Tuesday 26 August 2008

t.A.T.u. Become New Faces Of Marc Jacobs

Russian female singing duo t.A.T.u. possess been announced as the new faces of intriguer Marc Jacobs� upcoming Fall/Winter 2008 collection.


Introduced in the U.S. several years ago as lesbians, the girls had fame with their debut English album �200Km/h In The Wrong Lane�, spawning the hits �All The Things She Said� and �Not Gonna Get Us�.


Spearheading previous Marc Jacobs campaign were Victoria Beckham, M.I.A. and Meg White of The White Stripes.




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Saturday 16 August 2008

Romance ahead of Big Brother eviction?

With Stuart up for eviction on Friday, there is speculation that another housemate will turn their attention towards him in front tomorrow night.

Stuart and housemate Sara had a former night conversation during which she aforementioned: "I'm just looking at your eyes, your eyelashes. I'm taken up. It's a nice thing. Girls must love it. You're rather girly only you've got a man's body. You're so unlike to guys I go out with. You're buff."

She continued: "Sometimes I change my opinion on you. Sometimes you look different to me. Earlier you looked more like macho man, but tonight you look cute. I think close up you look more than adorable. I think you're quite opinionative and I quite like it. You put yourself down a lot, you're not a minger."

Stuart dismissed the compliments, locution: "I don't like regard. It's mortifying. Leave it there, I don't like it. Have you seen my frown lines?"

Sara replied: "Have you ever given a compliment to anyone in the business firm? You've never said anything nice about me."

Read our 'Big Brother' blog.

"Don't be fooled Stuart. You are, as you mumbled to yourself on the exercise machine, "a prissy guy", and you don't deserve it. Even if you do spend more time fabrication on your side and having staggeringly dull heart-to-hearts than anyone in the history of television."

Check out the 'Big Brother' protester profiles.



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Thursday 7 August 2008

Students dazzle in big-stage debuts at jazz fest

PORT TOWNSEND � The defining import of Jazz Port Townsend was possibly the one that was not planned.



On the last day of the jazz festival, a few hours before clouds and a sudden shivering set in, a cy Young woman in a flowered print dress and t. H. White sandals, her toenails painted bright putting green, stepped onto the big stage with her acoustic bass.



Behind her was the festival swelled band, before her an audience of more than 1,cc who had never ahead heard of Kate Davis.



Plucked from unitary of the week's many student workshops, Davis, 17, a senior-to-be at West Linn High School in Oregon, panax quinquefolius "Sometimes I'm Happy." The arrangement was spare just perfectly balanced and suited to her talents. The song all over and the audience roared.



The professionals on the by-line mostly agreed: She could be a star someday. Davis was added extemporarily by artistic director John Clayton after he heard her play the song in a class.



"I was floored and the wheels started turning," said Clayton, also a bassist. "I didn't want the audience to non know about some of the