Saturday, 14 June 2008
Bill's Wife -- Kid CaddyWhacker?
Murray's wife Jennifer Butler-Murray was pinched by the po-po in South Carolina on March 17 after allegedly getting drunk -- and then violent with her kids, according to a report filed with the Sullivan's Island Police. A witness caught Jennifer yelling at one of the couple's kids, and the cop who cornered her wrote that she was "very impaired."
Butler-Murray's been blabbing in a divorce filing that Bill was addicted to booze and drugs, abused, abandoned, and "lucky he didn't kill her."
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Monday, 9 June 2008
Britney's dad becomes her full time conservator
Sunday, 8 June 2008
George Clooney - The Things They Say 8272
"One kid around makes me nervous, Any time I feel I want to have a family, I take one look at them and calm down". GEORGE CLOONEY's dreams of building a family are cut short when he thinks of pal BRAD PITT and ANGELINA JOLIE's growing brood.
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Williams arrives in Perth for Ledger funeral
The magazine's website reports that Williams and her daughter arrived in the city earlier today under heavy security with more than five police officers and airport security helping to escort them through the airport.
Williams' arrival comes one day after Ledger's father, Kim, mother Sally and sister Kate all returned home from the US.
In a statement released earlier this week on Ledger's death, Williams said: "My heart is broken."
A private funeral for the 28-year-old actor - who was found dead in New York last month - is expected in the coming days.
McCartney invites fans to dinner
The event is part of the Night of a Thousand Dinners, a worldwide campaign to raise funds for landmine charities by hosting meals. Most of these dinners happen in homes, schools and churches. But this one, at least, will happen only on the internet.
In honour of World Environment Day, users will be able to log on to Paul McCartney's website www.paulmccartney.com and then, after donating a minimum of $25 (£12) to Adopt-A-Minefield, gain access to McCartney's online dining table. Of course, in this case "virtual dinner" is a euphemism for "an MP3 file and some recipes", but don't let that get you down.
McCartney will be offering an exclusive thank-you download of Lifelong Passion (Sail Away), a previously unreleased song recorded under the name The Fireman. During the 90s, McCartney worked under this moniker with the producer Youth (from the band Killing Joke), releasing two albums. According to McCartney's website, the pair are again working on new material and Lifelong Passion "gives you a taste of what is to come".
Along with the song download, party-goers will also be given recipes for a menu devised by chef Jamie Oliver. And then they can go and cook their own bloody food. McCartney joined the Adopt-A-Minefield initiative in 2000, becoming a "Goodwill Ambassador" along with his then wife Heather Mills.
"With the growing concerns about world hunger, it should be a priority to clear arable land of landmines so that communities can once again use their land to grow their own food," McCartney said in a statement. "Some music, some fantastic recipes from Jamie and, hopefully, with your help, we'll be able to raise the much-needed funds for the cause."
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Batman - Batman Milks It
BATMAN is set to become the latest face of the Got Milk? dairy campaign.
Christian Bale will don the batsuit and the milk moustache for a new pro-dairy promotion, which will air in June (08) - weeks before the new Batman film, The Dark Knight, hits the big screen.
The ad reads: "Others reload. Batman refuels. Research suggests that milk's unique mix of nutrients can help athletes recover after exercise. And its protein can help build muscle.
"So train hard and drink low fat or fat free milk, because the Batmobile isn't the only thing that needs to refuel."
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Nine Inch Nails settle on 'final' touring lineup
Idris Muhammad with Pharoah Sanders
Artist: Idris Muhammad with Pharoah Sanders
Genre(s):
Jazz
Discography:
Idris Muhammad with Pharoah Sanders
Year: 1980
Tracks: 8
 
Warchild grows through rap
But there were times when he didn’t want it.
“When I was in Kenya I hated myself, I even cursed the day I was born. I hated it. I wanted to commit suicide. I went to England, when there was a car coming I would want to stop and the car to hit me,” says Jal, a slight, soft-spoken man whose gentle demeanor belies his past. “I was trying to look for death.”
Inspiration for a better life would come in an unusual form - the violent, crime-plagued rhymes of rappers in the United States.
“What made me brave is American hip-hop,” says Jal in his heavily accented English. “Someone come and say to me, ‘They have to rob for them to eat.’ So I would try and picture, how does America look like because I’ve never been there. So for me when I look at it and look at my situation - I was a child soldier, we never had food, we raid villages and we take the food and we eat ... So I said, ‘OK, let me testify.’ ”
Jal’s testimony came in the form of his raps - and now, through his music, his is hoping to heal not only the wounds of his people, but to promote peace while inspiring others.
“I lost my childhood, yes. My country is (at) war. People are dying now. What could I do with what I have?” asks Jal, who last month released his third international CD, “WARchild,” and is the subject of a new documentary of the same name.
Karim Chrobog, the director of the award-winning “War Child” film, says Jal’s story shows that “you can really survive horrible horrible things and come out of them and really make a difference ... he has put all the bitter things in life aside, his sense of revenge, his sense of the war and how it’s affected him personally.”
The dreadlocked Jal, who doesn’t know his age but believes he is in his 20s, was about 7 when the Sudanese civil war, which pitted Muslims against non-Muslims, tore apart his family and led to his life as a child warrior for the Sudanese People’s Liberation Army. His pregnant mother was killed, and his father, a member of the SPLA, allowed his son to be trained as a solider for the anti-Muslim faction. Bands of children were taught how to use machine guns and put on the frontlines as the militia carried out attacks against government loyalists.
Jal, who says he is still growing as a rapper, recalls participating in verbal battles in the Sudan before the violence, much like playing the dozens in the United States, though he says he was never any good: “(It’s like) maybe telling somebody like, your sister is so skinny that she can shoot through a straw,” he says, laughing.
But as he grew older and started writing lyrics, Jal’s music struck a chord in Kenya, where his song “Gua” (which means peace) became a hit, and internationally. He performed at 2005’s Live 8 concert in Britain, was supported by PeterGabriel, collaborated with Moby, and realized that his rhymes were not only therapeutic for himself but others as well.
The lyrics on “WARchild” are not only inspirational and spiritual, but also political. One song talks about Africa being financially raped by the outside world, while “Forced to Sin” talks about his life as a soldier.
And while Jal was once inspired by American rap, he uses the CD to also criticize some rappers’ glorification of violence, sex and crime, most notably on the song “50 Cent,” which urges the multiplatinum rapper to stop promoting songs that might encourage black-on-black crime. The chorus: “Now 50 Cent I ain’t hating on you, still I think it’s my civic duty to warn you, you’re being played brother man, you’re being played by the man.”
“I sometimes ask myself, you say you’re a gangster, you deal drugs, you kill people,” Jal says of 50 and other rappers of his ilk. “If you’re a real killer, it’s not fun talking about killing people. It’s hard ... participating in killing someone is hard because human life - it doesn’t matter who you are, there’s no one can say, ‘I’m hardcore, I kill people.’ Somehow, someday it will burst in you.”
“You can’t be a gangster until you die,” adds Jal. “(50) should do something different, and maybe going back to the community because if we don’t do that, if we don’t save this generation, then it’s going to be a genocide, especially on black people.”