Friday, October 31, 2014

Son to Usher: Dad, you're not a great singer



NEW YORK (AP) — One of Usher’s sons studies his dance moves meticulously, while the other has said to the Grammy-winning star: “You’re not a great singer.”


Usher says his son Nayvid Ely Raymond, who turns 6 in December, isn’t impressed with the multiplatinum singer.


“He doesn’t care about what I do as much. … He’s like, ‘I’m the star. Who are you? You sing?’” Usher said in a recent interview.


“He told me the other day, he says, ‘You’re not a great singer,’” Usher, 36, continued with a laugh. His reply to his son: “What? I’m a great singer!”


Usher said his son named after him, who turns 7 next month, has taken to his father’s dance talents.


“When seeing me perform on tour in the past … and most of the time it’s past his bedtime, but he’s just sitting there studying every move, every second, like laser focus,” he said of Usher Raymond V. “And then I’ll see him off by himself doing the moves.”


Usher will showcase his sharp choreography on his UR Experience World Tour, which kicks off Saturday in Montreal. He said the tour was influenced by live shows he’s seen from U2, Bruce Springsteen and Frankie Beverly.


“There’s this connection and that is what gave the inspiration for this show,” he said of the veteran acts.


He will play many of his hits, from “U Remind Me” to “Yeah!” to “OMG,” on his first tour in three years. He will also play instruments.


“I may be playing the drum sometimes. I may be playing the bass,” he said. “We may have a reprise on a song that you know and you enjoy for, who knows, eight to 10 minutes.”


Usher, who released two singles this year, is currently working on his eighth album. Apart from music, he says he would like to do more movies and enjoyed his stint on NBC’s “The Voice” because was able to stress the seriousness of artist development.


“This is something that was very, very important when I came up as an artist and is probably the reason why 20 years later, I am making music and performing and excited about doing it,” he said.


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Online:


http://www.usherworld.com/


___


Follow Mesfin Fekadu on Twitter at twitter.com/MusicMesfin





Son to Usher: Dad, you're not a great singer

Democrats in tight New England governor races



CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — Facing a darkening political climate, Democrats are locked in competitive governor races across New England as Republicans push their midterm offensive into one of the nation’s last Democratic strongholds.


Would-be Democratic governors — Rhode Island Treasurer Gina Raimondo, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley and New Hampshire Gov. Maggie Hassan, who is seeking re-election — have seen their leads shrink or disappear in recent weeks. Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy and U.S. Rep. Mike Michaud, who is running for governor in Maine, have been stuck in dead heats for months.


Less than a week before Election Day, there are glimmers of hope for Democrats in some contests, but the tight races represent a troubling trend for a party now forced to pour time and resources into elections that were supposed to be easy wins.


“There’s a lot happening in New England,” said an excited Phil Cox, executive director of the Republican Governors Association. “We’re on offense in five out of six states.”


Facing largely unknown GOP businessman Walt Havenstein, Hassan was expected to cruise to victory in New Hampshire. But recent internal and external polls, a fresh $1 million advertising campaign from the Republican Governors Association and a climate that increasingly favors Republicans have given Havenstein and his team confidence they could pull off an upset.


“You look at Havenstein and see governor there,” said Tom Rath, a longtime Republican strategist. “Whether you agree with him or not, he’s a very credible guy even though he didn’t have a lot of name recognition — sooner or later that was going to change.”


The regional trend is representative of Democrats’ broader struggles as Republicans capitalize on President Barack Obama’s poor approval ratings to try to expand the map.


The Republican Governors Association had dumped $25 million into New England governor races through Thursday, while their Democratic counterpart had spent roughly $13 million, according to officials who track political spending. The Democratic Governors Association attributes its lower spending to reserving ad space early on when it was cheaper, but in New Hampshire the DGA hasn’t spent a dime while the national Republican group spent $3 million so far.


At the same time, the national mood appears to favor the GOP. An AP-GfK poll found last week that a growing number of likely voters want the GOP to win control of Congress, while 6 in 10 voters disapprove of Obama’s job performance.


The president is making last-minute appearances for gubernatorial candidates in six states — three of them in New England, where he remains relatively popular. First lady Michelle Obama jumped in this week as well, campaigning alongside gubernatorial candidates in Connecticut and Rhode Island.


“You got to get it done, Rhode Island,” Michelle Obama charged in her appearance with Raimondo in Providence. “Every single one of those votes matters. This election is going to be incredibly close. You hear me? Incredibly close.”


After winning a competitive Democratic primary, Raimondo appeared to be in a dominant position heading into a general election matchup against the longtime Republican mayor of Cranston, Allan Fung. Democrats have a significant registration advantage in Rhode Island, while Raimondo had raised far more money.


Fung ultimately had more to spend because he accepted matching public funds, however, and the race is considered a dead heat.


It’s a similar story in Massachusetts, where polling suggests Coakley is trailing Republican businessman Charlie Baker in a state where Democrats control every congressional seat and statewide office.


While there are far more Democrats than Republicans in New England, it’s not unusual for voters across the region to break with their party in governor races. Among the six New England states, only voters in New Hampshire have failed to elect a Republican governor over the last decade.


Democratic officials acknowledge their challenges this election season.


“Despite a difficult environment for Democrats and an RGA financial advantage that they love to tout, we are extremely competitive in a number of states currently held by Republican governors and are well-positioned to re-elect our incumbents,” said Danny Kanner, a spokesman for the Democratic Governors Association.


And some races may not be as competitive as the RGA’s spending suggests. Especially in New Hampshire, critics charge that the organization led by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a likely 2016 presidential candidate, is spending big simply to curry favor with New Hampshire Republicans who will host the nation’s first presidential primary election in about a year.


Democrats see a prime pickup opportunity in Maine, where Paul LePage is the only Republican governor serving in New England.


While polls suggest the three-way race is a tossup, Democratic challenger Michaud got a boost this week when independent candidate Eliott Cutler said anyone who doesn’t believe he can win should vote for someone else and scaled back some advertising.


At the same time, Republicans see one of their best pickup opportunities in Connecticut, where Malloy has been locked in a virtual tie with Republican challenger Tom Foley, whom Malloy defeated by fewer than 6,500 votes in 2010. Despite the state’s propensity to support Democratic presidential candidates, Malloy is the state’s first Democratic governor in more than 20 years.


While campaigning in New Hampshire on Friday, Hassan said she’s working hard for every vote.


“I’m just working as hard as I can to talk with the people of New Hampshire, make the choices before them clear and make sure that I’m listening to them, too,” she said.


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Peoples reported from Washington. Associated Press writer Erika Niedowski in Providence, Rhode Island, contributed to this report.





Democrats in tight New England governor races

Instagram bans US comedienne's topless Putin jab



US comedienne Chelsea Handler is fighting with Instagram after it took down a topless picture she posted looking similar to a famous shirtless picture of Russian President Vladmir Putin on horseback.


“Taking this down is sexist. I have every right to show I have a better body than Putin,” the 39-year-old actress and talk show host said on her Twitter feed after the spat erupted Thursday night.


The picture showed Handler on a horse, next to one of a similar pose to Putin in 2009, which provoked much amused debate at the time over his attempts to present him as an all-action leader.


But it was taken down three times in succession by the image-sharing service, which blocked it with a message saying “@chelseahandler, We removed your post because it doesn’t follow our Community Guidelines.”


Those guidelines ban “nudity and mature content.”


Handler countered: “If a man posts a photo of his nipples, it’s ok, but not a woman? Are we in 1825?” adding: “If Instagram takes this down again, you’re saying Vladimir Putin Has more 1st amendment rights than me.


“Talk to your bosses,” she told them.


She subsequently reposted the picture to Twitter, where it remained viewable Friday, albeit behind a warning which said “The following media may contain sensitive material.”


“You can now find my dogs and my breasts on Twitter only where my followers have the right to choose what they say. Bye bye instablock,” she wrote.





Instagram bans US comedienne's topless Putin jab

Fire at French public radio complex, staff evacuated



PARIS (Reuters) – A fire broke out at France’s public radio headquarters in Paris on Friday, forcing live programmes off the air as staff evacuated the vast Paris complex where major building work has been underway.


“The fire is not put out but it is under control,” said Paris fire brigade spokesman Gabriel Plus, adding that there were no victims and that there was no longer any risk of the fire spreading to other parts of the building.


Photographs circulating on Twitter shortly after the fire broke out showed thick black smoke billowing from upper floors of the building on the banks of the Seine river in the western part of the French capital.


“Staff … had to be evacuated because of a fire,” said a Twitter message from France Info, one of several public radio channels housed at the building, the Maison de la Radio.


France Info highlighted that building work had been underway recently at the building, where thousands of journalists and other staff work.


Fire brigade spokesman Plus said that the fire broke out in a part of the complex where no staff were presented because of renovation work that in part concerned eradication of asbestos.


(Reporting by Ingrid Melander and Brian Love; editing by Mark John)





Fire at French public radio complex, staff evacuated

Apple CEO publicly acknowledges that he's gay



NEW YORK (AP) — Apple CEO Tim Cook’s declaration that he’s “proud to be gay” wasn’t exactly news in Silicon Valley, where his sexual orientation was no secret. But advocates say that given Apple’s immense reach and visibility, his coming-out could help change attitudes in workplaces across America.


The 53-year-old successor to Steve Jobs made the announcement in an essay published Thursday by Bloomberg Businessweek. He is the highest-profile U.S. business executive to publicly acknowledge that he’s gay.


In a country where more major-league athletes have come out than top CEOs, business leaders said Cook’s disclosure was an important step toward easing anti-gay stigma, particularly for employees in the many states where people can still be fired for their sexual orientation.


Cook, who led Out magazine’s top 50 most powerful people for three years, said in the essay that while he never denied his sexuality, he never openly acknowledged it, either. He said he acted now in the hopes that his words could make a difference to others.


“I’ve come to realize that my desire for personal privacy has been holding me back from doing something more important,” he wrote.


Cook said he considers being gay “among the greatest gifts God has given me” because it has given him both a better understanding of what it means to be in the minority and “the skin of a rhinoceros, which comes in handy when you’re the CEO of Apple.”


Besides Cook, there are no other openly gay CEOs in the Fortune 1,000, even though statistically, 3.4 percent of Americans identify as something other than straight, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control. Some executives of major U.S. corporations who are openly gay at their companies declined to comment to The Associated Press.


John Browne, who resigned as British Petroleum CEO in 2007 after being outed by a tabloid and who is the author of “The Glass Closet: Why Coming Out Is Good Business,” said Cook has become a role model “and will speed up changes in the corporate world.”


Megan Smith, a lesbian who was a top executive at Google before recently becoming the U.S. government’s chief technology officer, predicted “people will look back at this time not only for the extraordinary technological innovations that keep coming, but also for great shifts in civil rights and inclusion of talent across our world. Tim is a big part of both of these important movements.”


Fifty-three percent of workers in the U.S. who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender hide that part of their identity at work, according to a study by Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest gay-rights group.


“I think it depends on where they’re located, and it depends on their position in a company,” said Wendy Patrick, a business ethics lecturer at San Diego State University.


She points out that executives in the 29 U.S. states that do not protect employees from being fired based on sexual orientation may still feel hesitant to come out at work.


Cook’s announcement “will save countless lives,” said Chad Griffin, president of Human Rights Campaign. “Apple has consistently fought for the LGBT community, and we’re incredibly grateful that today’s announcement will bring even more to their work for equality.”


Three days ago, Cook challenged his home state of Alabama to better ensure the rights of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community. Alabama is among the states that do not recognize same-sex marriage, and it offers no legal protections on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity. Cook is a native of Robertsdale, Alabama and attended Auburn University.


In Silicon Valley, there’s less of a stigma than in other industries and parts of the country.


“It’s an engineering-based industry,” said author Michael Malone, who has written several books about the evolution of Hewlett-Packard, Intel and other leading companies. “Either the person does the job or they don’t. And if they don’t, they’re gone. And if they do the job, nobody really cares about their personal life.”


It remains to be seen how the news will affect Cook’s reception in conservative countries where Apple Inc. does business.


“The global reaction to this is going to be very interesting,” said Todd Sears, who runs Out Leadership, a group that promotes gay rights. “Will Singapore arrest Tim Cook the next time he is there?”


In Russia, Vitaly Milonov, a city legislator in St. Petersburg notorious for his anti-gay statements, called Thursday for a lifetime ban that would bar Tim Cook from entering Russia.


But Cook’s coming out is unlikely to affect Apple’s sales in Russia, where most people don’t mix ideology with consumption.


The appeal of Apple’s products and the company’s clout probably made it easier for Cook to take a stand, said Richard Zweigenhaft, a Guilford College psychology professor who co-wrote the book “Diversity in the Power Elite.”


“This is not going to help Apple, and it’s not going to hurt Apple. It’s almost sort of immune because their products are so successful,” he said.


Cook’s revelation has the potential to make people worldwide rethink their attitudes toward gays because Apple’s products are beloved around the globe.


Said Sears: “It is going to be hard being a homophobe while holding an iPhone now.”


___


Associated Press writers Brandon Bailey and Michael Liedtke in San Francisco, Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow and Michelle Chapman in New York contributed to this report.





Apple CEO publicly acknowledges that he's gay

J.K. Rowling’s New ‘Harry Potter’ Story Details Dolores Umbridge’s Villainous Past



Dolores Umbridge is not the witch she claims to be.


Sure, she worked her way to high-level positions within the Ministry of Magic, even serving as Headmistress at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry for a year. But her accomplishments came under false pretenses, according to a new “Harry Potter” story written by J.K. Rowling.


Just in time for Halloween, Rowling’s released a new Pottermore.com story (via Today.com) all about the secret life of Ms. Umbridge, and here’s one of the bigger reveals: She’s a half-blooded witch!



Born to wizard Orford Umbridge and muggle Ellen Cracknell, Dolores was one of two children. Her brother was a Squib, unable to perform magic. Both Orford and Dolores were so sickened by the magic-free members of their family that they went their separate ways, with Ellen and her son returning to the muggle world, never to be seen again. From that day forward, Dolores presented herself as a pure-blood witch — just one of her many, many lies.


Rowling’s story charts Umbridge’s rise at the Ministry of Magic, beginning with an internship in the Improper Use of Magic Office at the age of 17. By age 30, she was in charge of the office, due to the ruthless tactics she covertly employed beneath her sugar-sweet demeanor. She rose even higher and eventually pushed her unambitious father out of the Ministry, denying all connections to him whatsoever. Yet another lie.


In fact, one of few ways to see through Umbridge’s false exterior is to give the woman a glass of sherry and watch as her true feelings about Muggles come spewing out of her mouth. Rowling notes that “even those who were anti-Muggle found themselves shocked by some of Dolores’s suggestions, behind closed doors, of the treatment that the non-magical community deserved.”



There’s much more in the story, including how Umbridge was instrumental in turning public opinion against Albus Dumbledore during Harry’s fifth year at Hogwarts, why she hates Hagrid and magical creatures so much, and her final fate following the events of “Deathly Hallows.” In an afterword, Rowling reveals that Umbridge was inspired by a loathsome instructor from her past.


“I have noticed more than once in life that a taste for the ineffably twee can go hand-in-hand with a distinctly uncharitable outlook on the world,” she writes. “I once shared an office with a woman who had covered the wall space behind her desk with pictures of fluffy kitties; she was the most bigoted, spiteful champion of the death penalty with whom it has ever been my misfortune to share a kettle. A love of all things saccharine often seems present where there is a lack of real warmth or charity.”


Rowling goes on to describe Umbridge as “one of the characters for whom I feel purest dislike,” saying her “desire to control, to punish and to inflict pain, all in the name of law and order, are, I think, every bit as reprehensible as Lord Voldemort’s unvarnished espousal of evil.”


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J.K. Rowling’s New ‘Harry Potter’ Story Details Dolores Umbridge’s Villainous Past

Energy Bills: UK Gas Prices Hit Record Low


Energy Bills: UK Gas Prices Hit Record Low