Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Actress Masami Nagasawa accepts award as 'Best Swimmer 2009'



TOKYO —Actress Masami Nagasawa, 22, was among four celebrities to accept awards recently at the 10th Best Swimmer Awards, held by the Japan Swimming Club Association in Tokyo. The annual awards are presented to celebrities who have contributed to the development of swimming in Japan, and who look good in swimsuits.

Actor Mokomichi Hayami, 24, comedian Koji Higashino, 41, and actress-comedian Shizuyo Yamasaki, 30 from comedy duo Nankai Candies, also accepted awards at the event.

Nagasawa and Hayami received favorable reviews for their performances as a diver and swimmer respectively in the movie “Rough” – released in Japan in August 2006. Nagasawa also spent a month in India in 2007 for the filming of drama special “Butterfly at the Ganges,” in which she swam fully-clothed in the holy river.

Yamasaki, affectionately known as Shizu-chan, said at the event: “I had no idea why I was chosen to accept an award, but it became clear when I lined up next to Masami. When people imagine ladies in swimwear, they think of me and then Masami,” drawing guffaws from the media in attendance. Yamasaki also spoke of her successful 10-meter dive during filming of a variety show recently, saying: “Somehow, I ended up pulling it off.”

Raptor



A U.S. Air Force F-22 Raptor taxis past a C-17 Globe Master at Kadena U.S. Air Force Base in Okinawa. Four of the aircraft, based in Langley, Va, are being deployed in the region for four months.

No honeymoon in Iran



If the turmoil surrounding Iran's recent presidential election offers a glance at the inner psyche of Iranians, Honeymoon in Tehran offers a penetrating stare. Though the deceptively light title suggests that readers are getting a romance (and they do), the heart of the book is the turbulent love story between the Iranian-American author, Azadeh Moaveni, and Iran.

Moaveni was born and raised in northern California, among an enclave of successful Iranians-in-exile, her parents included. As an adult, she spent 1999 to 2001 in Iran wrestling with her identity during a time that the country wrestled with its own. The result was a journalism gig with Time magazine as well as her first book, Lipstick Jihad.

Lipstick Jihad was criticized by New York Times reviewer Alexandra Starr as being overly navel-gazing. What the reader gleans about Iranian society, Starr complained, comes strictly through the lens of Moaveni's personal experience. Apparently Moaveni had this review in mind when she sat down to write Honeymoon in Tehran. In this book, she again covers two years in Iran, but this time the lens is turned out. The result is a rare and riveting look at the people of Iran.

Moaveni landed in Teheran again at a crucial time. She arrived in 2005, on the eve of the presidential election that unexpectedly catapulted Mahmoud Ahmadinejad from an obscure local politician to a menacing figure on the world stage. Moaveni, however, intended to do more than cover the election; she also intended to test the waters following the publication of Lipstick Jihad.

"It was, in short, the sort of book that dictatorships never welcome and that one writes on the eve of permanent departure, a final, cathartic clanging of the door on the way out. But being young and foolish," she recalls in Honeymoon in Tehran, "I had every intention of going back. I so desperately wanted Iran to be a place where you could speak truth to power... How wonderful it would be, I reasoned, if I could return unscathed."
Upon her return, she plunges headlong into the people of Iran. The reader glimpses everyone from Basij militants to waiters, mullahs to the freewheeling upper class. The Nobel Peace Prize winner and human rights champion Shirin Ebadi appears just pages from an underground rock band whose music "resonated with a very contemporary Iranian despair."

This despair is tempered with acts of rebellion, however small and symbolic. Pet dogs, outlawed by the Islamic government, become a trendy accessory for a particular set of Iranian women. At the height of summer, secular Muslims make a pilgrimage to the market to buy crates of ripe shahani grapes, perfect for making homemade wine.

Moaveni presents a people whose attitudes often differ sharply from the government that pretends to represent them. When the Iranian government is outraged over a Danish newspaper's publication of caricatures of the prophet Muhammad, and bakeries are forced to black out the word Danish, "Iranians continued to placidly eat what they continued to call Danish pastry," she writes. In stark contrast to Ahmadinejad's Holocaust denial and anti-Israel rhetoric, "...most Iranians found the president's anti-Semitic rhetoric distasteful... I had never encountered the open, careless anti-Semitism that was rampant in Arab countries..."

Honeymoon in Tehran also depicts the gulf between the Muhammad Khatami presidency and the Ahmadinejad regime. While Khatami stood as a president of the people, even if he lacked real power, Ahmadinejad is a president of the mullahs. Though Iranians were repressed under Khatami, Ahmadinejad's election signaled a new, darker era. As Mr. X, the government minder who tracks Moaveni's journalistic doings, ominously tells Moaveni early on in Ahmadinejad's first term, "[T]imes are changing..."

Indeed, Moaveni's relationship with the mercurial Mr. X, who is by turns friendly and frightening, grows increasingly tense throughout the book. When he isn't there on the pages, he lurks in the margins. She is ever aware and wary of his presence and the control he exerts over her livelihood - mimicking the relationship the people of Iran have with their government.

As Iranians do their best to go about their lives and ape normalcy, so does Moaveni. She meets and falls in love with an Iranian, the European-educated son of a textile magnate. Despite their location, the two have a decidedly Western courtship, moving in together and marrying after she becomes pregnant.

But the noose tightens around Moaveni and her new family as it tightens around the collective neck of Iran. The government cracks down on women who push the boundaries of the dress code - changing the laws without warning, and arresting 150,000 whose dress was deemed appropriate just days before. "We were all afraid to leave the house," Moaveni writes, "because it was obvious the authorities were out to make a point, arresting even women who were 'sufficiently' covered." Shortly thereafter she receives a warning from a young policewoman. Moaveni is shocked; it is the same veil she has worn for years.

Moaveni's work as a journalist, which was closely monitored but never forbidden under Khatami, is scrutinized under Ahmadinejad. Without warning, Mr. X informs her that not only is it "no longer appropriate" for her to work, she is also under judicial review and charges will be forthcoming. Her writing, Mr. X tells her, is "guilty of propaganda against the regime [and] undermining national security."

Though Moaveni might have returned to Iran unscathed, she leaves terrified and conflicted about abandoning her country. And as she weaves her own narrative with the larger story of the Iranian people, she offers a depiction of a people that are similarly scarred. Today, she lives with her husband and son in London. At once beautiful and sad, Honeymoon in Tehran is Moaveni's poignant good-bye to Iran and, perhaps, the Iranian people's good-bye to hope.

President: Neda’s Death Suspicious


President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has asked the judiciary chief to conduct a thorough investigation into the death of Neda Aqa-Soltan, an Iranian woman who was shot dead in the post-election protests in Tehran.
In a letter to Judiciary Chief Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi-Shahroudi on Monday, Ahmadinejad called for a thorough probe into the “suspicious“ death of Neda and apprehend those involved in the killing, Presstv reported.
“Neda Aqa-Soltan was shot dead in one of Tehran’s streets on June 20 by unknown elements under rather suspicious conditions,“ the president said.
“Amid the huge propaganda campaign by the foreign media and many other evidence about the heartfelt incident, it seems certain that opponents of the Iranian people interfere (in Iran’s internal affairs) for their own political ends,“ he added.
Neda, 26, became a symbol of post-election street rallies in Iran and an international icon in recent days after graphic videos of her death grabbed the attention of world media outlets.
Her death drew suspicions first after it was said that she was killed by a small caliber pistol--a weapon that is not used by Iranian security forces.

Different Versions
Meanwhile, new revelations about her death have surfaced in recent days.
Neda was killed on June 20 in an alley away from the scene of clashes between security forces and demonstrators.
The man who drove her to hospital said in an interview that her death looked “highly suspicious“, claiming there were no security forces or Basij members nearby.
“People were standing and there was traffic. Suddenly I saw a girl put her hand on her chest and drop to the ground with blood oozing from her mouth and nose,“ Presstv quoted the unidentified man as saying. It did not elaborate.
His version of the attack has added to the confusion already surrounding the shooting, which has been blamed on the security forces by the western media.
Security officials dismissed the report out of hand and insist that they did not open fire on protestors during the sporadic unrest.
“Police are not authorized to use weapons against the people,“ Tehran police chief Azizullah Rajabzadeh said on the morrow of Neda’s death.
Conflicting accounts by a doctor who said he tried but failed to save Aqa Soltan’s life in her final moments have only raised more questions without answering previous ones. (IRAN DAILY)

Iran Daily Caricature


Michael Jackson's family want 2nd autopsy



Michael Jackson's family wants the second autopsy on the singer to determine the cause of his death after the first autopsy revealed no official cause of death.

The Los Angeles County Coroner's office performed an autopsy on Jackson on Friday, but failed to determine what killed him.

Michael Jackson, the King of Pop, has died at the age of 50 after an apparent cardiac arrest. An autopsy was performed on the singer's body on Friday, but failed to determine the cause of death.


However, the three-hour autopsy revealed traces of the powerful painkillers OxyContin and Demerol.

Rumors and accusations have surfaced concerning Jackson's use of prescription drugs. Pending toxicology reports are expected to take four to six weeks.

Reverend Jesse Jackson, who met with the Jackson family yesterday, said the family wanted answers to questions surrounding the singer's death, including the role of the personal cardiologist, Dr Conrad Robert Murray, who was with him when he died.

NAT/SC/DT

Paikuli inscriptions studied, restored in Iraq



Cube of Zoroaster, Naqsh-e Rustam, Iran

Archeologists have studied and restored the Sassanid inscriptions found on Paikuli Tower, located in the Iraqi Kurdistan.

“The Paikuli inscriptions are in Parthian, Pahlavi and Middle Persian languages,” president of the Societas Iranologica Europaea and head of the archeology team Carlo Cereti told CHTN.

“The inscriptions belong to the Sassanid King Narseh and are similar to the ones at the Cube of Zoroaster that bears Middle Persian, Greek and Parthian texts,” he added.

The Cube of Zoroaster is an Achaemenid tower-like construction at Naqsh-e Rustam archaeological site northwest of Persepolis in Fars Province, Iran.

Cereti also said that some petroglyphs were smuggled during the war and some of them have been transferred to a museum in Iraq.

According to Cereti, this is the first time the site has been studied after initial studies conducted by German archeologist Ernst Herzfeld in 1913.

The Paikuli monument, locally called 'idol house', is on the Iraqi side of the border with Iran on a north-south line drawn from Sulaimaniyah in Iraq to Qasr-e-Sirin in Iran on the ancient road from Ctesiphon to Azerbaijan.

In the 19th century, it consisted of the ruins of a large, square tower that had originally been covered on all sides by stone blocks, some of which contained inscriptions, but, at the time, lay scattered all around the monument.

Herzfeld reconstructed the monument as a tall, square box with a slightly wider base and the inscriptions placed up on opposite sides.

He found that the Paikuli inscription commemorates the war between the Sassanid king Narseh and Warahran III.

TE/HGH

Red tide under control in Persian Gulf



Amid concerns that warming weather increases red tide, researchers say the soap-like foam substance produced by algae in the Persian Gulf is retreating.

As tourists and residents enjoy the beach, Mother Nature has been struggling to find its way out the red algal bloom; experts are keeping a watchful eye on the situation.

The phenomenon known as a 'red tide' is actually the result of an algal bloom, an event in which marine or fresh water algae accumulate rapidly in the water.

The latest ecological studies revealed the bloom of the microorganism Cochlodinium polykrikoides is under control.

Spring rains have played a helpful role in controlling the dangerous phenomenon by cooling down the weather.

Before the rains, four to five million units of algae could be found in a liter of Persian Gulf water. After the spring rains, the number decreased to 10,000 units per liter.

Scientists believe if the phenomenon is not under control serious effects will appear on the Persian Gulf environment and ecosystem.

Iranian researchers are racing to find ways to stop the spread of the red tide before the ocean warms in summer.

The effect of excessive algae on fish can be lethal. It produces oxygen radicals which can damage fish gills, possibly leading to suffocation.

Last year, the little creatures were to blame for 45 tons of dead fish; the damage inflicted on the Persian Gulf is estimated to be close to 500 million dollars.

NAT/SC/MD

Pioneering solar-powered aircraft unveiled



Swiss aviation pioneer Bertrand Piccard at the unveiling of the 'Solar Impulse' in Zurich on June 26


Whereas flying too close to the Sun was to be Icarus' downfall, it is to be the salvation of his modern-day heir Bertrand P
iccard.

For Piccard aims to circumnavigate the globe on an aircraft fueled by the rays of the Sun, and the first version of his mount was unveiled in Zurich, Switzerland on Friday.

The aptly named 'Solar Impulse' is a light-weight giant. Light weight, because it weighs no more than 1,600 kg (3,527 lbs), and giant because its wing span of 63.4 meters (208 ft) is greater than that of the Airbus A340 wide-body airliner.

It is the result of six years of work by some of the brightest engineers, who aim to prove that it is possible to fly with zero carbon emissions.

The power for the 'Solar Impulse' comes from 11,628 silicon cells placed on the upper surfaces of the aircraft. These provide enough power not only during day-time flying, but at night too, by drip-feeding the onboard storage batteries with enough power during the day.

The propulsive elements are four 10-hp electric engines driving 2-blade propellers.

The present version of the aircraft is designed to carry one pilot for up to 36 hours.

The ultimate version, intended to cross the Atlantic Ocean and eventually circumnavigate the globe, will have a pressurized cockpit to shield the pilot from the effects of high-altitude flying.

The pilot of that momentous mission will be no other than the aviation pioneer Bertrand Piccard.

The Swiss psychiatrist and aeronaut became the first person - along with his co-pilot Englishman Brian Jones - to circumnavigate the globe non-stop in a balloon in March 1999, breaking numerous endurance and distance records.

The 51-year-old father of three, who is also one of the directors of the 'Solar Impulse' project, said at the Friday's unveiling ceremony: “Yesterday it was a dream. Today it's an airplane, and tomorrow it will be an ambassador of renewable energies and energy savings - flying day and night with no fuel and no pollution.”

Also attending the ceremony was the director general of the International Air Transport Association (IATA) Giovanni Bisignani. He praised the event as a “great, great event” which “shows the world that carbon-free flight is possible.”

He did not say that sweet revenge is possible too. In this case, the revenge of Icarus.

Images taken from Mars show a long, deep canyon and the remains of beaches, which suggest the existence of a lake on the planet, reports say. Acco



A reconstruction of the lake on the Shalbatana Vallis river valley on Mars as it looked around 3.4 billion of year ago.

Images taken from Mars show a long, deep canyon and the remains of beaches, which suggest the existence of a lake on the planet, reports say.

According to the reports released by the University of Colorado at Boulder, the pictures indicate water carved a 50-kilometer-long canyon, Reuters reported.

Taken by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment aboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, the images show that the canyon would have covered an area of 200 square kilometers and been up to 450 meters deep.

Scientists have also identified formations that could belong to the shores of giant rivers and seas, but some of them could also have been created by dry landslides.

"This is the first unambiguous evidence of shorelines on the surface of Mars," says research associate and leader of the study Gaetano Di Achille.

"The identification of the shorelines and accompanying geological evidence allows us to calculate the size and volume of the lake, which appears to have formed about 3.4 billion years ago."

The Mars Phoenix mission found frozen water on the Red Planet last year. There is also evidence suggesting that water might still seep to the surface from underground.

Celebrity Deaths: Is 3 Really a Magic Number?




By David Montgomery

Michael Jackson, Ed McMahon and Farah Fawcett renew theory that deaths happen in threes.

Rarely since Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens and the Big Bopper crashed and died more or less simultaneously in an Iowa cornfield on Feb। 3, 1959, has the Celebrity Death Rule of Three fulfilled itself with such swift efficacy.

That's the old rule that celebrities die in threes. Between Ed McMahon's passing on June 23 and Michael Jackson's death on June 25, less than three days elapsed. Farrah Fawcett also died on the 25th.

Even in the face of such powerful evidence for the triplicity of bold-face morbidity, skeptics denied it। They blogged with learned-sounding certainty about how celebrity deaths, like all human demises, occur with random frequency. The skeptics were met with equal cogency by those who maintain that whenever a famous person dies, two more face imminent doom.

Some of this conversation took place at the Web site Threes.com -- a space devoted to the essential three-ness of the universe -- where a poster named Fletch said that after Fawcett succumbed, he and his lunchmates wondered who would be next. A poster named Brian retorted that the "celebrity death rule of three" has "all the scientific rigor of Alanis Morissette's 'Ironic.' "

Over at the site Polls Boutique -- dedicated to the essential pollability of the universes -- 57.75 percent of respondents answered "yes" to the question, "Do celebrities die in threes?" Sample comment: "I used to not think so, but now with the deaths of Ed McMahon, Farrah Fawcett, and Michael Jackson so close together, I don't know."

"People are dropping every day, unfortunately," says Michael Scott Eck, administrator of Threes.com, also known as the Book of Threes. "We want completion, we want to have the tragedy be finished. To put it into three-ness is to complete it."

Eck says we're wired to organize messy reality into threes. There are trinities everywhere, holy and otherwise. Time is past, present and future. There are three states of matter, three dimensions. Triangulation is how we get our bearings. So finding patterns in death is how we master our own mortality, says Eck, and three is the essential pattern.

Fine -- but how then to explain the death of David Carradine? He was found hanged June 4 in Bangkok in a reported case of autoerotic asphyxiation, but that's not all that needs explaining. Under the rule of three, he could have been No. 1, making McMahon No. 2 and Fawcett No. 3.

Or was Carradine No. 3 in a previous trinity of death? Or is Jackson No. 1 in a new series? Who's next?

Surely there will be another dead celebrity. There always is.

Much depends, however, on which departed souls count as celebrities, and on how much time may elapse between deaths in a valid triplet.

Fawcett and Jackson weren't the only people to die on June 25. So did Sky Saxon. He was the singer and bass player for the psychedelic band the Seeds, which had a '60s hit with "Pushin' Too Hard."

Is Saxon a celebrity? If so, he, Fawcett and Jackson make three in one day। Then we could put McMahon and Carradine together with, say, Koko Taylor, the blues musician, who died June 3. Another three.

But if Saxon is not famous enough to qualify for the rule of three, then how sad: dead and dissed.

Once a couple of celebrities die, there is great pressure to elevate another dearly departed to the pantheon. So this week folks are mentioning Billy Mays in the same breath as Carradine, McMahon, Fawcett and Jackson.

Billy Mays? He's the great pitchman who starred in commercials for cleaning products, and he died Sunday।

If we count Saxon and Mays with the more famous four, that makes six, which is two fulfilled rules of three. See? We could also sub in Gale Storm, former star of the golden oldy TV sitcom "My Little Margie," who died Saturday.

Or maybe Mays, Storm and Fred Travalena, the comedian, who died Sunday, have observed a B-List Celebrity Death Rule of Three.

There are notable defunct doubles waiting to resolve into perfect dead triplets: The passing this year of Dom DeLuise and Dom DiMaggio could be interpreted as an omen for sort-of-famous Doms। And the deaths of David Herbert Donald and John Hope Franklin could give pause to accomplished historians who go by three names. Two members of Lynyrd Skynyrd died earlier this year. Who's next?

Maybe such pairs simply obey their own mystical pattern. Marilyn Johnson, author of "The Dead Beat," a book about the "pleasures of obituaries," posits that deaths don't come in threes, they come in twos, going back at least as far as Thomas Jefferson and John Adams, who both died on July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. Coincidence? You decide.

"It is more than coincidence. . . . It's supernatural," Johnson writes. "I thrilled recently to a pair of obituaries for Paul Winchell, the voice of Tigger in 'Pooh,' and John Fiedler, the voice of Piglet in 'Pooh'; the two had gone silent a day apart. I keep them next to my clip from October 25th, 1986, the day the New York Times ran side-by-side obituaries for the scientist who isolated Vitamin C and the scientist who isolated Vitamin K."

The pattern's the thing.

Theresa Lazenby-Jones and her 17-year-old son, Kenneth Jones, were at home last week grieving Jackson's death when they were struck by the coincidence of two such famous people as Fawcett and Jackson dying on the same day. Or was it coincidence?

Jones got on the computer to do some research, and mother and son were blown away by all the celebrities who have died on the 25th of a month in recent years: Bea Arthur (April 2009), Dan Seals (March 2009), Eartha Kitt (December 2008), James Brown (December 2006), Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes (April 2002), Aaliyah (August 2001).

"This is like kind of crazy," Jones says.

"It's just strange," says Lazenby-Jones।
Along with the apparent lethality of the 25th, she also respects in the rule of three. It applies to her family, too. She recently has buried an uncle, an aunt and a cousin.

"It's a saying in our family," she says. "When somebody dies, it's always in threes."

Michael Jackson and the God Feeling



In startling ways pop culture mirrors long-standing spiritual arguments. In an age where the stage has replaced the pulpit -- where the line between the two is all but invisible -- morality is played out in the lives of celebrities. This is an unsettling phenomenon. Princess Diana slips into the role of Holy Mother almost equal with Mother Teresa. Michael Jackson's call to "Heal the World" in a pop song spreads to every corner of the planet and probably touches more people than the Pope's annual Christmas message.

With the sudden, sad death of Michael Jackson, whom I knew well for twenty years, a specific point of theology comes to life and haunts us. I'm thinking of Manichaeism, a Gnostic doctrine born in Persia in the third century, whose central idea is "the struggle between a good, spiritual world of light, and an evil, material world of darkness," as the Wikipedia entry puts it. Manichaeism pictured the destiny of the world, and each soul, in terms of black versus white, and so potent is the idea that it has permeated race relations, cultural divides, wars, and the whole tendency to demonize "them," those people who are different from us and therefore exist outside the light.

It's hard not to see Michael Jackson as a pop martyr to this kind of either/or thinking. His hit song, "Black or White," insisted that "it don't matter if you're black or white," something he deeply believed in. His skin changed from black to white because of vitiligo, but the public and press mistinterpreted this as a conscious attempt to change his skin and took it as the mark of someone who didn't know what world he belonged in. But I don't want to trade in symbols. As a real person, Michael struggled between extremes, and his vulnerability to the shadow side of human nature was very poignant. The tabloids consigned him to the dark side via cheap, sensationalized stories that verged on the ghoulish (stories he fed with behavior that flirted far too much with transgressive behavior). But the other aspect of Manichaeism was also there, an evangelical desire to bring light and healing to the whole world. The paradox of how one person could be so innocent and so disturbing at the same time remains a mystery.

I began to ponder Michael's nature after I received an e-mail that pointed to "the transcendent feeling he inspired in so many people with his music and his dancing. There was almost a religious, ritualistic feeling to it. He seemed to be in another zone when he was performing and took others with him." I agree, but the wider phenomenon is the "God feeling" communicated to millions of people through pop culture. Princess Diana played a key part, as Bono and Sting still do, as Live Aid concerts do. A transient mass communion substitutes for the traditional communion offered in church; a global feeling of oneness transcends the unity of small religious communities.

The flaws in this God feeling are obvious. It doesn't last. Strangers are brought together for a moment, usually through mass media, only to return to being strangers once the moment is gone. The message being communicated is far simpler than the doctrines and dogmas of organized faiths. All of which can make the God feeling seem superficial and sentimental. Did Michael Jackson really heal the world in any meaningful sense? Did it help Princess Diana to be elevated to saintly status when in reality her private life contained more than its share of trouble, confusion, and turmoil?

None of us are in a position to say. Communion is an actual phenomenon, however, and without it, we would feel much more alone and divided. In Afghanistan a pop talent show known as "Afghan Star" is watched by half the country's population. On the surface it looks like any other imitation of "American Idol," until you learn that this show is the most important vehicle for warring tribes and divisive religious traditions to view each other in peace. Via TV entertainment, "they" don't look as dark and ominous to "us." One is reminded that pop communion may, in fact, be the only kind that doesn't exclude anybody. The God feeling is important just because it isn't bound by doctrine and dogma. No one is outside the fold. When an audience lights candles and sways to "Heal the World," a space is created where nobody is unholy, no religion can exercise its imaginary exclusive patent on the true God. To the extent that Michael inspired such a feeling, he healed his own demons and ours, if only for an hour.

In some way that merges psychology and faith, Michael Jackson did play out the ancient split between dark and light; he was deliberately Manichean in his dangerous game with the media but also deeply divided. I come away feeling deeply distressed that he was imprisoned by a theological idea that has caused so much damage and distortion over the centuries. There is no cosmic war between dark and light, as I see it. Only one reality exists, and it's the human mind that judges and categorizes. We blow our own manmade suffering into grandiose cosmic schemes, and then we bow down and worship effigies to our own self-judgment. But that's an argument for another day. Today I linger on the rare thing that Michael accomplished. He inspired the God feeling in millions of people, and even amidst the grief at his sad undoing, a remembrance of that feeling comes through.

By Deepak Chopra

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Girls Get the Anime Look with Extra-Wide Contact Lenses




Anyone who's seen Japanese comics, cartoon videos or anime art is instantly struck by the common look of the girls - big eyes that, by making the rest of the face look small, add the cuteness and sex appeal prized by many Japanese men. Since no amount of cosmetic surgery will make actual human eyes larger, some girls are trying another way to up their cute quotient: extra-wide contact lenses!
These are no ordinary contacts - they're not only tinted, but tinted prominently in the extra-wide outer ring. The result is the appearance of a bigger, wider iris.

To quote the sales copy, "Wanna get big, watery shiny eyes without any surgery? CRAVE AND ENVY NO MORE!"

The extra-wide contact lenses are made by a variety of companies including Geo and Dueba, and cost in the $30-$50 per pair range. It seems they're not just cosmetic - send in your prescription and the lenses will be made to order.

Super Sexy Bikini Pants Combine Low-cut Jeans with a String Bikini




These outrageously sexy bikini pants from Sanna's Brazil Fashion, a Japanese clothing company, blur the line between blue jeans and a string bikini. And you know what? I'm all right with that!

Low-riding blue jeans are a fashion trend that seems to have long legs - pun definitely intended. The only question is, how low can they go? Sanna's Brazil Fashion seems to have given us the answer with their new line of bikini pants that combine ultra low-cut blue jeans with an integrated string bikini bottom. The effect is stunning... super sexy yet extremely flattering, and without showing more skin than a normal bikini displays.

Here they are being modeled on a Japanese TV show. I'm guessing this segment caused more seizures in the viewing audience then those Pokemon cartoons of a few years back...
The eyebrow-raising, super sexy design is practical as well as provocative, as the bikini portion helps keep the pants securely hitched to the hips. From the rear, the bikini portion can also serve to mask another fashion trend whose 15 minutes expired some time ago: the trashy "tramp stamp" tattoo.
If you'd like to set a new fashion trend in your neighborhood - or get expelled/fired/ogled as the case may be, you can order the "bijini", to coin a phrase, at the Sanna's Brazil Fashion website. They're surprisingly inexpensive at just $88 plus shipping and are made in Brazil... to whom those who appreciate the female form now owe mucho gratitude! Many thanks also to Neil Duckett for the TV show images.

World's First Eyeball Tattoo - Ouch!





A Toronto man has been the first to get an eyeball tattoo. Basically, he has turned the whites of his eyes blue.

Corneal tattooing is usually used for patients that have had trauma to their eye, not for this, which is called body modification.
It took 40 injections of blue ink in order to complete this procedure. Pigment was injected under the top layer of the eye using a syringe. The syringe injected the ink into the eye. At first they had tried a traditional needle with ink on it, but when the ink didn't hold, they switched to the syringe.

The man has reported that all is well so far, but it feels like he has something in his eye.
I can barely stand needles poking me anywhere, but in the eye? I can't even imagine. I wonder what would happen if you decided to change your mind after it was done?

Who here wants to get the world's next eyeball tattoo? Maybe a colorful rainbow would work nicely.

The P Mate



Freud would be proud. Now women can pee like men. That's right, women everywhere can experience the joy that is standing up while going #1. What woman wouldn't love the experience that comes from the P Mate? Oh yeah, most of them -particularly the girlie girls.

While these would be useful for women who go camping a lot or marathon runnings, nothing says “I'm a total freak and I think you are as well,” than giving the woman in your life a fake penis to pee with.

Fundies (The Underwear Built For Two)




Some couples share everything. For the people who won't accept that there is such a thing as too much intimacy, there is Fundies. Underwear for two, is a great gift for those annoying couples who are pretty much joined at the hip anyway. You never know, maybe getting a gift like this will make them realize how clingy they've been, and hopefully, they won't be so damn annoying anymore. It could just be the gift that keeps on giving.

Prius Hearse Makes Your Last Road Trip a Green Ride




"Ashes to ashes, dust to dust"... the great circle of life is as green as it gets, so why not make your final road trip an environmentally friendly one?

That's the idea behind the upcoming Toyota Prius Hearse by Lequios. The Japanese hearse manufacturer has plenty of experience with modifying Toyota products and by basing their newest model on the popular hybrid, is simply responding to clients' requests for a more eco-friendly vehicle.

The Prius Hearse is only in the design phase at the moment but if the pictured interior photos of Lequios' other models are any indication, this is gonna be one high-class hybrid! Based on the third-generation Prius, the hearse version is extended 1930mm (77.2 inches) for a total length of 6400mm (256 inches, or 21.34 feet).


The extra length and weight does take a toll on the hybrid's vaunted fuel economy but it's still quite respectable: 20.9km/l or about 44 mpg. Compare that to the 89.4 mpg rating of the new 2010 Prius... but then, you won't be taking the Prius Hearse on grocery runs or date nights - though wouldn't that be cool?

The estimated price of Lequios' upcoming Prius Hearse is 7,875,000 yen, or around $83,000 assuming you'll even be able to buy one here in the US of A. Just in case, though, I'm advising Larry David to start saving up those Seinfeld residual checks... his funeral is gonna be pret-ty, pret-ty good!

DO SMART WOMEN HAVE BETTER SEX?


Are you good at ‘reading’ people, managing emotions and detecting everyone’s moods? Well, congratulations! Because chances are, you’re likely to have better orgasms than others.

Forget ‘team-building’ and ‘leadership development’, new research has found that a person’s EI (emotional intelligence) can also be used to measure how much fun they have in bed.

A study of more than 2000 female twins has found that those who are more in touch with their feelings have twice as many orgasms as the emotionally reserved group.

The term ‘emotional intelligence’ refers to a person’s ability to express and monitor their own feelings as well as that of the others. It appears that those who are more emotionally savvy are also better at communicating our sexual expectations and desires to our partners – thus improving their sex lives.

Andrea Burri, psychologist and lead author of the study, said a woman’s EI may also be connected to her ability to fantasise during sex.

“A woman’s feeling of control, or the capacity to integrate physical stimulation with fantasy, may be contributors to [the frequency of] orgasms.”

Courtesan Procession in Shinagawa




The procession is held in Shinagawa and takes place every year on the first Saturday in June, and is part of a larger mikoshi festival.

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