Attractive

Thứ Bảy, 11 tháng 2, 2012

Al Jazeera English


Whitney Houston after performing I Didn't Know My Own Strength at the 2009 American Music Awards [Reuters]
Whitney Houston, who reigned as pop music's queen until her majestic voice and regal image were ravaged by drug use, erratic behaviour and a tumultuous marriage to singer Bobby Brown, has died aged 48.

Publicist Kristen Foster confirmed on Saturday that the singer had died, but the cause of death was unknown.

Al Jazeera's Rob Reynolds reported from Los Angeles that she had been seen at public events in good form, and had been working on post-production for the film 'Sparkle' in recent weeks, a film which she was producing.

She died at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles, where she had been staying for the past two weeks, he said.

Kelley Carter, an entertainment journalist, said the news was all the more tragic and surprising given the star’s recent good spirits.

Carter has seen Houston shortly before her’s death on Saturday.

"I saw her and spoke to her and never would have thought something like this would happen just a day and a half later," Carter said. "All of her previous problems with drug were behind her."

An ambulance had been called to the hotel at around 3pm local time but she was pronounced dead when it arrived.
Golden girl

At her peak, Houston was the golden girl of the music industry.
From the middle 1980s to the late 1990s, she was one of the world's best-selling artists.
She wowed audiences with effortless, powerful, and peerless vocals that were rooted in the black church but made palatable to the masses with a pop sheen.
From the middle 1980s to the late 1990s, Houston was one of the world's best-selling artists [Reuters]
News of Houston's death came on the eve of music's biggest night - the Grammy Awards. It is a showcase where she once reigned, and her death was sure to cast a heavy pall on Sunday's ceremony.
Houston's longtime mentor Clive Davis was to hold his annual concert and dinner on Saturday; it was unclear if it was going to go forward.

Her success carried her beyond music to movies, where she starred in hits like The Bodyguard and Waiting to Exhale.

At the height of her career she had the perfect voice and the perfect image: a gorgeous singer who had sex appeal but was never overtly sexual, who maintained perfect poise.

Houston influenced a generation of younger singers, from Christina Aguilera to Mariah Carey, who when she first came out sounded so much like Houston that many thought it was Houston.
A cautionary tale

But by the end of her career, Houston became a stunning cautionary tale of the toll of drug use.
Her album sales plummeted and the hits stopped coming; her once serene image was shattered by a wild demeanour and bizarre public appearances.
She confessed to abusing cocaine, marijuana and pills, and her once pristine voice became raspy and hoarse, unable to hit the high notes as she had during her prime.
"The biggest devil is me. I'm either my best friend or my worst enemy," Houston told ABC's Diane Sawyer in an infamous 2002 interview with then-husband Brown by her side.

It was a tragic fall for a superstar who was one of the top-selling artists in pop music history, with more than 55 million records sold in the US alone.

She seemed to be born into greatness, the daughter of gospel singer Cissy Houston, the cousin of 1960s pop diva Dionne Warwick and the goddaughter of Aretha Franklin.

Houston first started singing in the church as a child. In her teens, she sang backup for Chaka Khan, Jermaine Jackson and others, in addition to modelling. It was around that time when music mogul Clive Davis first heard Houston perform.

"The time that I first saw her singing in her mother's act in a club ... it was such a stunning impact," Davis told "Good Morning America".

"To hear this young girl breathe such fire into this song. I mean, it really sent the proverbial tingles up my spine," he added.

Before long, the rest of the country would feel it, too. Houston made her album debut in 1985 with "Whitney Houston," which sold millions and spawned hit after hit.
Saving All My Love for You brought her a first Grammy, for best female pop vocal. How Will I Know, You Give Good Love and The Greatest Love of All also became hit singles.
'Cool self-assurance'

The New York Times wrote that Houston "possesses one of her generation's most powerful gospel-trained voices, but she eschews many of the churchier mannerisms of her forerunners.
She uses ornamental gospel phrasing only sparingly, and instead of projecting an earthy, tearful vulnerability, communicates cool self-assurance and strength, building pop ballads to majestic, sustained peaks of intensity."
Whitney Houston

Won two Emmy Awards and six Grammy Awards, along with hundreds of other honours in her lifetime
Remains the only artist to have seven consecutive No. 1 Billboard Hot 100 hits
The 1985 debut album, Whitney Houston, was the best-selling debt album by a woman artist at the time of its release
First acting role was the lead in The Bodyguard(1992)
Her decision not to follow the more soulful inflections of singers like Franklin drew criticism by some who saw her as playing down her black roots to go pop and reach white audiences. The criticism would become a constant refrain through much of her career. She was even booed during the "Soul Train Awards" in 1989.

"Sometimes it gets down to that, you know?" she told Katie Couric in 1996.
"You're not black enough for them. I don't know. You're not R&B enough. You're very pop. The white audience has taken you away from them," she said.

In 1992, she became a star in the acting world with The Bodyguard.

Despite mixed reviews, the story of a singer [Houston] guarded by a former Secret Service agent [Kevin Costner] was an international success.

It also gave her perhaps her most memorable hit: a searing, stunning rendition of Dolly Parton's I Will Always Love You, which sat atop the charts for weeks.
It was Grammy's record of the year and best female pop vocal, and the Bodyguardsoundtrack was named album of the year.

But during these career and personal highs, Houston was using drugs.
In an interview with Oprah Winfrey in 2010, she said by the time The Preacher's Wife was released, "[doing drugs] was an everyday thing. ... I would do my work, but after I did my work, for a whole year or two, it was every day. ... I wasn't happy by that point in time. I was losing myself."

In the interview, Houston blamed her rocky marriage to Brown, which included a charge of domestic abuse against Brown in 1993. They divorced in 2007.

Houston would go to rehab twice before she would declare herself drug-free to Winfrey in 2010. But in the interim, there were missed concert dates, a stop at an airport due to drugs, and public meltdowns.

She was so startlingly thin during a 2001 Michael Jackson tribute concert that rumours spread she had died the next day.
Her crude behaviour and jittery appearance on Brown's reality show, Being Bobby Brown, was an example of her sad decline. Her Sawyer interview, where she declared "crack is whack," was often parodied. She dropped out of the spotlight for a few years.
Cancelled concerts

Houston staged what seemed to be a successful comeback with the 2009 album I Look To You. The album debuted on the top of the charts, and would eventually go platinum.

Things soon fell apart. A concert to promote the album on Good Morning America went awry as Houston's voice sounded ragged and off-key. She blamed an interview with Winfrey for straining her voice.

A world tour launched overseas, however, only confirmed suspicions that Houston had lost her treasured gift, as she failed to hit notes and left many fans unimpressed; some walked out.
Cancelled concert dates raised speculation that she may have been abusing drugs, but she denied those claims and said she was in great shape, blaming illness for cancellations.

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Pogrebnyak scores on English debut

Fulham's Pavel Pogrebnyak (L) challenges Stoke City's Ryan Shawcross during their English Premier League soccer match at Craven Cottage in London, February 11, 2012. (Reuters / Paul Hackett)
Fulham's Pavel Pogrebnyak (L) challenges Stoke City's Ryan Shawcross during their English Premier League soccer match at Craven Cottage in London, February 11, 2012. (Reuters / Paul Hackett)

Russian international, Pavel Pogrebnyak, has got his name on the scoreboard in his very first game for Fulham in the English Premier League.
Pogrebnyak’s effort helped his side snatch a valuable 2-1 home win against Stoke City.
The 28-year-old collected the ball in the middle of the visitors’ box in the 16th minute and with his left foot fired an unstoppable shot into the upper corner of Thomas Sorensen’s net.
But the Russian’s debut was marred as he had to leave the pitch with half an hour left to play due to a leg injury.
"He did well, you always have to wait and see how a new player will do when coming from abroad, but it was a good start for him. He managed to score too, so that will be a big boost," Martin Jol, the Fulham manager, said of Pogrebnyak. “English football is different from what he is used to and today he saw two sides of the game here. At times he got clattered, but following some lovely football he scored a good goal. I think in the first ten minutes he realised just how different the Premier League is."
Pogrebnyak joined Fulham from German side Stuttgart during the transfer window.
The tall striker, who also used to play for Spartak Moscow and Zenit St Pete, has 30 caps and eight goals for Russia.
The Great Po is one of the candidates to travel to Euro 2012 with his country’s national team this summer.

Judo champ Kazakova aiming for podium at London Paralympics

2004 Paralympics champion in judo, Madina Kazakova, says she plans to retire after grabbing some silverware in London 2012.
While the Russians dominate at the Winter Paralympics, it is the Chinese who are unquestionable leaders when it comes to the summer portion of the Games.
However, the biggest country on Earth could put up a decent fight against the world's most-populous nation as soon as this summer.

“The upcoming Paralympics in London could become the visually impaired Madina Kazakova's third successful podium attempt,” 
Sir Philip Craven, International Paralympic Committee president, stressed.
The Dagestan native won her maiden Paralympic gold at the 2004 Athens Games, but failed to repeat that feat four years later in Beijing, settling for bronze.
But London is slowly dawning on Madina as she dreams of ending her career with another piece of Paralympic silverware.

“I was thinking of retiring after the 2004 Games, I told myself: ‘This is it. This is the last time,’”
 Kazakova told RT. “But then I got to go to the Games again. But this time I’m definitely going to retire.”
Dagestan's sports world is mostly famous for its multiple freestyle wrestling Olympic champions. This Russian republic is predominantly Muslim and the majority of athletes are male.
Madina Kazakova's example could prop a rise in demand for women in sports, which are already becoming a regular sight in Dagestan's gyms.
“I don’t get negative comments that often,” she said. “Of course, some people say that girls should stay home and cook dinner. But none of my friends or fellow athletes would ever say such a thing. They always treat me with respect. They are always happy for me. None of them thinks that I am doing something inappropriate.”
Madina's success in life spans far beyond her sporting glory. Until recently she had the full support of her family and friends.
But that circle has now been complemented by another two die-hard supporters – her husband and newborn son, who will hopefully witness their favorite woman reach the top of the Paralympic podium once more.

British laughter in the Falkland Islands

As the 30th anniversary of the Falklands War nears, Western media show angry leaders and “mounting tensions between Britain and Argentina”. In fact, little stops the UK from reconfirming sovereignty in the oil-rich and strategically located islands.
So, when the UK dispatched its most potent destroyer, the 8,000-ton state-of-the-art HMS Dauntless, and a nuclear sub to the Falklands, it was most probably prepared for Argentine President Cristina Kirchner’s reaction. 
Whilst over the past three decades the British have built up a powerful military nuclear base in the Falklands to serve UK-US strategic interests in the region, Argentina had US-brand Money Power “democracy” imposed upon it, as punishment for daring to recover the Falklands in 1982.  
Thus, since 1983 when “democracy” kicked in, successive governments have gone from bad to worse, sinking Argentina deeper and deeper. Starting with president Raúl Alfonsín (who veered us straight into hyperinflationary collapse in 1989), followed by presidents Carlos Menem (who with his Trilateral Commission Foreign and later Finance Minister Domingo Cavallo dismantled Argentina’s economy and military); Fernando de la Rúa (who in 2001 blindly led Argentina to its worst financial and banking meltdown… and even brought Cavallo back!); Eduardo Duhalde; Néstor Kirchner and now his hand-picked successor-wife Cristina Kirchner.  
The Kirchners actually sympathize so much with terrorist groups from the seventies (whose terror attacks led to the 1976 military coup), that today many of the latter hold key government posts.  
These successive governments all had something in common: they upheld two key factors, fully aligned to Global Power Masters’ requirements and needs:
1) NEVER investigate the origin of Argentina’s huge Public Debt initiated under the illegal military-civilian regime that usurped power from 1976 to 1983. That debt should be repudiated as “Odious Debt” under international law; and in order to ensure that this never ever happens and that the Global Power Masters may wield full control over Argentina:
2) DISMANTLE ARGENTINA’S ARMED FORCES – This has been completely achieved, and today Argentina’s military credibility and dissuasion are all but nothing; not only vis-a-vis the UK (and US) against whom we went to war in 1982, but also compared to traditional UK-US allied neighbors like Brazil and Chile who maintain modern, professional and credible armed forces.
So, when president Kirchner went on nationwide radio and TV last Tuesday to announce what her government would do about Britain’s renewed colonial aggression, she said that: 
1) Argentina would denounce the UK at the UN for being “colonialist” (…the Brits have only been doing this for about five centuries!); 
2) The government will release the contents of the “Rattenbach Report” prepared by a long-dead general almost 30 years ago which states that the military junta under General Leopoldo Galtieri made every political, diplomatic, military and strategic blunder in the book (Ha! As though we didn’t know that!!), and
3) Argentina will never ever dare take military action against the UK in the Falklands-Malvinas (as though we could!)
All of this was music to London’s ears.
But why all the noise and why now?  It is and has always been about four key British and American geopolitical objectives:
1) Maintaining geopolitical prowess in the South Atlantic;
2) Projecting US and UK power over Antarctica, where UK and US territorial claims overlap with Argentina’s (which has all but withdrawn from the White Continent) and Chile’s (not a problem as they are traditional geopolitical allies of Britain);
3) Projecting US and UK power over Argentina’s immensely rich and grossly under-populated Patagonia Region facing the Falklands/Malvinas; and last but not least…
4) Oil.
Oil is always an issue with the “Western Democracies”, which their subservient global media downplay.  Whether in Libya, Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Venezuela or the South Atlantic.  
The truth is that recent estimates indicate that under the Continental Shelf of the Argentine Sea in the South Atlantic, where the Falklands jut out above the relatively shallow waters, there’s around 8.3 billion barrels of oil. That’s three times UK reserves, ranking 15th in global reserves.
Not surprisingly, billions of pounds and dollars are rushing in to exploit Falklands oil, so important at a time of growing turmoil in the Middle East and Persian Gulf.  Oil giants like Hess, Noble and Murphy (US), Cairn Energy, Premier Oil (UK) and, notably, BP’s Deepwater Horizon partner Anadarko Oil from Houston are all in top gear.  
Anadarko is interesting as its board includes General Kevin Chilton (former commander of US StratCom) and former Pentagon officer Preston M Geren III.   Rockhopper UK Exploration, in turn, announced it has already struck reserves estimated around 700 million barrels off the Falklands.
Keen observers living on Argentina’s Patagonian coasts say that, when the wind blows in from the Falklands, you can almost hear the British laughing at Cristina Kirchner’s Tuesday announcement.
Basic geopolitical common sense indicates that maintaining a powerful military is absolutely vital for any self-respecting country. Not to attack anybody – as the US, UK, NATO and Israel constantly do – but rather as defence and dissuasion against those very countries.  In Argentina’s case, England has a bad track record, having repeatedly tried to invade it over the past 300 years.
But, alas! Cristina Kirchner is only doing what all Argentine politicians do so well: that is to say, nothing.  In fact, her “announcements” last Tuesday were applauded by her own party and almost everyone in the so-called “opposition”.  Clearly, she’s not the sole culprit.  Back in 1990, under president Carlos Menem Argentina signed what many here consider its “Treaty of Versailles” (alluding to the devastating treaty imposed on defeated Germany in 1919 by the US, UK and France). 
Menem’s Foreign Minister Domingo Cavallo negotiated unconditional surrender with Britain, under a treaty that became Argentine Law No. 24.184, almost unanimously passed in Congress on 11th December 1990, opening our economy to unconditional deregulation, privatisation and indebtedness to global banks and dismantling our armed forces, notably in the critical southern part of the country.  Similar treaties then followed with the US and EU.
The truth is that today Argentina is not a sovereign country. National independence means there is a willingness to be free, even at the cost of war.  In fact, the last bastion of national sovereignty for any country is its armed forces.  
Not so Argentina.  We have no credible armed forces so, rather than being sovereign and independent, Argentina is merely “not yet invaded”.  
Were London, Washington, Brasilia, Santiago, NATO or Tel Aviv to decide on military intervention against Argentina for whatever reason, there would be absolutely nothing Argentina could do about it.
The British know this very well.  That’s why they’re laughing!