Friday, 29 November 2013

Kim Kardashian's tips for perfect 'selfie'

Socialite Kim Kardashian. PHOTO: AFP
LOS ANGELES: Socialite Kim Kardashian has given out tips to her fans on how to click a perfect self picture.
In a video, Kim, 32, is seen chatting with her best friend Brittny Gastineau at a nail salon. She is also seen giving away pearls of wisdom on the subject of selfies, reports dailystar.co.uk.
“Rule number one is that you always need it (the phone) to be a little bit higher than lower. So you always have to have it from high to low. Know your angle,” said Kim.
“No duck face, I love doing that because it gives you cheekbones. But everyone gets so mad,” she added.
Kim, who is engaged to rapper Kanye West, also took a minute to assess herself in the camera.
“I look so disgusting without make-up on, but whatever,” she said.

Bob Dylan whips up tempest in return to 1966 London venue

He kicked off with Oscar-winning Things Have Changed, following it with She Belongs to Me. PHOTO: FILE
LONDON: Bob Dylan played London’s Albert Hall this week for the first time since his fabled and tumultuous concerts there in 1966. His vitality and mystique are intact five decades on since he revolutionised popular music.
This time round there were no boos and catcalls prompted by his use of electric instruments, just ovations as he led his crack band through a set that drew heavily from his latest albumTempest but also reached back into earlier stages of his career.
True to form, Dylan said not a word to the audience, letting the music speak for itself.
He kicked off on Wednesday night with the Oscar-winning Things Have Changed following it with She Belongs to Me — the only song which had also featured in the 1966 shows.
An early highlight was What Good Am I from 1989’s Oh Mercy. He also offered up gentle, almost jazzy versions of Tangled Up in Blue and Simple Twist of Fate from Blood on the Tracks.
Fire and brimstone
But there was still plenty of fire and brimstone in the 72-year-old — “I’ll pay in blood, but not my own,” he snarled in Pay in Blood, a track from Tempest.
Further evidence he was not going soft was a bitter Love Sick from Time Out of Mind, the 1997 album which ushered in a new creative era for Dylan which shows no sign of stopping.
Dressed in a gambler’s coat and mariachi pants, Dylan either sat at a grand piano centre stage or sang at the microphone. His hands do not allow him to play much guitar these days.
But he treated the audience to plenty of his trademark wheezing harmonica. That his voice is a raspy croak is not news but it still sounded strong, and he looked spritely, his curly head of hair also a survivor from the ‘60s.
His three shows at the Albert Hall this week are part of the so-called Never-Ending Tour which sees him playing about 100 shows around the globe every year, re-shaping his classics in new versions which have both delighted and perplexed fans.
It was the first time Dylan had played the cavernous Victorian venue since the controversial shows 47 years ago which became the stuff of legend.
For those gigs he brought an electric group which later became known as The Band — but his then-new direction was greeted with anger by many fans who worshipped him as a politically engaged folk troubadour.
In a famous confrontation, a fan shouted out Judas to which Dylan replied “I don’t believe you,” and instructed the band to “play f***ing loud”.
The concert, heckler included, was released in 1998 as The ‘Royal Albert Hall’ Concert — though in fact it was from the Free Trade Hall in Manchester.
It might have been fitting if for his return Dylan had played Like a Rolling Stone, a 1966 show-stopper, but the Minnesota-born singer didn’t get where he is by doing the obvious.
As an encore, he played a roaring All Along the Watchtower followed by a R’n’B version of the peace anthem Blowin’ in the Wind before he disappeared into the night

Did you know?: SUV named after Anil Kapoor’s 24 character

Kapoor is thrilled by the gesture. PHOTO: FILE
Actor Anil Kapoor may have mentioned his early struggles as a young actor a million times to the press, but those days are well and truly behind him now. The Bollywood actor now has an Oscar-winning film to his credit, has worked in Hollywood alongside megastar Tom Cruise and now owns the rights for an Indian adaptation of hit American TV series 24. As if all of that wasn’t enough, he now has a car named after his character!
In the Indian version of 24, Kapoor plays the role of former Anti-Terrorist Unit chief Jai Singh Rathod. While fighting against criminals, Rathod is extensively shown driving the SUV Safari Storme. According to the Times of India, it seems that the manufacturers are quite grateful and impressed with the publicity they are receiving from Kapoor’s show, as they have gifted him a limited edition SUV called the ‘Jai Singh Rathod Edition’.
Kapoor is thrilled by the gesture. “I am particularly fond of cars, but this one will hold a special place in my heart as it will take me back to all the wonderful memories associated with the show,” he said. “Now that the shoot has ended, I intend to go for a long drive in this car and re-live all the action in real world.

Some of our songs are more enjoyable than others: Alex

The rock band has returned to the top of the British charts. PHOTO: FILE
LOS ANGELES: They have recorded in America, and front man Alex Turner lives in Los Angeles, but the Arctic Monkeys remain a British rock-and-roll phenomenon.
None of the four members — all from Sheffield in northern England is even 30, but they already have five albums under their belts after surfing on an internet-built fan base to stardom — one of the first rock groups to do so.
On stage during their current tour to promote new album AM, Turner sports an Elvis Presley-style pompadour and swivels his hips. Famed for vocals inflected with a Yorkshire accent, his spoken voice is these days overlaid by a California drawl.
While other rock groups of their generation have morphed into more electronic or synthesised sound — following the dance-floor trends of the day — the Arctic Monkeys have gone the other way, with more distorted guitar, powerful bass lines and Matt Helders’s signature percussion.
They have consolidated their formula on their latest album — which ranges from ballads to psychedelic themes — and returned to the top of the British charts.
How did you escape from the synth-fever we had a few years ago?
Turner: Oh, synth-epidemic. I didn’t know it was going on actually. We just keep taking the tablets, I suppose, drinking plenty of water… It seems like when a guitar band get the synths, it’s like it’s not enough. That’s not something that was ever on our agenda. But I’m not going to rule it out, I’ve got nothing against.
You seem to have struck a balance between musical independence and commercial success. Does it have something to do with being on a mid-sized label?
Turner: Perhaps it has something to do with that. Laurence Bell, from Domino, who owns the company, was who came to sign us in the first place. He allowed us to try different things and … I think working with him helped us to achieve that balance you are talking about.
You seem to have a lot of respect for your old songs. How do you feel today when you’re playing Teddy Picker or Dancing Shoes?
Turner: Some are more enjoyable that others. Sometimes it’s tough to get through one of the old ones … You know, you don’t feel like that anymore. When you tell the same joke 600 times, you won’t hear what it is anymore, but then sometimes like the 601st time you might see something in it you didn’t before.

If you give your 100%, results will follow: Deepika Padukone

Actor talks about her journey in filmdom. PHOTO: FILE
NEW DEHLI: She has scored a hat-trick of hits on the Bollywood pitch, with each film offering a different flavour of her versatile talent, but actor Deepika Padukone is in no mood to rest.
Her first big hit of the year, Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani, saw her impress the audience as nerdy Naina, and she followed up its success with her South Indian act as Meenamma in the box office record-breaking Chennai Express.
Deepika’s latest release Goliyon Ki Raasleela Ram-Leela, in which she plays a Gujarati girl, has also made its way to the INR1 billion club.
“It is magical,” the 27-year-old told IANS on the phone as she shared her sentiment post the film’s success, but she was quick to add that “nothing has changed”.
Her debut in Hindi films was like a fairytale — she entered with Shahrukh Khan in 2007 blockbuster Om Shanti Om and the reincarnation drama turned out to be a perfect springboard for the success and popularity that she continues to revel in even today. In fact, she is enjoying it even more today.
However, a career graph can’t be “planned”, says the tall and dusky beauty, who made a natural transition from the modeling world to the big screen.
“I’ve always believed that everyone has one’s own pattern, the only thing that I can do is to work with the best of my ability, to work honestly and whole-heartedly and to know that I’m giving my 100%. I think the results follow eventually,” said Deepika, who is the daughter of Ujjala and former badminton star Prakash Padukone, who was one of the world’s best badminton players in his time.
She is also ready to take on more new kinds of films — does that include independent films?
She drove the conversation to her first 2014 release — Homi Adajania’s Finding Fanny, an English language film produced by Saif Ali Khan’s Illuminati Films.
“I’ll call it alternate, because it will be pitched differently and it will look slightly different from some of the other films that I have done in the past,” explained Deepika, who finds it “strange” to dissect her films into mainstream commercial and alternate cinema.
“I think it is convenient from the audience’s point of view to categorise films, but for an actor, what I bring to a film is the same. The only thing probably different in Finding Fanny is that it’s an English language film. That was the first time for me, but in terms of my approach to a film, in terms of what I bring to a film or character, that doesn’t change with the type of film I do.”
“It doesn’t matter if I am doing a Chennai Express, I’m less or more committed. My enthusiasm for every film will be the same, irrespective of the budget or the way the film looks.”
How about her experience of playing such different characters and yet getting the act right each time?
“I think, in my case, it’s just that the films are doing well commercially, that people are sitting up and noticing that each of my films is different from the other in terms of characters.”
“But if you step back a bit, you will realise that in between 2009 and 2011, the films I did didn’t do well commercially, whether it was Khelein Hum Jee Jaan Sey, where I played a freedom fighter, to Break Ke Baad to Karthik Calling Karthi.”
“I am including my first film Om Shanti Om, where I played a heroine from the ‘80s… So, from the start of my career, I have had the opportunity to play various characters. I am glad that I haven’t been slotted as doing just one kind of character or just being stuck to doing one kind of cinema.”

It’s my right to criticise Pakistan because I love it: Fatima Bhutto

Novelist talks about her new book The Shadow of the Crescent Moon in London.
LONDON: 
Not soon after her much-criticised interview, in which she claimed that eating in restaurants and lingering in bookstores are “forbidden luxuries” in Pakistan, appeared in the London Evening Standard, Fatima Bhutto spoke at the London School of Economics (LSE) to a full house about her new book, titled The Shadow of the Crescent Moon. Waziristan, a region the host of the event described as a twilight zone between Pakistan and Afghanistan, and one that is in the news for all the wrong reasons, is the setting of her latest novel.
Commenting that being on a book tour is what she imagines being a prisoner of war feels like (being shunted from room to room and interrogated with the same questions) Fatima said that she wanted to write about northern Pakistan but did not choose Peshawar, Bajaur or Banu as these were settings that had too many prejudices, such as the Taliban and drones, attached with them. Thus, she picked the small town of Mir Ali, albeit a highly fictionalised one, as the setting, for she felt it did not already have a singular meaning attached to it.
Fatima also believes that characters unfold on their own when one is writing fiction. “It’s a strange process … You think you are building people, but they make themselves and they change across the writing of the book.”
The people in her book are struggling with things she herself is curious about, and in each of them there was something she sympathised with, whether it was their fears, longings or their suffocation. “In all of them, even the ones I didn’t agree with or felt offended by, I didn’t feel I could judge them.”
She was particularly intrigued by a character called Meena, who actively starts looking for funerals to go to: “Every morning, she finds out what soyem is happening where, and she turns up and starts asking questions. Meena used to disturb me very much when I was writing. She used to rattle me and as her story started to unfold, I started to see more of her, rather than creating more of her.”
“You let the characters be, which is curious. You don’t actually have the control you have with non-fiction where you build structures which are very definite. With fiction, you observe and follow along,” she said, adding that she got unreasonably attached to these characters that “don’t exist for anyone but you [the author].”
When asked if writing is her way of being political without actually entering politics, Fatima said that Pakistanis do not have a choice but to be political. “It’s what determines how you live and how you die, it is no longer an option to step out of politics.” As far as supporting a particular party is concerned, she said she only supports people on the ground who are doing good work.
She also feels that when Pakistan is talked about, it is in terms of CNN headlines andNewsweek stories rather than people. She also laments the fact that these headlines are dehumanised, that a report on drone strikes will say that some people killed may have been suspected underage militants, when it should really say children. “I wanted to write about people, about children, not underage militants,” she proclaimed.
When it was mentioned that it is these same people who will become journalists and lawyers, Fatima said exasperatedly: “That’s why we are where we are! You restrict voices to those who can speak English or have been educated abroad, or have computers and can use Twitter.”
She also said that democracy in Islamic countries will take time, as they haven’t been decolonised as yet in the true sense, and the problem does not lie with Islam. “Islamic countries will build their own version of democracy. It will not be like western democracy… it will be unique to where they are, and to their heritage and culture.”
On the media
Fatima believes the media is not thoughtful anymore, nor is it the incredible force of change it used to be. For this, she blames General Ziaul Haq; both his twice daily censor checks for all newspapers, as well as the fact that “journalists were publicly flogged and sentenced to death” in his time “and have learnt their lesson”.
She also thinks language is a barrier, for to know the true state of affairs in Balochistan, one needs to read newspapers coming out of Quetta rather than national papers: “I went to Quetta in 2007 where local journalists were doing tremendous work at a great cost to their lives, but they are not on Facebook and you can’t retweet them.”
On Malala
“Malala is important because she is a new voice. I think that’s part of the reason there is so much hostility [against her]. It is our duty to support her and the thousands of Malalas in the country who don’t yet have a voice,” she said.
“Malala has been treated unfairly in Pakistan. People say she is washing [our] dirty laundry in public. Well then Pakistan should clean its laundry up,” she added, taking the opportunity to deal with people who blame her for the same thing: “It’s my right to criticise Pakistan because I love it… It is my duty to speak when I see something wrong, especially because a lot of us live outside the problems and have privileges that millions don’t.”
She said if she is to speak about positive stories, “I would like to know what they are.”
Fatima’s book The Shadow of the Crescent Moon is out in Pakistan “after considerable south Asian bureaucratic delay

NATO probes Afghan airstrike that 'killed child'

The NATO coalition acknowledged reports of the boy's death. PHOTO: FILE
KABUL: US-led NATO forces in Afghanistan on Friday vowed to investigate an airstrike that President Hamid Karzai said killed a two-year-old boy, as acrimony deepens over a deal to allow US troops to stay in the country after 2014.
Civilian casualties have been one of the most sensitive issues of the 12-year military intervention in Afghanistan, and Karzai warned that the latest incident threatened the proposed bilateral security agreement (BSA) with Washington.
The NATO coalition acknowledged reports of the boy’s death and said it “deeply regrets any civilian casualties caused by this airstrike” on Thursday in the southern province of Helmand, a hotbed of the Taliban insurgency.
Karzai, whose troubled relationship with the US has again erupted in public over the security agreement negotiations, has often used civilian deaths caused by NATO to berate the international coalition for its failures in Afghanistan.
Karzai “strongly condemns the airstrike by NATO forces on a house which killed one child and wounded two women,” a statement from his office said late Thursday.
“This attack shows American forces are not respecting Afghan lives… As long as unilateral acts and atrocities continue by American forces on our people, we won’t sign this BSA.”
The airstrike was launched from an unmanned drone and hit the village of Faqiran in Helmand on Thursday morning, the statement said.
NATO’s International Security Assistance Force said that the strike targeted an insurgent riding on a motorbike, but it did not confirm that a drone was involved.
Karzai, who is due to step down ahead of presidential elections in April, has been stalling over the security pact that would see some US troops to remain in Afghanistan after next year for training and counter-terror missions.
About 75,000 NATO combat troops still deployed in Afghanistan are due to withdraw by the end of 2014 after fighting the Taliban since the Islamists were forced from power in 2001.
Helmand provincial spokesperson Omar Zwak told AFP that Thursday’s airstrike had targeted a Taliban commander but had instead killed a child called Rafiullah.
Zwak said a second drone attack killed the commander.
The US has stressed that the BSA cannot be delayed further as NATO combat forces plan their withdrawal, and has warned that vital international aid was at risk due to the extended postponements.
Karzai last week refused to sign the BSA promptly despite a “loya jirga” assembly that he convened voting for him to do so, and he has since raised new conditions with US negotiators – provoking frustration in Washington.
“We very much welcome the conclusions of the loya jirga,” US Ambassador James Cunningham said on Wednesday in the western Afghan city of Herat.
“As the jirga recognised, this is a strong agreement that benefits Afghanistan and we believe it benefits the United States as well.
“It provides clarity to Americans as we need to make important decisions of our own… We have a good agreement and we’re prepared to sign it in the near future.”
A similar US deal with Iraq collapsed in 2011 leading to a complete US troop pull-out and the country is now in the grip of savage sectarian violence.
Analysts say Karzai is keen to secure a reputation as a strong nationalist leader who stood up to foreign powers before he leaves office, even at the risk of alienating Afghanistan’s biggest aid donor.
The Taliban, who before the loya jirga had threatened to target delegates if they backed the BSA, condemned the proposed deal as a “pact of slavery with America”.