Rip Torn Arrested For Bank Robbery

Funny man Rip Torn, 78, was arrested for breaking into a Connecticut bank on Friday night.

According to police reports, the actor/comedian was found inside the Litchfield Bancorp building, clearly intoxicated and waving a loaded revolver.

Torn, who appeared on 30 Rock, Men In Black, Bee Movie, and a host of other comedies, was arrested and held on $100,000 bond.

Cops say Torn was charged with carrying a pistol without a permit, carrying a firearm while intoxicated, first-degree burglary, first-degree criminal trespass and third-degree criminal mischief.

He has two previous DUI arrests, is on probation in Connecticut, and has attended numerous court ordered alcohol education programs.

Torn's real name is Elmore Rual Torn, Jr, and was currently in production on "Cat Tales" due in theaters later in 2010.

The animated comedy has Torn lending his voice to Sampson, in this story of a cat named Rover, who has been raised as a dog in Dogtown, by accident. Rover travels to Catopolis to find where he really came from and find his roots.
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Jackson Kids To Sing At Grammy's?

There is a rumor starting to circulate that Michael Jackson's kids may make not only an appearance, but perform at this weekend Grammy Awards.

Things started to heat up when American Idol's Ryan Seacrest posted to his Twitter page that MJ's kids may participate.

Seacrest said on Wednesday:

"Just talked to the executive producer of the Grammys... hearing MJ's kids may sing."


Were pretty sure he would not have said anything unless there was at least a remote chance the children would appear.

There have been rumors before about the kids making an album and/or appearing on a Jackson Family bio or televised special.

More as news comes our way…
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Miss Africa USA: Liya Endale


School/Institution: (currently applying to 3 different graduate schools)

Major/minor: Psychology, Sociology

Giving back:

Tutor with Greensboro Dreamers
Teacher/Mentor with Empowered Youth Program at UGA
Guest speaker at scholarship fundraisers, talent shows, and high schools through the Moore's Ford Memorial Committee
Just Go Vote Foundation volunteer for 2004 elections
2004 Mock African Council Conference in Washington D.C.
Five-Year Aspirational Plan: In five-years I plan to be working on my PhD in School Counseling/Education or a related field so as to work with international students in America, helping them to manouver successfully in a new culture. Working in a public school system will also allow me to continue publishing my writing and playing my violin in the summers.

Country you are representing: Ethiopia.

Platform: I will help provide Ethiopian schools with easily accessible resources to make their students competitive on a global scale.

UGPulse: Tiger Woods... Same old story?

The media plays such a large role in forming our opinions on people, current events, places and ourselves based on insubstantial evidence. The story of Tiger Woods does not surprise me; not because he was an athlete, not because he was a black man, not because it is the same old story but because he was human and there was no evidence that he was handling success in a manner which honored his wife or followed the guidelines of what we as a society deem a 'respectable citizen'.

Realistically speaking, Tiger Woods was presented with tens of millions of dollars a year, beautiful women at the turn of every corner, a profession which keeps him away from home and any semblance of normalcy, and a posse of enablers more interested in reaping the rewards of befriending a superstar than giving sound advice to a friend. It takes a rare individual to handle this combination of circumstances in an honorable way. The only thing rare about Tiger Woods is likely his ability to play golf. Any other glorious characters of his personality were only fed to us by a media that would portray him in any way that brings in the fattest checks. Any other expectations we had about Tiger Woods were, frankly, unrealistic.

I often think of my disappointment when I learned that Martin Luther King Jr. cheated on his wife. It took some time for me to realize that the reason he was so influential had nothing to do with his habits in the bedroom and that it was not my place to judge him. In the same manner, I have to ask myself, "If MLK Jr. couldn't do it, why did I ever think Tiger Woods would? He does not even preach a value laden message. All he does is hit the heck out of a ball with a stick."


Contestant Liya Endale from Ethiopia.

UGPulse: Identity Theft... Are you concerned? How do you protect yourself?

Identity theft is a very real and very underestimated threat in our society. Our identity in this system has nothing to do with how much we love, smile or laugh. It has to do with a systemic method of rating our monetary credibility based on a specific series of actions we take which are monitored closely. Your credit rating will ultimately affect where and how you live, who you will marry and whether or not you will be able to afford going to school or buying a house. Subprime mortgages will likely, and hopefully, be an antiquated method of loaning money to people in troubled situations. Today, in order to buy a home, you have to have a down payment, 3-6 months of the mortgage payments in your bank account, have had the same job for at least two consecutive years, and a debt to income ratio of less than 45%. This means you have to have to have excellent credit for a creditor to take you seriously. Imagine if you do, in fact, manage to follow the rules and raise your credit score to a 740. Then, someone gets their hands on your 'identity' in the system. A crime committed against a faceless number in a system is a lot easier to commit, especially if you are in the growing situation where you have to feed your family and you are out of a job.

The chances of identity theft increase each time you pay your bills online, apply for another credit card, and use your debit card to pay for gas. The risks are like landmines scattered across our daily routines. If a we step on an active mine, the consequences can easily affect us for the rest of our lives. Recently, I accidentally opened up a skymiles MasterCard in my friend's name because I gave the representative his name and birthday. That is all it took for me to have a credit card with a 3-5 thousand dollar limit in someone else's name.

These warnings are not meant to terrify anyone into a paranoid panic, but to scare us into making smart decisions. First, take your birth year off of your facebook status. Next, be aware of how you are being monitored in this system. Did you know that there are three different credit bureaus which monitor different aspects of your monetary credibility? This means that depending on which credit bureau a lender checks with, one credit score can range by 100 points of another. Here is the good news, you can get a free copy of your credit report twice a year from each bureau so you can monitor your scores by reporting errors or being aware of any suspicious activity quick enough to prevent it from affecting your life. All you have to do is call and ask for it; Equifax 1-800-525-6285, Experian 1-888-397-3742, and TransUnion 1-800-680-7289.


Contestant Liya Endale from Ethiopia.

UGPulse: Tell us about the country you represent? Are all its women as beautiful as yourself?

Geographically, Ethiopia lies along the path of the Great Rift Valley which extends in Syria. Further, Ethiopia served as the hub of international trade for hundreds of years. For these reasons, the people of my country come in all shades. Our common features share those of the people from Ethiopia, into Egypt and Syria. Our noses are more narrow and our hair finer than our brothers and sisters from countries which do not lie along this geographic path resulting in a mixed population. Unfortunately, this world values these physical features and I often hear that women of Somalia, Ethiopia, Sudan and so forth have a reputation of being very 'beautiful'. I, however, do not define beauty by how fine one's hair is or how narrow one's features are. These transient labels only serve to create animosity between regions based on nothing more than what we are forced to believe is 'beautiful'.

Further, I do not believe that these characteristics are what make me beautiful. My strength is not what lies on the outside, but in the way I perceive this world, the way my mind calculates all of the different stimuli I have been presented with from the time I was born in Addis Ababa. My beauty is in my warrior-spirit, my inability to love half-way, and my ability to show others how to think beyond the surface. So, are the women of Ethiopia as beautiful as me? Yes, and most even more so. Not because of the reasons others may call them beautiful but because of their courage which surpasses mine and strengthens me, because of their intellect and their resilience. This is what makes all women beautiful.

UGPulse: If you watched the new incredible movie, Avatar, what moved you most in the movie and what positive or negative message did you take home from watching this movie?

Today, we are bombarded with more stimuli on a daily basis than ever before. It takes more energy than ever to filter the intake of images, music, and media and not to get caught up with what 'looks pretty'. Remember. Everything can be broken down into basic messages. It is then our responsibility to actively choose what messages to internalize.

I was too excited to watch the movie Avatar after friends of mine from Georgia to South Korea raved about how awesome it was. With 3-D glasses on, I watched the most expensive movie made to date and took in all of the sophisticated technology which allowed computerized images to seamlessly blend in with a physical world. I was floored, moved by the raw and unbridled emotion of the main character, Neytiri . Outside of the obvious allusions to historical attacks on civilizations for their resources, there was something about this movie which lingered with me. I could not put my finger on it but I took it home with me and toiled with it for days.

In congruence with other films which have recently been released, certain themes began to stick out to me. Blind Side, Invictus, and Avatar all centered on the plight of a colored people. But when it came time to find the solution to each of their conflicts, the challenge was always met by a person or persons of Caucasian descent. First, I was angry at myself for coming up with such a negative synopsis of movies which were perhaps intended to funnel more positive messages of hope, resilience, and the power of a giving heart. These messages are vital and obvious. However, I believe subtle messages are more powerful and therefore dangerous because they seep into our subconscious, bypassing that level of thinking which allows us to choose what values and beliefs we take from these messages.

When people see that heroes always look a certain way, some will begin to believe that they can not be heroes because they do not share these characteristics of the ones on the big screens. I would love to see an Avatar where the hero is a Na'vi, a Blind Side that focuses on tackling the true and systemic problems that resulted in the condition of the victim instead of presenting the symptoms as the main problem. And I would love to see a movie about Nelson Mandela that uses the people who bled, fought, sacrificed and lost the most for a new South Africa to pass along the same message of forgiveness.


Contestant Liya Endale from Ethiopia

Breakup - Brad Pitt And Angelina Jolie Are Done

In what will become one of the biggest Hollywood splits of all time, Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie are calling it quits and have signed the papers on how to split their massive fortunes and children.

News outlets are reporting that Angelina and Brad started the breakup process in December when they visited a top divorce lawyer to begin working out how to split things up.

As of today, they will split their money equally and have shared custody of their six children. The kids however, will live with Jolie full time.

Since the couple is not married, the documents are reported to be more like a powerful prenuptial agreement - but for unmarried people.

There is no date penned yet on the documents, and it looks more like they are just getting everything ready for when they decide to officially split.

They have three adopted children - Maddox, 8, Pax, 6, and Zahara, 5, and three biological kids Shiloh, 3, and 17- month-old twins Knox and Vivienne.

Their joint fortune of about $350 million includes mansions in France, California and New Orleans.

Rumors have been circulating for months that the couple's relationship was doomed.

We suspect the $350 million is just the combined, joint income since the couple has been together - because we know Pitt is worth close to a billion dollars.

This could get very ugly.
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Scott Baio Receives Death Threats

Here is one we didn't think we would ever hear - Teen heartthrob Scott Baio has been receiving death threats because of some nasty Twitter posts.

Seems the "Charles In Charge" star, now 48, posted an unflattering picture of Michelle Obama along with some pretty unprofessional comments.

Baio immediately started to receive threatening Twitters, emails, and phone calls after he commented Michelle looked lake a man.

One angry Obama fan told Baio:

"Easy to find your house Scottie boy and finish you - I am a republican and I love Mrs O."


Baio quickly posted an apology saying:

"For New followers: I POST A LOT OF JOKES WITH PICS. They are JUST that, a joke. NOT targeting anyone. Laughter IS the best medicine."


We suspect this is just a case of a bad Twitter going haywire.

Old Scott has been keeping busy these days, with two-rumored movie deals in the works. Yea, right.
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Unusual Friendship of Tiger, Lion and Bear

Living with the zoo's founders for the past eight years, Shere Khan, Baloo and Leo have now moved to a purpose built habitat Photo: BARCROFT .
More images after the break...

Tiger, lion and bear form unusual friendship Charles Hedgecoth with Shere Khan the tiger and Baloo the bear Photo: BARCROFT Tiger, lion and bear form unusual friendship...and with with Leo, the lion.


Rescued eight years ago during a police drugs raid in Atlanta, Georgia, the three friends were only cubs at the time and barely two months old. They had been kept as status symbol pets by the drug barons. Delivered to the Noah's Ark animal rescue centre in Locust Grove, Georgia, the decision was made to keep the youngsters together.


"We could have separated them, but since they came as a kind of family, the zoo decided to keep them together," said Diane Smith, assistant director of the Noah's Ark zoo.
"To our knowledge, this is the only place where you'll find this combination of animals together, they are our BLT, (bear, lion and tiger).


Living with the zoo's founders for the past eight years, Shere Khan, Baloo and Leo have now moved to a purpose built habitat were the US public can now witness first hand their touching relationship.


"We didn't have the money to move them at first," said DIane.

"Now their habitat is sorted and they have been moved away from the children's zoo areas where the public couldn't really get a good look.

"Now, though, it is possible to see Baloo, who is a 1,000 pound bear, Shere Khan, a 350 pound tiger and Leo, who is also 350 pounds messing around like brothers.

"They are totally oblivious to the fact that in any other circumstance they would not be friends."


Handled by Charles and Jama Hedgecoth, the zoo's owners and founders, the three friendly giants appear to have have no comprehension of their animal differences.


"Baloo and Shere Khan are very close," says DIane.

"That is because they rise early, as Leo being a lion likes to spend most the day sleeping.

"It is wonderful and magical to see a giant American Black Bear put his arm around a Bengal tiger and then to see the tiger nuzzle up to the bear like a domestic cat.

"When Leo wakes up the three of them mess around for most of the day before they settle down to some food."


Surprisingly for three apex predators with the power to kill with a single bite or swipe of their paw, they are very relaxed around each other.


"They eat, sleep and play together," said Jama Hedgecoth, founder of Noah's Ark zoo.

"As they treat each other as siblings they will lie on top of each other for heat and simply for affection.

"At the moment they are getting used to their new habitat.

"Shere Khan is being quite reticent about the move, but Baloo, the bear is very good at leading him on and making him feel comfortable and safe."


Explaining that the three 'brothers' have always seemed to share a unique bond, Charles Hedgecoth, Jama's husband and fellow founder talks about his role in their upbringing.

"They are obviously not wild animals any more," said Charles.

"Noah's Ark is their home and they could not possibly be separated from each other.

"You just have to remember who you're dealing with when you are with them though.
"It's when you forget that these fellows are wild animals that you get yourself in trouble."

According to DIane Smith, the trio's new habitat cost an estimated £15,000 and had to be constructed carefully, in order to accommodate its occupants.

"The clubhouse had to be very sturdy for the guys, because they all sleep in it together,"

We had to include a creek, because the tiger and the bear both like to be in water."  Via : Link
 













Watch Justin Timberlake and Matt Morris Sing Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah"

Last night, during the "Hope For Haiti" telethon, Justin Timberlake and Matt Morris crooned a version of Leo Cohen's "Hallelujah".

If you saw it, then you probably got goose bumps as the song gained in volume and meaning.

Timberlake seems most comfortable singing and performing in the pop culture arena, but last nights performance was sure to touch more then a few hearts.

It was one of the best performances of the evening, and summed up lots of emotions into one of the most beautiful songs ever written.

It's good to see young Hollywood come together in a way that is not just self serving, tabloid grabbing, over the top sensationalism used to grab headlines.




All of this was part of George Clooney's "Hope For Haiti Now: A Global Benefit For Earthquake Relief" telethon in Los Angeles, California on Jan. 22, 2010.
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Watch Bobsled Split Pants Video Of Gillian Cooke

Every now and then a video goes viral and people just have to see it.

This week, the video subject is British Bobsled competitor Gillian Cooke, who while in Switzerland had a small wardrobe malfunction.

She split her pants from one end to the other.

Gillian is from Edinburgh Scotland and is the brakes member for the bobsled driven by teammate Nicola Minichiello.

Watch Gillian Cooke Split Pants Bobsled Video:



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Redefining "impossible" when it comes to maternal mortality

Someone recently told me that saving mothers' lives in the developing world is impossible. They argued that the maternal mortality problem is too complex, too challenging, too expensive.

But, that is exactly the wrong attitude.

We've overcome health challenges today that once seemed impossible. We've eradicated disease, created cures and discovered innovative new methods to save lives that would have been unimaginable only a few decades ago. We've done it before and we can do it again.

Just look at smallpox. Sixty years ago, more than 50 million cases of smallpox emerged annually and a quarter of the victims died. To get a sense for the magnitude of 50 million people per year, consider that today there are five million new cases of HIV/AIDS each year. There were ten times more people with smallpox, plus the global population was smaller.

In 1967, the world health community launched a global effort to eradicate smallpox. It took a coordinated, worldwide effort, required the commitment of every government and cost $130 million dollars. By 1977, smallpox had disappeared. The smallpox eradication saved $17 billion dollars and millions of lives. In just 10 years, we had done the impossible -- turned one of the world's deadliest diseases from a terror into a memory.

And smallpox is not the only global health success story. Polio has been reduced by 99 percent since 1988. Twenty-six countries reduced their malaria cases by more than 50 percent between 2000 and 2006. Creative new health strategies like micro-insurance for poor people or Kangaroo care for pre-term babies are transforming health outcomes in even the most low-resource settings. Dedication and innovation are transforming health care worldwide.

One hundred years ago, dying in childbirth was an accepted norm in the United States and Europe -- tragic but inevitable. Today it's almost unheard of. Some might think that the overall increase in wealth is what saved mothers' lives and that, without it, real progress is impossible. But they are wrong. For proof, we need only look to Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka isn't a wealthy nation. A third of its population lives in poverty and it has been devastated by natural disaster and civil conflict. However, the tiny island nation has done something remarkable -- it reduced its maternal mortality rate by almost 50 percent every decade since independence. In 1960, 340 Sri Lankan women died for every 100,000 live births. Today, the rate is only 13 deaths for every 100,000 births, a rate nearly comparable to developed nations.

Sri Lanka achieved this dramatic drop in maternal deaths by investing in health infrastructure. It built a network of health centers which provide free health care to the population. It invested in training skilled midwives and providing all women with access to family planning while educating communities and empowering them to secure their own health care. Sri Lanka proves that being a developing nation doesn't mean a country is condemned to a high maternal death rate. For example, Sri Lanka has a lower GDP than the Ivory Coast, but the Ivory Coast has more than ten times the maternal death rate.

There is reason to hope, even in most affected countries. In August, I traveled to my home country of Ethiopia with a team from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to shed light on the state of maternal health. Ethiopia continues to have one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world and much of what we saw was heartbreaking and frustrating. However, we also saw progress. The Ethiopian government has trained 30,000 young women to serve as health extension workers and provide essential health care like immunizations and antenatal check-ups to rural communities. We met women who survived difficult pregnancies because of the new hospitals and clinics the government is building and I met the dedicated health workers working around the clock to save lives.

The same elements that wiped out smallpox -- national commitment, coordinated, focused efforts and sufficient funding -- can save mothers' lives in the developing world. I'm asking all nations to take up this challenge: commit to ending maternal mortality now. Make maternal health a national priority. Recognize that mothers' health is at the heart of achieving development, not a by-product or an afterthought. Dare to create a world where giving birth doesn't mean gambling with your life.

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Liya Kebede is supermodel, actress, designer, maternal health advocate, mother. Source: The HuffingtonPost

Portraits of Power By Platon

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