Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Exxxotica Expo: The good, the bad and the tawdry

The Exxxotica Expo, Miami Beach's annual convention for all things adult-industry related, celebrates its fifth anniversary this weekend. And we promise: this is the only 5-year-old's birthday party where you'll be leaving with a goody bag full of porn, pasties and sex toys. If only there were a bounce house.

You've got three days to navigate everything that's going on (and coming off). Here's what expo-goers need to know.

Who's appearing: All the current-day porntastic favorites, including Digital Playground's Jesse Jane; Adam & Eve stars Teagan Presley, Bree Olson and Alexis Ford; adult stars Jenna Haze, Sunny Leone, Gina Lynn and Alexis Texas, Ron Jeremy, Shauna Sand, Savanna Samson and tons more. Intermingling with the adult créme de la créme are plenty of wannabes, reality stars and company reps wearing little and eager to vie for your attention.

What's new: This will be the first of the conventions to feature Legends of Exxxotica, a lineup of the big-name adult film stars. Peter North, Jilly Kelly, Nina Hartley, Lisa Ann, Christy Canyon, Ginger Lynn and others will sign autographs and reminisce about the days of excessive body hair and terrible background music.

Entertainment: Exxxotica's main stage runs round the clock, featuring a combo of musical performances, bikini (or less) competitions and vaudevillian stage antics. Take part in ``So You Think You Can Do Porn?'' -- a physical challenge show where eager civilians are put into compromising positions that test their porn star skills. Or opt for ``How Deviant are You?''

Seminars: Education is the key to success, folks, and that's why Exxxotica delivers a full plate of industry-related seminars for its attendees. Learn how to get into the adult film industry, the legalities of starting an adult website or how to cajole your significant other into the swinging scene.

Exhibitors: Adult mags, websites and movie companies unabashedly display their wares alongside retailers of latex wear, toys, corsets and bondage gear. Vendors in the business of vanity are also abundant, so expect pitches for laser hair removal, airbrush tanning and other services that help you look better naked.

The VIP dealio: VIP status will get you access to a lounge where ``Exxxotica Hotties'' will mingle amidst free-flowing cash bars. Also included: admission to The Bedroom, where swingers club Miami Velvet will provide a bunch of cabanas.

Where: Miami Beach Convention Center, 1901 Convention Center Dr.

When: 4-11 p.m. Friday, 1-11 p.m. Saturday and noon-7 p.m. Sunday.

Tickets: General, single-day admission is $35; go all three days for $85. VIP admission is $65; weekend-long VIP pass is $150. Tickets can be purchased in advance or at the Convention Center; must be 18 for general admission, or 21 for VIP.

Parking: Park at the Convention Center for some solid moolah, or try to score a $1.25/hour meter nearby. Best bet: the 17th Street garage a few blocks away charges $1 an hour.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Togetherville - a Facebook 'for kids'

Kids under 13 aren't allowed on Facebook, but that hasn't stopped many of them from joining.

Togetherville, a social network for kids ages six to 10, hopes to lure them into a more age-appropriate setting. The site, whose founder has three children under 10, launches Tuesday night.

It's free to join, and kids' accounts must be created by their parents using their own Facebook logins. Parents can approve or reject their children's friends and see what types of activities or games their kids are up to.


"The adults participate directly," said CEO and co-founder Mandeep Dhillon, whose kids are eight, five and two. "Which is why this is not a digital babysitter."

Kids have separate logins to Togetherville, and the site looks different depending on whether a parent or a child is logged in. For kids, there are games, pre-screened YouTube videos and other activities, such as educational applications, but no ads.


There are even Facebook-style status updates, called "quips", with a twist: kids choose from a preselected menu of updates, which change daily. Dhillon says that's because when given a blank space to type in, kids tend to either write gibberish or get stumped by to say. But if they want to, they can send in their own "quips" for approval.


Parents can send their kids virtual gifts, review their activities on the site or look at virtual art they've created. Togetherville plans to make money by selling virtual goodies for its games.


The site taps into a growing trend of tech-savvy parents interacting with their kids online. Stephen Balkam, CEO of the Washington DC-based noprofit Family Online Safety Institute, said he hopes Togetherville will get parents to remove their young children from Facebook, calling it a "much safer environment".


Though they are prohibited by the sites from joining, many of kids under 13 are already on MySpace and Facebook. They lie about their age, or get their parents to do so, Balkam said.

Monday, May 17, 2010

UK web users 'wary of revealing too much'

UK internet users have become significantly more cautious about how much personal information they reveal on social networking websites such as Facebook, according to a report by media regulator Ofcom.

The twice-yearly report, a survey of the internet habits of 1,824 people aged 16 and over, found that since 2007 users have become more savvy about online security and are now more reluctant to provide personal information online.

Ofcom's report found that 80% of those surveyed who have a social networking website are likely to only allow friends or family to see it. This is a significant seachange in attitude compared to 2007 when just 48% of those surveyed took such steps.


The report has been published in a climate where the practices of social networking sites – Facebook in particular – have come under scrutiny for privacy and security practices. Earlier this month, EU data protection officials called Facebook's latest privacy changes "unaceptable" and the world's biggest social networking site has been embroiled in a controversy over "panic buttons" for child users.


Almost half of adult internet users in Scotland say they have set up a social networking profile compared with 46% in Wales, 44% in England and 31% in Northern Ireland.


However, about a quarter of internet users say they "lack confidence" in installing filtering software or security features.

The report found that the Scottish were the least likely to worry about entering personal details online with 50% "happy" to enter their home address details on the internet, compared with 23% in Wales and Northern Ireland. More than 40% of Scottish adult internet users are also happy to enter credit card details.

When it comes to trust in media, just 31% of internet users believe web content to be "reliable and accurate". This compares to about 50% of adults that trust television and radio content. However, news sites are trusted by 58% of web users.

Adults in Scotland say they use the internet at home the most at 10.6 hours per week, with adults in England at 8.3 hours per week and those in Wales at 6.8 hours per week. Adults in Northern Ireland say they use the internet at home the least at 6.5 hours per week.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Teen risk-taking linked to hypersensitivity to reward signal

PARIS — Unprotected sex, wild rides on a motorbike, smoking, drugs or alcohol -- the litany of risk-taking by teenagers is famously long. But what drives it?

The answer could lie with adolescents' hypersensitivity to signals that unleash dopamine, a powerful brain chemical that underpins the pleasure from a reward, US psychologists suggest.

A team led by Jessica Cohen of the University of California, Los Angeles, recruited 45 people from three age groups -- children aged eight to 12, teenagers aged 14-19 and adults aged 25-30.

The volunteers were asked to look at pictures on a computer screen and say whether the images matched the pattern on T-shirts sold by either of two fictitious universities.

There was a financial carrot (either 25 US cents or five cents) for each answer that was right. The answer could be either predictable or random.

The task was performed while the volunteers were in a functional magnetic resonance imaging scanner (fMRI), which measures blood flow in the brain in response to neural signals.

Among the teenagers, the striatal area of the brain, which is sensitive to dopamine, lit up more strongly than among children and adults when receiving the reward.

"Our research shows that when adolescents get a reward that they're not expecting, their brains are more responsive to that reward," Cohen said in a phone interview.

Dopamine levels were not measured, but "it's our guess that dopamine is the cause," Cohen said.

Previous research, among adult humans and monkeys, has found dopamine surges before an expected reward comes, she noted.

The findings, published by the journal Nature Neuroscience, could help parents, school teachers and others guide adolescents in the transition from childhood to adulthood, says Cohen.

Children are not fully sensitive to rewards, whereas adults are sensitive to rewards but also -- to varying degrees -- brake the urge.

"Some researchers have put forward a theory that striatal regions are fully developed in adolescents but the pre-frontal regions, which put the brakes on, are not," Cohen explained.

"As a result, adolescents get the sensitivity to reward that adults get too. But adults can suppress it and think before they act, or act more responsibly sometimes, whereas teenagers tend not to be able to do this as well."

Thursday, May 13, 2010

No real saving with interconnect cuts

A survey conducted by voice-based telecommunications solutions company Du Pont Telecoms found that the average business person could expect to save only 2% on their cellphone bill following the almost 29% reduction in cellular interconnect charges in March.

Mobile operators implemented the first rate cut in March.

The Independent Communications Authority of SA (Icasa) then surprised mobile operators recently by cutting mobile interconnect rates further.

Icasa proposed a three-year glide-path for both mobile and fixed service licensees.


The cuts
Mobile interconnect rates, currently set at R0.89 per minute, were proposed to be reduced to R0.65 from July 2010 and further reduced to R0.40 from July 2012.

Fixed termination rates were initially asked to reduced to R0.15 from July 2010, and further reduced to R0.10 from July 2010.

Du Pont Telecoms said it calculated the impact mobile telecommunications group Vodacom's (VOD) recently introduced revised call tariffs would have on business contract subscribers.


Graeme Victor, CEO of the group said: "Du Pont is in the business of managing and analysing cellphone packages on behalf of our customers, the majority of whom are large corporates running fleets of cellphones on business contracts.

"We were keen to see how much our customers who subscribe to Vodacom's two most popular business packages - Talk 500 S and Talk 1000 S - were likely to save with the new tariffs. We were hugely disappointed at what we found: an average saving of a mere 2%," he said.

Focus on retail costs Victor said that the evaluation exercise highlighted a need to move away from focusing on interconnect rates to putting pressure on networks to reduce the actual retail cost of calls.

Du Pont said it had previously warned that a drop in interconnect rates would not necessarily lead to a reduction in retail call charges. "This was the case in Kenya, Tanzania and Ghana, while in Israel, call charges actually increased," it said.

"So far we have unfortunately been proved correct. The networks have tinkered with some - but not all - pre-paid packages but we believe that the majority of pre-paid users have not benefited to any great extent by the lower interconnection rates," Victor said.

Free time?


The group noted that benefits for existing contact users had largely been limited to more off-peak 'free minutes' being bundled into their packages.


Victor said that as most businesses and high-volume contract users already wasted a high proportion of their off-peak 'free minutes', the availability of even more 'free minutes' for use outside of business hours was likely to exacerbate the wastage problem.


However with the elimination of off-peak rates by Vodacom in its new pricing structure, business contract consumers could find that they actually end up with less 'free' off peak talk time than they had before, Du Pont said.

It pointed out that neither MTN (MTN) nor Cell C had announced any reduction in the per-minute rate for contract subscribers since the lower interconnect rate came into effect.

"This clearly indicates that if the government and regulatory authorities are serious about reducing the cost of mobile telephony, they need to turn their attention to the retail costs of calls across the board - including for contract/post-paid subscribers," Victor concluded.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Tyra Banks tries hand at fantasy novels

Banks, the host of reality competition "America's Next Top Model" and whose own TV talk show is set to end this year, will write three books, Delacorte Press said.

She has already finished the first, called "Modelland", which is about a teen girl in a make-believe society at an academy for exceptional models called Intoxibellas. It will be published in the summer of 2011.

Writing on her web site, Banks said the book was "for all the girls and guys who want a lot more FANTASY in their lives … and some fierceness and magic, romance and mystery, crazy and wild adventures, and yeah, some danger too."


Publishers Delacorte Press described "Modelland" as showcasing issues ranging from relationships to body image and empowering women of all ages.

Banks, 36, announced in January that she would be ending the Emmy-award winning "The Tyra Banks Show" later this year after five seasons to launch her own production company Bankable Studios.

She is also the host, judge and executive producer of "America's Next Top Model."

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Teen hookah smoking in Calgary surges

Hookah smoking is on the rise among Calgary teens, which supports the results of a University of Montreal study released this week.

Desiree Carlson, of the Hemporium located a couple of blocks from the city's Western Canada High School, said she's seen smoking hookah take off.

"Since I started in November, I've seen the craze of smoking shisha and hookahs go crazy," said Carlson. "Everybody's wanting it."

Hookahs or shishas are large communal water pipes designed to burn fragrant blends of tobacco or similar substances mixed with molasses. Smoking hookah is a centuries-old Middle Eastern tradition.

'I've seen the craze of smoking shisha and hookahs go crazy.'—Desiree Carlson, Hemporium

While it's illegal to sell tobacco-free hookah products to minors, the water-based pipes can be purchased by anyone.

Some of Calgary's hookah cafés offer in-house hookah smoking, circumventing indoor smoking bans by selling tobacco-free products to adults only.

"It's just a good relaxing environment and I like to smoke," said Mike Wilkie, a hookah café patron in Marda Loop. "It tastes good."

The Hemporium serves a lot of high school students with hookah-related products, said Carlson.

"There's a fair amount of younger kids that come in for the herbal," she said. "Probably because it's social, delicious and you get to smoke without harmful effects."
Not a safe alternative

Jennifer O'Loughlin, professor of medicine at the University of Montreal and co-author of the study, said smoking hookah is not a healthy alternative to cigarettes.

The study, published Monday in the journal Pediatrics, showed about 23 per cent of 871 youth aged 18 to 24 reported smoking a water pipe at least once in the previous year. Most reported smoking only on rare occasions, but five per cent had used water pipes once or more in the past month.

"It's been confirmed that the smoke does contain harmful constituents that do contain nicotine, carbon monoxide and carcinogens," said O'Loughlin. "Compared to cigarettes water pipe smoke might also contain greater amounts of tar and heavy metals such as cobalt, chromium and lead."

Researchers have also linked the product to lung cancer and heart diseaseA.

Carlson said fruit-flavoured shisha is most popular, but other flavours include coffee, cola and Earl Grey.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Hookah smoke 'major public health threat'


Smoking tobacco from hookahs or water pipes has become an unhealthy habit among some young adults, Quebec researchers suggest.

Hookahs are large communal water pipes designed to burn fragrant blends of tobacco. Hookah smoking may evoke images of the Mideast, where it has been practised for centuries.

The study, published Monday in the journal Pediatrics, showed about 23 per cent of 871 youth aged 18 to 24 reported smoking a water pipe, also known as shishas, at least once in the previous year. Most reported smoking only on rare occasions, but five per cent had used water pipes one or more times in the past month.


"The popularity of water pipes may be due in part to perceptions that they are safer than cigarettes," warned senior investigator Jennifer O'Loughlin, a professor at the University of Montreal department of social and preventive medicine and a scientist at the University of Montreal Hospital Research Center.


"However, water pipe smoke contains nicotine, carbon monoxide, carcinogens and may contain greater amounts of tar and heavy metals than cigarette smoke."

In some places, laws aimed to keep bars and restaurants cigarette-free don't ban the aromatic smoke swirling from water pipes. P.O.V.:

Hookahs: Should they be permitted indoors?


"From a public health standpoint, we really do need to nip this in the bud before we've got a hookah lounge on every corner," says Pippa Beck, a policy analyst with the Non-Smokers Rights Association.

Beck notes that the city of Ottawa, where she is based, has issued at least 15 licences to restaurants or bars that offer hookahs. Tobacco content varies

Some of the products contain no tobacco, but it's impossible to tell without laboratory testing, Beck said. The labels on smoking materials are often minimal to non-existent and may be Arabic, she said.


Hookah use is also on the rise throughout the United States and elsewhere, said Dr. Wasim Maziak, an epidemiologist who studies tobacco addiction at the University of Memphis in Tennessee.

"It's still under the radar currently. But I think there's a kind of major awakening," Maziak says, pointing to the fact that the U.S. National Institutes of Health have started funding research into hookah use.


"This is spreading so fast.… People now understand it's really a major public health threat."

Student Sarah Bergman of Concordia University in Montreal said smoking hookah offers an illusion it's not bad for you.


"It's not like cigarettes at all," said Bergman, who described a sweet flavour from inhaling the smoke. "In a way, people want to do it more often, and they think it is better for them."

"Water pipe users may represent an advantaged group of young people with the leisure time, resources, and opportunity to use water pipes. Evidence-based public health and policy interventions are required to equip the public to make informed decisions about water pipe use," the study's authors concluded.

Hookah users were more likely to report also using cigarettes, marijuana, illicit drugs and alcohol, the researchers found.

Soft-core porn still hot stuff on cable TV

There's one sector of the entertainment industry that has not been roiled by the Internet, the economy or ever-changing consumer tastes. Say hello to Hollywood's most stable business: Soft-core pornography.

The oft-mocked genre, which has given the world such memorable fare as "Witches of Breastwick" and "Tarzeena: Jiggle in the Jungle," is more visible — and valuable — than ever, even at a time when hard-core adult entertainment is easily accessible on every media device. Premium-cable TV networks such as HBO, Showtime and Cinemax — the channel nicknamed "Skin-emax" for its preponderance of sexy programming — continue to fill their late-night schedules with low-budget, nudity-filled films, and the adoption of video-on-demand and pay-per-view services has given soft-core content wider play. Several of the premium channels offer prominently displayed inventories of erotic entertainment via VOD, where there's no shortage of choices in the "After Hours" or "Midnight Movies" sections.

Soft-core porn "just keeps going, like a cockroach — you can't kill it," says Marc Greenberg, the 63-year-old founder of MRG Entertainment, the Santa Monica company that's one of the top producers of so-called "soft erotics," the industry term for toned-down pornography. MRG supplies between seven and 15 films a year to Showtime and a handful of movies to Cinemax, for whom it also produces "Co-Ed Confidential," a 13-episode, college-themed sex series that's now in its fourth season. "You're more likely to get your wife to watch my show — it's not so in-your-face," says Greenberg.

At the same time, premium channels have been upping the skin factor on their higher-profile, higher-brow series. Shows such as HBO's "True Blood," which debuts its third season next month, and Showtime's "The Tudors" and "Diary of a Call Girl" all showcase fairly graphic sex scenes that are often as explicit as what you would see in an R-rated movie in theaters. In one memorable scene from the first season of Showtime's Emmy-nominated " Californication," which stars David Duchovny as a lothario novelist living in Venice, his character engages in a ménage à trois with his agent, played by Evan Handler, and a beautiful 20-something woman. The romp climaxes just as their ex-wives walk in the door.


It's no secret, of course, that sex sells, and cheesy erotic content has been a constant on cable TV since its early days, long before premium networks expanded into multichannel behemoths. Showtime, for example, now offers eight channels on its "multiplex" package, including Showtime Women, a female-targeted channel that does not show soft porn. All of the premium channels will air films that are rated X by the Motion Picture Assn. of America, but they also adhere to certain self-imposed guidelines when it comes to sexy material. In general, cable channels won't show full male frontal nudity or extended close-up shots of female private parts. "Our producers know where the lines are," says Susan Ennis, executive vice-president of program planning for HBO Networks, which owns Cinemax. Erotic entertainment "is a staple of [Cinemax's] brand, it's in our DNA, we're not running away from it," Ennis says.. Cinemax's volume of soft porn has been steady for the last five years, and it continues to roll out one new sex-themed series per quarter, with the most recent being the second season of "Zane's Sex Chronicles," based on a bestselling series of erotic short stories written by Zane, the pen name of a female African American author from the Washington, D.C., area. Across all platforms, the series, which follows the romantic adventures of a group of professional women, attracts about 1.4 million viewers per episode, according to the network, which has nearly 12 million subscribers. "I don't think that sexuality should be separated from the rest of life — it can be fun, it can be painful, it can be kinky and it can be entertaining in a tasteful way," says the 43-year-old author known as Zane, who writes all the scripts for the series and is its executive producer. Adds Ennis: "We know our viewers embrace this kind of content." That content is particularly conspicuous now on VOD, which has unshackled soft-core from the boundaries of late-night. On Cinemax, erotic films and shows — what it calls "After Dark" content — make up just 8% of the channel's over-the-air schedule. But when it comes to VOD, nearly 20% of Cinemax's inventory is devoted to erotic entertainment, and 15% of the channel's overall on-demand orders are for "After Dark" programs. Ironically, the proliferation of hard-core porn in recent years seems to have made the softer stuff more appealing — or at least more palatable — to a wider audience, particularly among women, according to industry observers. While women who are now in their 20s and 30s have grown up in an era when adult entertainment has become increasingly mainstream and sex tapes helped launch the careers of celebrities such as Kim Kardashian and Paris Hilton, many of them are still uncomfortable watching all-out porn, even if it's in the company of a partner. In contrast to hard-core pornography, which depicts full male nudity and actual sex, soft-core sex is more simulated than real, and the films usually attempt to have coherent storylines and dialogue. Many of the soft-core TV series also center around a female character, such as the madam in "Beverly Hills Bordello," a longtime cable-TV staple, or the pair of sisters — one a recent college graduate, the other an erotic model — who are the leads in "Life on Top," a Cinemax series that debuted last year. But while soft-core content may be less graphic than a Jenna Jameson film, it does not aspire to high art. "There's nothing creative about this — you're going to see sex in the first minute and you're going to see sex every seven or eight minutes after that," says Greenberg.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Boomers: Is The Economy Ruining Your Sex Life?


Layoffs, unemployment and economic uncertainty can affect middle-aged and older Americans in many ways. Have you noticed that your sex life has taken a turn for the worse? We'd love to hear from you for a future story. An ABCNews.com reporter may contact you.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Kendra Wilkinson fights sex tape release

This summary is not available. Please click here to view the post.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Stomach Cancer increasing in surprising number in Young White Adults

According to the National Cancer Institute Researchers and colleagues have examined new cancer in young white adults, while rates in all other American adults have declined and the chances for developing stomach cancer are still very low in young adults while all rates in all other American adults have declined. There were 39,003 cases detected in a surveillance program that covers about one fourth of the U. S population. It focused on lowerstomach cancer not cancer of the upper stomach, which has been linked with gastric reflux.

A senior investigator at he U. S National Cancer Institute said "We confirmed what had been previously understood about gastric cancer, that in most groups it has been declining over the last 30 years". Dr. Jaffer A. Ajani, an oncologist in the Department Gastrointestinal Medical Oncology at the University of Texas M. D Anderson Cancer Center and co author of an accompanying journal editorial said, "One possibility is that these are Eastern Europeans, who have come to the United States. Eastern Europeans have gastric cancer in different places. My personal opinion is that it is just among Eastern Europeans". A strategic director for cancer occurrence at the American Cancer Society said, "This probably needs further investigation. Anything that occurs in the younger age group indicates a burden in the future. So, it is important to find out what is contributing to this increase so you can avert the future cancer burden."

In U. S men, stomach cancer is among the top 10 most common cancers in blacks, Asian Americans, Hispanics and American Indians and it's also among the most common cancers in Asian American women. It may be noted that the report is published in the May 5 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

TV Ratings: 'Dancing,' 'House' lead ABC, FOX Monday split

"Dancing with the Stars" delivered another strong Monday to push ABC to a win overall, while "House" (and a two-hour primetime programming window) pushed FOX to another demo win.

Meanwhile, "Chuck" dropped against increased competition, while a special 9 p.m. airing of "Big Bang Theory" suggested that the comedy isn't quite ready to lose its "Two and a Half Men" lead-in just yet.

Among adults 18-49, FOX averaged a 3.4 for the night, nipping the 3.3 rating for ABC and the 3.2 rating for CBS in the key demographic. NBC wasn't part of the logjam, finishing fourth with a 1.6 rating, beating the 0.9 rating for The CW.


Overall, ABC dominated with an estimated 15.02 million viewers and a 9.6 rating/15 share. CBS' 5.9/9 was a distant second, with FOX's 5.7/9 in a close third. NBC's 3.5/6 was fourth, still comfortably ahead of the 1.3/2 for The CW.


In the 8 p.m. hour, ABC's "Dancing with the Stars" ruled with an 11.8/19 and tied for first in the demo with a 3.8 rating. FOX's "House" was second overall with a 6.0/10 and tied for first in the demo. CBS' "How I Met Your Mother" and "Rules of Engagement" were third with a 4.7/7, beating the 3.2/5 for "Chuck," which also fell to a 1.9 demo rating. The CW's "One Tree Hill" was fifth, steady from last week.

At 9 p.m. "Dancing with the Stars" (13.3/20 and a 4.5 demo) and "Romantically Challenged" (6.8/11 and a 2.5 rating) were first overall. CBS' new "Big Bang Theory" and a "Big Bang Theory" repeat finished second overall with a 6.7/10 and won the demo with a 4.1 rating. FOX's "24" had a 5.4/8 for third. A repeat of "Law & Order" was fourth for NBC. The CW's "Gossip Girl" had a 1.2/2 for fifth.

Overall, "Castle" won the 10 p.m. hour with a 7.0/12, beating the 6.3/11 for CBS' "CSI: Miami," though CBS' procedural had a slim advantage in the 18-49 demo. NBC's new "Law & Order" was well back in third.

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Health Insurance Companies to offer coverage to young adult children

In the announcement made by the federal employee health insurance program, it is unlikely this year to offer young adults the ability to remain on their parents’ policies until the age of 26. In simpler terms, it means that it will not follow the lead of some private insurance companies which will begin to offer such coverage to young adults by June 1. The current health care law requires insurers to offer to keep adults younger than age 26 covered through their parents’ health plans. It may be noted that United Healthcare, Well point, Humana, Independent Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans and KAISER Permanente said last week that they will offer such coverage immediately by June 1. This has come as a relief to many however some major insurers say they wont make young consumers wait.

Executive Director of Families USA, Ron Pollack said, “It creates a standard that becomes the norm throughout the health insurance marketplace”. The OPM statement updated last Friday said, “Though we are eager to provide coverage to young adults prior to January 1, the current law governing the FEHB Program specifically prohibits us from doing so. Unfortunately, this does not allow flexibility for FEHB plans to provide coverage to other adult children until the provision" in the new health law becomes effective in September”.

The law defines dependent family members as unmarried children under age 22 and this is restricting the OPM actions. Young adults turning 22 are covered for an additional 30 days under their parents’ plan, notes OPM, which is noted in a story by the Federal Times. It may be noted that during this time, they can keep insurance for an additional 36 months through the Temporary Continuation Coverage (TCC) program.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Dying from a stroke - like Miss Hawaii Teen Sheryl Wolfe - is highly unusual for teenagers: docs

Strokes in teenagers - like the one that led to the death of Miss Hawaii Teen United States Sheryl Wolfe this week at just 18 years old - are unexpected, devastating and, fortunately, very rare. The incidence ranges from .06 to two cases for every 100,000 kids and teens, said Michael DeGeorgia, director of the center for neurocritical care and a neurology professor at University Hospitals Case Medical Center in Cleveland, Ohio.

Ischemic strokes, caused by lack of oxygen to the brain, are more common than hemorrhagic, or bleeding, strokes.
“It’s not that these kids who get strokes are drinkers or smokers or that they have clogged arteries,” he said.

“It’s usually a clotting abnormality in an otherwise healthy artery or an abnormality in the heart that causes a clot to form. If it goes to the head, it can cause a stroke.”


Another reason for an ischemic stroke is the dissection, or tearing, of a blood vessel that supplies the brain, De Georgia said.

“This can be caused by injuries in sports like hockey, football and wrestling,” he said . “But research suggests that the person this happens to has an inherited connective tissue disease that results in a weakness in the artery wall.

Teens with sickle cell disease have a higher stroke risk, said Dr. Toby Gropen, chairman of neurology at Long Island College Hospital.

“Strokes can’t easily be predicted, but a family history of clotting abnormalities, miscarriages or cardiac disease at a young age should prompt some discussion with the family doctor,” Gropen said.

Some strokes in young people could occur because they have an autoimmune disease like lupus, said Dr. Steven Wolf, director of pediatric neurology at St. Luke’s and Roosevelt Hospitals, and birth control pills can raise the risk of stroke, but very slightly.

As for making lifestyle changes to prevent stroke, doctors say the best course of action is simply to be aware of family history. If someone in your family had a brain aneurysm or AVM that results in a bleeding stroke, that raises the risk a little bit, for example.

The survival statistics for bleeding strokes are sobering. Half of these stroke victims die, and half of those who survive have a permanent disability.

“If you survive a bleed, a good number of those people are left with a permanent disability of some type, whether it is motor or cognitive,” said Dr. Max Wiznitzer, pediatric neurologist at Rainbow Babies and Children’s Hospital in Cleveland, Ohio. “But the risk of death from ischemic stroke is much lower.”

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Sania-Shoaib tie the knot


Sania Mirza and Pakistan cricketer Shoaib Malik finally got married on Monday. The 23-year-old Indian ace and 28-year-old Shoaib were scheduled to wed on April 15, but the family advanced the date. The Indian tennis ace was dressed in a red sari, the one her mother Nasima wore for her nikaah 25 years ago. Shoaib, a former Pakistan captain, wore a black sherwani, designed by Shantanu and Nikhil, for the nikaah ceremony, held at hotel Taj Krishna.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Miley Cyrus to give singing advice to 'Idol' finalists

The mega star Miley Cyrus is currently busy in promoting her upcoming film ‘The Last Song’, which is set to be released later this month on March, 31. She stars with her rumored beau, the Aussie actor Liam Hemsworth, in the film based off of the novel by Nicholas Sparks.

Cyrus is the mentor for the top 11
Cyrus, otherwise known as Hannah Montana, will guest star on this week’s ‘Idol’ where she will mentor the 11 remaining ‘American Idol’ chicks as they will perform Tuesday night, live for their audience viewers.

On Tuesday night’s results show, based on a ‘Billboard Number One Hits’ theme, Cyrus will be joined by other fellow music stars- Joe Jonas, of the Jonas Brothers and the TV show Jonas, and Demi Lovato, of Disney’s Sonny with a Chance- as performers.

The 17-year-old pole-dancing star is going to be the first celebrity mentor on the TV singing contest this year, giving the women contestants on the show singing advice, reports Boston Herald.

Previously, Shania Twain
and Victoria Beckham have guest stared during the nationwide auditions rounds.

Cyrus to set stage on fire
In addition to mentoring the Top 11 finalists - Didi Benami, Crystal Bowersox, Lee Dewyze, Andrew Garcia, Casey James, Aaron Kelly, Michael Lynche, Siobhan Magnus, Paige Miles, Katie Stevens and Tim Urban- Cyrus will also set the stage with her new song, ‘When I Look At You’.

On Tuesday night’s results show, based on a ‘Billboard Number One Hits’ theme, Cyrus will be joined by other fellow music stars- Joe Jonas, of the Jonas Brothers and the TV show Jonas, and Demi Lovato, of Disney’s Sonny with a Chance- as performers.

“This appearance is about showing Miley the young adult, not Miley the tween star,” MSNBC quoted a person from the Cyrus camp as saying. “She’s in a tough situation though, because it’s going to be hard for a lot of ‘Idol’ fans to not draw that comparison. A lot of kids who watch ‘Idol’ also loved ‘Hannah Montana.’ ”

Jonas and Cyrus both are no strangers to Idol. ‘Hanna Montana’ star performed her hit song, ‘The Climb’, last year, and Jonas served as a judge during some of the auditions in the current season.

Cyrus on upcoming film and Aussie beau
Meanwhile, Cyrus is eagerly waiting for her upcoming flick ‘The Last Song’, which is opening March 31.

Cyrus appeared as a guest on Monday morning's (March 22) episode of ‘The View’, where she discussed her new film, her life in music and her Aussie boyfriend Liam Hemsworth, according to MTV.

"Well, I like him very much ... I love him. He is a great person," Cyrus told the hosts of the show of Hemsworth, who is also her co-star in "The Last Song". "He's someone I'm holding onto because we very much connect and were both very ambitious and have some of the same goals. My mom loves him and thinks he's wonderful."

Monday, March 22, 2010

'Sex doesn't always sell'

Love him or hate him, but ignore him? Better luck with that. Because Dibakar Banerjee just loves to push the envelope.

His latest film after Khosla Ka Ghosla and Oye Lucky! Lucky Oye! -- the provocatively titled Love Sex Aur Dhokha -- is already getting a lot of reaction. The movie has earned a lot of praise from critics, who hail him as the country's innovative filmmaker.

So is he worth all the praise? Well, his fans and curious others got to know more during this scintillating chat last week. For those who missed the chat, here's what transpired.
Dibakar Banerjee says, Hi everybody, this is Dibakar. Let's have your questions.

kishor asked, hi sir how to made this story
Dibakar Banerjee answers, By seeing life around me, the MMSes, the sting scandals on TV and by seeing Bollywood films.

afsar asked, Jahan love hota hai waha sex jarroori to nahi?
Dibakar Banerjee answers, Aadmi aur aurat ka pyaar ho toh sex ko aap daal mein chhoka maan sakte hai. Swaad badta hai. Lekin uske bina bhi agar sirf man ka pyaar ho toh bhi daal achhi hai.

sexy asked, are there any nude scenes in the movie?
Dibakar Banerjee answers, Yes. Some of them have been blurred by the censors.

kris asked, Hi Dibakar, is it not a vulgar title
Dibakar Banerjee answers, No.

Harsha asked, Is this film focuses only on Sex & Dokha?
Dibakar Banerjee answers, No, also on love.

KLPD asked, Your movies have been quite different and yet conventional in a way. Is this intentional?
Dibakar Banerjee answers, Not consciously different; I just make the films that I want to make and people define them the way they want to define.

KLPD asked, The censors deleting the scenes- Will it have the same impact now?
Dibakar Banerjee answers, Yes, it will. I just saw it again with a hall full of other people who were not aware of the 10-12 second cuts that we had made and were affected by it. But it all depends on what impact you're looking for.

KLPD asked, KKG was fully entertaining, OLLO was arty. LSD is more real. What next?
Dibakar Banerjee answers, More angry.

KLPD asked, Ekta is known for her tear jerker joint family dramas. How come you chose her as a producer for LSD?
Dibakar Banerjee answers, She chose me.:)

KLPD asked, What is the secret of "putting" in entertainment in any story or How do you make a film entertaining, and yet retaining the fabric of the script
Dibakar Banerjee answers, Lovely question. Maybe it's got to do with respecting the characters, respecting the audience's time and drawing the correct balance between what you want to say and what is relevant to them. One golden rule: humour helps. Of which LSD has a lot!

pankaj asked, hi what is ur film all about
Dibakar Banerjee answers, It's about all of us and our society, and what's private and public and what's film and what's life.

rmm85 asked, Is it going to release internationally?
Dibakar Banerjee answers, Not immediately. We'll take it to the festivals first and then release it internationally.

KLPD asked, Doesnt LSD release warrant a post by you on passionforcinema
Dibakar Banerjee answers, Would have loved to, but the last two months, I've been working insanely against deadlines and time.

rmm85 asked, What massege u want to give through this movie?
Dibakar Banerjee answers, See the film, see if you find one, then we'll talk! :)

kam asked, why censor has deuducted those scense which required for film after giving A certificate don't u think this is unfare with film y r u agree with this
Dibakar Banerjee answers, They agreed with the scene but they thought it was too explicit, and therefore wanted to reduce 10 seconds of it to avoid disturbing some parts of the audience.

Alirocksn asked, Tu nangi achi lagti hai...... Can this song be released somewhere instead of tu gandi achi lagti hai....please????????
Dibakar Banerjee answers, No, because it's been banned by the censors, and to flout that rule would be illegal.

AB asked, What's your next movie with IMRAN KHAN about ?
Dibakar Banerjee answers, No one told me about it -- maybe you know something I don't! :)

babu@123456 asked, why are u spoiling the young generation u bollywood people does not have shame as u have habbit of seeing such nonsense with u kids u don't have any culture
Dibakar Banerjee answers, See the film alone, se if anyone will be spoilt by it, and then let's talk!

soumyanayak asked, r u banking on the fact that, no matter what, sex always sells?
Dibakar Banerjee answers, Actually, it doesn't. What sells is a topical and relevant story. Otherwise our films would have been a string of disconnected sex scenes from beginning to end.

Jacqueline Fernandez is from Venus in Jaane Kahan Se Aayi Hai

Sri Lankan beauty Jacqueline Fernandez will be seen having special powers in her next Bollywood venture Jaane Kahan Se Aayi Hai. No, she doesn't play superwoman, she plays a woman from planet Venus!

Writer-director Milap Zaveri says his film is not a sci-fi action movie but a romantic comedy about Tara, a girl from Venus who comes to Earth in search of love. And that's why he didn't want his heroine to do daredevil stunts but she does have some super abilities - the Venus woman has the power to freeze time.

"Jaane Kahan Se Aayi Hai is a love story rather than a superwoman story. So there was no point indulging in anything that would have made Jackie (as Jacqueline is fondly called) appear to be overtly larger than life. She is different in a lot of senses and hence there had to be something special attached to her. However, we didn't want anything too gimmicky about her behaviour or persona," Zaveri said.

Jumping from rooftops, dodging bullets, hopping across skyscrapers, taking on 200 baddies at a time and indulging in gravity-defying stunts were a complete no-no for the makers of the film. As they started exploring various options, the one that struck the right chord was the concept of 'time freeze'.

"We thought that this would be a nice touch to the character, especially so because it would work with kids as well as adults alike.

"Also, we could use this character trait in different moods and situations in the film, whether a funny sequence, a romantic moment or an emotional encounter. Once we decided to go ahead with 'time freeze', it was a matter of improvising on the script while incorporating this trait," said Zaveri, who has written either the script or dialogues of films like Masti, Kaante, Jhankaar Beats and Heyy Babyy.

Jaane Kahan Se Aayi Hai sees Jacqueline paired opposite Riteish Deshmukh, who had acted with the former Miss Sri Lanka in her debut film Aladin as well.

Also starring Ruslaan Mumtaz, Sonal Sehgal and Vishal Malhotra in principal roles, Jaane Kahan Se Aayi Hai boasts of a number of guest appearances - Farah Khan, Akshay Kumar, Sajid Khan, Amrita Rao, Deepika Padukone, Katrina Kaif, Priyanka Chopra, Anushka Sharma and Vidya Balan.

With music by Sajid-Wajid, the film is set to release on April 9.

Friday, March 19, 2010

DOD official notes rise in sexual assault reporting

In the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, 3,230 reports of sexual assault were filed.

An increase in reporting was a goal for the department, said Kaye Whitley, director of the Defense Department's sexual abuse prevention and response office.

"Research in the civilian community shows that sexual assault is widely underreported, and we believe that is the same in the military," she said. "As a result, increasing reporting has been one of our key goals. We want people who are victims of sexual assault to come forward so they can get the help that they need."

The department's goal is to create a "climate of confidence" so that people will come forward to report, she added.


One aspect of the program is a confidential reporting option called "restricted reporting," which lifts some of the barriers that can deter military personnel from reporting sexual assault. Unrestricted reporting means the victim's command is notified and an investigation initiated. Under the restricted reporting option, the command is not notified and an investigation does not follow. Still, the victim can receive medical, mental health and all other services without becoming involved in the military criminal justice process.

Ms. Whitley said the number of sexual assaults in the military probably is comparable to the civilian community, but that direct comparisons are hard to make. The overall rate for the Defense Department was two reports of sexual assault per thousand servicemembers. In the Army, the rate was 2.6 per thousand. In the Navy it was 1.6 per thousand, in the Air Force 1.4 per thousand, and in the Marine Corps 1.3 per thousand. Service-specific data, including the total numbers of reports, is included in the annual report.


"Our total number includes both perpetrators and victims," Ms. Whitley said. The data covers eight categories of sexual assault ranging from the least-egregious wrongful sexual contact to rape.


"We need to keep in mind that these are reports where the victim or the perpetrator was a military member," Ms. Whitley said. The reports include sexual assaults reported that involved a military member against a military member, a military member against a civilian or a civilian against a military member, she explained.

Last year, Ms. Whitley said, 123 victims converted their restricted reports to the unrestricted category.


"What we find are those people who are victims of sexual assault, they feel a loss of control," Ms. Whitley said. "Then, when we meet with them and give them these reporting options, they get a little bit of that control back. So often, they will go home and if they feel supported and start feeling comfortable with reporting it, they will change it to an unrestricted report, in which case we can investigate and prosecute."


The restricted reporting option has been in place since 2005, and it fills a need, Ms. Whitley said. "We've had over 3,600 people use that option since then, so that tells me that over 3,600 people wouldn't have come forward otherwise," she said.

Ms. Whitley said she would like to think the rise in reported cases has resulted from the emphasis the department is putting on sexual abuse prevention and the department's efforts to tell people about the program.


Last year, the theme of the awareness and education campaign was "My Strength for Defending: Preventing Sexual Assault Part of My Duty." This year's theme -- "Hurts one. Affects all. Preventing sexual assault is everyone's duty" -- builds on that and concentrates on readiness, Ms. Whitley said.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Newspapers still relevant in online age: study

OTTAWA - We may be living in a digital age but a new national newspaper readership survey suggests that the majority of Canadians still like to get their news from a newspaper -- even if that paper is online.

The Newspaper Audience Databank (NADbank) study for 2009 suggests 77% of Canadians read a print or online edition of a newspaper at least once a week, numbers that remain fairly steady across all age groups.

The NADbank numbers provide readership results for 81 Canadian daily newspapers in 53 markets across the country, as well as for 60 community papers in 33 markets. The study gives a snapshot of the readership habits of 72% of Canadian adults, the group says.

Among other results, the study found that 47% of adults aged 18 and over read the print version of a daily newspaper most weekdays, while 73% of those polled had read a paper in the past week. Speaking strictly of online editions, 22% said they read a daily paper online in the past week, while 77% had read either a printed or online edition.

The demographics of newspaper readers defy the common wisdom that young people have no interest in newspapers, with 78% of respondents aged 18-24 saying they'd read either a print or online edition of a newspaper in the past week. The age group with the lowest percentage of newspaper readers is 25-34, but even there 72% read a newspaper at least once a week. People aged 50-64 were the most avid readers, at 81%.

Higher-paid and university-educated Canadians are the most likely to read a newspaper, but 78% of blue-collar respondents also said they read newspapers each week.

News is the first section all readers turn to, with 73% saying they usually read local news, and 59% reading national and international news as well. After that, the favourite sections break down by age, with those aged 18-49 accessing arts and entertainment next, followed by sports, health, business and editorial pages. Those aged 50 and up went to the editorial section after the news, and then entertainment, health news, food and business.

"This is great news for our advertisers," says Kirk Allen, senior vice-president of publishing sales at Canwest LP. The publisher of 10 of the daily newspapers in the study saw its weekly readership grow by 2.1% to four million, and weekly online readership was up 20% overall.

"Canadian marketers can continue to rely upon the strong readership and reach across the country they have come to expect from our dailies.

Relation between Loneliness and High Blood Pressure in Older People

According to a new study, loneliness might have negative effect on blood pressure in elder people.

The study conducted at the University of Chicago, has established a direct link between loneliness and high blood pressure. The relation is independent of age and other factors that can cause blood pressure to increase, including body-mass index, smoking, alcohol use and demographic variations like race and income.

The researchers also probed the probability that depression and stress might be responsible for the increase, but found that those factors did not entirely clarify the rise in blood pressure among lonely people 50 years and older.

Researcher Louise Hawkley wrote in an article, "Loneliness Predicts Increased Blood Pressure", that loneliness worked as if it is a distinctive health-risk factor in its own right. It came out in the current issue of the journal, Psychology and Aging.

During the five-year study on 229 people aged 50 to 68, Hawkley found a lucid relation between feelings of loneliness and increasing blood pressure.

Hawkley said, "Loneliness is characterized by a motivational impulse to connect with others but also a fear of negative evaluation, rejection and disappointment. We hypothesize that threats to one's sense of safety and security with others are toxic components of loneliness, and that hypervigilance for social threat may contribute to alterations in physiological functioning, including elevated blood pressure".

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Love Sex Aur Dhokha gets adult certificate

Dibakar Banerjee’s much talked-about Love Sex Aur Dhokha went before the censor board recently. The controversial love scene showing a bare-backed girl on top of a man, making love, has been told to be blurred on screen.

Buzz up!
In other words, Dibakar’s couple will be seen by the audience making love as two blurred figures.

The director, already miffed and mired in what he sees as unnecessary controversy, refuses to be enraged even if so many recent Hindi films have had graphic love-making scenes. As for the female bare back during a love-making scene, the censors liberally allowed that in Rensil D’Silva’s Kurbaan just recently!

Says Dibakar, “We had submitted a DVD of the film to the Censor Board so they’d recommend cuts in advance and avoid delays. The censor preview recommendation suggests that we blur the sex scene. We were told this scene was too graphic and needed tempering. There’s no way the censors could allow the love-making scene. We’ve clearly been told that even before the film is submitted for censoring.”

When asked how bare-backed love-making scenes have been allowed by the censors recently and how the one in Love Sex Aur Dhokha (LSD) has been asked to tone down even before the film is submitted to the censors, the director chooses to smile mysteriously.

“I’ve been, in principle, against the film being perceived as a voyeur’s delight. Love Sex Aur Dhokha is not about sex sex and sex. Those who expect that will turn away disappointed.”

However, in another more radical cut, all reference to caste in a love story between a low-caste boy and a high-caste girl has been removed by the Censor Board. This has infuriated Dibakar. Says the director, “This completely changes the perspective of my story since now the caste-challenged love story is turned into a poor-boy-rich-girl romance. This is not what I intended.”

Also, the song “Tu Nangi Acchhi Lagti Hai”, which was modified on the audio cd to “Tu Gandi Achchi Lagti Hai”, has now been similarly modified in the film also.

Says Dibakar, “But no complaints. Considering the controversial content, my film got away easily with little cuts and an ‘Adults’ certificate.”

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Mentoring juveniles before they become adult criminals

In their first job out of law school, Whitney Louchheim and Penelope Spain worked, literally, in a closet. With neither windows nor air conditioning, “my wrists stuck to the keyboard when I typed,” Ms. Louchheim remembers. The two had borrowed the closet-cum-office from a nonprofit group in an unsavory neighborhood.
“We were right next to … the biggest open-air heroin market in D.C.,” Ms. Spain recalls. Their location was difficult for outsiders to comprehend. “Our parents would come to visit, and they were terrified,” Spain says. “My father just looked at me like, ‘This is what has become of my daughter and her law degree?’ ”

But from the moment they met on orientation day at American University, the two women had bonded over an unconventional vision: to help young men in jail leave Washington’s juvenile justice system and find their way to productive, fulfilling lives.

Louchheim and Spain cofounded Mentoring Today, a nonprofit that matches volunteer mentors with youths serving time at the district’s juvenile lockup, then called Oak Hills.

In 2004, when the women first began planning their project, roughly one-third of the young men who’d been imprisoned were sent back to Oak Hills within a year of being released. Louchheim and Spain knew some of them: They had started a tutoring program that brought classmates from American University into Oak Hills.

The women realized they were positioned to be more than teachers. “Legal issues, housing, family, friends, girlfriend,” Spain says. “All of those things we were involved in because we had earned their trust.”

Louchheim and Spain also found themselves serving as de facto advocates for the young men, following up with caseworkers, lawyers, or parents. Eventually, they realized this kind of support needed a full-time effort. So instead of taking the usual path for bright law school graduates – lucrative internships or prestigious clerkships – they started Mentoring Today with a couple of credit cards and a promise they made to each other at Spain’s kitchen table.

“We said, ‘I’ll hire you if you hire me,’ ” Spain says. “It was a deal.”

Flash-forward five years. Mentoring Today now has a solid track record. It has inspired mentors to donate more than 1,800 volunteer hours, which have helped more than 30 young men remake their lives. Last year, the nonprofit raised more than $350,000 from donors and grantmakers to fund its services.

The women defined “success” differently than do many at-risk youth programs. Although 92 percent of those they mentor have continued with their education, for example, those who end up behind bars again aren’t written off. When one of Spain’s early mentoring subjects returned to a lockup, she still saw progress: He’d learned to read and write and could write letters to her.

Mentoring To­day’s willingness to stand by its young people is “the biggest proof” of its success, says

Da­vid Muhammad, chief of committed services for the Department of Youth Rehab­il­itation Ser­­vices (DYRS) in the district.