schedule. It sounds stupid, but I just do what’s written down. If you keep focused and stop panicking, you get a lot more done. I’ve also learnt that it’s about trying and not becoming despondent or using failure as an excuse not to try. I fail about 50 times a day. It’s like water off a duck’s back now. Acknowledge it and move on. You can’t be devastated by it.

We need to write this down! What else?

I’m the centre of so many things in our domestic existence that I can’t afford not to be as happy as I can be. And the only person I can count on to make me happy is me. That’s not a lesson I learnt at 21 – I’m learning it at nearly 50 and I still feel like I’m only getting 72 per cent… in my trials.

Follow Meg on Twitter @meg_mason

Download the Sunday Style app from iTunes


View the original article here

Fans give Zach Braff $2M on Kickstarter

Zach Braff

Zach Braff has defended his decision to use Kickstarter, saying it is the only way he can have full creative control of the project. Picture: AP Source: AP

AS actor Zach Braff raised a few eyebrows as well as US$2 million on Kickstarter to fund his next movie, Desperate Houswives star Eva Longoria opened up about the depression that followed her break-up from ex Tony Parker, while US news anchor Tom Brokaw claims his daughter's junior prom has more dignity than the White House Correspondents Dinner, which needless to say he wasn't attending this year.

Global Goss

Source: No Source

Actor Zach Braff has raised US$2 million ($A1.95 million) in the three days to follow up his 2004 indie hit Garden State. The actor, who used Kickstarter to fund the project, has promised his fans, “I won’t let you down, let’s make a killer movie.”

Of course, why an over-paid Hollywood star might use the site to grab cash out of the pockets of less well-paid fans, has caused some consternation among, well, jealous people. Braff, as he would, disagreed, proclaiming that using Kickstarter was the only way he would be able to direct the film with final editing approval and his desired casting choices. So, he’s a control freak, then?

Actress Eva Longoria

Eva Longoria says friends complimented her on her fine figure when in fact she lost excess weight because of depression. Picture: AFP/Joe Klamar Source: AFP


Eva Longoria has told Dr Oz that after her divorce from NBA star Tony Parker she became severely depressed. After the couple split in 2010, the diminutive Longoria said, “I was not eating. I was depressed. I was sad. My diet was coffee.”

The former Desperate Houswives star says she lost a huge amount of weight but, as is the way in our very odd weight-obsessed universe, people told her she’d never looked better.”

“People kept saying, ‘You look amazing, divorce agrees with you.”

“And I was like, I don’t feel good, I have no energy.”

Longoria said she “didn’t know” she was depressed (“I thought I was just sad”) until she spoke to her doctor, and got on the road to recovery after, among other things, changing her diet.

Tom Brokaw

Veteran anchor Tom Brokaw says the likes of Lindsay Lohan have turned the White House Correspondents Dinner into a joke. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

It’s always Lindsay Lohan’s fault. Now, veteran US news anchor Tom Brokaw has said he declined his invitation to this year’s White House Correspondents Dinner (held over the weekend) because of the troubled actress. Lohan, who was invited to last year’s soiree (and who apparently spent much of the night in the bathroom), was apparently the straw that broke the camel’s back for Brokaw.

“Somewhere, it began to freewheel out of control,” said Brokaw of the event, which has been a tradition since 1920 for journalists who cover the White House and the President.

Brokaw, who says that his “daughter’s junior prom has more dignity” still admits he wouldn’t have minded meeting Charlize Theron, though. Of course he wouldn’t.

Ricky Gervais

Ricky won't be doing any of his trademark dance in the final US version of "The Office". Source: Supplied

Get the guitar… Ricky Gervais has broken the hearts of David Brent-ophiles everywhere by rejecting an offer to appear in the final episode of the US version of The Office. Although he’s recently resurrected Brent for a couple of web spots (all of which are gold), Gervais, it seems, is too busy with his role in the upcoming Muppets flick to pay a visit to the US show, which is ending after nine seasons.

Apparently, Steve Carell also declined an offer to reprise his role of Michael Scott one last time. End of an era.

Marc Antony

J-Lo ex Marc Antony has reportedly split from Chloe Green, the 22-year-old daughter of the Top Shop billionaire Philip Green. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

Well, that was quick. J-Lo’s ex, Marc Antony, has already dumped his much, much younger girlfriend after a whirlwind romance. At 22, Chloe Green (the daughter of Top Shop billionaire, Sir Philip Green) is just three years older than Anthony’s eldest daughter, Ariana. Green is said to have moved her things out of 44-year-old Anthony’s Miami mansion, and gone away to drown her sorrows with her mates. You’ll be right, love.


View the original article here

Vietnam embraces My Best Gay Friends

My Best Gay Friends

My Best Gay Friends creator Huynh Nguyen Dang Khoa (R) posing in a promotional image in Ho Chi Minh City. Picture: AFP PHOTO/HUYNH NGUYEN DANG KHOA Source: AFP

  • Comedy looks at 20-something gay, lesbian and transgender people
  • First episode of web series has been viewed over one million times
  • Highlights growing support for marriage equality

VIETNAM'S first gay sitcom has become a YouTube sensation, racking up millions of views as support for legalising same-sex marriage strengthens within the communist government.

Homosexuality was once seen as a social evil in Vietnam and the success of My Best Gay Friends, a low-budget series about three people sharing an apartment in southern Ho Chi Minh City, has taken even its creator by surprise.

"I thought it would only interest Vietnam's gay community - but we're hearing that parents, grandparents, whole families watch and love the shows and long for new episodes," Huynh Nguyen Dang Khoa, who also stars in the series said.

Watch the introduction to the hit YouTube soap in Vietnam, 'My best gay friends'. Video: YouTube/dangkhoadeptrai

From moving out of home to work and relationship trouble, the series details life as a typical perpetually-broke twenty-something in Vietnam - but the characters are mostly lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender.

Khoa decided to make the show after hearing about the weird but often very amusing situations faced by a close friend - who also stars in the sitcom- as he came out and began living an openly gay life in Vietnam.

My Best Gay Friends

Huynh Nguyen Dang Khoa (C) seen here in scene from the popular YouTube gay sitcom, My Best Gay Friends. Picture: AFP PHOTO/HUYNH NGUYEN DANG KHOA

"We didn't have much money so everyone chipped in - we had a little cash to cover equipment, and buying food for when we were shooting all day," said Khoa, who used his own digital SLR camera to shoot the whole series.

Most of the characters are played by Khoa's friends - both gay and straight - but Cindy Thai Tai, a well-known transgender singer who was one of the first Vietnamese celebrities to have sex-change surgery, also makes an appearance.

"I wanted to show people that homosexuals have ordinary lives, full of emotion, friends, family - very normal lives," said 22-year-old Khoa, who is himself gay.

While it is not illegal, homosexuality has long been a taboo in Vietnam, where Confucian social mores- with their emphasis on tradition and family - still dominate.

But in a surprise move last year the authoritarian government said it was considering legalising same-sex marriage - a proposal that recently won the support of the Ministry of Health.

"People of the same sex have the right to live... love, find happiness (and) get married," said Deputy Minister of Health Nguyen Viet Tien.

The move would make Vietnam the second country in the Asia Pacific region to legalise such unions after New Zealand.

Some symbolic but non-legally binding same-sex weddings have already been held in Vietnam, with footage of one such event going viral in 2010.

Sociologist Le Quang Binh told AFP that social attitudes towards the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) community were changing rapidly in Vietnam at the moment but it was hard to know how much "My Best Gay Friends" had helped.

"We are lobbying the government on (same-sex weddings). I hope good change will come," said Binh, who has worked on numerous research projects on Vietnam's LGBT community.

Even if Vietnam stops short of allowing gay marriage, any legal change to recognise same-sex unions would catapult the country to the forefront of gay rights in Asia, where traditional values dominate many societies and sodomy is illegal in some.

My Best Gay Friends tackles the issue in episode nine - the most recent episode which has already been watched half a million times - when a lesbian wedding ceremony runs into problems.

"The couple is female! This wedding goes against Vietnamese traditions and customs," the manager of a restaurant says as she forces the wedding party to leave the establishment. "They are violating the law."

When one flamboyant member of the party - played by Cindy Thai Tai - protests, asking "so you think that the homosexuals have no rights to love and wed each other lawfully?" the manager quickly explains the establishment has no choice.

"Please madam, local authorities called us and forced us to cancel this wedding. If we go against the order we'll get a serious fine!" the manager adds.

The wedding is quickly moved to an alternative venue and goes ahead - to the delight of the couple's friends and family present.

The first episode of the low-budget series recently passed the one million views mark and the further eight completed episodes, out of a planned 15, are swiftly accruing hits.

"I feel a lot of sympathy, and admiration, towards the friendship and love they show for each other. I think they live a more beautiful life than ordinary people," read one typical comment from a viewer, posted on YouTube.

In 2011, curious Vietnamese filmgoers streamed into cinemas to catch Lost in Paradise, which chronicled the doomed love affair between a gay prostitute and a book seller, providing a rare glimpse into a usually hidden side of the country.

Despite the online popularity of My Best Gay Friends Khoa said there were no plans to broadcast the series on television as it was "rather sensitive" and did not appeal to networks or their advertisers.


View the original article here

Here's a tale that wags the dog

Shaking dogs

Shaking dogs: incredible photos of pooches caught mid-shake. Photo: carlidavidsonphotography.com/Carli Davidson Source: Supplied

  • Images show fabulous variety of dogs in mid-shake
  • Zoologist photographer grew up beside nature reserve
  • Snapper has 19,000 Facebook fans and book deal

FORGET wildly popular dance the Harlem Shake, here's the Portland Shake, as brilliantly captured by a talented American zoologist turned pet photographer.

As a child growing up next to a nature reserve in suburban New York City, Carli Davidson cared for cockroaches and rats, dreaming of being a lion tamer.

When she grew up, she worked with elephants and tigers at Oregon Zoo.

Today, she is winning rave reviews and carving out a career as an accomplished animal photographer in Portland, USA.

Shaking dogs

Bailey, Border Collie: incredible pooches caught mid-shake by Carli Davidson. Photo: carlidavidsonphotography.com Source: Supplied

Ms Davidson's stunning snaps of dogs in never-seen-before poses have won her 19,000 fans on Facebook - and now her first book deal.

The images show a bewildering variety of dogs in mid-shake, casting a fascinating new light on a common tick of man’s best friend.

Shaking dogs

Teuer, Boxer: incredible pooches caught mid-shake by Carli Davidson. Photo: carlidavidsonphotography.com Source: Supplied

"At first I wasn't trying to capture anything," recalls Ms Davidson, 32, whose project Shake was inspired by her own dog Norbert.

With lots of natural loose skin around his face, Ms Davidson’s first model Mane, a Dogue de Bordeaux, was an ideal test subject.

Shaking dogs

Mane, Dogue de Bordeaux: incredible pooches caught mid-shake by Carli Davidson. Photo: carlidavidsonphotography.com Source: Supplied

"After seeing the first few images, I realised I was capturing was something playful, light-hearted and somewhat bizarre."

Shaking dogs

Mane, Dogue de Bordeaux: incredible pooches caught mid-shake by Carli Davidson. Photo: carlidavidsonphotography.com Source: Supplied

Inspired, the photographer started shooting as many dogs as she could.

Ms Davidson's subjects are mostly friends' pets, bolstered by orphans from the local animal rescue shelter.

Shaking dogs

Teuer, Boxer: incredible pooches caught mid-shake by Carli Davidson. Photo: carlidavidsonphotography.com Source: Supplied

Picked up by publisher Harper Collins, the photographer has shot more than 60 different dogs for her first book, on sale in October.

"I shot over 100 dogs, but some chose not to shake, so I scheduled a lot more then I needed."

"I show two images of each dog, like two frames in a movie, to amplify the sense of change in appearance and motion."

Shaking dogs

Rocky, Bloodhound: incredible pooches caught mid-shake by Carli Davidson. Photo: carlidavidsonphotography.com Source: Supplied

How does she get the dogs to shake?

"I use a variety of techniques, but I usually tell people its magic," says Ms Davidson. "I'm not giving all of my secrets away just yet."

Shaking dogs

Rocky, Bloodhound: incredible pooches caught mid-shake by Carli Davidson. Photo: carlidavidsonphotography.com Source: Supplied

Not resting on her laurels, the photographer is working on Invincible, a project sharing stories of disabled pets and their owners, and at time same time shooting Fetch, which shows dogs in mid-air as they leap to retrieve favourite toys.

Shaking dogs

Greta, Corded Poodle: incredible pooches caught fetching by Carli Davidson. Photo: carlidavidsonphotography.com Source: Supplied

"Fetch shows us both the predator and the playful puppy in our dogs. I'm amazed at how high dogs will jump for Frisbees!" she says.

It's the perfect culmination of a journey that began with the young Ms Davidson hanging around photo shoots with her art director father.

Shaking dogs

Twinky, Chinese Crested: incredible pooches caught mid-shake by Carli Davidson. Photo: carlidavidsonphotography.com Source: Supplied

"The fact that I can make a living at my photography was secondary to making the art, but it's much appreciated," she says.

"I aim to tell honest stories that encourage curiosity, and hopefully help people recognize the sameness of all creatures."

SHAKE by Cari Davidson will be published by Harper Collins in October. Pre-order here

Simon Crerar is News Limited's Visual Story Editor. Follow him at twitter.com/simoncrerar

Shaking dogs

Balboa, Bull Terrier: incredible pooches caught mid-shake by Carli Davidson. Photo: carlidavidsonphotography.com Source: Supplied


View the original article here

Cyberattack suspect had 'bunker'

Cyber attack identity theft hackers

The 35-year-old Dutch man arrested on charges of launching cyberattacks had a mobile hacking centre set up in his van, police said. Source: Supplied

A DUTCH citizen arrested in northeast Spain on suspicion of launching what is described as the biggest cyberattack in Internet history operated from a bunker and had a van capable of hacking into networks anywhere in the country, officials said.

The suspect traveled in Spain using his van "as a mobile computing office, equipped with various antennas to scan frequencies," an Interior Ministry statement said.

Agents arrested him on Thursday in the city of Granollers, 35 kilometres north of Barcelona, complying with a European arrest warrant issued by Dutch authorities.

He is accused of attacking the Swiss-British anti-spam watchdog group Spamhaus whose main task is to halt ads for counterfeit Viagra and bogus weight-loss pills reaching the world's inboxes.

The statement said officers uncovered the computer hacker's bunker, "from where he even did interviews with different international media."

The 35-year-old, whose birthplace was given as the western Dutch city of Alkmaar, was identified only by his initials: S.K.

The statement said the suspect called himself a diplomat belonging to the "Telecommunications and Foreign Affairs Ministry of the Republic of Cyberbunker."

Spanish police were alerted in March by Dutch authorities of large denial-of-service attacks being launched from Spain that were affecting Internet servers in the Netherlands, United Kingdom and the U.S. These attacks culminated with a major onslaught on Spamhaus.

The Netherlands National Prosecution Office described them as "unprecedentedly serious attacks on the nonprofit organization Spamhaus."

The largest assault clocked in at 300 billion bits per second, according to San Francisco-based CloudFlare Inc., which Spamhaus enlisted to help it weather the onslaught.

Denial-of-service attacks overwhelm a server with traffic, jamming it with incoming messages. Security experts measure the attacks in bits of data per second. Recent cyberattacks - such as the ones that caused persistent outages at US banking sites late last year - have tended to peak at 100 billion bits per second, one third the size of that experienced by Spamhaus.

Netherlands, German, British and US police forces took part in the investigation leading to the arrest, Spain said.

The suspect is expected to be extradited from Spain to face justice in the Netherlands.


View the original article here