Sunday, November 30, 2014

Jolie plans 'very little acting'



Angelina Jolie will do “very little” acting in future and has admitted that she would not direct the films she acts in.


The Oscar-winning actress has directed Unbroken, which stars young British rising star Jack O’Connell as the late Louis Zamperini, a Second World War hero and athlete who ran in the 1936 Berlin Olympics.


Jolie, 39, told The Sunday Times Culture magazine: “I’ll do very little acting in the future. And it’s funny, somebody said to me – and I think it’s true – what’s odd is that I wouldn’t direct the films I act in.


“Some of them, maybe, but in general I wouldn’t spend two years working on the things I’m in.”


Jolie has spoken of how Zamperini taught her to embrace challenges when she attended the premiere of Unbroken in Leicester Square in London.


The mother-of-six, who underwent a double mastectomy after testing positive for having a cancer gene and campaigned for peace in her capacity as a UN ambassador, also revealed she wants her eldest sons Maddox and Pax to see the film.





Jolie plans 'very little acting'

Football legend Pele's renal support removed until Monday



SAO PAULO (Reuters) – Brazilian football legend Pele’s health continued to improve on Sunday, with doctors removing renal support temporarily to assess the evolution of a urinary tract infection.


The 74-year-old three-time World Cup champion was put on kidney support treatment last week. In a statement, Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein said the treatment would be suspended until Monday, when doctors would decide whether or not to reinstate it.


The statement said that Pele, who is often called the greatest football player in history, was “lucid, talking”, and that his respiratory and blood readings were stable.


Pele underwent surgery just over two weeks ago to remove kidney stones.


Pele, who was born Edson Arantes do Nascimento, has struggled with a series of health problems over the past decade. He has had emergency eye surgery for a detached retina, and a hip replacement.


Known in Brazil as the “King of football”, he played in four World Cups and scored more than 1,000 goals during his career.


(Reporting by Guillermo Parra-Bernal; Editing by Aidan Martindale)





Football legend Pele's renal support removed until Monday

Ill Teenager's Treatment Branded 'Abhorrent'



The case of a teenage girl with mental health issues held in police custody for almost two days because no NHS beds were available is “abhorrent”, a senior MP has told Sky News.



Dr Sarah Wollaston, who chairs the Commons Health Select Committee, was speaking after a 16-year-old was found a bed only when a senior police officer lashed out publicly at the “unacceptable” scenario.



The MP for Totnes told Sky’s Murnaghan programme: “We know that last year there were 30 children in Devon and Cornwall who unfortunately spent a night in a police cell for no reason other than the fact they were experiencing a mental health crisis.



“Clearly it is unacceptable if it happens to anybody, adult or child, but particularly abhorrent that it happens to children.”



Dr Wollaston, a former family doctor, said she wanted such an occurrence to be made a “never event”.



These are serious, largely preventable, incidents, such as operating on the wrong part of the body, that should not occur if the correct procedures are followed.



“It’s absolutely the wrong place for anyone to be in a police cell when they are in a mental health crisis,” Dr Wollaston added.



“We would find it utterly unacceptable if this was a physical condition and we should feel the same about a mental health condition.”



Devon and Cornwall Police Assistant Chief Constable Paul Netherton told Sky News on Saturday: “I was very concerned because we shouldn’t be put in a position where we have a 16-year-old schoolgirl kept in custody now for three days because there is no place where we can house her safely.



“A police station and a custody block on a Friday and Saturday night is simply not a place where a young child should be placed.



“We wouldn’t put a criminal in custody for that long and we certainly don’t want to put someone who is suffering from mental health issues in a custody block for that length of time.”



Mental health charities have condemned the handling of the vulnerable teenager.



Paul Farmer, chief executive of the mental health charity Mind, said: “This is a terrible and shameful situation.



“Being in mental health crisis can be terrifying and life threatening, and people need urgent care from mental health services.”



He added: “This whole episode shows how thinly spread NHS mental health services are.”



Lucie Russell, director of campaigns at YoungMinds, said it should not be the responsibility of police to look after the teenager.



“It is both shocking and totally inappropriate that a 16-year-old child has to spend two days in a police cell as she goes through a serious mental health crisis,” she said.



She added: “This girl will look back on the crisis she experienced and remember living through it in police custody.”



NHS England said: “After details were provided to NHS England about the girl and her condition a place was found locally within a few hours. We are grateful for the help of the NHS in the area in identifying the place.”



The organisation added: “It is worth noting that mental health crisis services have been expanding so that the number of people ending up in police cells is in fact down – but clearly more needs to be done.”





Ill Teenager's Treatment Branded 'Abhorrent'

GSK to axe U.S. jobs as part of $1.6 billion cost cuts - sources



By Ben Hirschler


LONDON (Reuters) – GlaxoSmithKline will this week inform U.S. staff of hundreds of job cuts in its biggest market as the drugmaker starts implementing a major cost-saving programme, sources familiar with the matter said on Sunday.


Britain’s top drugmaker announced at third-quarter results on Oct. 22 that the new restructuring scheme would save 1 billion pounds ($1.56 billion) in annual costs over three years, but it has yet to tell employees where the axe will fall.


Staff in the United States, where GSK has been struggling with falling sales of respiratory drugs, will be briefed on the changes on Wednesday by the company’s head of North American pharmaceuticals Deirdre Connelly, the sources said.


A GSK spokesman declined to go into details but said the aim of the restructuring programme was to improve performance by reducing complexity and establishing a smaller, more focused and lower-cost organization.


“Each business unit is currently deciding how to respond to this challenge. When we do have proposals, we will first share those with our employees,” he said in an e-mailed statement.


Respiratory medicine has traditionally been GSK’s strongest business and Advair – an inhaled therapy for asthma and chronic lung disease – is its biggest seller. But Advair sales are now tumbling the United States, while new lung drugs Breo and Anoro are proving slow to take off.


Advair has been hit by competition from rivals and an increasing trend by U.S. health insurers to use hardball tactics to get drugmakers to cut prices for older products.


French drugmaker Sanofi has reported similar pressures from U.S. insurers in the diabetes market.


U.S. insurers, who themselves are under pressure to keep premiums in check, are pushing back particularly hard on prices for medicines in areas like diabetes and respiratory diseases where there are multiple options for doctors and patients.


The revamped GSK operation in the United States is designed to defend the company’s margins in this tough environment. The changes will also take into account the movement of some pharmaceuticals staff as a result of a complex asset swap deal with Switzerland’s Novartis , which is taking over GSK’s oncology business.


(1 US dollar = 0.6391 British pound)


(Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by Jon Boyle)





GSK to axe U.S. jobs as part of $1.6 billion cost cuts - sources

Hear Frank Ocean's Atmospheric 'Memrise,' His First New Song in Two Years



By |

November 29, 2014

While much of America recovered from their Thanksgiving feasts or lined up for Black Friday shopping, Frank Ocean was quietly sharing new music. Friday morning, the Channel Orange singer uploaded “Memrise,” a lo-fi track that finds Ocean serenading a lover and marks his first new solo material in nearly two years.




The two-minute-long song is divided into three sections: An atmospheric opening where Ocean harmonizes with multiples layers of his own voice, a speak-sung middle verse that’s reminiscent of TV on the Radio, and a coda where the singer finally unfurls his Grammy-winning voice as he sings, “Don’t go plastic on me / Nothing’s set in stone.” It’s unclear whether “Memrise” was just a Black Friday gift to fans or a sneak preview at the singer’s next album.





Related

Fall Preview



Originally slated for summer 2014, Ocean’s follow-up to Channel Orange landed as one of the 25 albums in Rolling Stone‘s Fall Music Preview, where we projected that the LP might finally arrive this winter. However, with just over a month remaining in 2014, it appears we’ll have to wait until next year before Ocean drops his new album. The singer was last reported to be in the studio working with Hit-Boy (BeyoncĂ©’s “XO,” Jay Z and Kanye West’s “Niggas in Paris”) and Rodney Jerkins. Pharrell Williams and Danger Mouse are also rumored collaborators.



“Memrise” is Ocean’s first post-Channel Orange solo track since he unveiled “Wise Man,” a song recorded for – but not released on – the Django Unchained soundtrack. In addition to “Memrise,” Ocean also revealed the song’s lyrics on his Tumblr:



“I memorized the wayward expressions
Never look down
Never let you see me down
I memorized the way no directions
Can I come over now
I’d like to stay a little while
I memorized your body exposed
I could fuck you all night long
From a memory alone



I never forget a face
Don’t go plastic on me
Nothing’s set in stone
You’re not dipped in gold
Dipped in gold
You can’t breathe if you’re dipped in gold
You are not on paper
You are not a copy
You’re so, you’re so… so thick, so thick”





Hear Frank Ocean's Atmospheric 'Memrise,' His First New Song in Two Years

German retailers happy with start to Christmas shopping season



BERLIN (Reuters) – Germany’s Christmas shopping season started well – suggesting a bounce-back in Europe’s biggest economy is continuing – with electronics, homeware and food selling particularly strongly, the German retail association (HDE) said on Sunday.


Data out on Friday showed German retail sales recovered strongly in October after a steep drop in September as the private consumption that has become vital for growth in the country showed signs of renewed strength.


“We are satisfied… Most popular were books and premium foodstuffs,” HDE head Stefan Genth said in a statement, adding that Advent calendars and Christmas decorations had also sold well.


An HDE survey of 500 firms showed that electronics, home and garden and food were doing particularly well, with hopes rising among fashion retailers for sales of winter gear as temperatures dropped in Germany after unseasonably mild weather.


The HDE is predicting a 1.2 percent rise in sales for November and December to 85.5 billion euros ($106 billion). E-commerce is expected to grow 18 percent to make up 10 billion of that.


German retail sales for the first 10 months of the year were up 1.3 percent in nominal terms, the statistics office said.


(1 US dollar = 0.8030 euro)


(Reporting by Emma Thomasson; Editing by Sophie Walker)





German retailers happy with start to Christmas shopping season

Justices weigh limits of free speech over Internet



WASHINGTON (AP) — Anthony Elonis claimed he was just kidding when he posted a series of graphically violent rap lyrics on Facebook about killing his estranged wife, shooting up a kindergarten class and attacking an FBI agent.


But his wife didn’t see it that way. Neither did a federal jury.


Elonis, who’s from Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, was convicted of violating a federal law that makes it a crime to threaten another person.


In a far-reaching case that probes the limits of free speech over the Internet, the Supreme Court on Monday was to consider whether Elonis’ Facebook posts, and others like it, deserve protection under the First Amendment.


Elonis argues that his lyrics were simply a crude and spontaneous form of expression that should not be considered threatening if he did not really mean it. The government says it does not matter what Elonis intended, and that the true test of a threat is whether his words make a reasonable person feel threatened.


One post about his wife said, “There’s one way to love you but a thousand ways to kill you. I’m not going to rest until your body is a mess, soaked in blood and dying from all the little cuts.”


The case has drawn widespread attention from free-speech advocates who say comments on Facebook, Twitter and other social media can be hasty, impulsive and easily misinterpreted. They point out that a message on Facebook intended for a small group could be taken out of context when viewed by a wider audience.


“A statute that proscribes speech without regard to the speaker’s intended meaning runs the risk of punishing protected First Amendment expression simply because it is crudely or zealously expressed,” said a brief from the American Liberties Union and other groups.


But so far, most lower courts have rejected that view, ruling that a “true threat” depends on how an objective person perceives the message.


For more than four decades, the Supreme Court has said that “true threats” to harm another person are not protected speech under the First Amendment. But the court has been careful to distinguish threats from protected speech such as “political hyperbole” or “unpleasantly sharp attacks.”


Elonis claims he was depressed and that his online posts under the pseudonym “Tone Dougie” were a way to vent his frustration after his wife left him and he lost his job working at an amusement park. His lawyers say the posts were heavily influenced by rap star Eminem, who has also fantasized in songs about killing his ex-wife.


But Elonis’ wife testified that the comments made her fear for her life.


After she obtained a protective order against him, Elonis wrote a lengthy post mocking court proceedings: “Did you know that it’s illegal for me to say I want to kill my wife?”


A female FBI agent later visited Elonis at home to ask him about the postings. Elonis took to Facebook again: “Little agent lady stood so close, took all the strength I had not to turn the bitch ghost. Pull my knife, flick my wrist and slit her throat.”


Elonis was convicted of making threats of violence and sentenced to nearly four years in federal prison. A federal appeals court rejected his claim that his comments were protected by the First Amendment.


The Obama administration says requiring proof that a speaker intended to be threatening would undermine the law’s protective purpose. In its brief to the court, the Justice Department argued that no matter what someone believes about his comments, it does not lessen the fear and anxiety they might cause for other people.


“The First Amendment does not require that a person be permitted to inflict those harms based on an unreasonable subjective belief that his words do not mean what they say,” government lawyers said.


The National Center for Victims of Crime, which submitted a brief supporting the government, said judging threats based on the speaker’s intent would make stalking crimes even more difficult to prosecute.


“Victims of stalking are financially, emotionally and socially burdened by the crime regardless of the subjective intent of the speaker,” the organization said.


The case is Elonis v. United States, 13-983.


___


Follow Sam Hananel on Twitter at https://twitter.com/SamHananelAP





Justices weigh limits of free speech over Internet