Thursday, 12 December 2013

Did you know?: Pop singer Miley Cyrus is MTV’s Best Artiste of 2013

Miley Cyrus, the pop star who caused a stir with her raunchy performance at this year’sMTV Video Music Awards, was named the Best Artiste of 2013 by the cable TV network on Tuesday.
MTV said that the singer dominated both the music charts and the headlines with the release of her album Bangerz, her jaw-dropping performances at awards shows and her hosting stint on the television sketch show Saturday Night Live.
“She is the third artiste to receive the distinction of being named MTV’s Best Artiste of the Year, with past honourees including Katy Perry (2012) and One Direction (2011),” MTV said in a statement announcing the results.
Cyrus, 21, was also ranked as the Top Artiste on MTV.com, based on fan visits to the site, and had the most watched video of 2013 with her live performance alongside singer Robin Thicke at the VMAs. In a MTV documentary released in October, the We Can’t Stop singer admitted that she was out to shock and to push the boundaries. She said she was unapologetic for her provocative performance with Thicke.
Cyrus, the former Disney Channel star who shot to fame in the show Hannah Montana, has made a valiant effort in the past year to shed her good-girl teen image with her suggestive performances and revealing outfits, and it appears that she has been a resounding success at doing so

Jennifer Aniston’s 2014 wish list

Jennifer Aniston feels like a youthful 40-something. PHOTO: FILE
LOS ANGELES: Hollywood actor Jennifer Aniston, who will turn 45 in February next year, says she had an awkward phase in her 30s, but is happier than ever with where she is in life now.
Aniston shared thoughts and details about her personal life along with her plans for 2014 in an interview with Parade magazine, reports E! Online.
“There’s nothing to worry about — although I don’t think I had a care in the world at 25, either. That all started in my 30s, my awkward phase,” she said.
Aniston tied the knot with Brad Pitt when she was 31 years old, and the two became Hollywood’s golden couple. Unfortunately, they parted ways in 2005 after five years of marriage, and their divorce came through the same year.
The star says she now feels like the most beautiful woman when she’s at home with her fiancĂ© Justin Theroux.
“I’m a bit of a late bloomer! But it doesn’t matter to me because it just gets better. They do say youth is wasted on the young, but I feel just as youthful now, if not more, than I did when I was 25. I’m more in my body; I’m more in my mind. Life is full. Life is wonderful. We’re very, very fortunate.”
Aniston also explained that she has plenty of things she’s looking forward to in 2014, including a sequel to Horrible Bosses, “which is such a fun character” for her.
“And I think I’m going to try at some point next year to direct a full-length feature, which I’m extremely excited about. I’m just so happy and I’m grateful for my fans. I just hope I keep doing the work that they love.

This is how Earth and moon would look to alien spaceships

Juno flyby
Juno was spinning at 2 revolutions per minute when it caught these low-res images of Earth from 600,000 miles away.
(Credit: Video screenshot by Tim Hornyak/CNET)
You could say NASA's Juno is a bit of a sentimental spacecraft. When it took off for Jupiter, revving up its speed by 8,800 mph, it couldn't help but grab some farewell shots of its home.
For a home movie filmed from 600,000 miles away, the footage may be grainy, but it's also spectacular.
Earth and the moon are captured in a low-resolution dance set against the inky void of infinite space beyond them. This is what we'd look like to curious UFOs.
Captured by Juno's Magnetic Field Investigation cameras, which are used to track faint stars, our planet's satellite is seen in blurry rotation while the moon orbits far away. Juno was about three times the distance of Earth and the moon.

"In the movie, you ride aboard Juno as it approaches Earth and then soars off into the blackness of space. No previous view of our world has ever captured the heavenly waltz of Earth and moon.""If Captain Kirk of the USS Enterprise said, 'Take us home, Scotty,' this is what the crew would see," Scott Bolton, Juno principal investigator, said in a release.
"During the flyby, timing was everything," NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory says on its YouTube page.
"Juno was traveling about twice as fast as a typical satellite, and the spacecraft itself was spinning at 2rpm. To assemble a movie that wouldn't make viewers dizzy, the star tracker had to capture a frame each time the camera was facing Earth at exactly the right instant. The frames were sent to Earth, where they were processed into video format."
Meanwhile, Juno received Morse code greetings from amateur radio operators on Earth. The eerie hellos were recorded and processed -- listen here.
Launched in 2011, Juno is due for a rendezvous with Jupiter in 2016, when it will begin to probe the gas giant's cloud cover. The object is to learn more about the planet's atmosphere, magnetosphere, and internal structure.

Kristen Stewart new face of Chanel

Stewart poses for Chanel. PHOTO: REUTERS
LOS ANGELES: Actress Kristen Stewart is the new face of high-end luxury fashion brand Chanel.
The 23-year-old has already shot for a high profile advertising campaign with the brand’s creative director Karl Lagerfeld. The campaign will be released in 2014, reports vogue.co.uk.
The “Twilight” actress also showed her support for Lagerfeld by flying out to Dallas by private jet at his Coco Chanel MĂ©tiers d’Art fashion show Tuesday.
She wore a high-waist orange leather trousers with a cropped long-sleeved top from the spring/summer 2014 Chanel show for the event.
This will mark the second modelling job for Stewart, who is already the face of Balenciaga fragrances.

Spotify sets mobile music free. What took so long?

Spotify founder Daniel Ek presents the streaming music service's free mobile option at an event in New York.
(Credit: Spotify)
The beaten-down music industry adores digital, just not taking risks with it. That began to change Wednesday, and the business is turning to Spotify -- for now -- to do it.
Free, mobile options are the most popular way people listen to streaming music today, but as anyone who has downloaded Spotify's app has discovered quickly -- forget about listening on your phone if you want something unlike the myriad radio options that many others (Pandora,iTunes Radio) provide. That's because the deals Spotify struck with labels only a couple years ago didn't allow for mobile, on-demand streaming without a user forking over $10 a month.
The dilemma: Spotify was striving to break through in the world's biggest music market -- the US -- after rapid adoption in parts of Europe, all while facing a near future in which giants like YouTube and Beats would add their own subscription-music services to an already competitive market, and Spotify couldn't give listeners the one service they wanted most.

More importantly, it shows the music industry is gravitating away from a protective premise that free subscription listening hurts all-important "ownership" sales, typified first by records, then CDs, then iTunes. It's not giving users of free subscription services total control, for sure, but it is giving them greater user control, and it's using Spotify to do it.That ended Wednesday, when the Sweden-based company unveiled a first-of-its-kind free mobile offering. It allows mobile users to listen to any song in the catalog -- narrowed down to a single artist, a single album or a single playlist -- without a fee, so long as the songs are shuffled. It's a compromise from true on-demand, but it's a big step toward the dream of Spotify founder and Chief Executive Daniel Ek: Bring all the music in the world to all the people in the world, with Spotify providing the soundtrack to everyone's lives.
"The challenge is to get the entire planet on a path to eventually subscribe and pay something for music," said Ken Parks, Spotify's chief content officer, in an interview with CNET. "But the first task is to get them on the conveyor belt to paid consumption."
"This is our vision, and the labels are on board," he said.
On Wednesday, Ek said that this idea -- moving the free Spotify service outside the home-- has been his dogging him for more than a year. So what took Spotify so long?
Two things: licensing and a little faith.
Listener habits shifted quickly from desktop to mobile. As smartphones proliferated and data plans enabled more streaming, most of that high-growth, Internet-connected listening migrated to the devices people use on the go -- even if they're using them in the home. Pandora, the biggest provider of Web-based music in the world, says 80 percent of listening hours occur on a connected device.
In other words, as the labels came around to letting music fans listen on their computers for free, listeners were already plugging their earbuds into their smartphones. The deals between Spotify and rights holders didn't anticipate that, and adjusting music licenses is the farthest thing from a simple fix.
Music copyright is one of the most fractured and complex licensing landscapes that exists. You don't need to just get performance rights, you need to get publisher rights too. You can't just get licenses in one country; you have to cobble together different deals in every country. And for every type of permission you need, in every country you want to be, there are multiple rights holders you need to bargain with.
That would slow any license renewal process down, but a key reason a free mobile product from Spotify didn't come sooner lies in Spotify's other big announcement Wednesday: It launched in 20 new countries. That expands the number of markets it operates by more than half. Since the new free mobile listening service is available everywhere Spotify is, that meant negotiating the unheard-of rights in 55 countries.
Given the complexity of music copyrights, it raises the prospect of a paralyzing conundrum: As Spotify works towards its goal of reaching every corner of the planet, every added markets adds more licensing tangles, enough to trap Spotify from getting anything new done fast enough to be relevant.
Spotify, of course, doesn't think so.
"This is something everybody in the world wants, so I think in some sense, while we increase complexity by trying to cover the globe, the more successful we are, the easier the conversation [with right holders] becomes," Parks said.
For years, the music business's clearest shot at big growth has been "access services" like Spotify. The proportion of recorded music revenue that comes from them has more than tripledin the last five years.
That should be music to the ears of an industry with weak overall growth, but the music industry's biggest problem isn't just growth. It's the fact that its total sales are a fraction of what they were a decade ago, the heyday of the compact disc, and there's nothing that has cannibalized CD sales more than digitization of music.
Enter Ek, asking rights holders to double down on giving Spotify users digital music without any fee.
Spotify declined to discuss its negotiations with rights holders, but a music industry source said that, as one would expect, the talks frequently centered on finding a model the labels and publishers were comfortable with that would give away some but not too much.
(Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET)
Having gone through the "shock, followed by grief, followed by anger, followed by acceptance" stemming from the difficult transformation of listening habits, labels are warming up to the 21st century way of selling music, said Daniel Danker, the chief product officer of Shazam.
"We're seeing the rebirth of the business model," he said. Labels are embracing new forms in much the same way as Internet tech companies have done, he said, and that means all participants may be able take better advantage of the business opportunities technology provides music.
Spotify had to wait for the music labels to get comfortable with the idea of free music on mobile devices, according to Forrester analyst James McQuivey. It's an offering that can be "doubly disruptive as it can replace both radio and paid digital downloads, and labels don't want to undermine either one," he said. "Will [consumers] use free as a springboard into paid? That's the hope, and it's one music labels are finally ready to test."
Make no mistake: To the labels and other rights holders, this is all about money. So long as they get paid, they don't care which service wins. The goal now is to figure out what model to make that happen most as technology transforms music listening.
Ek believes he already has the answer: "The more music you play, the more likely you'll pay," he said Wednesday. Now Spotify just needs to prove it.

Mario Kart-like Angry Birds races into iOS

(Credit: Rovio)
Rovio, the mobile developer behind the wildly popular Angry Birds franchise, has launched a Mario Kart-like racing game for iOS.
The title, dubbed Angry Birds Go, puts some of the franchise's characters into soapbox cars, allowing gamers to kart-race around different tracks. The game is somewhat of a milestone for the franchise. All previous titles have been 2D. Angry Birds Go is the first 3D world for the franchise.
According to Rovio, gamers can play as either pigs or the birds, and the title includes everything from racetracks to stunt roads to air courses. Some special powers have been added to the soapbox cars to add an additional layer of difficulty.
The decision on Rovio's part to jump into racing seems to follow Nintendo's own wildly popular Mario franchise, which made its name as a platformer but quickly branched out into other areas, including kart-racing with Mario Kart. Nintendo's Mario Kart franchise is now a hallmark in Nintendo's stable of games.
Angry Birds Go is free and available now for iOS-based devices.

Did you know? Ali Zafar first Pakistani to be named Hottest Asian Man

Our very own Rangeen singer-turned-actor Ali Zafar has become the first Pakistani ever to top Eastern Eye’s list of the 50 Sexiest Asian Men in the World.
The multi-talented pop star, actor and composer topped the list, which has largely been dominated by celebrities from India in the past, narrowly beating two-time winner Bollywood star Hrithik Roshan, who came in second this year.
Zafar, who was pleasantly surprised by the win, said, “I am very flattered and never expected to be given this title. I still don’t know how I made it to this list, let alone top it. I saw a tweet frenzy right before the poll, which resulted in my trending worldwide on Twitter, so I had an idea about the volume of votes polled, I didn’t expect to top the list though! I would like to thank my fans who voted for me, from the bottom of my heart.”
Speaking to The Express Tribune, when asked how it felt to have trounced all his equally handsome competition, Zafar said, “I am a Hrithik fan too! Anyone would feel good having received the title, but beating anyone else to it is not the reason why I’m happy. It’s the fact that so many people made an effort to vote for me that has me smiling.”
Eastern Eye showbiz editor Asjad Nazir, who compiles the annual list and is chairman of the judging panel, said, “Such was the volume of votes received from different continents, that the star of hit film Chashme Baddoor and soon to be released comedy Total Siyapaa was trending worldwide on Twitter. This is something that has never happened before, and showed that Ali is inarguably the biggest global celebrity Pakistan has right now.”
Guess who else made it to the list? Everyone’s beloved, drool-worthy TV actor Fawad Afzal Khan of Humsafar fame! Fawad rose 18 places from last year to the 25th spot on this year’s list.
Other notable names in the list included Shahid Kapoor (4), Salman Khan (5), Ranbir Kapoor (6) and Shahrukh Khan (14).
So what did Ali’s wife Ayesha Fazli have to say about all of this? She laughed, and light-heartedly said, “Well, it’s not news for me at least, I am glad the world has finally acknowledged it too!