Monday 30 June 2008

Big Brother - Jennifer And Dennis Sent To Big Brother Jail


Big Brother 9 housemates Jennifer Clark and Dennis McHugh have been sent to the house's jail for rule-breaking.

The pair had been talking about their auditions for the show, a banned subject under Channel 4 rules.

Big Brother called all housemates to the sofas and asked those who had discussed nominations to stand up.

Dennis, Jennifer, Rebecca Rice, Kathreya Kasisopa, Rex Newmark, Sylvia Barrie and new housemate Stuart Pilkington all got to their feet, with Big Brother reprimanding them for continuing to discuss the matter, despite numerous warnings.

"Two of you will go to jail until further notice," Big Brother told them. "You have one minute to decide which two of you will be punished and go to jail. Your time starts now."

Dennis and Jennifer put themselves forward, having admitted to being the worst offenders, and were told: "Dennis and Jennifer, you must go to jail immediately."

And though he had been punished for speaking out of turn, the duo decided to pass the time in the jail by badmouthing blind housemate Mikey Hughes.

"I find Mikey unbearable," Jennifer said. "I can't stand him. I find everything that comes out of his mouth just repulsive."

And Dennis, who had said he thought he cope with the Scottish radio producer, then replied: "I cannot bear to hear him any more. Can you imagine watching that all summer? You'd be traumatised! I don't even want him in here."

Mario Marconi later told Mikey he failed to understand how Jennifer, Dennis et al had managed to land themselves in trouble, saying: "It's not hard to adhere to, is it?

"It's not like you're declaring yourself under the Official Secrets Act. They're just saying 'keep your gob shut and use your common sense'."


24/06/2008 09:20:57





See Also

Tuesday 24 June 2008

The science of survival, and why we're kept in the dark

"The Unthinkable: Who Survives When Disaster Strikes — and Why"



by Amanda Ripley



Crown, 266 pp., $24.95



Governments and corporations could save thousands of lives if they trusted ordinary people with vital information about disasters. That's the theme Amanda Ripley emphasizes in her new book, "The Unthinkable: Who Survives When Disaster Strikes — and Why."



This is about making it through — and helping others through — fire, plane crash, hurricane, earthquake or terrorist attack. It's also a critique of public policies that keep survival preparation in the hands of officials and shut out the ordinary citizens who do most of the lifesaving in a disaster.



As Ripley points out, the U.S. government has granted more than $18 billion to states and cities to upgrade homeland security since Sept. 11. But almost none has been used to teach ordinary people how to survive an attack. For example, she asks, "Why don't we tell people what to do when the nation is on Orange Alert against a terrorist attack — instead of just telling them to be afraid?"



The book is packed with first-person accounts of survival from the attacks on the World Trade Center, from Hurricane Katrina, from airline crashes and other large and small disasters. From hours of interviews with survivors and disaster experts, Ripley defines what she calls the "arc of survival," the stages of brain-freeze and recovery that victims undergo.



The common first stage is denial; a kind of protective coating seems to descend on the psyche, shutting out the awful truth. This is the fatal mind-set that kept victims of Sept. 11 sitting at their desks in the World Trade Center, checking e-mails and making phone calls instead of heading for the stairwells.



Ripley describes the second stage as deliberation — "We know something is terribly wrong but we don't know what to do about it."



In the third stage, which the author describes as the decisive moment, individuals may become the victims of panic or paralysis, or act quickly to save their own and others' lives. Ripley describes moments when understanding this sequence and being ready for it — practicing escape routes, for example — has saved lives in the most awful situations.



Too often, public and private authorities are so anxious to keep customers or constituents from worrying about their safety that they avoid explaining in detail what steps to follow when the worst happens. Or they assume that only officialdom can be trusted to react properly. A glaring example is that of the London subway terrorist attacks, in which passengers had no way to let train drivers know there'd been an explosion; train doors could be opened only by transit authorities, from the outside; and first-aid kits were kept in the offices of safety officials, rather than on the trains.



Coping with terrorism demands even more initiative from regular people than do other hazardous situations, Ripley argues. Yet the federal Department of Homeland Security (DHS) keeps no record of how many people have received training in its volunteer programs. DHS maintains a somewhat insipid Web site (www.ready.gov) with such helpful hints as "During a nuclear incident it is important to avoid radioactive material if possible."



As a longtime staff writer for Time magazine, Ripley evidences a reporter's need to know everything about a story before writing it. In "The Unthinkable," she digs into the biological and social evolutions that cause us to make smart or terrible decisions under stress. She also suggests how we can train our brains and those of others to choose survival.








See Also

Sunday 15 June 2008

Hella

Hella   
Artist: Hella

   Genre(s): 
Other
   Rock
   



Discography:


There's No 666 in Outer Space   
 There's No 666 in Outer Space

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 11


Church Gone Wild-Chirpin' Hard   
 Church Gone Wild-Chirpin' Hard

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 24


Church Gone Wild - Chirpin Hard CD2   
 Church Gone Wild - Chirpin Hard CD2

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 12


Church Gone Wild - Chirpin Hard CD1   
 Church Gone Wild - Chirpin Hard CD1

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 12


The Devil Isn't Red   
 The Devil Isn't Red

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 11




Indie rockers Hella consist of guitar player Spencer Seim and drummer Zach Hill. The deuce number one got unitedly in the springtime of 2001, development a following about the Sacramento area that won them a record administer on 5 Rue Christine Records. Their debut LP, Defy Your Horse Is, appeared in 2002, and accomplished Hella's chaotic coming to instrumental noise rock. The duet proven prolific, issuing the LP Total Bugs Bunny on Wild Bass on Narnack in 2003, The Devil Isn't Red for 5RC in 2004, and the bivalent record album Christian church Gone Wild/Chirpin' Hard on Suicide Squeeze in 2005. The CD/DVD jazz band Denseness Face/Homeboy followed from 5 Rue Christine in November of that class. After cathartic the EP Acoustics in tardy 2006, Hella moved to Ipecac Records -- 5RC had folded after the going of flop Slim Moon -- and regrouped with guitarist Josh Hill (cousin to Zach) and bassist Carson McWhirter, both of whom had been in a dance orchestra with the span before they had get Hella, as well as vocalist Aaron Ross (it was, in fact, the inability to find a vocalist that caused the initial dissolution and formation of the duet Hella). Their first gear record as a fivesome, There's No 666 in Outer Space, was released in January 2007.






Thursday 5 June 2008

Scorsese making Marley documentary

Following the success of his Bob Dylan documentary 'No Direction Home' and the completion of his new Rolling Stones film 'Shine a Light', Oscar-winning director Martin Scorsese is to make a documentary about reggae legend Bob Marley.
Variety reports that the as-yet-untitled film has been authorised by Marley's family.
The film is due for release on 6 February, 2010, which would have been Marley's 65th birthday.
To listen to this week's special 'Arts Show' report on Bob Marley, click here.