Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Beyonce Is Pregnant

Its Official Beyonce Is Pregnant
Usweekly is confirming reports that Beyonce is pregnant with her first child. The magazine is reporting that nobody was more surprised then Beyonce to know she was pregnant. 

Beyonce was totally shocked to find out she was pregnant. Beyonce loves kids, but she wasn't ready to be a mother just yet," says a source who is close to the singer. Beyonce was working hard on finishing her latest album and then planing on touring the world again.

Beyonce and Jay-Z got married in 2008 in a private ceremony attended by close family members and friends. 

Its Official Beyonce Is Pregnant
The source also went on to say:
that the singer, who is in her first trimester, realizes that "this is a gift from God and she's so happy."
Beyonce comes from a very religious family. When her sister Solange came out pregnant her family basically forced her and her boyfriend to get married, due in part to their religious beliefs. 

Friends of the couple are already expressing their well-wishes for the parents-to-be.
"Jay has been all about family since I met him, and he's always going to be," record executive Kevin Liles, who has known the rapper for years, tells Us. "I wish them the best."

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Top 10 Hottest Female Debuts In Bollywood 2011

Over the years we have seen number of good-looking ladies making their way in Hollywood and receiving huge approval both from the audiences and critics. Many of them turned huge stars while some struggled their way to become the spirited stars. But we have to admit this fact that Bollywood Film Industry always introduces new faces to public every year. The clear examples of this fact are the beautiful Deepika Padukone, Kangna Ranaut, Asin, Anushka Sharma, Sonakhi Sinha and many others. So keeping this thing in mind I have created the list of those ten beautiful divas that are debuting this year and have won the heart of many people across India and about the world. So let’s have a look on these fantastic ladies who have made their debut this year.
10. Puja Gupta:
The previous winner of Miss India Universe Contest in 2007 and the participant of Miss Universe Contest, despite her universal fame, she received more fame when she made her acting debut this year in the comedy film F.A.L.T.U. Her onscreen presence was highly praised by both the audiences and critics and she will definitely become the big star in the near future.
9. Parineeti Chopra:
She is a cousin of the Bollywood loveliness Priyanka Chopra and still due to make her entrance in the Yash Raj film titled Ladies vs Ricki Bhai which also stars Ranveer Singh and Anushka Sharma. Still to make an impact on big screen, Parineeta Chopra has garnered great fan attraction because of her cute and innocent looks and many people are bearing in mind her as the star of tomorrow. She landed on this list because of her growing popularity.
8. Parvathy Omanakuttan:
Parvathy Omanakuttan made her big screen debut with Vishal Aryan Singh’s United Six and despite this film did not performed well; her performance was praised by the critics. She was also crowned Miss India World in 2008 and was the first runner-up in Miss World 2008. Her sexy and seductive looks have won the heart of many people across India.
7. Nargis Fakhri:
Nargis Fakhri is originally an American Model but she is all set to make her big screen debut in Imtiaz Ali’s Rockstar opposite Ranbir Kapoor. She is careful one of the hot and sexy young ladies who can become the superstar of tomorrow. She has also modeled for many Indian Fashion Shows and many of the experts have praised her onscreen persona.
6. Tena Desae:
Tena Desae She got fame through Channel V’s reality show “Get Gorgeous”. She made her debut with Anumpam Kher in “Yeh Faaslay”. She will be next seen in The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel which is directed by BAFTA award winner John Madden where she will be acting with SlumDog Millionaire’s Dev Patel and Oscar winner Judi Dench.
5. Zoa Morani:
Zoa Morani is the daughter of Karim Morani who is producer of Raja Hinudstani 1996. She is launched by Red Chillies Entertainment in “Always Kabhi Kabhi”. She will also walk the ramp at Lakme Fashion Week for designer Pallavi Mohan as the show stopper.
4. Sulagna Panigrahi:
Sulagni Panigrahi is and Odia and Indian television and film actress.She made her debut in television serial Ameber Dhara as Dhara and also played a character in Do Saheliyaan. She further did a grey role as Sakshi Rajvansh in Bidaai ,until bagging her break in Bhatt banner film Murder 2 as Reshma.
3. Myra Karn:
Myra Karn has no intentions of becoming an actress as she is an engineer by profession and a very qualified individual, but Raj Kumar Gupta insisted her and thus she became famous with her splendid performance in No One Killed Jessica. Her performance was praised by the critics and now she is considered the future prominent star of Bollwood.
2. Ariadna Cabrol:


She is a Spanish actress and model who has worked in Spanish,Serbian and Hindi films. She made her debut in 2000 with the short film Focl al cantir. She also starred in Spanish Tv shows like Los Serrano, Un Paso Adelante and TV mpvies like La stella dei re,Estocolm. She made her Bollywood debut in Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara which also stars Hrithik Roshan, Farhan Akhtar, Katrina Kaif and Abhay Deol.
1. Sarah-Jane Dias:
 She is an Indian actress and former beauty queen and winner of Femina Miss India World  2007 title. She was also a Channel V VJ. She hosted Get Gorgeous, a supermodel hunt on Channel V. She acted in crossover movie Brides Wanted and played groom’s best friend who helps him in his bride hunt. She also acted in the video of Australian rock group NXS’s Never Let You Go from the album Switch. She made her Bollywood debut opposite Abhishek Bacchan in the action film Game.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Beyonce and Kreayshawn go head to head







Time Out NY

Live Review




There were two hot-ticket shows last night: one starring a singer and entertainer at the peak of her powers, in control of her musical direction and multi-million-dollar empire, the other featuring a young upstart with a novelty hit ("Gucci Gucci"), barely old enough to drink.



It goes without saying that there’s a huge gap in terms of Beyoncé's and Kreayshawn's experience as performers; Beyoncé has been in the biz since she was nine, Kreayshawn, well, hasn’t (read our exclusive interview here). But the stark differences between these sold-out shows, and more importantly the approach each artist takes to putting on a show, do shine a light on pop culture and the way it’s shifted in just a decade.



Beyoncé makes much of the fact she was inspired by Michael Jackson and the Jackson Five (as does her husband, Jay-Z). Like Jackson’s career, Beyoncé's success is rooted equally in talent and elbow grease. Beyoncé learned her craft under the strict tutelage of her dad—that kind of charisma doesn't come without grind—and she was clear about the way she grafted from the beginning of last night's Roseland blowout, opening up with a Jackson song ("I Wanna Be Where You Are") and a story about her father cutting off Destiny's Child's first audition (complaining, "I can hear that snot in your nose"). The singer then rolled out her hits like an endless red carpet, existing just for Beyoncé to strut on. It was a glorious show, beginning with a medley of singles (and the stories behind them) and culminating with her new album, 4, being performed in its entirety. Lady Gaga, Frank Ocean, Maxwell, Jay-Z, Jennifer Hudson, the Dream, Ne-Yo, Kelly Rowland and Adele all watched the show, presumably feeling the same giddiness as the fans in the crowd (hip-hop kids, gay boys and well-coiffed girls). You simply can’t watch and not be awed.



Beyoncé wore a shimmering gold leotard while her hair was tossed and tousled by a wind machine. Kreayshawn, on the other hand, dressed down to prove her merit. For her official NYC debut, the Oakland rapper wore a horrible white T-shirt tucked into ratty cut-off shorts. Was she being one of the boys? Or is she embarrassed by the spotlight? Kreayshawn’s exposure to the mainstream and fame has come fast—probably too fast—and that’s how it goes in 2011. In a media meritocracy where every last YouTube commenter has a say, unseasoned performers like Kreayshawn get to sell out the Highline before they even have enough songs to fill a headline slot. (To be clear, by unseasoned we’re not talking about age; Shirley Temple was seasoned at six).



Kreayshawn’s large, straggly entourage crowded the stage, and she needed the support; she doesn’t yet know how to work a crowd and shared MC duties with White Girl Mob cohort V-Nasty (an impressive MC who apparently lost out on a big-bucks record deal because of her liberal use of the n–word). The show was a charming mess nonetheless. I like Kreayshawn because I think the handful of songs she has are great, and because she seems to genuinely enjoy what she does. She smiles a lot, which is rare, and her show felt like crashing a teenagers' house party.



Beyonce's stage at Roseland was packed too, heaving with musicians: A full band, string section, brass section (including gleaming white saxophones), astoundingly beautiful backing singers. And still it felt like Beyoncé was the only person onstage, such is her dazzle.



Of course it’s not bad that Kreayshawn’s live show is a bit of a shambles—that would be like saying that you have to know how to dance to have fun at a school disco. But what a thing to see: make-it-up-as-you-go opportunism contrasted so vividly with old-fashioned showbiz. In New York at least, there is still room for both.

Ke$ha







The multimillion-selling party girl takes some time out to chat.



Time Out NY

Interview



Sure, Ke$ha might gets her kicks out of making necklaces from fans’ teeth and licking rock stars’ faces (the proof awaits below), but the hard-living pop star is no dummy. On a break from her European tour, the “Tik Tok” hit-maker talked with us about life on the road, in advance of her Get $leazy blowout that’s coming to Jones Beach on Saturday 20.



You’ve just finished touring the U.K. Did you find it rougher there than here?

[Laughs] Oh, God! Yeah, in Scotland everybody was wasted by three in the afternoon—it was awesome! And last night I played here in London and we definitely got into messy, rowdy after-parties.



What’s the most bizarre thing you’ve seen in the past year of craziness?

Oh, you know, I’ve been all over the world…the most bizarre thing? I just played Glastonbury and I brought all my trannie friends, and we were all walking around and they were in thongs, with big fake boobs and giant wigs and wellies on. And one of them fell in the mud, so we all decided to just roll around in it together. So by the end of the night there was a bunch of trannies in thongs and wellies covered in mud, all drunk, singing along to U2. It was pretty good.



You strike me as being very hardy—you Tweeted that you actually like sleeping on the tour bus…

Well that’s definitely the image that I try to uphold, that I am tough, and I am confident. Because I think that that’s a good role model, to let things roll off your back and not take any negativity too seriously, and to really not give a fuck. Of course there are certain things that get to me, but I try and lead by example and show people that, especially with haters, that you should just ignore them.



Do you ever have to take quiet time?

[Laughs] I try to get in quiet time and book time, but really, the only time I ever get that is when I’m on an airplane—I have a fear of flying, but I actually love flying because it’s the only time I can sleep, and it’s the only time I get to read. Right now I’m reading Jitterbug Perfume, by Tom Robbins. He’s one of my favorite authors; he wrote Still Life with Woodpecker and he’s great.



You write your own songs and work hard. Do you ever feel like people underestimate you?

I mean, yes—but I’m living my dream. I’m so thankful every day I get to wake up and play music to people that show up to my gigs. So is it hard, is it a grueling schedule and do I work my ass off? Absolutely. But that’s not what I’m going to focus on, because I just feel so lucky, and it seems a little bit pretentious. And the party-girl image—it’s true, I do drink whiskey. But to maintain the kind of schedule I have and to work on all of my songs—and I play almost every instrument if you come and see my live show—there’s brains behind that. I write for other people, and I am a smart person. I don’t think you could be dumb and be conquering the world.



What makes a hit song? Is there math to it?

I think anybody would have a different answer to this, but for me what’s really important for my songs is that they’re honest [Emphatically] and they’re real. I can tell when someone’s singing a song and they don’t mean it. I write every song. It’s coming from me and my life and my experiences. So it’s all real. And when I can connect with somebody and I believe them, I think that makes the song more tangible to me and, you know, a hit.



What music is believable to you?

Well, for Animal, I’d always listened to Licensed to Ill, the Beastie Boys record. It was just so funny and irreverent and youthful and no matter what, when you put on that record it makes you wanna destroy and party and it puts you in a great mood. And I always wanted my record Animal to be like that. Just ’cause I believed them. They were out of control and running around New York City. And I loved it. But another song? Iggy Pop, “Nightclubbing”. I believe he goes nightclubbing at all hours and is kind of just lurking around, slithering around like a weirdo in the night. I believe him when he sings that.



Tell us about your Hands On Nashville project. That sounds pretty noble.…

Well, I’ve snuck into shows since I was 13 years old. And I know there are people who don’t want to break the law, but I thought I could give kids a way to get into my shows, by giving back to the community—they can earn their way into the show. I know when I was younger I couldn’t get a [break], so this is a way for them to do something good and get a free ticket to a dance party.



Your fans are so devoted, they’ve started sending you their teeth.

Ah! [Laughs]. They are devoted. One fan sent me one tooth, so I made a necklace out of it. But then I found a bunch of my baby teeth, and started realizing I would love to wear a piece of my fans’ bodies on me. I mean, it sounds kind of weird, but I’m very much into wearing gemstones and natural pieces of jewelry ’cause it makes me feel grounded. And I started thinking, maybe I could make some sort of garment out of my fans’ teeth. I have almost 500 and I’m still collecting more. I got four yesterday.



Are you at all grossed out by it? Or is it just, Yep, got the teeth?

No! That’s, like, the animal inside. I love bringing that out of people.



Is your mom a bit of a hippy chick?

Yeah. I mean, she’s definitely a hippy—she lived in a school bus, and then a teepee for part of her life. So I guess I get the free spirit from her. And then I get a little bit of the rowdiness from my brother.



There’s a messiness to what you do—a critic remarked on the fact you did a cartwheel onstage that was not very good but really joyous…

[Giggles] Well yeah, that sums up my message pretty accurately—that what I’m doing is messy and imperfect, but it’s really fun. And it’s just a big celebration of life, and nobody on my stage takes themselves very seriously. We’re good musicians and we play a good show, but we act a little bit like jackasses. I never want to be pretentious.



You recently licked Slash on the face.

Ah! Yeah. I was playing the Oxegen festival, and I’d just gotten off stage and I was on this high. So I get out of my car and see Slash doing an interview, and I try to go kiss him. But I couldn’t reach ’cause he’s really tall, so I just decide to lick him. [Laughs] It was a good one.



Is Ke$ha onstage a persona like Ziggy Stardust, or is that straight-up you?

I think it’s like me times ten.

Kreayshawn







The small MC with the big mouth sets the record straight.



Time Out NY

Preview




“I mean, I said I wanted to be a stripper seriously as a seven-year-old, but I didn’t know what a stripper was.…” Kreayshawn offers an incredulous whatever frown as she recounts a recent interview. Welcome to the world of being misquoted, we say. “I know!” Kreayshawn responds.



The tiny California MC is curled up on an ornate sofa at the Box, a fashionably clandestine Lower East Side hotspot, getting ready for a showcase. She’s still reeling from the news that she’s up for a trophy at the MTV Video Music Awards (“I’m the newest artist in the New Artist nominees!”), and as if to confirm her newfound celebrity status, the 21-year-old was misidentified just this morning: “I was in the black Navigator and I rolled down the window for a second, and these girls are saying, ‘[Gasp] Oh my God, is it really you, Lady Gaga?’ ” She laughs. “And I’m like, ‘No, I’m not Lady Gaga! But I’m even cooler! I’m Kreayshawn!’ ”



Is Kreayshawn cooler than Gaga? Her cool, controversial friends from back in the Bay (Odd Future, Lil B) indicate so, and her crisp beats are certainly fresher than Gaga’s hackneyed Eurodisco stylings. But in terms of having something to prove, and achieving any kind of enduring fame, Kreayshawn has her work cut out.



Her big-bucks record deal with Columbia is a result of the success of a novelty single, “Gucci Gucci,” directed at girls whose identities hinge on their branded accessories (“Them basic bitches wear that shit so I don’t even bother”). She’s been accused of minstrelsy, caused outrage by using the n-word in a tweet and reputedly got her start because Bruce Willis is her uncle.



But if Kreayshawn is a fake, she does an extremely convincing job of suggesting otherwise. She doesn’t seem to try too hard in person. Her laid-back attitude and slightly monotone speaking voice may suggest she’s bored, confident, insouciant or just really stoned—but it sure as hell doesn’t scream stage school, or even really show-off.



Kreayshawn categorically isn’t Bruce Willis’s niece. Born Natassia Gail Zolot, she was raised by her mother in Oakland. Mom was just 16 when she was born, and a member of garage band the Trashwomen; ergo, there wasn’t any money around, and Natassia was raised with music in the house. (Tito Puente, Screamin’ Jay Hawkins and Kool Keith were big hits with junior Kreayshawn). She enjoyed taking graffiti classes after school, and started directing music videos, working with rappers like Lil B.



“I definitely grew up running around Oakland streets,” she says, “And there’s a lot of sick shit.” Like what? “Like, child prostitution is everywhere, you know what I’m saying? Everywhere. The average age for a prostitute out there is 12, 13. There’s usually 250 murders a year and there’s only, like, 300,000 people living there, which means it’s a killing every other day. It’s hella crazy.”



The n-word scandal shocked her, as she was quoting a song lyric, she says. And in any case, Oakland is different: “It’s so multicultural and everyone’s blended in together; the only thing that we battle with in the Bay is just, like, fighting with the police, which brings everyone together.”



Nevertheless, Kreayshawn moved from the Bay to L.A. (“Small circles mean more and more drama, and you can only do so much out there”), where success found her, fast. She wrote “Gucci, Gucci” to amuse herself and her friends, but says she knew it was something special right away. “I never thought of signing to a label—it never even crossed my mind. [But] when I made ‘Gucci, Gucci,’ I was like, This song’s hell tight, showing my friends, listening to it all day. Then we made a video, and then it just rolled all over the Internet after that.”



Fact is, one can discuss Kreayshawn’s authenticity, her supposed right to make the kind of music that she wants to make, pretty much indefinitely. But it seems daft to deny that “Gucci, Gucci” is a brilliant pop song, and a shame to not be able to enjoy Kreayshawn’s posturing—this skinny little kid acting like a gangster, unbothered by notions of prettiness: “I got the swag, and it’s pumpin’ out my ovaries!”



“I’m a confident person,” she says quietly. “But people bring it up, that it’s going to be hard as a white female in this hip-hop game, you know? And I’m trying to say for me, I don’t wanna be looked at as a white rapper anyway. I wanna prove to everyone that I’m a artist. Sooner or later it’s not going to be hard at all, ’cause I’ll make my own name.” In the meantime, there are shows to play, awards to be (maybe) won. “I’m excited,” she says. “I’m excited just to be on the red carpet and kick it, you know?”

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Top 10 Eid Dresses collection 2011

Eid Dresses collection 2011 . There are present two Eid in the Middle East in a year. When the month of Ramadan inwards then after this holy month the Eid-ul-fitr is came. On that Eid day Muslims make a lot of dresses and also purchased very different and antique goods for themselves.
The dresses of the Eid is now easily available in the market and because the Eid-ul-Fitr will coming in spring/ Summer in this year that’s why there is present a many low weighted dresses are present in the Market.













Monday, August 8, 2011

Bon Iver







Time Out NY

Live preview




Does bigger mean better? Bon Iver expands its sound, and plays two huge shows.



Even if you’re not a fan, you are probably aware of the mythology that has sprung up around Bon Iver’s debut album, For Emma, Forever Ago, since its release in 2007—the lore being that before singer Justin Vernon became BFFs with Kanye West, he locked himself in a cabin for an entire winter and made the saddest songs ever recorded.



Well, if For Emma was the log cabin, then the newly released Bon Iver is the Playboy-style 1970s country retreat. The snow is still falling outside, the guitar still leans against the wall—it’s just that this time around, your feet are sinking into thick shag carpet, and you’re pushing ice cubes around a tumbler of Scotch.



What does this mean sonically? Simply that Vernon has traded acoustic guitars for glistening electric strings and pitter-pattering drums. Bon Iver is an album of textures, trading as much in space as it does in melody. This expansiveness is borne out in such far-flung song titles as “Calgary,” “Minnesota, WI” and “Perth.”



Factor in the notion that at least one song here sounds like a lost Bruce Hornsby and the Range cut, or perhaps an Alan Parsons Project single, and you can practically feel the velveteen sofas and see the mood lighting. Those who love a GHM (Good Hard Mope) may be more resistant to the charms of this new record; for the rest of us, Bon Iver invites us to luxuriate in melancholy. Expect some serious escapism at these two big shows.

Britney Spears / Taylor Swift







Time Out NY

Live Preview





The object of a million teen crushes goes head-to-head with the perennial teenager.



Little girls have big crushes on Taylor Swift, and it’s easy to see why—from the singer’s perfect curls and well-chosen outfits to the pearls of grown-up wisdom that seem to fall from her lips (“Words can break someone into a million pieces, but they can also put them back together,” she writes in the sleeve notes to her latest CD, Speak Now). Swift’s fans show their devotion online with such breathless comments as, “I wish I could have a wonderful sister like Taylor Swift.”



But how would the “Swifties” really react to having Taylor as their big sis, wafting around the house in a cloud of serenity and making the right choices all the time? (Even when Swift loses in love, she triumphs in song.) Surely there’d be a bit of irate foot-stomping and bad attitude.



While Britney Spears is Swift’s senior in years (a mother of two at 29) and in record sales, she is the younger sister to Swift’s shining example. Spears is in defiant mode pretty much all the time; her new video, “I Wanna Go,” has the pop star cursing at journalists, grabbing a fan’s crotch and flashing a police officer. She’s awkward, too; after nearly two decades in the game, Spears still stands pigeon-toed, not quite sure what to do with her hands.



For tweenage girls, quaking understandably at the prospect of their first kiss, Taylor is obviously the winning choice, at least fantasywise. To those of us past our door-slamming teens, however, naughty Brit is by far the more appealing option. We’ll take our ticket with a pair of ripped tights, please.