Student of the Year Film Songs Download




Student of the Year is an upcoming Indian comedy film directed by Karan Johar, starring newcomers Varun Dhawan, Sidharth Malhotra and Alia Bhatt in the lead roles. Wikipedia
Release date: October 19, 2012 (initial release)
Director: Karan Johar
Music: Vishal Dadlani
Casting director: Nandini Shrikent
Cinematography: Ayananka Bose
Download All IN ONE
01
Ratta Maar - Vishal Dadlani & Shefali Alvarez
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02
Radha - Shreya Ghoshal, Udit Narayan, Vishal & Shekhar
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03
Ishq Wala Love - Shekhar Ravjiani, Salim Merchant & Neeti Mohan
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04
The Disco Song - Benny Dayal, Sunidhi Chauhan & Nazia Hassan
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05
Kukkad - Shahid Mallya
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06
Vele - Shekhar Ravjiani & Vishal Dadlani
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07
Mashup of the Year (Mixed by Kiran Kamath) - Vishal Dadlani
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Student of the Year (film) Pictures















Can’t dislike Student Of The Year's promo



Several filmmakers have woken up to the importance and impact of promoting their films through online media today. We got a taste of their sudden 'realisation' recently. Having watched the promo of Karan Johar's upcoming directorial film Student Of The Year on the internet, (which has a 1,1,28,851 views on the Dharma Movies page) we wanted to express our views.

But on clicking, we realised that the like/dislike option was disabled. The same tab on the Eros Entertainment page was also not working. However, on other pages, the promo did have the standard feature enabled.

On investigating further, we learnt that the choices were disabled only after the video received more 'dislikes' than 'likes'. At the time of going to press, the trailer on Dharma Movies page had 862 likes and 959 dislikes.

A source threw light upon what really transpired. "The promo of Student Of The Year received many views but too many 'dislikes' on the Dharma Movies page on Youtube. So, the makers decided to disable the option," said the source.

In simple words, this action will hide the existing like/dislike count from the viewers. Also, one wouldn't be able to comment on the video. Interestingly, when Mumbai Mirror inquiredDharma Productions last evening about this, the options that were disabled for the past couple of days were activated once again.

The one redeeming thing for the production house however, is the increasing number of views and the many positive comments the trailer has received online. In fact, the video started trending on social networks minutes after it was released.

Grand Theft Auto V Trailer Remake in San Andreas



GTAV Easter Egg in Max Payne 3




First Screenshots of GTA V





New GTA V Screenshots - Transport





New GTAV Screenshots - Leisure





New GTAV Screenshots - Business





What Rockstar said about "Universes"



SammiiDoogles
There are many references to GTAIII characters and brands (El Burro graffiti in LC for example) in GTAIV, but do any characters (other than Lazlow) actually exist within both 'universes'? Is that where Donald Love went? Did he hop dimensions into the GTAIV universe?! Plot twist!! Are the two universes completely separate? I understand it'd make almost no sense having two Liberty City's but is there any way we'll see characters from GTAIII return? GTAIV has some amazing characters, but some of the characters in the III era are just unforgettable.

Rockstar says:
El Burro is referenced as he was also referenced in GTA 1, so it felt appropriate that he should cross "universes" - the "universes" are the worlds interpreted at different definitions, 2d, 3d and high definition, so we felt brands and radio / back ground characters would exist in both, but 3 dimensional characters would not. This is the logic (as far as it could be considered logical) behind it - so no, we don't believe any GTA3 characters could exist in the GTA4 universe.


Now, while this question and answer wasn't specific to GTAV, I think what we can deduce from it is that what they said about GTAIV applies to GTAV as well - given that they are within the high definition interpretations of these fictional worlds.
That makes perfect sense if you think about it. Imagine if characters from the GTA 3 trilogy crossed over to this new interpretation of Los Santos, specifically CJ. Wouldn't it seem odd to think that the history CJ had with GTA: San Andreas' neighborhoods, the layout of the streets, the size of the map, all suddenly completely wiped out and replaced with a more broader city?
There are those, however, who say that this is the "bold new direction" Rockstar is taking by bringing back older characters. But that is unlikely given that they issued this statement a month after GTAV was announced with its trailer.
Of course, as mentioned by Rockstar, this does not apply to in-game branding and radio personalities. While we don't yet know for certain, I'm sure when Lazlow isn't busy playing rugby or making strippers cry, he's hard at work recording and producing radio content for GTAV.
On a separate note, you may have noticed we haven't yet seen many night time scenes from the game assets released so far on GTAV. If you want to get hyped, make sure you check out the video "NightFall" by Colin Rich - a "three minute tour of light through the City of Angels".

Mitt Romney strives to strike a posture personable and presidential




TAMPA — Condoleezza Rice radiated charisma, Ann Romney exuded warmth, and Paul Ryan brought his Wisconsin-bred polite pugnacity. But in the end, it was Mitt Romney who capped the Republicans’ big week with a message that carried an unlikely echo of the very president he is trying to unseat.

On the final night of a slimmed-down and at times uneven Republican National Convention, Romney used his long-awaited address to call for national unity and conciliation, to “restore the promise of America.” He used somewhat gentler rebukes of President Obama — more disappointed father than angry uncle — as he pleaded with his party and his country to transfer to him the mantle of hope and change.

It was a shrewd tack, and a more presidential one, performed with the recognition that many Americans are still just forming first impressions of a man who has remained, in the public imagination, something of a riddle.

“That America, that united America” became a refrain, as Romney called for shared purpose — toward putting people back to work, caring for the poor and the sick, and preserving US military strength. In spirit, at times, it evoked Obama’s legendary lament at the 2004 Democratic National Convention about the red state-blue state divide.

Despite the harsh attacks that he, his campaign, and their Republican surrogates have leveled against Obama’s presidency this week, Thursday night was Romney’s moment to rise above all that, to appear, at least for a brief moment, high-minded and more personable. Fleeting or not, it was an approach that surely held appeal well beyond the partisan confines of the Tampa convention hall, even if the speech lacked the soaring rhetoric or cogency of the week’s best performers.

Romney had two key challenges coming into the convention. He had to make voters confident in his ability to fix the economy, but also comfortable with him as a potential president. He has, though, been famously stingy in talking about himself. His campaign book, “No Apology,” is so spare on personal details that he began the first chapter with these words: “I hate to weed.”

Whether he accomplished all he needed to remains an open question. But one of the most important tasks of the past few days — fleshing out who Mitt Romney is, and where he comes from — he achieved to a degree Thursday by revealing some emotion in talking about his five boys and by letting friends and supporters speak to his character.

Party leaders and TV viewers heard uplifting (and selectively chosen) stories about companies helped by Bain Capital. They heard of the loyalty he inspires among those close to him. They heard of his managerial aplomb as governor. But most notably they heard testimonials about his long and committed service within the Mormon church.

In perhaps the moving moment of the convention, a former Massachusetts couple, Pat and Ted Oparowski, told a hushed audience how Romney, in his role as a lay church leader, had ministered to their family when their 14-year-old son, David, was dying of cancer. One day, David asked Romney, a Harvard Law School graduate, to help him make a will, something no teenager should ever have to do.

“How many men do you know would take the time out of their busy lives to visit a terminally ill 14-year-old and help him settle his affairs?” Pat Oparowski asked.

The inclusion of the Oparowskis, along with other Mormons, in the program was, as envisioned by the campaign, an adroit way of addressing the centrality of Romney’s Mormon faith without delving into specific tenets. It was a shift for a man who has been highly resistant to sharing much publicly about his religion and its place in his life. Romney’s unremarkable utterance Thursday about his upbringing — “We were Mormons” — was remarkable in that he said it at all.

With Republicans worried about turning off women voters, Romney also made a fairly explicit pitch for their support. He invoked his mother, Lenore, and her groundbreaking, though ultimately unsuccessful, 1970 campaign for US Senate in Michigan. He paid tribute to the lineup of women convention speakers. And he ticked off a tally of women he appointed to senior positions as governor.

Republicans now head into the final two months of the presidential campaign professing enthusiasm and optimism about their chances this November.

“This has been a tremendous convention,” former senator Mel Martinez of Florida said prior to Romney’s speech.

Still, Stu Rothenberg, editor of the nonpartisan Rothenberg Political Report, said Romney is unlikely to receive a sustainable polling bounce from the convention. Plus, any bump is likely to be countered by Obama’s gain from his own convention. Continued...

Clint Eastwood speech with empty chair upstages Mitt Romney at GOP convention



Political conventions are TV shows, only TV shows, and the one from Tampa last night starred a silver-maned screen icon named Clint Eastwood who drifted wildly off-script, addressed an empty chair, put words in the mouth of an invisible “president” that were vaguely — no, very distinctly — scatological, rambled for eleven minutes, drove event organizers to drink and in the process totally, irrevocably heisted the entire week.
It doesn't matter what stripe your politics are, or whether you thought last night was a victory or disaster, Eastwood stole the night. He stole it with the expertise and facility of a veteran actor who knew exactly what he was doing — stealing a scene, and stealing it with utter conviction.
There is but one thing anyone will remember from this week — one thing and one thing only: The sight of Dirty Harry addressing an empty chair.
Let the big minds address whether this remarkable TV moment was good or bad for the Republican ticket and they already have: Bob Schieffer last night said it was a political disaster, shifting attention from the candidate to a loopy actor addressing an empty chair. His colleague Norah O'Donnell said Friday morning that it was the “not good, the bad and the very ugly.""
But wait! What about us? The viewer — the ones sitting at home, drifting off to sleep, wondering when we'd hear yet another speaker talk about yet another mother who had to drive 130 miles to work, while the kids at home were burning the pancakes? The ones watching Taylor Hicks and saying “I voted for THAT guy!?" 
Instead, we got Clint and it was electrifying — a glorious, bizarre, fun, wild, weird, kooky, incendiary moment that threatened to throw the entire convention into a complete tailspin — and just before the nominee spoke.
Now THAT'S entertainment, friends.
The lasting effect of this? Well, you know the DNC at this very moment is cooking up a comeback and Twitter last night was alive with speculation — Oprah addressing an empty chair in Charlotte? And surely someone at the DNC had this idea — get an empty SUIT on a rack up onstage and have George Clooney address “Mitt Romney.“
Reporters love to criticize/whine about the convention — no news! All scripted! Why even cover this thing?
Last night Clint Eastwood gave them — us — reason to watch. You may never vote for Romney in a million years — or may never vote for Obama in a million. But you will remember Clint Eastwood, and the memory doubtless will be a pleasing one: “Something fun and crazy finally happened at a political convention. Maybe I'll stick around for the mystery guest next time.”

Maria Montessori, a bold life breaking gender boundaries




Doctor Maria Montessori may have given her name to one of the world’s most well known education methods, but the woman behind the philosophy is not a well known feminist figure.

In the early twentieth century Montessori, one of Italy’s first female physicians, was a true trailblazer, rejecting many social norms associated with gender roles in her time.

The daughter of parents who placed a high value on education, as a teenager Montessori enrolled in technical schools where she focused on math and science. Montessori planned to become an engineer, but then decided to study medicine.


Montessori applied to the University of Rome, but was strongly discouraged from attending because of her gender. She enrolled anyway, taking classes in natural sciences, botany, zoology, experimental physics, anatomy, and chemistry. She graduated with her degree in 1896.

According to the American Montessori society, she faced gender discrimination left and right. It was deemed inappropriate for her to attend classes with men while in the presence of a naked body (even when that body was dead), so Montessori did her cadaver dissections after class, alone.

After graduating, Montessori found employment at the university hospital, and began her own practice. She also began her soon-to-be famous research studying how mentally disabled children learn, which would be the foundation for her educational methods for all students.

When Montessori was 36, she founded Casa dei Bambini, or Children’s House, an experimental school where she could test her education methods. Rather than teaching the children herself, Montessori trained the teachers and then oversaw their work and observed the students. Her methods, quickly spread, and soon she was training teachers around the world.

Montessori traveled, speaking extensively on her approach to education, and also on women’s rights, and peace. She believed that peace could be taught in education, putting her at odds with Benito Mussolini in Italy. Montessori left her country in 1932 and was later was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize six times.

Even in her personal life, Montessori was unusual for her time. She had one son, Mario, but did not marry his father. Mario Montessori eventually became her collaborator in her studies.

Montessori’s legacy remains her education methods, but with her remarkable life she also stands as a model of a uniquely talented and bold woman.

Snooki's Baby Lorenzo Gets Love From Auntie JWoww



Ever since Snooki welcomed her little meatball into the world Sunday morning, the first-time mom's "Jersey Shore" pals have shown Lorenzo LaValle a lot of love.
Someone who has stuck by Snooki through thick and thin is the one and only JWoww, who took to Twitter to congratulate her bestie and her fiancé Jionni LaValle on their adorable new baby. wrote, "So proud of @snookiand @JLaValle! Lorenzo is the cutest baby I ever seen. Love him already." Snooki (Real name Nicole Polizzi) responded, "Aw thank you auntie !" And as she celebrates her first full day as a mom, she tweeted early Monday morning, "Hardly any sleep but SO worth it!"

But Mama Snooki is hardly the only proud parent. Jionni couldn't hold back his joy either, writing, "I'll never forget old high school memories or the vacations I been on with my boys, I will also never forget 8/26/12 the day my son was born!"
Snooki gave birth at 3 a.m. Sunday at Saint Barnabas Medical Center in Livingston, New Jersey. A rep for Polizzi told MTV, "The world just got another Guido!!! Lorenzo Dominic LaValle has entered the world weighing 6lbs, 5oz. Nicole, Jionni & Enzo are doing great!"
MTV shared in Snooki's excitement: "We couldn't be happier for Nicole and Jionni on the healthy delivery of their baby boy! We look forward to Lorenzo's first trip to the Jersey Shore and can't wait to see his first animal-print onesie."
Back in March, Snooki and Jionni announced they were not only expecting their first child, but also that they were engaged. "I mean, I do have a dream wedding," she told MTV News in April. "But I definitely don't even want to talk about it or think about it because I'm not even ready for it yet. I just want my baby first."

Bill Nye explains creationism critique: ‘I’m not attacking religion’



Bill Nye (better known to some as the Science Guy) says he isn’t attacking religion by advocating that children be protected from creationist viewpoints. He’s just saying people shouldn’t let religious beliefs interfere with science.
Nye,a former Seattleite and current Internet science star, caused a stir online in a video for BigThink.com. He made this plea to adults who don’t believe in evolution: Please, don’t make your kids think that, too. (Watch the video here: “Bill Nye to creationist parents: Don’t force your crazy beliefs on kids.”)
A few days later, Nye added some more perspective in a CBS interview. The full video is posted above. Here’s a partial transcript, courtesy of CBS.

You can believe what you want religiously. Religion is one thing, but science, provable science is something else. My concern is you don’t want people growing up not believing in radioactivity, not believing in geology and deep time. You don’t want people in the United States growing up without the expectation that we can land spacecraft on Mars. You want people to believe in science, this process, this great idea that humans had to discover more about the universe and our place in it, our place in space.
Nye also spoke out to the Huffington Post, saying the Bible shouldn’t be taken literally when it comes to creationism:
The bible that is often cited as a guide to natural law has been translated from other ancient languages. There must be countless subtleties and nuances that are literally lost in translation. I got into good bit of controversy, when I showed an audience in Waco, Texas, USA that the bible, as translated into English, claims that the Sun lights the day, and the Moon lights the night. I pointed out that this translation is unsettling. To my ear, it doesn’t seem as though the author realized that the Moon’s light is reflected sunlight. It seems to me that many ancient people may have realized that the Moon casts reflected light, but it’s lost in translation. This being but one example.
In case you haven’t heard, Nye is reprising his science show on YouTube in conjunction with Nerdist.com. As controversial as his creationism statement has been, it can’t be bad publicity for the new show.

Hurricane Isaac 2012: Storm Makes Landfall in Louisiana‎



Hurricane Isaac made landfall this evening in southeastern Louisiana, with winds of 80 mph that spread out over an area 200 miles wide.
It was a Category 1 hurricane as it came ashore, and the National Hurricane Center warned of "strong winds and a dangerous storm surge occurring along the northern Gulf Coast."
The storm threatened to drop more than a foot of rain -- up to 20 inches in some areas -- from Biloxi, Miss., to New Orleans. The hurricane center said a storm surge -- the bulge of water that a storm pushes ahead of itself -- of 8.8 feet had been measured at Shell Beach, La.
Isaac, a massive and slow-moving storm, reached the coastline just a day short of the seventh anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, which devastated New Orleans in 2005. New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu said Isaac's path is similar to Katrina's and the anniversary has created "a high level of anxiety."
"We don't expect a Katrina-like event, but remember there are things about a Category 1 storm that can kill you," Landrieu said. He urged people to avoid streets likely to flood.
"One of the things that's concerning about this storm is most of its major activity is occurring at night, which makes it a little more difficult to respond to," Landrieu said.
Usually boisterous New Orleans was a ghost town as tourists and locals heeded warnings and either left town or hunkered down in boarded-up buildings.
Rick Knabb, director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami, said it wasn't so much Isaac's strength as the speed at which it was moving that should concern the people living in its path.
"The models show [Isaac's] forward speed slowing down, and that's not good," Knabb said. "When a large system moves slowly, that means a lot of rainfall."
That was a worry that the New Orleans mayor echoed today as the storm approached.
"The thing that concerns us about this storm is that the fact that is it going so slow, slowly and that it could hover of the city for a long period of time," Landrieu said.
President Obama addressed the nation this morning, saying that the Federal Emergency Management Agency has been on the ground for more than a week working with officials in areas that could be affected.
"I want to encourage all residents of the Gulf Coast to listen to your local officials, and follow their directions, including if they tell you to evacuate," Obama said. "We're dealing with a big storm, and there could be significant flooding and other damage across a large area.
"Now is not the time to tempt fate. Now is not the time to dismiss official warnings. You need to take this seriously," he added.
In advance of the storm, Louisiana set up shelters and stockpiled more than a million packaged meals, 1.4 million bottles of water and 17,000 tarps.
Since the levees failed in Katrina seven years ago, more than $14 billion has been spent on the 133 miles of floodwalls, spillways, gates and pumps surrounding New Orleans.
"There is no evidence of any over-topping, whatsoever, we expect that the levees are going to hold," Landrieu said.
While officials say the city is more prepared now than it was in 2005, it's still taking no chances when it comes to evacuation

Perry Hall High student charged as adult in cafeteria shooting



With heightened security and trauma counselors on hand, Perry Hall High School will restart its school year Tuesday, the day after a student shot in the cafeteria was left in critical condition and another student was taken into custody as the suspected gunman.

The shooting took place on the first day of classes Monday as several hundred students were in the cafeteria, where the sound of gunfire initially seemed like just another piece of the aural landscape. Students said it sounded like the pop of air that escapes when a bag of chips is opened, or the clap of a door slamming shut.


Instead, it was gunfire, striking a 17-year-old student who was airlifted to Maryland Shock Trauma Center as classmates and strangers offered prayers for him at impromptu gatherings and across social media. Police said they do not believe the victim, who was not identified, was targeted by the shooter.

Witnesses said a school counselor quickly grabbed the shooter and pinned him up against a vending machine. Police also declined to identify the 15-year-old suspect, who was taken into custody shortly after the 10:45 a.m. shooting, until they decide whether to charge him as a juvenile or an adult.

"He's in custody, our investigators are talking to him, he's cooperating, but he's not been formally charged yet," said Elise Armacost, a Baltimore County police spokeswoman, who noted that juveniles' records are not public. "Is he going to be charged as a juvenile, or is he going to be charged as an adult? I don't know the answer to those questions yet."

Police said they cannot confirm information appearing on various social media networks. Several parents and students pointed to a Facebook posting by someone who said he attended Perry Hall High and spoke of the first day of school being the last day of his life.

A man who identified himself as the suspect's father told the Associated Press that his son had been bullied but declined to give further details. A woman who said she was related to the father gave the following statement on the family's behalf: "We are horrified. We did not see this coming and our thoughts and prayers are with the victim and the victim's family."

Students described a day that suddenly turned chaotic during an early lunch break in the cafeteria of the school, the county's largest with nearly 2,200 students. Rather than the festive atmosphere of a school community returning after summer break, police helicopters whirred overhead, students dove under cafeteria tables and, as the news spread quickly, distraught parents tried to reach their children, in person or by phone or text message.

Throughout the day, a sense of disbelief pervaded.

Jeremy Knavel, 16, said he couldn't believe his eyes when he saw a student emerge from a bathroom Monday morning, taking a gun out from under his shirt.

"I thought it was a joke," he said. "Then when I heard the shot, I ran. I'm shaken still. I can't believe it actually happened."

Sophomore Nick DiPaula, 15, said he and a friend were talking in the cafeteria when they heard a loud bang and turned to see what it was.

"We just see him with the gun, and he's aiming it at my table," DiPaula said.

A school counselor he identified as Jesse Wasmer ran over and tackled the gunman as he and other students hit the floor and another teacher started yelling, "Get out of the building, get out of the building!" DiPaula said.

Wasmer was hailed as a hero by colleagues and across the Internet, where a "Thanks Mr. Wasmer" Facebook page was created. He could not be reached to comment, and school officials declined to discuss details of the incident.

The actions of Wasmer and other teachers in the cafeteria who intervened "were really beyond what anyone can be expected to do," and "made that situation the best it could have been in such a horrible time," said Matt Smoot, a science teacher in his fifth year at the school.

Dennis Sullivan, the school's lacrosse coach until last year, whose son Aidan is a senior at the school, said he knows Wasmer well and was not surprised by his actions. "He's definitely a hero in my book. He saved a lot of people's lives today with what he did," Sullivan said Monday night.

New Baltimore County schools Superintendent Dallas Dance, on his first day of classes after being hired this spring to head the school district, praised the school's "heroic, brave faculty."

Dance said Perry Hall High will be open Tuesday with additional security at the school. The Police Department's Critical Incident Stress Debriefing team will provide support for students and faculty, Armacost said.

Students and parents alike were unnerved by the incident, saying the school has always been considered safe.

It was "overwhelming," said Julia Schoennagel, 14, a freshman. "It was my first day, and I was excited to meet my teachers and see who was in my classes," she said. "It was unreal, I couldn't believe it. You never think that would happen at your school."

US Open tennis 2012 diary: A-Rod and a hard face



Kevin Mitchell at Flushing Meadows
, Wed 29 Aug 2012 01.37 BST

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Andy Roddick was 21 when he won the US Open in 2003, his only slam title, but he looks as intense now as he did then, a volcano with a racket.
Back then the incentive was the burning desire to take over from his fellow American Pete Sampras, who delayed his retirement announcement until just before the tournament. Sampras won his eighth and final US title 12 months earlier, having beaten Roddick in the quarter-finals and Andre Agassi in the final. He never played on Tour again.
In 2012 Roddick can look back on a distinguished career but not one that comes anywhere near that of Sampras. Like every player of his era he has been confounded by the rise of Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, then the power of Novak Djokovic, the flickering art of Andy Murray and the presumption of an army of young contenders.
He remains a prickly but increasingly amusing presence, quick to respond acidly to criticism, which has grown in keeping with his struggle to beat injury and his rivals. However he takes it as gross insult to suggest he might quit tennis and spend more time with his Texas radio station
After seeing off the artful but under-powered challenge of another young American, the promising Rhyne Williams, in three competitive sets on day two with the help of 20 aces, the first question he fielded afterwards, although cleverly crafted, set the tone. "Crossing the threshold of 30 – a little less scary in tennis now than it was 10 or 20 years ago."
Roddick, who turns 30 on Thursday, replied: "I don't know how to rationalise what it was 10 or 20 years ago. It's not something I think about."
What he does think about, surely, is the future. For the moment it looks OK. Whether he has one here after round two we will see soon enough. He was as fiesty as ever against Williams – and with the media.
Asked what would be an "acceptable" run here, he snapped: "There is no 'acceptable' result. You play your second round, try to win your second round. You go as far as you want. Or as far as you can. I don't think we think of it in the context of what's acceptable and what's not."
Not now. Maybe that wasn't the case nine years ago.
Face off
Trying to read a player from his or her facial expression and demeanour is, as Andy Murray has discovered, a popular exercise in commentary boxes and newspaper columns everywhere.
Take the contrasting tics and twitches of David Goffin and Tomas Berdych.
The forecast rain did not arrive on a sunny day, but you would not know it from the cloud hovering over Berdych, a man who looks as if someone has wired him up to the mains – as well he might, protecting his sixth seeding against the Belgian, who is ranked 48 places below him in the world.
Goffin, who gave Roger Federer a fright in Paris, is the Czech's polar opposite, all bright-eyed and innocent, and might have wandered in from the pages of TinTin. Berdych won. Back to the books Dave.
There are stories in every face.
Milos Raonic (pained, unhappy, frustrated prospect, just the 15 double faults, 55 unforced errors and 30 aces) beat Santiago Giraldo (your prototype engaged Latin but not in Rafa's class of intensity).
Roddick (Mr Angry, King of the Twitch, Berdych clone to the power of 10, scourge of ball kids) defeated Williams (cleancut college type, glad to be here, nice to ball kids, thanks for coming).
All in all, then, a victory for the gnarled and wild-eyed. God bless 'em.
Strike talk cools
Whether or not the players boycott the Australian Open in January, Andy Murray, who was on the front line of talks in Melbourne a year ago, advises caution.
"The player meeting at the Aussie Open was pretty brutal. Everyone was speaking up. The whole tour was together; they still are." He added, pointedly: "There have been some changes to the grand slam prizemoney. The majority of the players want to see a change in the grand slams. Who knows what's going to happen? I hope it doesn't come down to [a strike]. That's bad for everybody."
I wouldn't bet on anything more than a flow of tough messages between the ATP and the tournament organisers. These are unhappy but well-paid athletes, not revolutionaries.
Aussie Brit
Johanna Konta, Sydney-born prospect of Hungarian parents who moved to the UK seven years ago when she was 14, admitted after winning her first round win over Timea Babos (a Hungarian by birth) that she still doesn't know the words to God Save The Queen. It's not a hanging offence any more, Johanna. As long as you keep winning.

Wozniacki out of US Open



NEW YORK (AP) -- Slowed by a right knee injury, eighth-seeded Caroline Wozniacki failed to make it out of the first round of her second straight Grand Slam tournament, falling 6-2, 6-2 to 96th-ranked Irina-Camelia Begu of Romania at the U.S. Open on Tuesday.

Wozniacki quit after the first set of her semifinal match last Friday in New Haven. Four days later, she was ousted from the U.S. Open, finishing the match with tape that trainers applied to her hurting knee during an injury timeout in the second set.

Begu got her first U.S. Open win.

Wozniacki was the top seed at Flushing Meadows the last two years but fell in the semifinals both times.

Earlier this summer at Wimbledon, she lost her first-round match to Tamira Paszek.

Foo Fighters fans confused over 'last show' comments



Just for a little while! Not forever… right you generation-defining rockers?!

The Foo Fighters played two seemingly EPIC back to back shows this weekend at England's famed Reading/Leeds festivals, and during their Sunday performance at Reading, Foo Fighter frontman Dave Grohl bid adieu to the spotlight!

Dave shared with his many exuberant fans:

"Well, well, well. The f*cking Reading festival. You guys realize we've got a lot of songs to play. It's the last show of the tour and it's the last show for a long time."

The passionate lads then went on to slay SO many of their hits AND Dave gave a commemorative nod to former Nirvana bandmates Krist Novoselic and the late Kurt Cobain.

While we will miss The Foo Fighters - they've soothed our aching souls on more than one occasion - the time seems ripe for a little hiatus from the 'scene,' especially as the boys are probably still feeling SO high off of their multiple Grammy wins for their latest album, Wasting Light!

Take a nice looonnggg, relaxing break musical dudes! And then PLEASE return to pleasure our senses once again!

Get nostalgic and check out some snaps of the Foo Fighters ragin' out at last year's BBC Radio 1's Big Weekend (below)!

Bill Cosby dead? No, just another hoax

After a phony “R.I.P. Bill Cosby” page randomly popped up on Facebook Monday (Aug 27) … Bill Cosby’s name instantly became a trending topic across social media sites and search engines, as fans all over mistakenly paid tribute and offered their condolences.

Bu fortunately, the 73-year-old legendary actor/comedian is NOT dead and is very much alive and well, Gossip Cop reported Monday night, noting that this isn’t the first time the entertainer/educator has been falsely “killed” by social media.

This very same thing happened to Mr. Cosby twice last year — in February, and in August.

And he also isn’t the only celebrity dealing with ridiculous death hoaxes. Other celebs who have fallen victim to ridiculous death hoaxes this week include Bill Nye (the Science Guy), Russell Brand and even Rihanna.

Rick Santorum Speech At Republican National Convention: Party Lifts All Children -- 'Born And Unborn'



Mitt Romney's wife, Ann, has painted a loving portrait of her husband at the Republican convention, on the day he became the party's White House nominee.

In her prime-time speech, Mrs Romney spoke of her "real marriage" to a steadfast, caring husband and father.

Correspondents say the address was an attempt to show the human side of the Republican, who lags behind President Barack Obama in likeability ratings.

Mr Romney will challenge the Democratic president in November's elections.

Opinion polls show Mr Romney neck and neck with the Democratic president.

Many voters have said the former Massachusetts governor and business star is still something of an unknown quantity.
'A better place'

Mrs Romney, 63, took to the stage after speeches from prominent Republicans, including South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley and former presidential candidate Rick Santorum.

Republicans in Florida say that it is time for change in the US

Telling the audience she wanted to "talk to you from my heart about our hearts", Mrs Romney said of her husband, "you really should get to know him".

She talked about the way her husband helped her deal with multiple sclerosis and breast cancer.

"I read somewhere that Mitt and I have a 'storybook marriage,'" she said.

"Well, in the storybooks I read, there were never long, long rainy winter afternoons in a house with five boys screaming at once. And those storybooks never seemed to have chapters on MS [multiple sclerosis] or breast cancer.

"A storybook marriage? No, not at all. What Mitt Romney and I have is a real marriage."

She added that her husband, who has not spoken much in public about his faith or private life, "doesn't like to talk about how he has helped others because he sees it as a privilege, not a political talking point".

Mrs Romney ended by pledging: "This man will not fail. This man will not let us down.

"He will take us to a better place, just as he took me home safely from that dance."

Mr Romney appeared on stage and kissed his wife as she concluded her remarks, to a standing ovation from the audience.

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie delivered the keynote address after Mrs Romney.

The BBC asks women voters in Florida if they will pick Romney or Obama

The speeches followed a roll-call of party delegates and a lively voice poll in which state delegates called out their team's allocation of votes.

Altogether, Mr Romney secured 2,061 votes, bringing him up to the crucial 1,144 delegates needed to put him "over the top".

While Mr Romney was not present during the vote count, Mrs Romney confirmed that he would attend her address.

Vice-presidential candidate Paul Ryan was also given the Republican party's official stamp of approval on Tuesday.

During the Tuesday sessions, speakers attacked Mr Obama, with House Speaker John Boehner saying "his record is as shallow as his rhetoric".

Republican National Committee chairman Reince Priebus said the president has "never run a company. He hasn't even run a garage sale or seen the inside of a lemonade stand."
Abortion and Wall Street

The convention also approved its party platform - a policy agenda that calls for tax cuts to revive the economy, repealing and replacing a healthcare law passed by Mr Obama, and an end to abortion.

Recent opinion polls have indicated that voters view the economy and unemployment, which is stuck at 8.3%, as top priorities.

The platform also calls for the overturning of measures passed to regulate Wall Street in the wake of the 2008 economic collapse.

On abortion, the platform says: "The unborn child has a fundamental individual right to life which cannot be infringed."

That is more conservative than Mr Romney's declared view - he says he opposes abortions, except in cases of rape, incest, or when the mother's health is in danger.

This is Mr Romney's second run for the White House, after an unsuccessful bid in 2008.

President Obama's renomination will be confirmed next week at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, North Carolina.

This year's convention got off to a late start when Monday's programme was postponed amid concerns that Hurricane Isaac might disrupt the proceedings in Tampa.

But the category one hurricane missed Tampa, instead making landfall in southern Louisiana on Tuesday evening.

It comes almost seven years to the day since Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans.

K. Michelle, Karlie Redd and 5 things we learned on 'Love & Hip Hop ATL' reunion



Some of the cast said the "Love & Hip Hop Atlanta" reunion would be epic and crazy weeks ago age, with K. Michelle telling the studio audience, "I'm tired of these old [expletive] Harriet Tubman [expletive]."  Redd refuses to reveal her age, though she admits that she has a daughter, who she did not want to be a part of the show.

"I'm beautiful, I'm young, I'm talented," Karlie said. "I never tell my age."

Meanwhile, Rasheeda argued with K. Michelle, claiming she does not believe her ex-boyfriend, Memphitz, ever abused her. Throughout the season, K. Michelle was very vocal about him hitting her while they were together.

"Something don't make no damn sense," Rasheeda said. and they were right. The hour-long (Part 1) reunion was entertaining and answered many a question regarding where the cast, including K. Michelle, Karlie Redd and Rasheeda, stand.

In looking over the reunion, there were a good five stand out moments and facts that we learned. So, let's get started with the first one.

1. K. Michelle has a history book and she will use it.

While K. Michelle did not have a chance to discuss her personal life, as in who she might be dating or what is next for her during part 1 of the reunion, she was undeniably entertaining. Using historical references addressing Karlie Redd, K. Michelle said Karlie was old enough to have marched with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., looked like Michael Jackson and was as old as Harriett Tubman. If you don't know who those people are, you need to start reading.

2. Karlie Redd has a daughter.

While it was pretty much established weeks ago that Karlie Redd was not signed to Cash Money, a point on the reunion show, there was some light shed on Karlie's secret child. According to Karlie, there is a daughter but she simply did not want to involve her in everything that comes with "Love & Hip Hop Atlanta." As Mona Scott Young said, that is understandable.

3. Ariane will defend Mimi at any cost.

Ariane is the kind of friend that has your back no matter what. On the reunion show, Ariane stood up to Stevie and made it known she has always been there for Mimi -- especially when he wasn't.

4. Lil Scrappy was one of Joseline's paying clients...

Joseline shut Lil Scrappy up real quick when she revealed how they knew each other before the show. According to Joseline, Lil Scrappy knew her from back in the day. He had no comment.

5. Rasheeda still believes K. Michelle is a complete liar.

Rasheeda stood her ground on the reunion show calling K. Michelle "bi-polar" among other things and insisted her story about Memphitz hitting her is not true. She also claimed K. Michelle wants what she has, which is a husband.

All of that said, that was not the end of "Love & Hip Hop Atlanta." We still have one more part to the reunion show. That kicks off Monday, September 3 at 8 p.m. on VH1.

age, with K. Michelle telling the studio audience, "I'm tired of these old [expletive] Harriet Tubman [expletive]."  Redd refuses to reveal her age, though she admits that she has a daughter, who she did not want to be a part of the show.

"I'm beautiful, I'm young, I'm talented," Karlie said. "I never tell my age."

Meanwhile, Rasheeda argued with K. Michelle, claiming she does not believe her ex-boyfriend, Memphitz, ever abused her. Throughout the season, K. Michelle was very vocal about him hitting her while they were together.

"Something don't make no damn sense," Rasheeda said.

'Pretty Little Liars' summer finale: Who 'betrAyed' the gang?



Pretty Little Liars fans owned Twitter tonight in anticipation of tonight’s big “betrAyal.” And the reveal sent some fans into people-think-I’m-being-murdered screams. Others, like this fan, simply lost control: “Full on shaking and balling my eyes out. #PLL.”

So, in normal people terms, was the twist worth the (over)reactions? You be the judge:

Like every Pretty Little Liars episode, this summer finale kept you guessing until the end. And those of you who had your money on Paige were…OUT OF LUCK! In fact, the final minutes revealed that it was Toby who was working on the A Team.

Yes, a lot happened. And I’ll back up for those of you who aren’t following my nonlinear take on life in Rosewood.

Someone died tonight. We knew that was coming. But the big question was WHO. The answer? Nate, who went all nutso and took Emily hostage AFTER kidnapping pencil-wielder Paige, who we had all assumed the worst about. (Sorry!)

Emily was the one who killed Nate. After escaping, she ran to a lighthouse — a perfect showdown spot — and had a scuffle that ended in him being stabbed with his own knife. What a loser.

Caleb arrived to console Emily, who was crying after killing Nate, which I didn’t completely understand. Dude was gonna kill you, Emily! Don’t cry; stab him again to make sure it’s done! But she didn’t. Instead, we heard a gunshot! (I KNEW the second Hanna expressed to Caleb that she hated the gun that something bad was going to happen.) It’s not entirely clear — to me, at least — WHO shot it, but we know poor Caleb was on the receiving end of the bullet. (Bullets > pink furry lamps) I hope his abs are still symmetrical.

At the hospital — as if a death, a serious injury, and the fact that one of them just killed a man wasn’t enough to deal with — the girls learned that Garrett was set free. Yikes.

Life just isn’t easy for this quartet, and while it certainly sucks to be them, it’s awesome for us to watch.

PLL fans, sound off on the summer finale, and please forgive me for turning back into a 13-year-old for this recap. This show has undeniable powers over me. I suppose I have more in common with the aforementioned obsessed fans than I thought.

Is there more to it? I’m sure there is. But in the meantime, fans have a long time to process that information. (The show doesn’t return until October.) And while we all aren’t busy praying for mercy on Toby’s soul, there’s also Caleb who needs a few good wishes. Last we heard he was in surgery, getting patched up after being shot

David Guetta - Nothing But The Beat (Deluxe Edition)