Fan Spotted Jackos Ghost At Neverland

Posted by John

Michael Jackson's ghost has been spotted at Neverland. Fans of the late pop star - who died of a suspected cardiac arrest on June 25, aged 50 - claim the image of his spirit can be seen in the background of a TV show filmed inside his beloved ranch. Learn more ...

The Life Of Mickel Jackson

Posted by John

Michael Jackson has passed away. He was pronounced dead some time back. I have compiled some pictures below. Check them out and leave your condolence messages below. Please respect the dead. Michael was a world wide phenomenon and last of the breeds. They don’t make em like that any more.

Top 12 Americas Most Endangered Foods

Posted by John

Curious about the endangered foods native to your region? Check out some of these finds from the new book Renewing America's Food Traditions. The list is broken down by foodsheds across the country, so named by the Renewing America's Food Traditions collaborative to highlight foods that once served as ecological and cultural keystones .Learn more ...

Finally Desksense Launches Today (after much Market PR)

Posted by John

Desksense , the best mini-security solution for individuals and small organisation. It's a high end product, designed in MS .Net Framework, to provide end-to-end security for your PC. Desksense uses NTFS File system, and System Policies to set rules for your computer.....

Lit A Candle Before Michael Jackson Funeral Time

Posted by John

Lit A Candle Before Michael Jackson Funeral Time... http://www.hothollywoodcelebrities.com is the site where many people has gathered from the very morning at this day 7th of July to dedicate a candle for Great Micheal Jackson.Learn more ...

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When A Fashion Goes Wild And Crazy - Hot Pics

Posted by Editor John On Friday, January 02, 2009 0 comments
Looking for that purr-fect way to flaunt your wild side? Deck up in animal prints. The zebra stripes, the leopard dots, the cheetah prints, they make a style statement any day. See these celebs show off their wild streak.

When it comes to flaunting her wild side, trust Paris Hilton to come up with the best. Svelte and sexy, Paris shows off an amazing leopard print with lots of white and gray splashed accentuating her curves.
In photo: Paris Hilton launches her perfume 'Heiress,' with her mother Kathy and father Rick in attendance, at the BT2 Store on Novemver 11, 2006 in Dublin, Ireland.

The swirl of the skirt is so feminine yet so carefree. Subtle yet sexy, Izabel Goulart leaves nothing to imagination as she pirouettes in a wild cheetah print.
In photo: Model Izabel Goulart arrives at the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show held at the Kodak Theatre on November 16, 2006 in Hollywood, California. The show will be broadcast December 5, 2006 on CBS.

Leopard prints are never out of fashion. Be it a short dress or a gown, it blends well with blacks to give you a classy look as Denise Richards proves here.
In photo: Actress Denise Richards walks the runway during the 'MAX Factor Salutes Hollywood' fashion show March 14, 2007 at Social Hollywood in Hollywood, California.

Voluptuous or thin, animal prints, help you camouflage your worry areas making you look trim and set to turn heads. Shakira carries it off in style.
In photo: Singer Shakira arrives at the Los Angeles premiere of New Line Cinema's 'Love in the Time of Cholera' held at the Cinerama Dome

This Barbadian singer, model and designer never gets it wrong when it comes to what she wears. And just like her, a leopard print is a must have for your wardrobe this season.
In photo: Singer Rihanna attends the annual Bambi Awards 2007 in Duesseldorf, Germany.

Be it party wear or sexy lingerie, leopard prints always do the trick. A dash of blue just accentuates the sexy and wild touch.
In photo: Model walks the catwalk during the Cheetah collection show as part of the Myer Spring/Summer Collection Launch at the Carriageworks on August 8, 2007 in Sydney, Australia.

The earthy hues blend perfectly well with the animal prints as model Petra Nemcova shows us. In photo: Model Petra Nemcova arrives at the Imitation by Imitation of Christ launch party at Snitch night club on September 4, 2007 in New York City.

A shade darker, yet making a style statement is Jessica Simpson. A neat A line cut with a clutch bag completes that perfect night out.
In photo: Actress and recording artist Jessica Simpson attends the 11th Annual Ace Awards at Cipriani's 42nd Street November 05, 2007 in New York City.

Black and whites may be yesteryear, but work magic when paired with deep necks and a pair of hoops. The animal print just adds a dash of mystery.
In photo: Actress Lisa Rinna arrives at the 14th annual Screen Actors Guild awards held at the Shrine Auditorium on January 27, 2008 in Los Angeles, California.

Bronze or blonde, animal prints highlight your skin tones. Singer Jamelia carries off a strappy animal print with Aclan.
In photo: Singer Jamelia attends the Elle Style Awards 2008 at The Westway on February 12, 2008 in London, England.

A long gown and a clasp in animal print completes that evening out for Sharon Stone. Throw in some necklaces and other accessories and you are all set to make an impact
In photo: Actress Sharon Stone arrives at amfAR's Cinema Against AIDS 2008 benefit held at Le Moulin de Mougins during the 61st International Cannes Film Festival on May 22, 2008 in Mougins, France.

Bold and sexy, animal prints are hot even in lingerie. A must have for honeymooners and wild chicks.
In photo: A Model wears creation of Wonderbra & Jenny Packham's new lingerie collection at the Old Factory studio on November 28, 2006 in London, England.

If you do not feel like flaunting the animal prints, add them to your accessories. A hat, a clasp in animal prints never really goes out of style.
In photo
: Cheryl Cole from Girls Aloud launches the new KitKat Senses bar at The Soho Hotel on March 26, 2008 in London, England.

Be it casual or a black tie affair, you can always have a bit of animal print on you. Functional and chic, a bag as the one Madonna carries could make eyes trail you!
In photo:
Singer Madonna arrives at the Atlantic Records building on November 1, 2006 in New York City.

Animal prints go well with all shades and all colours. From a dress to footwear, it makes heads turn as Anna Kurnikova does here.
In photo:
Tennis player Anna Kournikova arrives at the 22nd Annual Sports Spectacular at the Hyatt Regency Century Plaza on June 3, 2007 in Century City, California.


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Top 5 Modern Adandoned Cities

Posted by Editor John On Friday, January 02, 2009 0 comments
1. Centralia, Pennsylvania : At one time, the tow­n of Centralia, Penn., supported almost 3,000 residents, with stores, churches, hotels and bars. It was a boomtown, established in 1866 and built from the profits of coal mined out of the Pennsylvania hillside. It was this same coal that led to Centralia’s almost complete demise.

City workers burning trash in an open pit in 1962 accidentally lit a vein of anthracite coal, part of the vast deposit that lay beneath the town. Once lit, the coal carried the flames to adjacent veins and deposits, eventually causing a huge underground coal fire. The city tried for years to put the fire out. Techniques like mining burning coal, digging trenches to cut the fire off from the rest of the coal beds, and dousing the embers with water all failed to produce the desired effect. Officials concluded the best chance to save the town was to dig an extensive network of trenches to isolate the hot spots. The exorbitant cost of the undertaking kept the plan from ever coming to fruition.
We Can't Forget San Zhi

The tourist resort of San Zhi, Taiwan, was an ultra-modern development created by the Taiwanese government in the early 1980s. Its unique, podular structure were never enjoyed, however it was abandoned before it was ever inhabited. Western expatriates living in Taiwan report a string of job-site deaths that led to the idea that the development was haunted, which left it unused.

In 1981, with the fire burning steadily for almost 20 years, the last straw came for most of the town’s residents. A 12-year-old found the ground beneath his feet had literally opened up. T­he boy managed to grab onto a root and was rescued by his cousin from the 150-feet deep sinkhole filled with poisonous carbon monoxide.

The federal government allocated $42 million for the re­location of Centralia’s residents in 1982, essentially declaring the town a lost cause. Most Centralians took the offer of help, leaving the town almost entirely abandoned. A few chose to stay; around 20 residents remain in Centralia as squatters in what were once their legitimately owned homes. The government closed the main egress into town, Route 61, detouring traffic, and effectively cutting off the burning town and its remaining inhabitants from the rest of the world. Those roads that haven’t been reclaimed by vegetation are buckled and cracked, with white noxious gas spewing from underground. Most of the buildings either caught fire or were leveled to keep them from burning. The town’s cemetery and a few houses, some still inhabited, remain.

2. Hashima Island, Japan : One of the sagging apartment blocks on Hashima Island, Japan. At one time, units like this housed inhabitants of the most densely populated city on Earth.

Hashima Island is a small, 15-acre outcropping of rock off the coast of Nagasaki, Japan. Although tiny in size, the island was important in magnitude: It was a major coal mining center for Japan for almost a full century. The island sits atop ­a coal deposit that descends well into the ocean floor beneath. Once it was tapped, Japan’s Mitsubishi Corporation purchased Hashima from the local families who owned it in 1890. That's when the heyday of Hashima Island began.

Since it’s located about 18 miles from Nagasaki, it made more sense for Mitsubishi to build housing on the island, rather than ferry its employees to and from the island every day. Squat concrete apartment blocks were constructed one at a time. Space was at a premium, so the buildings went up instead of out, and families were jammed together in cramped lodging, sharing bathrooms and kitchens.

Amenities like a movie theater, doctor’s office, arcades, restaurants and bars were added later, and the city became a thriving, microcosmic community. The entire complex was linked via underground tunnels. At its peak in 1959, Hashima Island was the most densely populated city on Earth, with 5,259 inhabitants on the small, rocky outcropping .

After World War II, employees found their lives on the island much improved. Modern luxuries like televisions, radios and the movie theater were introduced post-World War II. And the formerly unvegetated island sprang to life with rooftop gardens planted and maintained by the island’s employee-residents. The golden age of Hashima Island was pretty short-lived, however. In January 1974, with petroleum supplanting coal as the world’s preferred energy source, Mitsubishi revealed the mine would be closed. By the following April, the last of the island’s residents were ferried onto the mainland, and the island was permanently closed.

The structures of the island are in remarkably good shape, considering their more than three decades of neglect. Some stone walls have caved and crumbled, but the concrete structures remain largely intact. Windows are broken and railings along the apartment’s balconied corridors are in a dangerous state of disrepair, but corridors within the company’s offices are surprisingly undamaged. The city continues to sit silently offshore, an abandoned ghost island, its only inhabitants stray cats and the occasional illegal visitor. The island may enjoy more visitors in the future, though. Japanese officials have applied to make Hashima Island a World Heritage Site .

3. (Parts of) Detroit, Mich : The arcade with a view of the ticket counters at the abandoned Central Michigan Depot in Detroit.

Some modern abandoned cit­ies are actually parts of functioning cities. Perhaps the best example of an abandoned district is found within Detroit. The Motor City ­gets its name from its former role as the world’s seat of the automotive industry. Henry Ford’s refinement of the assembly line led to cheaper, mass-produced cars and trucks in the 1920s, and the city expanded quickly. By the 1950s, Detroit, with its two million residents, was America’s third-largest city.

With employment rates and income high in the area, opulent buildings began to dot downtown Detroit’s skyline. Ornately detailed architecture adorned the city’s theaters and office buildings. It was a bustling city, and its buildings reflected the power and the wealth the automobile industry accumulated.

By the 1970s and '80s, however, the American auto industry entered a decline. Detroit, inextricably attached to car manufacturing, reflected this downturn. In 1979, Detroit’s Big Three carmakers (Chevrolet, Ford and General Motors) produced 90 percent of all of the vehicles sold in the U.S.; by 2005, that figure was down to 40 percent. Since Detroit was something of a boomtown -- based on cars, not gold -- it couldn’t help but suffer when car manufacturers faced competition from overseas automakers.

But it wasn’t only competition from foreign car manufacturers that led to the demise of downtown Detroit. Suburbanization played a role as well; as people began moving out of the city, their money went with them. The same holds true for the carmakers. Automotive factories became bigger as the car boom went on. With land in the city at a premium, car companies built newer, bigger facilities in the suburbs. Whole sections of Detroit were left abandoned, while in other cases, slumping buildings sat empty alongside struggling buildings that remained open.

Detroit began to crumble. Building owners simply left their investments to decay once they found they couldn’t lease or sell them. Others tried to revitalize or redevelop buildings into new businesses; for example, some stage theaters found new lives as movie theaters. Ultimately, a lack of customers caused many buildings to simply be abandoned. For years, office buildings, hotels, churches, theaters, homes, factories and stores were boarded up and left to rot. Vandals broke windows, spray painted messages and picked mementos from the architecture. Within these buildings, sunlight streams through cracks. Old furniture is overturned in unused hotel rooms. Desks still stand in empty offices. Even the city’s old train depot -- a massive, 18-story transportation hub -- has been abandoned, its intricate shell a reminder of its past importance.

4. Humberstone and Santa Laura, Chile : Inside the school in the abandoned saltpeter mining town of Humberstone, Chile, taken July 2006.

Humberstone, Chile, was founded in 1862 as the nitrate mining center of Oficina La Palma. In 1925, it was renamed Humberstone after the British mine manager who bolstered the small town's wealth . Both Humberstone and nearby Santa Laura boomed together from their shared nitrate production. The towns saw their heydays as a combined nitrate mining and processing center in the 1930s and '40s . Nitrate is an essential ingredient in fertilizer, but in the '30s, a cheap synthetic substitute was create­d, effectively rendering nitrate (also called saltpeter) obsolete.

With the need for mined nitrate diminished, the towns of Humberstone and Santa Laura began to decline alongside the industry they were built on. The towns suffered a slow demise, taking three decades to become completely abandoned. It wasn’t until 1961 that the factory offices (which had continued to support a handful of residents) shut down completely.

The towns were left to sit as they were when the last residents left, the dry sand from the encroaching desert drifting through the abandoned school and the theater. At the factories, the machinery remains and the workers’ houses are around today, although a bit worse for the wear. The Humberstone hotel's swimming pool is drained now, but its diving board is still in place.

5 . Prypiat, Ukraine : The bumper car ride in the abandoned city of Prypiat, evacuated after the 1986 Chernobyl power plant explosion.

On April­ 26, 1986­, an explosion occurred at the No. 4 reactor of the nuclear power station at Chernobyl, in the Soviet state of Ukraine. It was the worst disaster in the history of nuclear energy production. The radiation spread by the explosion resulted in thousands of deaths in Ukraine, Russia and surrounding nations by 2006. Soviet officials were criticized for not moving quickly enough to warn residents of the danger. Cities were eventually evacuated, and the government constructed an 18-mile exclusion zone -- a closed-off area surrounding the decommissioned power plant .


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Best Of New Year's Traditions And Superstitions

Posted by Editor John On Wednesday, December 31, 2008 0 comments
Fireworks : Fireworks, cheering, singing and noisemakers on New Year’s Eve are believed to scare away evil spirits. Do we really need an excuse to set off fireworks? Probably not. But we’ll take this opportunity to light the sky (and maybe the grass in our neighbor’s yard). Music and singing are a part of most celebrations and I’m pretty sure the 20 people doing a poor job of singing “Don’t Stop Believing” at 1AM aren’t concerned with keeping evil away in the new year.

Making Resolutions : Many believe the first day of the New Year should be spent thinking about the past year and resolving to improve oneself in the coming year. And while the media recycles old stories about quitting smoking or getting out of debt and your parents use new year’s resolutions as a guilt-inducing tactic to get you to move out of their basement or pay back what you owe them not all resolutions have to be a life-altering ordeal. Resolve small in the New Year and you’ll feel good that you got something accomplished.

Paying Off Your Debt : It sounds like a resolution but you’re supposed to do this before January 1. This way you’re even when the new year arrives and you start with a fresh slate. On New Year’s Day you shouldn’t pay out anything or make loans because this signals money leaving you. So buy your lottery tickets on New Year’s Eve.

Kissing at Midnight : New Year’s Eve ranks second behind Valentine’s Day as the worst day to be single because when that clock strikes midnight everybody’s smooching but you. Granted, this is only painful for about 60 seconds (unlike Valentine’s Day which serves up a full 24 hours of candy hearts, barely clothed cupids and ridiculous romantic gestures). The New Year’s Eve kiss is a symbol that your affection and closeness will last all year. So don’t grab some weirdo and kiss them, find a friend and give ‘em a hug.

Singing “Auld Lang Syne” : A Scottish poem from the 1700’s; it literally means “old long since” or, in American, terms “days of long ago” or “the good old days.”

The song goes as such:

Should old acquaintance be forgot,
and never brought to mind?
Should old acquaintance be forgot,
and days of auld lang syne?

CHORUS:
For auld lang syne, my dear,
for auld lang syne,
we’ll take a cup o’ kindness yet,
for auld lang syne.


First Footer : The first person to visit your home on New Year’s Day has significance. It is considered good luck for a man to be the first person to cross your threshold (you have to let him in; he shouldn’t use a key to let himself in). It’s even better luck if he’s tall and good looking with dark hair. I’ve read specifically that the first footer should not have flat feet, crossed-eyes or a unibrow. So Frida Kahlo and Bert from Sesame Street should not be let in. Best of all, the first footer should bring along gifts like bread, fresh fruit, salt, and wine. If you’re a handsome man delivering wine on New Year’s Day, I’m guessing not many people are going to turn you away.

Lay Low & Do (Pretty Much) Nothing : A lot of info out there said not to do laundry or dishes (since you “wash away” luck and these can cause a death in the family in the coming year), not to take anything out of the house (including trash) and not to wash your hair. Sounds like the hang-over crowd was looking for a little justification to lie on the couch all day.

Eat, Eat! : While you are lazing about on the couch, make sure you are eating luck foods:
• Grapes – 12 of them, one for every month of the year
• Pork – because pigs root forward when they eat while chickens scratch backward (and bacon is delicious)
• Black eyed peas – here’s a good luck recipe that’s quite tasty and gets you your black-eyed peas and pork all in one meal
• Lentils – which resemble coins
• Greens such as collard greens, chard, cabbage and kale – the folds of the greens resemble money
Many of the foods that are “good” to eat resemble money or have to do with moving forward.

Nothing Should Leave the House : Here’s one that had to be thought up by someone who didn’t want to run errands. Nothing should be taken out of the house on New Year’s Day. If you’ve got things to give to others, return to stores, etc. put them in your car on New Year’s Eve because they shouldn’t leave the house on New Year’s Day. Some people allow items to leave the house after something has been brought in. The idea here is that something should be added to your house before anything is taken away. So if you’re a First Footer with a goodie basket, you best buy that stuff on your way over.


What You Do at New Years, You Will Do All Year : While most of these superstitions and traditions are meant to usher in good luck while keeping bad luck at bay, what you do can reflect how you’ll live in the coming year. Recovering from a big party the night before? Your year will likely include being surrounded by friends and good times. Motivating to work out on New Year’s Day? Well look who might just drop 10lbs in the new year. Cleaning and organizing around the house? Sounds like a year full of getting things done. Sleeping the day away? Maybe you won’t be getting too much done in the new year. Reading Top 10 lists? Sounds good to us. Happy New Year.


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Amazing Ice Lantern Festival

Posted by Editor John On Monday, December 29, 2008 0 comments
Visitors gather outside the gate of Zhaolin park at the ice lantern festival in Harbin, China ..

Every year the Harbin ice lantern festival opens on 22 December ..

The event, recognised as home to ice and snow art in China, lasts until February ..

This year is the 35th ice lantern festival. The festival is internationally renowned for its exquisite sculptures..

This year's ice lantern festival has over 2,000 illuminated ice scultpures on display..

It began in 1985 and considers itself to be China's greatest ice artwork festival, attracting hundreds of thousands of visitors..

The city's location in northeast China accounts for its arctic climate which provides abundant ice and snow..


This year, the festival is Disney sponsored and themed...


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