Sunday, November 6, 2011

Back in full force!

I know some people are probably frustrated with me for lack of posts and winners and I apologize profusely. We are back in action in full swing and posting and blog winners resume tomorrow. Some of my sponsors due postings are entirely way too overdue but I have had family emergencies I am choosing not to share the details of... However, I will say that I have been out of town (in fact- 8 hours out of town) and dealing with these and it was not a fun trip AT ALL. Again- I am extremely sorry to those who are frustrated with me and hope and pray you understand that I cannot always be chained to this computer. To my readers and winners, you will be seeing a flood of posts in the coming week (and the week after that.) Thanks to those who are not yet complaining at me and to those who are I will be emailing you back soon.
Thanks!~

Popular tattooed Barbie causes controversy

NEW YORK: With pink hair and tattoos across her shoulders and neck, U.S. toymaker Mattel's latest collector's edition Barbie doll could be compared more to the edgy female heroine of author Stieg Larrson's best-selling Millennium trilogy than to the more traditional Barbies.

Since its release earlier this month online, the $50 (31 pound) limited edition doll designed by Los Angeles-based fashion company tokidoki and aimed at adult collectors, has sold out but not before causing controversy.

"Is the New 'Tokidoki' Tattoo Barbie Inappropriate for Children?" the magazine U.S. News & World Report asked in a recent headline.

Some parents in the United States also questioned whether the toy company that launched the original Barbie in 1959 should be promoting body art.

"It's teaching kids to want tattoos before they are old enough to dress like that," Kevin Buckner, of Virginia, told a local television station.

No one was available from Mattel to comment on the issue but not all the feedback has been negative. Some adults said the doll reflected modern fashion and pop culture.

"Have you seen Lady Gaga, Nicki Minaj, Katy Perry, Rihanna?" Candace Caswell, a 30-year-old mother from New York asked in an email interview, adding that the pop stars have tattoos and wear wigs and crazy clothes.

"They are capturing a snapshot of pop culture the way it really is. Barbie is not raising my daughter. I am," she added.

For Heather Gately Stoll, of Colorado, tattoos are not the issue.

"What is inappropriate for kids are her measurements," she said about the shapely doll. "If she can change personalities why can't she change her shape and size?"

And while New York mother Sue Dennis would not spend $50 on the doll, she is not offended by it.

"I have a 16 month-old son and the tokidoki Barbie is more the diverse image of women I would like to present to him versus more traditional ones," she said.

The tokidoki Barbie is not the first to sport tattoos. In 2009, some stores pulled Mattel's Totally Stylin' Tattoos Barbie following complaints, and a year earlier Mattel collaborated with motorcycle manufacturer Harley Davidson to produce a Barbie with wings tattooed on her back.

Production of tattooed Butterfly Art Barbie was halted in 1999 after parents voiced their concerns.

Gayatri Bhalla, 41, of Washington D.C, who writes a blog about experiences for tween girls, sees it as a marketing issue.

"One the one hand, the company likes to hold Barbie up as the iconic American toy for girls and use her to promote things that most parents wouldn't object to, such as Take Your Daughter To Work Day," she said.

"But they also create Barbie in images that a lot of parents wouldn't choose to hold up as a role model for their young daughters, and a full-body tattooed doll falls into this camp." (Reuters)

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Millions of escaped bees shut down highway

SALT LAKE CITY: A flatbed truck carrying hundreds of beehives overturned near a construction zone on a Utah highway, freeing millions of bees and forcing authorities to temporarily close Interstate 15, officials said on Monday.

"The driver lost control, hit the concrete barrier and rolled over. Of course, we then had bees everywhere," said Corporal Todd Johnson with the Utah Highway Patrol.

The highway in southern Utah was shut down for several hours on Sunday evening and Monday morning, officials said.

Local beekeepers worked through the night to gather the escaped bees. Officials said there was a net over the beehives but bees still managed to escape after the truck overturned.

The truck driver and two law enforcement officers responding to the accident were stung by bees but the stings were not life-threatening, Johnson said.

"There were about 450 colonies on the load and probably about 45,000 bees to the colony," said Richard Adee with Adee Honey Farms in Bruce, South Dakota.

That would translate to more than 20 million bees.

Adee said the bees were headed to Bakersfield, California for almond pollination next spring.

"We stacked the equipment back together, put them back on trucks and trailers and whatever we could find to move them out of there," said beekeeper Melvin Taylor of Santa Clara, Utah.

"Then we tried to move them as far out of the metropolitan area as we could. Because when those bees come alive today they are going to be mad that their house is all (broken) apart," Taylor added.

Taylor said bees not gathered and removed likely perished in the accident and cleanup. (Reuters)

Friday, November 4, 2011

Nextdoor launches neighborhood social networks

SAN FRANCISCO: Internet startup Nextdoor launched a social network Wednesday designed to strengthen communities by connecting real world neighbors.

The US launch of Nextdoor.com was touted as a modern age variation on the town square or backyard fence where neighbors get to know each other and keep tabs on what was happening around their homes.

"Good things happen when people know their neighbors," Nextdoor co-founder and chief executive Nirav Tolia said while showing the service.

Nextdoor is free. The only caveat is that users must verify who they are and that they live in the real-world location that comports with the boundaries of the online neighborhood they wish to join.

"When you have a physical address, you have a high level of trust," Tolia said. "This way you can get to know your neighbors and, more than anything, bring back a sense of community."

Nextdoor has been in private test mode for less than a year and has already spread to more than 175 neighborhoods in 26 states.

"Nextdoor takes the best of social media, adds a spoonful of intimacy, and envelopes it in a blanket of privacy and comfort," said Anne Clauss, whose neighborhood in Hamilton, New York, staked out a place at the service.

The website layout is reminiscent of social networking king Facebook, but news feeds focus on local topics ranging from movie DVDs being given away or lost pets to recommendations for babysitters or ice cream shops.

"Nextdoor is the virtual backyard fence or front-porch conversations of years ago," said Verlinda Henning, part of the online version of her neighborhood in Memphis, Tennessee.

Maps atop Nextdoor pages show layouts of a neighborhoods, with green plots symbolizing members and red showing non-members. Members can click on any plot to see who lives there and have Nextdoor send them an invitation postcard.

"This is very similar to Facebook, but it is really your neighborhood identity," Tolia said.

"We heard users don't want to mix their social lives and local community lives. They want Facebook for friends and family, and a neighborhood."

He likened the model to that of LinkedIn, a thriving social network centered on advancing careers, jobs and business prospects.

"We need specific social networks for specific use cases," Tolia said. "If we put it all together into one social network, it is going to be overwhelming."

Being part of Nextdoor is free and the website doesn't post advertisements. The startup is focused on attracting users, expecting revenue will follow, likely in the form of working with local businesses.

Only those with passwords can get into the pages of a virtual neighborhood, and information can't be indexed by Google or other search engines, according to Nextdoor.

"Nextdoor is different from other networking sites because it was built from the ground up to help neighbors come together in a trusted environment," said board member Bill Gurley of Benchmark Capital, which is backing the startup.

"We have been blown away by the positive response to Nextdoor and believe it is a natural evolution of social networking." (AFP)

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Serbian police recover two stolen Picasso paintings


BELGRADE: Serbian police have recovered two works by Pablo Picasso stolen from a Swiss cultural centre in 2008, police said on Wednesday.

The two oil-paintings "Tete de Cheval" from 1962 and "Verre et Pichet" from 1944, valued at 3.1 million euros ($4.3 million) in total, were discovered in a joint operation by Serbian and Swiss police, a police statement said.

The two paintings, one showing a horse's head in blues, greys and whites and the other a still life of a glass and pitcher in red and green, belong to the Sprengel museum in Hanover, Germany, but were stolen from the cultural centre in Pfaeffikon, near Zurich, while on loan in 2008.

Serbian authorities said an investigation into how the paintings came to be in Serbia and how they were hidden had been launched. (AFP)

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Future planes could travel five times speed of sound


LONDON: The passenger plane of the future could travel at five times the speed of sound, according to a report published in British newspaper.

According to the British daily, the Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IME) in its report said state-of-the-art technology will allow airlines to travel in a V-shaped group formation similar to migrating geese by the end of the century.

The report adds that, regardless of the aircraft type, passenger jets could save on fuel by flying in formation and following in each others' slipstream. A "blended wing" shape, where the wing and fuselage meld into one, will also make the planes more fuel-efficient and aerodynamic, the IME claims.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

5,000 have breakfast together in Australia


SYDNEY: More than five thousand people had breakfast together Sunday  October 23, 2011 morning on Sydney’s Bondi Beach. The famous Australian beach transformed into the biggest breakfast table in the world.

An orchestra even played classical music throughout the meal.
Sydney holds the huge breakfast party every year, as part of the annual October "Sydney International Food Festival."