Thursday, February 28, 2013

Eating well could help spread disease, water flea study suggests

Feb. 26, 2013 ? Plentiful food can accelerate the spread of infections, Edinburgh scientists have shown in a study of water fleas.

Scientists studying bacterial infections in tiny water fleas have discovered that increasing their supply of food can speed up the spread of infection. They carried out the study to better understand factors that affect how diseases are transmitted.

Researchers found that when a population of parasite-infected water fleas was well-fed, some of them became highly contagious, compared with when food was limited.

Epidemic spread

"If we have an idea of which individuals transmit a lot of disease, we will be better able to stop its spread," said Dr Pedro Vale, School of Biological Sciences.

Scientists say the discovery highlights that, under certain conditions, some individuals may be more prone to spreading disease than others.

Their findings could help inform ways to monitor and control the spread of infections, such as epidemics, in large populations.

Some well-fed water fleas were more infectious than others because they were able to survive for longer with the parasite, giving it more time to multiply.

Parasite growth

Scientists at the University studied the impact of food quantity on the spread of a bacteria parasite that grows in the water flea gut, releasing infectious spores when the water flea dies.

Among those water fleas that were well-fed, some were found to be carrying many more parasites than others, and so were more prone to spreading the disease.

The study, published in Biology Letters, was supported by the Wellcome Trust and the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in France.

"We know that contact between individuals is important; but now we know that, for some animals at least, nutrition may also play an important role in the spread of disease," said Vale.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Eating well could help spread disease.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. P. F. Vale, M. Choisy, T. J. Little. Host nutrition alters the variance in parasite transmission potential. Biology Letters, 2013; 9 (2): 20121145 DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2012.1145

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/_9qJFDnuoBA/130226120551.htm

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Sunday, February 17, 2013

Ex-mayor racked up huge gambling losses

Maureen O'Connor, right, walks to federal court in San Diego on Thursday with her attorney, Eugene Iredale.

Associated Press

SAN DIEGO ? Maureen O'Connor was a physical education teacher who won a seat on the San Diego City Council when she was only 25 years old, later winning two terms as the city's first female mayor as she charmed voters with a populist flair.

But her rapid rise was matched by her fall, culminating Thursday when she acknowledged in federal court that she took $2.1 million from her late husband's charitable foundation during a decade-long gambling spree in which she won ? and lost ? more than $1 billion.

O'Connor pleaded not guilty to a money laundering charge in an agreement with the Justice Department that defers prosecution for two years while she tries to repay the foundation and receives treatment for gambling.

O'Connor, 66, once had a personal fortune that her attorney estimated between $40 million and $50 million, inherited from her husband of 17 years, Robert O. Peterson, founder of the Jack in the Box Inc. fast-food chain. She is now virtually broke, living with a sister.

O'Connor walked across the courtroom with a cane, appearing frail and struggling to maintain composure at one point as her attorney wrapped his arm around her shoulder and placed his hand on her head.

At a news conference, she said she always intended to repay the foundation and appeared to blame her behavior on a brain tumor that was diagnosed in 2011.

"There are two Maureens ? Maureen No. 1 and Maureen No. 2," said O'Connor, who declined to take questions. "Maureen No. 2 is the Maureen who did not know she had a tumor growing in her brain."

O'Connor's game of choice was video poker at casinos in San Diego, Las Vegas and Atlantic City, N.J. Her attorney, Eugene Iredale, said she played for hours at a time.

She won about $1 billion from 2000 to 2009, according to winnings that casinos reported to the Internal Revenue Service, but lost even more. Iredale said her net gambling losses topped $13 million.

News of O'Connor's gambling troubles and financial ruin elicited sympathy in her hometown. Magistrate Judge David Bartick told her that she left "a very strong legacy in the city of San Diego."

The U.S. attorney's office said O'Connor's medical condition influenced the decision to strike a deal.

Source: http://www.deseretnews.com/article/765622727/Ex-mayor-racked-up-huge-gambling-losses.html

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'A Good Day To Die Hard' Looks To Silence Critics With Box-Office Win

Poorly reviewed fifth entry in action franchise could make as much as $55 million.
By Ryan J. Downey


Bruce Willis in "A Good Day to Die Hard"
Photo: Fox

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1702076/a-good-day-to-die-hard-box-office.jhtml

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Saturday, February 16, 2013

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Source: http://www.rayskillmanford.com/2007-Nissan-Versa-Greenwood-IN/vd/13454868

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Prince to headline Montreux jazz with three pricey concerts

GENEVA (Reuters) - Prince returns to the Montreux Jazz Festival in July to give three concerts at the 47th edition, the first after the death of founder Claude Nobs, organizers said on Thursday.

The American singer and musician is booked to give three shows on July 13, 14 and 15, the Swiss festival said in a statement.

"Groovy, funky and the undisputed master of improvisation, Prince's performances are all unique and unpredictable," it said of the 54-year-old viewed as a pioneer of online music distribution and maverick in the business.

Prince first appeared on the famed Montreux stage in 2007, then showed up at 3 a.m. to jam with his band at a late-night jazz cafe along Lake Geneva. He gave two back-to-back shows on the same night in 2009, drawing fans from across Europe for a rare appearance on the continent.

Tickets go on sale on Friday morning, at a whopping 175 Swiss francs ($190)(standing) and 395 francs for a seat.

"We consider him one of the headline acts," festival spokeswoman Emilie Loertscher told Reuters.

The rest of the line-up will be announced on April 18.

Nobs, who founded the Montreux Jazz Festival nearly 50 years ago, died in January at age 76 after several weeks in a coma following a skiing accident.

The Swiss impresario immortalized by rock group Deep Purple as "Funky Claude" in the song "Smoke on the Water", lured the biggest stars of the music world including Miles Davis, Ray Charles and Aretha Franklin to the annual event.

(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay, editing by Paul Casciato)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/prince-headline-montreux-jazz-three-pricey-concerts-175745711.html

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Friday, February 15, 2013

Texas A & M University Singing Cadets coming to Paris, Texas

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Source: http://www.publicbroadcasting.net/ketr/events.eventsmain?action=showEvent&eventID=1338007

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Whitesnake Announce 'Made In Japan' Live Album, DVD And Blu-ray Out April 22nd 2013

Frontiers Records is pleased to announce Whitesnake's highly anticipated live concert 'Made In Japan' will be released on Deluxe 2CD/DVD Edition, Blu-ray and DVD in the UK on Monday April 22 (U.S release is April 23). 'Made In Japan' captures the multi-platinum rock band's co-headline performance at the 'Loud Park' festival, which took place in Japan's Saitama Super Arena on October 15th 2011.

Filmed on the Japanese leg of Whitesnake's momentous Forevermore World Tour, in support of their 2011 album of the same name, 'Made In Japan' is packed full of the incredible songs that continue to keep the band at the very forefront of rock'n'roll. The 'Forevermore' songs alone are worth the price of admission, and that's before factoring in the hits such as 'Is This Love', 'Still Of The Night' and 'Here I Go Again'. It's all here. This is what Whitesnake fans, new and old, have been clamouring for.

In addition to the concert recording from Loud Park Festival, 'Made In Japan' features a bonus disc containing never-before-heard versions of tracks recorded during soundcheck at a variety of Japanese venues on the tour. ?Led by front man and founding member David Coverdale, 'Made In Japan' features the Whitesnake line-up of Doug Aldrich and Reb Beach on guitar, bassist Michael Devin, drummer Briian Tichy and special-guest keyboardist Brian Ruedy.

'Made In Japan' coincides with Whitesnake's UK Arena tour alongside Journey, with special guests Thunder. The tour starts at the Glasgow SECC on Saturday May 18th and runs nationwide.

MORE INFORMATION:

http://www.whitesnake.com/

Source: http://www.contactmusic.com/press/whitesnake-announce-made-in-japan-live-album-dvd-and-blu-ray-out-april-22nd-2013

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University of Maryland shooting: Neal Oa 'lucky to be alive,' relative says

February 13, 2013 - 10:30 am

The stepfather of the University of Maryland student who was shot but survived Tuesday's murder-suicide in College Park says it's "a miracle he survived," according to the Frederick News-Post.

Neal Oa, a Maryland junior, was one of three people shot outside a 36th Street home early Tuesday morning in what Prince George's County Police believe was a murder-suicide. The Frederick News-Post reports that Oa is recovering from a gunshot wound to the leg.

The shooter, who authorities have identified as Maryland graduate student Dayvon Green, shot both Oa and 22-year-old Stephen Rane after he set fire to the house. Rane died as a result of his injuries.

"We feel really bad for the other families," Chris Merz, Oa's stepfather, told the Frederick News-Post.

An investigation into why Green set the fire and then opened fire on his roommates before killing himself continues.

READ MORE at fredericknewspost.com.

www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/news/display.htm

Source: http://www.wjla.com/articles/2013/02/university-of-maryland-shooting-neal-oa-lucky-to-be-alive-relative-says-85182.html

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Mayor wants Bryant to ?fix things'

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Source: http://thenewsstar.com/article/20130213/NEWS01/130213011/-1/rss

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Thursday, February 14, 2013

Advance promises to expand biological control of crop pests

Feb. 13, 2013 ? A new discovery promises to allow expanded use of a mainstay biological pest control method, which avoids the health, environmental and pest-resistance concerns of traditional insecticides, scientists are reporting. The advance toward broadening applicability of the so-called sterile insect technique (SIT) appears in the journal ACS Synthetic Biology.

Luke Alphey and colleagues explain that the Lepidoptera, a large family of insects with a caterpillar stage, cause widespread damage worldwide to cotton; apples, pears and other fruits; and vegetable crops like broccoli, Brussels sprouts and cabbage. Farmers usually battle these pests with traditional insects, with little use of SIT, despite its many advantages. SIT involves mass release of radiation-sterilized insects, which mate but produce no offspring, thus reducing the population of pests. Alphey's team focused on eliminating major drawbacks that discourage wider use of SIT: They include difficulty in producing male-only sterile insects without the use of radiation, which reduces their ability to compete with wild males for mates.

The scientists describe development of a synthetic genetic system that produces vigorous adult males with lethal information encoded in their sex-determination genes. The males mate, and all the female offspring die, thus reducing the pest populations. They developed the "lethal genetic sexing system" in two pests, the pink bollworm, which damages cotton crops, and the diamondback moth, which attacks broccoli, cabbage and other cruciferous vegetable crops. The approach could be used on other pests, as well, they state.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Chemical Society.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Li Jin, Adam S. Walker, Guoliang Fu, Timothy Harvey-Samuel, Tarig Dafa?alla, Andrea Miles, Thea Marubbi, Deborah Granville, Nerys Humphrey-Jones, Sinead O?Connell, Neil I. Morrison, Luke Alphey. Engineered Female-Specific Lethality for Control of Pest Lepidoptera. ACS Synthetic Biology, 2013; : 130108140209004 DOI: 10.1021/sb300123m

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/m3lZcBQF-Zs/130213114710.htm

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Wednesday, February 13, 2013

VIERA Remote 2 for iPhone/iPad 1.01

VIERA Remote 2 allows you to wirelessly control your Panasonic flat-panel VIERA TV from your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch over WiFi. With it, you can also view pictures, videos, music and websites from your mobile display on the TV screen, and vice versa.?

In order to use this app, your iOS device needs to be connected to the same WiFi network as your TV.

VIERA Remote 2 is compatible with VIERA TV 2011/2012/2013 models.

Requirements:

? iOS 5.0 or later
? Compatible with iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad

What's New in This Release: [ read full changelog ]

? Minor bug fix

Source: http://handheld.softpedia.com/get/Remote/VIERA-Remote-2-for-iPhone-iPad-139076.shtml

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UF women's golf tied for second at Northrop Grumman

Published: Monday, February 11, 2013 at 10:11 p.m.
Last Modified: Tuesday, February 12, 2013 at 12:04 a.m.

PALOS VERDES, Calif. ? Wasting no time in its first tournament in nearly two weeks, the third-ranked University of Florida women's golf team is tied for second place after the first round of the Northrop Grumman Regional Challenge. Leading the charge was none other than sophomore Camilla Hedberg and senior Mia Piccio who both carded even par (71) rounds to finish the first day tied for second also on the individual board.

Looking for a possible fourth medalist honor of the year, it was no surprise to see Hedberg's name near the top of the leaderboard, but for Piccio, coming off an individual win at the Lady Bulldog Individual Championship a week ago, it was exactly what the Gators needed to stay near the top of the board with still two rounds to play.




As a team, UF shot six-over (290) and is tied with fourth-ranked Duke. UCLA leads all teams with a first round four-over (288). Top-ranked Southern Cal sits in fourth at 14-over and Texas rounds out the top five at 15-over.

Along with Oregon, Florida is one of two teams to have multiple players in the top-five of the individual standings. Duke's Alejandra Cangrejo sits alone at the top after a 1-under (70) through the first 18 holes.

?I am proud of the team today,? Florida head coach Emily Bastel said. ?The course played tough and the conditions were challenging. We did a good job of staying patient and making minimal mistakes. We'll make a few adjustments for tomorrow and play hard these next few days.?

The 71 for Hedberg is her 11th even or under par round this year out of a possible 15 rounds. Starting on the tenth hole, the Spainiard stayed fairly consistent through the first eight holes, birdieing the par-four 12th, but then pulling back even with a bogey at No. 14. After staying even at the turn, Hedberg rolled off two straight birdies at No. 1 and No. 2 and looked to be getting on a roll, but then came back even again with two straight bogeys on the very next two holes.

After claiming her first collegiate victory at the Lady Bulldog Championship last week, Piccio was coming in to this week with plenty of confidence and didn't disappoint. Also starting on the tenth hole, the senior actually had a little trouble getting started after a double-bogey on No. 12 to fall to two-over. However, birdies on No. 14 and the par-five 16th, got her back to even at the turn. Piccio suffered her second over par hole at No. 1, but then stay Gators finished the first day of play with four golfers in the top-20 as senior Isabelle Lendl and sophomore Anna Young both shot scores of 3-over (74) to go in to Tuesday tied for 19th. Young actually had three birdies on the day, which was second-most for the team, but suffered six bogeys as well. Lendl only had one birdie in relation to four bogeys, but finished her round seven straight pars.

Finally, after a great showing at the Florida Challenge, junior Elcin Ulu was looking to keep the great play going, but was not able to get any good rolls as she was forced to pencil in two double-bogeys, three bogeys and only one birdie, which was at the par-three sixth hole. Ulu is currently tied for 60th at eight-over (79).

Source: http://www.gainesville.com/article/20130211/articles/130219924

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Deficits Tie Hands of Activist President (WSJ)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/284546164?client_source=feed&format=rss

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State of the Union 2013: Daily Beast Live Chat!

The Daily Beast?s whip-smart team of political columnists will be here this Tuesday a touch after 8:30 p.m. E.T. to chat while we watch President Obama's 2013 State of the Union. Join John Avlon, Michelle Cottle, Michael Tomasky, Howard Kurtz, and your fellow Beast readers in the chat box below.

Source: http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/02/12/state-of-the-union-2013-live-chat

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Trial Begins for Former Nebraska Football Player

Jury Selection Begins in Dennard Trial - Bill Steckis Reports at 10

Alfonzo Dennard Trial, Day One- Bill Steckis reports at Five

TUESDAY - DAY 2
On day two of Alfonzo Dennard's trial, the jury heard testimony from witnesses who were in the area of 14th & O Streets around bar close time on April 21, the morning Dennard is accused of punching a Lincoln Police Officer and resisting arrest.

Arresting Officer Benjamin Coke took a stand and described the arrest.

In his opening statements to the jury, Defense Attorney Terry Dougherty said his client's actions were in self defense. He will admit to resisting arrest but not to willfully assaulting an officer.

MONDAY - DAY 1
Jury selection for a former Nebraska football player accused of assaulting an officer began Monday.

Alfonzo Dennard is accused of punching an officer in the face during a fight outside a downtown Lincoln bar last April.

He's facing three charges: assaulting an officer, resisting arrest and third-degree assault. Dennard pleaded not guilty to all three charges.

Dennard's attorney Terry Dougherty expects the trial to last five days.

Judge Stephanie Stacy said that one of the prospective jurors happens to be her neighbor. She also disclosed that her husband is a former husker football player. Attorneys for both sides agreed that they are aware of the disclosures and said they had no problem with them. Fifty-three prospective jurors were interviewed by counsel for both sides.

Twelve jurors were selected along with two alternates.

Stacy denied a request by 1011 News to allow cameras in the courtroom.

The Assault of an Officer charge is a class three felony.

"I will not be doing any media interviews during the trial," said Terry Dougherty, Dennard's attorney.

Dougherty says the trial should end on Friday.

Source: http://www.1011now.com/sports/headlines/Trial-Begins-for-Former-Nebraska-Football-Player-190665271.html

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Obama to announce 34K troops to be home in 1 year

FILE - In this Feb. 5, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama gestures as speaks in the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington. The president's announcement that half of the U.S. troops now in Afghanistan will come home within one year will put the number precisely where it was when he first became president. The next step: to decide how many Americans will stay longer-term, once the combat phase of the U.S. military presence ends at 2014's close. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

FILE - In this Feb. 5, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama gestures as speaks in the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House in Washington. The president's announcement that half of the U.S. troops now in Afghanistan will come home within one year will put the number precisely where it was when he first became president. The next step: to decide how many Americans will stay longer-term, once the combat phase of the U.S. military presence ends at 2014's close. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama will announce in his State of the Union address that 34,000 U.S. troops will be home from Afghanistan within a year, a senior administration official said Tuesday.

That's about half the U.S. forces currently serving there, and marks the next phase in the administration's plans to formally finish the war by the end of 2014. The U.S. now has 66,000 troops in Afghanistan, down from a peak of about 100,000 as recently as 2010.

The U.S. is still finalizing plans for the size and scope of its military presence after the war ends. The White House has said it would be open to leaving no troops in Afghanistan, though it's likely that a small presence will remain, in keeping with the Pentagon's preferences.

Obama won't announce troop numbers beyond 2014 in Tuesday's speech and has not yet made that decision, said the official, who requested anonymity in order to discuss the troop drawdown ahead of the president.

Obama discussed the next phases of the drawdown with Afghan President Hamid Karzai during a day-long meeting in Washington last month, the first meeting between the two leaders since Obama's re-election. The two leaders agreed to accelerate their timetable for putting Afghan forces in the lead combat role nationwide, moving that transition up from the summer to the spring.

Obama will announce the troop drawdown and the future of the U.S. role in Afghanistan during a joint session of Congress that is otherwise expected to be dominated by the economy and other domestic issues.

Foreign policy has intruded in recent days, however, and the White House quickly condemned North Korea early Tuesday for its nuclear launch hours before Obama's address. The president is expected to make further remarks on this in his primetime speech.

Some private security analysts, as well as some Pentagon officials, worry that pulling out of Afghanistan too quickly will leave the battle-scarred country vulnerable to collapse. In a worst-case scenario, that could allow the Taliban to regain power and revert to the role they played in the years before 9/11 as protectors of al-Qaida terrorists bent on striking the U.S.

Many Americans, however, are weary of the war, according to public opinion polls, and are skeptical of any claim that Afghanistan is worth more U.S. blood. Registered voters are roughly split between those who say the U.S. should remove all troops and those who favor leaving some troops in place for counterterrorism efforts, according to a recent Fox News poll.

The Obama administration gave the first clear signal in early January that it might leave no troops in the country after December 2014. Administration officials have said they are considering a range of options for a residual U.S. troop presence of as few as 3,000 and as many as 15,000, with the number linked to a specific set of military-related missions like hunting down terrorists.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-02-12-US-Obama-Afghanistan/id-1083d2e9f34e4033a26c460efb955058

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Digital gap: why aren't moviemakers learning narrative from videogames and the web?

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - From killing off film prints to designing fantastical CGI worlds, movies are going digital in every way except one - storytelling.

Unlike the eras when the advent of photography inspired the fine arts to embrace abstraction, or when the rise of mass-media pushed writers into modernist and eventually post-modern terrain, movies remain largely impervious to the narrative techniques employed across the internet.

Hollywood views videogames and the web as an existential threat, but instead of radically altering its approach, most movies unfold over the course of two hours in a linear fashion, just as they have done for a century. Over the course of its history the medium has had no problem embracing change in film as long as its technologically driven, hence the shift from silent movies to talkies, or black and white to color. It has remained more precious, however, about how it spins its celluloid fantasies.

Today's top directors are more interested in aping classical cinema than forging a new filmmaking vernacular. That's in contrast to 10 years ago when movies like "The Matrix," "Memento," or "Being John Malkovich" turned cinematic storytelling on its head, gleefully experimenting with an inter-textuality that mirrored our hyperlinked world.

With a few exceptions like Joe Wright's "Anna Karenina," which re-imagined Leo Tolstoy's tragedy as a series of intersecting operas, or Martin McDonagh's "Seven Psychopaths," a bloody crime movie that is also a comment on the art of screenwriting, that flowering of experimentation is over.

"The films of early aughts engaged with virtuality in a way they don't today," Alissa Quart, a cultural critic and the author of the forthcoming "Republic of Outsiders," told TheWrap. "You had people like Steven Spielberg working on ?Minority Report,' now you have ?Lincoln.' Or Paul Thomas Anderson going from ?Magnolia' to ?The Master.'

"Those movies engaged with multiplicity and technology and surveillance, and now those same filmmakers are looking at these huge commanding triumphal figures in stories set in the past that look antique."

Films like "The Master" or "Zero Dark Thirty" or "Django Unchained" are referential, but their influences lie in film's history, mimicking the wide vistas favored by John Ford or the atmosphere of exquisite paranoia in 1970s thrillers like "All the President's Men." The directors gaze lingers in the past and rarely looks toward the future.

"A way to get serious as a filmmaker is to be very clearly dealing with your influences," Kurt Anderson, host of the arts and culture program "Studio 360," told TheWrap. "Now, I have no doubt that ?Pulp Fiction' was full of Quentin Tarantino's influences, but at the time it seemed like a new way of telling stories. When you get to ?Django,' it becomes all about his cinematic influences."

Even the methods that Hollywood has kicked up to convince teenagers to give up their game consoles and hit the multiplex are bizarrely retro.

Souped-up theatrical exhibition offerings like 3D are a throwback to the 1950s, when Hollywood was facing a different, though no less grave incursion from television. Likewise, what is IMAX and its mammoth projections but a reincarnation of Cinerama, the colossal wide-screen format the flourished in the Eisenhower era?

In contrast, television shows like "Lost" or "Once Upon a Time," which are set in fantasy worlds and tease out mysteries in episodic fashion, are more akin to what players expect from videogames.

That's not to say there isn't some cross-pollination. Flint Dille is a game designer on the likes of "Dead to Rights" and the screenwriter of movies like "An American Tail: Fievel Goes West." He says that both mediums steal from one another, claiming that the plot of 99 percent of videogames is derived from ?80s action movies starring Arnold Schwarzenegger.

In turn, today's action movies design their set pieces to appeal to audiences who grew up with "Mass Effect" and "World of Warcraft."

"When you look at ?The Hobbit' - that escape from the goblins' lair is a Nintendo game," Dille said. "It's like a videogame in its velocity. Or a movie like ?Jack Reacher' is like a game in that the main character arrives with no back story, and that's something we've been conditioned to accept from playing games where the protagonist is a cipher."

To be sure, studios have shown an appetite for persistent experimentation when it comes to using apps and viral marketing to generate excitement for tent pole films like "The Dark Knight" or "Star Trek Into Darkness." Yet the emphasis is on promotion, not narrative.

So why is it that, while computer technology has opened up brave new worlds in terms of special effects and advertising, it has not altered storytelling?

The culprit is a hodgepodge of commercial realities and artistic preferences.

"I've been spending a lot of time pondering the question what is a modern film?" Howard Suber, professor of film history at UCLA, told TheWrap. "I've come to the conclusion that it is basically everything that was made after the 1960s -- but that's 50 years. The reason why that's still modern is that not a hell of a lot has changed."

Suber said that when he shows a movie in his class from earlier eras, his students are unable to deal with the slower pacing and editing, but they have a less difficult time adjusting to anything made after that date.

"The entire field of modern film is 50 years long, which is staggering when you compare it to any earlier age films," he said. "The films of the ?20s looked antique to audiences in the ?30s, and the same was true with the way audiences in the ?50s viewed films from 10 years earlier."

Quart thinks that the kind of cultural permanence that Suber describes may be a conscious choice by artists who are looking to create spaces that are distinct from the fragmented world wrought by social media.

In a recent piece in the New York Times, Quart argued that "Mad Men" and "Breaking Bad" are popular in part because they allow viewers to take a break from Twitter, texts and other technologically enabled forms of multi-tasking.

She argues the same appeal underlies movies.

"My gut tells me that filmmakers are trying to give viewers respite from what the virtual world is offering," Quart said. "It's motivated by an esthetic defensiveness because we are inundated with all these modes of communication."

It hasn't helped that films that have exploded conventional approaches to storytelling sunk at the box office.

Sure, "The Matrix" was a worldwide blockbuster, grossing $463 million and spawning two sequels, but "Magnolia" ($48.4 million) and "Adaptation" ($32.8 million) were lucky to break even. More recent mind-bending films like "Anna Karenina" ($49 million globally), and "Synecdoche, New York" ($4.3 million globally) continued the trend of hardly making a ripple at ticket counters. Studios' obsession with tentpole films that can cross language and cultural barriers to appeal to global audiences have likely made them less receptive to films that revel in narrative complexity.

That could change. If filmmakers like J.J. Abrams get their way, blockbuster films will seep off the screen and into other platforms, rivaling the sprawling nature of the web.

The big shake up could come with Transmedia - the notion that stories should be told over various mediums ranging from comic books to videogames. This approach to popular culture has been a buzz word for over a decade, but its adherents believe the film industry is poised to take a dramatic leap forward.

"They're are a lot of film purists who believe their job is to get the script shot and make it beautiful," Jeff Gomez, president of Starlight Runner Entertainment and a trans media consultant on films like "Avatar," said. "But there's also a growing number of young people, who were weaned on videogames and immersed in multiple media platforms, for whom these new kinds of storytelling are intuitive."

Gomez notes that Joss Whedon's decision to set his upcoming ABC show "S.H.I.E.L.D." in the world of "The Avengers" films is a perfect example of a platform-agnostic approach.

It's a boundary that could keep eroding when Abrams gets hold of the "Star Wars" franchise. The director already has experimented with transmedia in television shows like "Lost," but the saga of the Skywalkers and new owner Disney's consumer products heft could open up whole new galaxies in terms of storytelling - ones that jet from games to toys to movies, creating a vast universe of narrative possibilities.

In 1977, "Star Wars" gave birth to the modern blockbuster. Nearly 40 years later when "Star Wars Episode 7" is scheduled to hit theaters, will it change the face of film again?From killing off film prints to designing fantastical CGI worlds, movies are going digital in every way except one - storytelling.

Unlike the eras when the advent of photography inspired the fine arts to embrace abstraction, or when the rise of mass-media pushed writers into modernist and eventually post-modern terrain, movies remain largely impervious to the narrative techniques employed across the internet.

Hollywood views videogames and the web as an existential threat, but instead of radically altering its approach, most movies unfold over the course of two hours in a linear fashion, just as they have done for a century. Over the course of its history the medium has had no problem embracing change in film as long as its technologically driven, hence the shift from silent movies to talkies, or black and white to color. It has remained more precious, however, about how it spins its celluloid fantasies.

Today's top directors are more interested in aping classical cinema than forging a new filmmaking vernacular. That's in contrast to 10 years ago when movies like "The Matrix," "Memento," or "Being John Malkovich" turned cinematic storytelling on its head, gleefully experimenting with an inter-textuality that mirrored our hyperlinked world.

With a few exceptions like Joe Wright's "Anna Karenina," which re-imagined Leo Tolstoy's tragedy as a series of intersecting operas, or Martin McDonagh's "Seven Psychopaths," a bloody crime movie that is also a comment on the art of screenwriting, that flowering of experimentation is over.

"The films of early aughts engaged with virtuality in a way they don't today," Alissa Quart, a cultural critic and the author of the forthcoming "Republic of Outsiders," told TheWrap. "You had people like Steven Spielberg working on ?Minority Report,' now you have ?Lincoln.' Or Paul Thomas Anderson going from ?Magnolia' to ?The Master.'

"Those movies engaged with multiplicity and technology and surveillance, and now those same filmmakers are looking at these huge commanding triumphal figures in stories set in the past that look antique."

Films like "The Master" or "Zero Dark Thirty" or "Django Unchained" are referential, but their influences lie in film's history, mimicking the wide vistas favored by John Ford or the atmosphere of exquisite paranoia in 1970s thrillers like "All the President's Men." The directors gaze lingers in the past and rarely looks toward the future.

"A way to get serious as a filmmaker is to be very clearly dealing with your influences," Kurt Anderson, host of the arts and culture program "Studio 360," told TheWrap. "Now, I have no doubt that ?Pulp Fiction' was full of Quentin Tarantino's influences, but at the time it seemed like a new way of telling stories. When you get to ?Django,' it becomes all about his cinematic influences."

Even the methods that Hollywood has kicked up to convince teenagers to give up their game consoles and hit the multiplex are bizarrely retro.

Souped-up theatrical exhibition offerings like 3D are a throwback to the 1950s, when Hollywood was facing a different, though no less grave incursion from television. Likewise, what is IMAX and its mammoth projections but a reincarnation of Cinerama, the colossal wide-screen format the flourished in the Eisenhower era?

In contrast, television shows like "Lost" or "Once Upon a Time," which are set in fantasy worlds and tease out mysteries in episodic fashion, are more akin to what players expect from videogames.

That's not to say there isn't some cross-pollination. Flint Dille is a game designer on the likes of "Dead to Rights" and the screenwriter of movies like "An American Tail: Fievel Goes West." He says that both mediums steal from one another, claiming that the plot of 99 percent of videogames is derived from ?80s action movies starring Arnold Schwarzenegger.

In turn, today's action movies design their set pieces to appeal to audiences who grew up with "Mass Effect" and "World of Warcraft."

"When you look at ?The Hobbit' - that escape from the goblins' lair is a Nintendo game," Dille said. "It's like a videogame in its velocity. Or a movie like ?Jack Reacher' is like a game in that the main character arrives with no back story, and that's something we've been conditioned to accept from playing games where the protagonist is a cipher."

To be sure, studios have shown an appetite for persistent experimentation when it comes to using apps and viral marketing to generate excitement for tent pole films like "The Dark Knight" or "Star Trek Into Darkness." Yet the emphasis is on promotion, not narrative.

So why is it that, while computer technology has opened up brave new worlds in terms of special effects and advertising, it has not altered storytelling?

The culprit is a hodgepodge of commercial realities and artistic preferences.

"I've been spending a lot of time pondering the question what is a modern film?" Howard Suber, professor of film history at UCLA, told TheWrap. "I've come to the conclusion that it is basically everything that was made after the 1960s -- but that's 50 years. The reason why that's still modern is that not a hell of a lot has changed."

Suber said that when he shows a movie in his class from earlier eras, his students are unable to deal with the slower pacing and editing, but they have a less difficult time adjusting to anything made after that date.

"The entire field of modern film is 50 years long, which is staggering when you compare it to any earlier age films," he said. "The films of the ?20s looked antique to audiences in the ?30s, and the same was true with the way audiences in the ?50s viewed films from 10 years earlier."

Quart thinks that the kind of cultural permanence that Suber describes may be a conscious choice by artists who are looking to create spaces that are distinct from the fragmented world wrought by social media.

In a recent piece in the New York Times, Quart argued that "Mad Men" and "Breaking Bad" are popular in part because they allow viewers to take a break from Twitter, texts and other technologically enabled forms of multi-tasking.

She argues the same appeal underlies movies.

"My gut tells me that filmmakers are trying to give viewers respite from what the virtual world is offering," Quart said. "It's motivated by an esthetic defensiveness because we are inundated with all these modes of communication."

It hasn't helped that films that have exploded conventional approaches to storytelling sunk at the box office.

Sure, "The Matrix" was a worldwide blockbuster, grossing $463 million and spawning two sequels, but "Magnolia" ($48.4 million) and "Adaptation" ($32.8 million) were lucky to break even. More recent mind-bending films like "Anna Karenina" ($49 million globally), and "Synecdoche, New York" ($4.3 million globally) continued the trend of hardly making a ripple at ticket counters. Studios' obsession with tentpole films that can cross language and cultural barriers to appeal to global audiences have likely made them less receptive to films that revel in narrative complexity.

That could change. If filmmakers like J.J. Abrams get their way, blockbuster films will seep off the screen and into other platforms, rivaling the sprawling nature of the web.

The big shake up could come with Transmedia - the notion that stories should be told over various mediums ranging from comic books to videogames. This approach to popular culture has been a buzz word for over a decade, but its adherents believe the film industry is poised to take a dramatic leap forward.

"They're are a lot of film purists who believe their job is to get the script shot and make it beautiful," Jeff Gomez, president of Starlight Runner Entertainment and a trans media consultant on films like "Avatar," said. "But there's also a growing number of young people, who were weaned on videogames and immersed in multiple media platforms, for whom these new kinds of storytelling are intuitive."

Gomez notes that Joss Whedon's decision to set his upcoming ABC show "S.H.I.E.L.D." in the world of "The Avengers" films is a perfect example of a platform-agnostic approach.

It's a boundary that could keep eroding when Abrams gets hold of the "Star Wars" franchise. The director already has experimented with transmedia in television shows like "Lost," but the saga of the Skywalkers and new owner Disney's consumer products heft could open up whole new galaxies in terms of storytelling - ones that jet from games to toys to movies, creating a vast universe of narrative possibilities.

In 1977, "Star Wars" gave birth to the modern blockbuster. Nearly 40 years later when "Star Wars Episode 7" is scheduled to hit theaters, will it change the face of film again?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/digital-gap-why-arent-moviemakers-learning-narrative-videogames-205902302.html

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TMZ Article On Former WWE Star, Kevin Nash & Konnan At AAA Canada Event, Morrison Interview

- TMZ has an article about former WWE star Kenn Doane and an anti-bullying book that he recently wrote. Doane told the gossip site that he came up with the idea for the book while he was rehabbing a knee injury last month. Doane has a publisher for the book, who will provide illustrators and another author to add some finishing touches. The book should be available in June.

- AAA Canada presents: Next Generation Wrestling on Friday, February 22nd at the Victoria Pavilion on the Stampede Grounds at 1410 Olympic Way SE in Calgary. Doors open at 6:30 with a special pre-show, with the main show kicking off at 7:30pm. Tickets are on sale at all ticketmaster locations and the Scotiabank Saddledome box office. Kevin Nash, Davey Boy Smith Jr., Konnan, Necro Butcher, Teddy Hart and John Morrison are scheduled to appear. You can get more information at this link.

- Speaking of Morrison, StarShip-Pained.com passed along this interview that John Morrison did last December with GrappleTalk. During the interview, Morrison discussed his various acting gigs and more, you can listen to it below:

Got a news tip or correction? Send it to us by clicking here.

Source: http://feeds.wrestlinginc.com/~r/wrestlinginc_news/~3/nWAy99-brmo/

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Monday, February 11, 2013

Video: Is Love Enough? (Full Show)

Sorry, Readability was unable to parse this page for content.

Source: http://video.msnbc.msn.com/cnbc/50773978/

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Hunt for Christopher Dorner becomes major PR problem for L.A. police (+video)

Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck says he will review alleged cop killer Christopher Dorner's charges of racism. It could be an important step in reversing the LAPD?s history of corruption and abuse.

By Brad Knickerbocker,?Staff writer / February 10, 2013

A digital billboard along Santa Monica Boulevard shows a "wanted" alert for former Los Angeles police officer Christopher Dorner, suspected in a spree of violence as part of a vendetta against law enforcement after being fired by the department.

Reed Saxon/AP

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The hunt for alleged cop killer Christopher Dorner has turned into a major public relations challenge for law enforcement officials, in particular the Los Angeles Police Department working its way back from a history of corruption and abuse.

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Not only have hundreds of well-trained officers equipped with military-style vehicles ? including helicopters with thermal imaging devices one pilot says can pick out a rabbit in a snowstorm ? been unable to find the man charged with killing three people and wounding two others on a rampage aimed at police officers and their families.

The LAPD also has been forced to reexamine the reasons for Mr. Dorner?s dismissal as a police officer in 2009 ? brought about, Dorner charges in the 11-page manifesto he posted on Facebook, by racism in the department. And the LAPD is having to make amends to the two people ? a middle-aged Hispanic woman and her mother delivering newspapers ? wounded when police riddled their truck with gunfire. (The women?s truck was neither the make nor the color of Dorner?s pickup later found abandoned.)

How much do you know about the Second Amendment? A quiz.

The search for Dorner continued Sunday in and around the San Bernardino mountains east of Los Angeles, but police were on edge and alert to the possibility that the alleged killer had left California. Police in Las Vegas (where Dorner owns property) are now traveling in pairs, and motorcycle patrol officers have been ordered into less-vulnerable cruisers.

Given Dorner?s claims about why he was fired, which detail specific episodes with specific senior officers named, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck has ordered an official review of the case, which occurred before he took over the department.

"I am aware of the ghosts of the LAPD's past and one of my biggest concerns is that they will be resurrected by Dorner's allegations of racism within the department," Chief Beck said in a statement Saturday. "Therefore, I feel we need to also publicly address Dorner's allegations regarding his termination of employment."

In his manifesto, Dorner warns that the killing will continue until ?the department states the truth about my innocence.?

But Beck says, "I do this not to appease a murderer?. I do it to reassure the public that their police department is transparent and fair in all the things we do."

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/SkeTvFv9GsY/Hunt-for-Christopher-Dorner-becomes-major-PR-problem-for-L.A.-police-video

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Sunday, February 10, 2013

How the iMore community uses their iPhones and iPads to stay in shape

How the iMore community uses their iPhones and iPads to stay in shape

February is Fitness Month at iMore and Mobile Nations, and that means our whole community is involved -- readers, listeners, viewers, and most of all, forum members. I wrote my Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu routine up a couple of days ago, but all week you've been sharing how you use your iPhone and iPad to stay in shape, and the apps and accessories you use along with it. Sure, we sweetened the deal by putting a $100 iTunes gift card up for grabs -- and we'll do it again next week -- but you guys brought serious game.

So what did you tell us?

Our winner, msiry, had this to say:

I use My iPhone to help me stay in shape. Below are the Apps and Accessories I use:

  • Lose It: I use this app every single day to help me track how much I eat. Its very useful as I try to keep my carb intake at a minimum of 18% daily. I believe it is free in the AppStore as well, and very simple to use. Just recently it has added an extra bonus for users with the Nike FuelBand, which leads to me my next section.

  • Nike+ FuelBand: Best thing to ever happen to me to keep going at the gym, and stay active. It's worn on the wrist, and actually has taken place of my watch. So, each day you set a goal for yourself and how many FuelPoints(its a measurement of how active you are) you think you will achieve. I started out low around 1500 FuelPoints for my first week, but when I was destroying those goals, I decided to up it up 2000 for my second week. I am now consistently at around 3200-3800 after a month of use. To reach my goals, I do what I have to stay active, as I no longer take escalators and take the stairs when available to me. I try to walk everywhere, and my dog loves it, as she gets extra long walk walks now. A friend of mine actually got one as well, and we have a daily competition of who is where, and what they set their goal too for the day, if it's too low, we talk trash to each other about it. Also, the FuelBand keeps track of Calories burned, Steps taken, and has a pretty nice watch on it as well. The one downfall of the FuelBand is the price tag, as it retails around $150 dollars. Luckily, I found a good deal on Ebay and was able to score one for $100 dollars after shipping and handling. Nike has a wide range of products to track your daily activities, so If you're interested, I would visit your local sports store, nike store, or google, and do as much research as possible before getting any product.

  • Nike FuelBand App: My FuelBand goes hand in hand with the Nike FuelBand App for the iPhone. It syncs via BlueTooth, and keeps track of all your goals, how far you've traveled that day, how many calories you've burned, and it has fun little animations when reaching certain goals. The App is Free in the App Store.

  • Evernote: I use this app to track my workouts, and setup new workouts for myself. I basically follow a Circuit training workout I found online, that I feel has been very beneficial for me, I do that every other day, and the other days are just cardio/core exercises.

Overall these are the 4 main apps I use on a daily basis, and since January 1st, I am currently down 11 pounds to 200lbs, my goal is to be at 175 by May 30th. I am a competitive baseball player, as well as a casual golfer & surfer, and I have been out of shape for way too long. I feel great, I've received many compliments that It shows that I've lost weight, and a lot of my clothes that didn't fit me this time last year, I am now able to wear them, or the're too big on me.

Thanks msiry! We also had great tips from many of the other entrants.

Darthgreg, among other things, bought his analog fitness content with him to iOS:

  • AirVideo: The DVD workout system p90x was what really got me started taking fitness seriously. Since I finished it, I've expanded my workout regime quite a bit into other workout videos as well as some self designed stuff. Consistently, however, I want easy access to p90x or another workout video, and since I've ripped them all to a computer, AirVideo gives me access to them no matter where I am or who is using the main tv. AirVideo streams all of my workout movies to my iPhone or iPad whether at home or abroad. I don't always use it, but I can always turn it it if I need it. It is very, very handy.

Daspoo has been using, among other things, the new incarnation of iFitness Pro for recording and storing routine stats

  • Full Fitness : Exercise Workout Trainer: The app allows for entry of weight, reps per set, and set counts per exercise, lets you save routines for repeated use, and even allows for backup/restores of data in case something ever happens to your phone; not to mention it shows vids explaining how to perform many exercises. It's a fantastic tool for tracking your steady improvements and also for remembering baselines for starting exercises during workouts. There was drama in the past with the older version of the app (something about the dev creating false 5-star reviews, or something to that effect), but it really is a handy thing to have at the gym when you want to graduate from the notebook of set/reps info. Highly recommended!

Gregory Schneider, among other things, used Zombies 5K to get to the point where he could run a full 5K. But he also used the more general version:

  • Zombies, Run!: Zombies 5k helped me get to the point where running more than 100m wasn't a struggle but Zombies Run! keeps me motivated not just on runs, but on walks with my dog too. I still use runtastic in the background as I prefer it's stat tracking over that of zombies run but the story pieces and voice acting in zombies run keep me thoroughly entertained while I'm out and about.

TheBiggMann, who works as a personal trainer, has even incorporated the cloud into his regime:

  • Dropbox: This app saves my life on a regular basis. I upload all my clients workouts to my Dropbox because it seems like every week I need a new log or to change something on someone's workout. Having all my files at my fingertips allows me to do just that, all from the comfort of our training studio.

We had a lot of other great posts as well, and a lot of great recommendations, so make sure you check them all out, and if you haven't already, please add yours to the thread!



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/d-z870Uk-lk/story01.htm

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The sound of NY Fashion Week: smartphones snapping

A model walks the runway during the Alexander Wang Fall 2013 fashion show during Fashion Week, Saturday, Feb. 9, 2013, in New York. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

A model walks the runway during the Alexander Wang Fall 2013 fashion show during Fashion Week, Saturday, Feb. 9, 2013, in New York. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

The Monique Lhuillier Fall 2013 collection is modeled during Fashion Week, Saturday, Feb. 9, 2013 in New York. (AP Photo/Jason DeCrow)

A model walks the runway at the presentation of the Prabal Gurung Fall 2013 fashion collection during Fashion Week, Saturday, Feb. 9, 2013, in New York. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

A model walks the runway at the presentation of the Jill Stuart Fall 2013 fashion collection during Fashion Week, Saturday, Feb. 9, 2013, in New York. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

A model walks the runway at the presentation of the Jill Stuart Fall 2013 fashion collection during Fashion Week, Saturday, Feb. 9, 2013, in New York. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

(AP) ? Remember clapping? As in when a fashion designer puts on his runway finale and then takes a bow before an adoring crowd.

The fashion hordes these days are way too busy tweeting, Instagramming and taking video with their smartphones to put those busy hands together. But more often than not, so are the fashion houses.

Technology has taken over in important ways for designers and was ready made for this New York Fashion Week as the huge storm had the elite teetering around Manhattan in blowing snow, clutching those phones.

Audiences had already been on the bandwagon, taking phone pics from their seats and posting reviews online before the models were off the runway, but designers are figuring out how to use all the instant feedback to their advantage.

Before the snow hit, information went out to retailers, editors, stylists and bloggers on how to view the Donna Karan and Helmut Lang shows online and through phone apps for those unable to attend in person.

Rachel Roy and Peter Som switched to entirely digital catwalk shows. Rebecca Minkoff and Kenneth Cole beamed live tweets on the walls, with Cole pledging donations to amFAR if a certain hashtag was used during the show.

Tommy Hilfiger collected curated interactions ? and added some himself ? that were shared with guests entering and exiting his menswear show. He planned to do the same Sunday for his women's collection.

Still clutching those phones, the crowds dealt Saturday ? Day 3 of the eight days of fall previews ? with the storm's mush of an aftermath in their dash around town and at the Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week tents at Lincoln Center.

The industry will shift to Milan, London and then Paris after the shows close here Feb. 14.

ALEXANDER WANG

With buzz and anticipation building for his debut collection for Balenciaga, Wang used his own show to make the statement that his signature line is still very much on his mind.

The collection of finely tailored pieces in luxe and lush textured fabrics seemed elevated from the more casual and funky styles he's turned out the past few seasons, although there was the sportswear twist he is best known for woven into every look. It was a sophisticated turn ? and trick ? to pull off.

The song "Eye of the Tiger" of "Rocky III" fame was the underlying theme music as the models stepped onto the runway in the lobby of the ornate Cunard Building at the southern tip of Manhattan. (It was a drastic change in vibe from the airplane-hanger feel of the pier he had shown in for years that now is hosting the Westminster Dog Show.)

The catwalkers wore fur boxing gloves and hoods, with an opening for their ponytails, wrapped tightly around their heads, and fuzzy footwear. Sweatshirt-style tops were made of mohair with a touch of metallic, and fur had a burnout effect. He said he "disguised" some of the richest fabrics by brushing them, re-embroidering them and mixing them to make them modern.

PRABAL GURUNG

Military touches are shorthand in high fashion for strength and confidence. Gurung added some exclamation points, specifically citing as his muse a woman in combat.

There has been much in the news ? and Gurung is a newshound ? about the Pentagon's decision to open more on-the-ground options to women and also technological advances in women's body armor.

"They're redesigning the whole uniform for women because all this while they've been wearing men's uniform," he said backstage.

That led Gurung to think about women's empowerment, all the way to women he read about from the Ukraine who are coming together in self-defense against human trafficking.

There were smart jackets with gold hardware and some with red-and-black brocades, crisp navy suits, and leather harnesses over stretch-crepe dresses with sexy slashes on the bodice and asymmetric peplums and hemlines.

There had to be a little femininity mixed in with the aggressiveness, Gurung explained, because it's femininity that gives women their best tool "to rule a man's world."

BAND OF OUTSIDERS

Scott Sternberg's womenswear customer likes her jackets, especially blazers. For fall, they're getting them with a little 1940s flair.

The designer would like to see her wearing them with great trousers like the women of the era who knew how to work ? with feminine wiles ? the borrowed-from-the-boys look.

But, Sternberg said, he doesn't want her to be clich?d, either, so he tossed some 1980s videogame references for good measure.

He had been in contact with Atari to partner on some holiday menswear gifty items when the light bulb went off for more refined women's clothes, Sternberg explained.

"We're turning Atari images into really chic prints for women on things like cardigans with Swarovski crystals on top," he said. " Video games on top of the '40s: It's kind of insane but kind of cool."

MONIQUE LHUILLIER

Opulent Touches and intense tones of malachite green, oxblood red and amethyst were Lhuillier's red carpet calling cards.

With the Oscars around the corner, the drama on Lhuillier's runway was wrapped in beads on lace and punctuated by malachite, with illusion effects, plunging backs and strapless glamour.

Lhuillier has been lucky in Hollywood (Julianne Hough at the Golden Globes) and hopes these gowns will help continue her run.

"Well you know, every time I start a collection I always say, 'What haven't I don't before, what's exciting, what's new, what do I want to accomplish this season?' So I wanted this girl to be super sexy. It's dramatic, mixed in with a little Art Deco, and just really intense color and intense structure."

While she didn't skimp on comfy, everyday looks for fall, sending out cable knit dresses in bone and shaggy fur coats, her gowns stole the show ? though her roomy cocktail dresses with high-low hemlines and swingy sheer overlays were pleasers, too.

She used a digital feather print on crepe for a sheath dress and a crepe strapless gown. A burnished brocade was printed on a tweed, notched-collar coat paired with black pants. Another print was an abstract of butterflies.

Lhuillier said backstage she "wanted to be darker, more sensual, and a little stronger and more confident" on the runway this time around. And she wouldn't talk Oscars.

"You'll have to wait and see but, um, anything is possible," she smiled.

Connie Britton, who appears in "Nashville," wore a fitted black Lhuillier on the front row and said her gowns are "pretty fantastic." Actress Bridget Moynahan was in a red Lhuillier and calls the designer "a good friend to have."

JILL STUART

It was that easy: Stuart woke up one day thinking about how stylish British model Stella Tennant and her friends were, so Stuart thought she would create a wardrobe just for them.

She aimed to dress an aristocratic fashion risk-taker for all those parties at castles in the English countryside.

"I was thinking about the beautiful dinners and the charades she and her friends play, and the great performances they see at the end of the night," Stuart said backstage.

Her offerings include a plum-colored halter dress covered in satin flowers, a more tailored dress in black wool with more sharply cut flowers, and a white sheer man-tailored shirt paired with black evening shorts and a full-cut long black coat.

NICOLE MILLER

Miller's collection was called "Menswear With a Twist: Raiding the Boyfriend's Closet."

It was the good girl meets bad boy, packing a wardrobe of tough leather jackets, pleated skirts and several fedoras for the adventure. No apologies to mom.

There were particularly short knit dresses and a skin-hugging corset dress in a print called "tatooage," which looked exactly as it sounds.

And there were outfits more in line with what's expected from Miller, including a long dress in a wallflower print with a ruffle front and a stretch-denim dress with sexy net inserts.

The black matte-jersey, floor-length dress, with a dropped leather waist and notched V neck, that closed the show was the right high note to leave on.

But where Miller saw "golf pants" on a pair of loose baggy trousers paired with a burned out velvet-and-georgette blouse, the audience might have seen glorified sweats.

REBECCA TAYLOR

Feminine beaded tops over boy shirts were paired with punky skinny pants adorned with zippers as Taylor explored Frank Lloyd Wright and the Lower East Side of the 1980s.

"I had been reading that book, 'Loving Frank,' and I wanted everything to feel a little bit more architectural," said the New Zealander based for years in New York. "It inspired me to look at his work because I hadn't been terribly aware of architecture, really."

A black tweed and leather T-shirt was shown with an olive green stretch leather pencil skirt to capture both inspirations. Taylor paired a black, box-pleat top with a girly peplum and a frayed design in a tweed skirt done in wine red.

A black pleated leather skirt was trimmed in a mesh-like lace and worn with a pleated top in plum.

The collection for fall, Taylor said, was definitely more structured and tailored than her work in the past, with help from a bonded stretch knit that created a delicate texture.

She patched colors together in an ode to Wright's famous stainglass windows, relying on petrol blue, ruby, lavender, violet and camel.

HERVE LEGER

Max Azria wanted to infuse the metal sculptures of the artist duo Les Lalanne with the bandage silhouette of the Herve Leger line, but what he got was urban jungle-inspired armor.

Azria mixed studs, exposed zips, fur and beading with the bandage silhouette for which Leger and his namesake label are known, creating a riot of black, white and autumnal animal prints.

It all seemed demure, thanks to a below-the-knee hem and fur hooded goatskin sweatshirts that didn't seem out of place after the blizzard.

Demure isn't a word normally associated with Herve Leger, yet nary a knee peeked out of the collection. Whenever the lower hem wasn't covering up legs, tight black leggings made of bandage strips and knee-high boots covered up any skin.

The brand, long popular among club-going types, debuted a line of footwear during the show ? boots that were, like the clothes, dark, sleek and skin tight.

REBECCA MINKOFF

Minkoff named her colors after planets and other spacey things.

A winter white was "Saturn" and used for a leather motocross jacket. The color caramel became "eclipse" for a leather duffel coat.

Minkoff put a twist on the colorblocking trend that has been around now a few seasons by mixing chunks of different textures instead of contrasting hues. That technique was also seen on the runways of Jason Wu and Nicole Miller.

Minkoff's soft-line exaggerated shoulder, instead of the aggressive ones that were so popular on the runways a few years ago (and in the 1980s), also turned up elsewhere.

The collection "embarks on a voyage to the future, marrying modern, spacesuit-like construction details and a new sophisticated grunge attitude," Minkoff wrote in her notes.

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Follow Samantha Critchell on Twitter at http://twitter.com/AP_Fashion

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-02-09-NY%20Fashion%20Week-Day%203/id-79649bd12f974f9da9f78e7bc06ac023

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