Saturday, September 19, 2015

Photo: Footballer Mikel Obi welcomes twin


He shared the photo on his instagram page and wrote "My whole world in my arms. Welcome to the world, my angels." Now, the question we all want to know is; who is the baby mama? Longtime girlfriend, Olga? Who knew she was pregnant?

Selena Gomez covers the October 2015 issue of Elle Magazine



                                                 Another photo from her 'Elle' Issue after the cut...

Heads as well as hearts': Croatia says it can take no more migrants


 

After suddenly finding itself in the path of Europe’s biggest tide of migrants for decades, Croatia said on Friday it could no longer offer them refuge and would wave them on, challenging the EU to find a policy to receive them.
The migrants, mostly from poor or war-torn countries in the Middle East, Africa and Asia, have streamed into Croatia since Wednesday, after Hungary blocked what had been the main route with a metal fence and riot police at its border with Serbia.
“We cannot register and accommodate these people any longer,” Croatian Prime Minister Zoran Milanovic told a news conference in the capital Zagreb.
“They will get food, water and medical help, and then they can move on. The European Union must know that Croatia will not become a migrant ‘hotspot’. We have hearts, but we also have heads.”
The arrival of 17,000 since Wednesday morning, many crossing fields and some dodging police, has proved too much for one of the EU’s less prosperous states in a crisis that has divided the 28-nation bloc and left it scrambling to respond.
A record 473,887 refugees and migrants have crossed the Mediterranean to Europe so far this year, the International Organization for Migration said, most of them from countries at war such as Syria who are seeking a better, safer life.
Hundreds of thousands have been trekking across the Balkan peninsula to reach the richer European countries to the north and west, especially Germany, which is preparing to accept 800,000 migrants this year.
But that has wrongfooted the European Union, which has come up with no common policy to deal with the biggest wave of migration to Western Europe since World War Two.
Hungary acted on its own to shut the main route this week by closing its border with Serbia, leaving thousands of migrants scattered across the Balkans searching for alternative paths.
Croatia, offering an overland route to Germany bypassing Hungary, found itself suddenly overwhelmed, and began sending migrants in trains and buses to Hungary.
Gyorgy Bakondi, head of Hungary’s national disaster unit, said more than 4,000 migrants had arrived from Croatia on Friday without any prior consultation, and up to 1,200 more could come before the end of the day.
With tempers clearly fraying, he said authorities had seized a Croatian train carrying migrants to the town of Magyarboly, disarmed the police who were escorting it and arrested the driver.
Hungarian government spokesman Zoltan Kovacs said the incident “raised the suspicion of a border violation”.
However, Croatian police spokeswoman Jelena Bikic said no one had been disarmed or arrested, the escort had been agreed in advance, and the police had returned to Croatia.
Hungary did, however, agree earlier in the day to register at least 1,000 migrants delivered from Croatia.
“TIME TO DEAL DIFFERENTLY”
While Zagreb made welcoming statements earlier this week, Milanovic said he had called a session of Croatia’s National Security Council and that it was time to deal with the problem differently. The president has told the military to be ready if called on to help stop the flow of people.
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker spoke to Milanovic by phone to offer Croatia technical and logistical help in coping with the flood of migrants.
Croatia, the EU’s newest member state, has already closed almost all roads from the border. Interior Minister Ranko Ostojic said if the crisis continued “it is a matter of time” before the border was shut completely, though Milanovic, in his remarks, questioned whether even that would keep migrants out.
Police have rounded up many migrants at the Tovarnik railway station on the Croatian side of the border with Serbia, where several thousand spent the night under open skies.
“We are so exhausted,” said Hikmat, a bare-footed 32-year-old Syrian woman from Damascus, after a journey, like many others, by sea and then through the Balkans to the border between the two former Yugoslav republics.
She said she had been traveling for two months with her son, and added: “Look at me. I just want to get anywhere where we will be safe.”
Some kept traveling and reached tiny EU member Slovenia overnight. Many did so by evading the police and trekking through fields or traveling by train, exasperated by Europe’s confused response to the crisis.
“I didn’t expect such a reaction from Europe … They first open the doors then they close them. They punish the people,” Syrian migrant Dara Jaffar said at Tovarnik’s railway station.
Worried by the situation, Slovenia stopped all rail traffic on the main line from Croatia. Late on Friday, Prime Minister Miro Cerar – reversing his earlier stance – said Slovenia might consider forming a “corridor” for migrants to pass via its territory to western Europe “if the pressure is too great”.
A Reuters reporter saw Slovenian riot police using what appeared to be pepper spray on a crowd of migrants trying to cross the border from the Croatian village of Harmica.
Unlike Croatia, Slovenia is a member of Europe’s Schengen zone of border-free travel, an important goal for refugees. With around 1,000 migrants expected to enter Slovenia in the next 24 hours, it has said it plans to abide by EU rules by receiving asylum requests but returning illegal migrants.
EMERGENCY EU SUMMIT
After failing to agree on a plan to distribute 160,000 refugees across the EU — just a fraction of the numbers arriving this year — the bloc has called a summit for Wednesday to work on a united response.
Donald Tusk, who chairs EU summits, called on Friday for a credible EU migration policy and said member states must stop shifting responsibility onto their neighbors.
In a letter addressed to the 28 leaders ahead of the summit, Tusk, a former Polish prime minister, also urged them to provide donations to the World Food Program to help feed some 11 million refugees in Syria and the region.
Tempers are fraying among some migrants trekking across Europe.
In the Croatian town of Beli Manastir, just over the border from Hungary, angry groups of Afghan and Syrian migrants, waiting for trains to Zagreb, fought with rocks and sticks at a ticket office.
Rocks, smashed bottles and broken sticks littered the ground. A handful of police in ordinary uniforms tried to restore control.
Relations between EU states have also been damaged, with several suspending the Schengen rules to restore emergency border controls to slow the flow.
Despite criticism by rights groups and some EU officials, Hungary’s right-wing prime minister, Viktor Orban, said his country was extending the fence along its southern border with Serbia to the Croatian section.
Serbia warned its neighbors against shutting down the main arteries between them, saying it “will seek to protect our economic and every other interest before international courts”.
Germany, which is planning to host by far the largest number of refugees, says other EU countries must do their part.
Some other EU states, especially former Communist countries in the east, reject quotas to accept refugees. They accuse Berlin of exacerbating the problem and encouraging the overland surge by suspending EU rules to announce in August it would take in Syrian refugees wherever they enter the EU.
German Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel renewed a threat that countries that do not help in the migrant crisis will be deprived of EU funds.
Interior ministers will try to overcome the differences on Tuesday, a day before the summit of EU leaders.
“These occasions may be the last opportunity for a positive, united and coherent European response to this crisis. Time is running out,” Adrian Edwards, spokesman for the U.N. refugee agency, said in Geneva.

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

The Jungle Book Mowgli to return to box office in 2016





Mowgli appears in a beautiful, lush jungle in a sneak peek video of Disney's new live-action and CGI film, The Jungle Book.
Newcomer Neel Sethi is playing the character, a boy raised by wolves who communicates with animals. Several actors are portraying CGI-animated characters, including Scarlett Johansson (Kaa, a python), Idris Elba (Shere Khan, an evil tiger), Bill Murray (Mowgli's friend Baloo, a bear), Ben Kingsley (Bagheera, a panther) Lupita Nyong'o (Raksha, a wolf and Mowgli's adoptive mother) and Christopher Walken (King Louie, an Orangutan).
A short clip was posted on Disney's Instagram page this weekend. It shows stunning jungle scenes—a river surrounded by vegetation and Mowgli standing on a mangled tree branch, covered in vines, in the middle of the jungle. Rustling ,or perhaps hissing, is also heard. A longer trailer is set to be released today Monday.
The Jungle Book, based on a collection of stories by British author Rudyard Kipling.
Jon Favreau is directing Disney's The Jungle Book, which is set for release on April 15, 2016.
Kingsley told E! in August at Disney's D23 convention:
"It is going to be a very different experience in that it's much more visceral. You feel the threat of the jungle, as well as the beauty of the jungle. You feel the power of those beasts as well as the story that they have to tell. You feel that there is something very muscular and vivid about those animals.
When the elephants came onto the screen, the audience gasped because they do look like a herd of elephants. You cannot imagine that that was created in a laboratory. It's almost impossible to believe that you're watching computer-generated images."

Singer and actress Liza Minnelli has cancelled two upcoming appearances in London and Sheffield.


Liza Minnelli
Singer and actress Liza Minnelli has cancelled two upcoming appearances in London and Sheffield.
The US star has called off an event at the London Palladium on 20 September, when she was to have been interviewed on stage by Sir Bruce Forsyth.
Minnelli was also booked to give a similar talk at Sheffield City Hall on 22 September.
According to reports, the events were cancelled due to a dispute over money with their promoter, Rocco Buonvino.
The promoter has previously organised celebrity appearances in the UK by Sylvester Stallone, John Travolta and others.
"We have been advised by the promoters of An Evening with Liza Minnelli that the performance has been cancelled," the London Palladium said in a statement. "All tickets will be refunded."
Rocco Buonvino Productions and Minnelli's representatives have not responded to a request for a comment.
Minnelli, the daughter of Hollywood legend Judy Garland and director Vincente Minnelli, won an Academy Award for her role in 1972 film Cabaret.
She is one of a handful of stars to have won the so-called Egot - an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar and a Tony.
In March, the 69-year-old was admitted to a drug and alcohol rehabilitation unit for treatment of substance abuse.
In promotional material issued when the shows were announced, Minnelli said she considered the UK to be "a second home".

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Meet the most dedicated Kim Kardashian clone



Almodovar got butt and breast surgery in 2009.Thalia Almodovar, 28, who is transgender, reportedly spent more than $100,000 to look like Kim Kardashian.Almodovar got butt and breast surgery in 2009.A transgender Kim Kardashian fan reportedly spent more than $100,000 to look like her idol. Thalia Almodovar, 28, always felt like a woman growing up.
 Kim Kardashian steps out of her Soho apartment on Sept. 10, 2015 in New York City.
Meet the most dedicated Kim Kardashian clone.
A transgender superfan of the buxom reality TV star has reportedly shelled out more than $100,000 to look like her favorite celebrity — and now she's on the hunt for her own Kanye West.
"I think Kim Kardashian is absolutely stunning, she is gorgeous," Thalia Almodovar, 28, told Barcroft TV. "I love the shape of her body. I think she is beautiful an
The New York City beauty said she's frequently mistaken for her idol after she got butt enhancement surgery and breast implants in 2009 and spent nearly $31,000 to match Kim K.'s wardrobe.
Almodovar, who was born male but started transitioning in high school, said she "embraced" the new attention from people confusing her with the famous "Keeping Up With the Kardashians" star.
"I would get preferential treatment in clubs and restaurants. Walking down the street people would mob me for selfies. It was incredible," she said.
d I admire what she has accomplished."
She had fat transferred from liposuction to form her now-voluptuous bottom and uses a mobile app to find the best places to buy outfits similar to Kardashian's.
"Everything about Kim's attitude really resonates with me," she said. "I love my life, and I love being mistaken for Kim."
But being the carbon copy of the curvy socialite has its flaws. Men often can't see past their own obsessions with Kim, Almodovar said.


"Sometimes I am just not in the mood when guys just want to talk to me because I look like Kim without getting to know me," she said. "That annoys me."
"I had this guy that dated me only because he had an obsession with Kim and he thought that I look like her," she added. "It was like almost a fantasy."
But Almodovar is still holding out hope her Yeezy is just on the horizon.
"I'm single now so I'm on the lookout for my own Kanye," she said.