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Rascal Flatts, Brad Paisley Split the Charts
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Rascal Flatts gravitated toward their latest single mainly because it spoke of their feelings as parents, but the message also applies to many situations. "'I Won't Let Go' is one of the finest songs we've ever cut, and personally, I think it's one of the finest songs written in a long time," says the Flatts' Joe Don Rooney. "Once you have children, like [me and] Gary and Jay, you really feel that in this song -- that unconditional love and support for your children." Lead singer Gary agrees, adding, "It's an unforgettable melody, and the first time we heard it, we just knew it was a monster of a song ... It's what we always look for -- that big universal lyric. It could be anything from God to mother to children to anything. It's however you perceive the song."
Brad is overwhelmed to have the legendary Alabama on one of his songs, especially as he grew up performing their songs in his shows before making the move to Nashville. "It's really an amazing experience to see them back together singing like they are and that sound that the three of their voices have," Brad says. "They're responsible for so many of us in music now that were influenced by them, and getting to hear them on the radio right next to me is a thrill of a lifetime."
Rascal Flatts appear on the first of two farewell episodes for the 'Oprah Winfrey Show.' They perform their No. 1 hit, 'I Won't Let Go.' The guys are also set to kick off their summer tour, Flatts Fest, in Bristow, Va., June 18.
Brad arrives in stores with his latest album, 'This Is Country Music,' featuring his latest No. 1 hit, 'Old Alabama,' today (May 23). He is set perform the tune when appears on ABC's 'Good Morning America,' CBS' 'The Late Show With David Letterman' and 'Hannity' on FOX News on Tuesday (May 24), as well as when he hits the road on his H20 II: Wetter & Wilder World tour June 3 in Virginia Beach, Va.
Beyonce and Jackie Evancho Sing Farewell to Oprah
Oprah Winfrey concludes 25 years of her talk show tomorrow.
But a slew of huge names gathered in Chicago last week to tape a farewell to this television goddess. For a special that aired yesterday afternoon, Tom Cruise, Katie Holmes, Madonna, Halle Berry and Will Smith, among others, saluted Oprah inside the United Center.
The event also featured a couple touching musical performances: from Beyonce - who sang "Run the World (Girls)" and told Oprah "your persuasion can build a nation" - to Jackie Evancho, the 10-year old sensation from last summer's America's Got Talent.
Watch both below, and try not to get too choked up over the end of Oprah...
DWTS' Backstage Q&A: Hines Ward and Kym Johnson on Winning the Mirrorball Trophy
With the scores among the three finalists in 'Dancing With the Stars' being so close it was going to come down to who had the strongest fan base. In the end, the Steeler Nation, the fan base of the pro football team that Hines Ward plays for in Pittsburgh, turned out to be stronger than all the 'Cheers' and 'Disney' fans.
Ward and his partner Kym Johnson took home the coveted mirrorball trophy. Emmy-winning actress Kirstie Alley and partner Maksim Chmerkovskiy came in second. Disney starChelsea Kane and partner Mark Ballas, who was celebrating his 25th birthday yesterday, came in third.
Immediately after the show, the ballroom dance floor turned into a media frenzy. ABC publicists quickly set up a press line with a white, plastic chain-link fence, separated by poles, with press on one side, stars and dancers on the other, and a flurry of interviews began.
AOL TV was on the scene to talk to the new champions, the runner-ups and other Season 12 participants.
"It's just incredible," Johnson told AOL TV shortly after the finale. "I feel so proud of Hines. We did it! I still can't believe it."
A delighted Ward said that he'll keep the coveted mirrorball next to his Super Bowl MVP trophy, but he was even happier that he helped give Johnson, a previous winner with Donny Osmond, her bookend statue.
"I really wanted Kym to win her second one," he said.
Ward wasn't sure he was going to win even after Kane was announced as the third-place winner and he was standing there with Alley. "I thought, 'Oh, geez. Everybody knows Kirstie!' I didn't know how I'd match up with her [when it came to votes.]"
"The [Pittsburgh] Steeler Nation was behind us," Johnson said with a smile. "Now I can rest and relax. This was worth it. I feel great."
"I don't feel like we won," Alley said, acknowledging her second place finish, but she still feels like a victor. "We did an amazing job. You want to win and I didn't and we didn't. I can't say that I don't have any sadness about it. But that will probably change really fast when I drink a bottle of wine.
"I want to say one thing," the actress added. "Maks had a long way to go with me and he pulled it off. I wish we would have won and I wish he would have won. I really do. But I look at what evolved from the first day. I guess you could look at that as extraordinary."
Kane likewise had no regrets. "I'm so happy with this entire process," she said. "It feels really flattering to be included in the first place from the moment that 'DWTS' called me. To be in the company of a huge movie star and a huge sports star ... I've only been in the game for four years."
Winning for Ballas would have been a nice birthday gift, but Kane said he was doing fine. "If anything Mark and I are just sad that it's over. It's very bittersweet. We've spent a lot of time together and it's hard to say goodbye. It's not like, 'See you next season.' I'll never be able to do anything like this again in my life."
There are tears, she said, but "They're happy tears."
Call her biased if you will, but Shirley Ballas, Mark's mother, a respected dancer and instructor, thought that her son and Kane did amazingly well. "I have my own opinion [as to the outcome] as a dancer. Chelsea was by far the best. I was a bit disappointed in Len [Goodman, judge] that he didn't have his own opinion. The judges' votes go a long way."
At the end of the day, however, Ballas knows that 'DWTS' is a TV show. "It's reality TV," she said. "It's not always about the dancing."
Ballas added, "We have a great winner [in Hines], Kirstie Alley is to be admired for the weight she lost and Chelsea is a great dancer."
Season 12 will be remembered as the installment when the drama returned to where it belongs -- on the dance floor (and not in the personal lives of contestants or in conflicts between dancers and celebrities.) The competition was so fierce that not even the pro dancers could predict who was going to win.
"We were trying to make bets backstage," says pro dancer Chelsie Hightower, who came in fifth place with her star partner, rapper Romeo. "[But] we didn't even know who to put a bet on. They've all had such amazing journeys."
In the end, she said, "We were excited to see Hines win. He's an amazing person."
The Dancing With the Stars Season 12 Winner is Read more celebrity gossip at: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/05/the-dancing-with-the-stars-season-12-winner-is/#ixzz1NNBcqesr
It's been a Dancing with the Stars season to remember.
The injuries. The drama. The personal stories that moved us. The moves on the floor that thrilled us. A cast of stars so engaging and evenly matched that the field was as competitive as it was entertaining from the start.
But there could be only one Season 12 champion.
Somewhat surprisingly, given that she was just one point from perfection Monday and seemed like the dark horse to win, Chelsea Kane finished in third place.
That left Kirstie Alley, who ended up with five points less than the other finalists, but has been a fan favorite all season, up against Hines Ward for the crown.
Talk about anyone's game. Anyone willing to wager on this?
And the Season 12 Dancing With the Stars winner was ...
Hines Ward and his partner, Kym Johnson!
They jumped in the air and hugged as confetti dropped. The Pittsburgh Steelers star lauded Johnson, who fought through a bad neck injury this month, as "an amazing teacher" and thanked the judges "for giving us constructive criticism."
"I also want to thank all the fans," he said.
Kirstie Alley, who finished second along with Maksim Chmerkovskiy, said, "This the most extraordinary adventure I've ever been on in my life."
Still, she couldn't quite overtake Ward, a former Super Bowl MVP who proclaimed that DWTS is his Super Bowl this spring. Here's the MVP ...
Marmite Banned in Denmark
Marmite, the British spread made from yeast extract with a taste that people will either love or hate (indeed, the company’s marketing slogan is "Love it or hate it"), is definitely not getting any love by the Danish government: it is banning the sticky spread.
The sales ban enforces a law restricting products fortified with added vitamins. Food giant Kellogg’s withdrew some brands of breakfast cereal from Denmark when the legislation passed in 2004, but until now Marmite had escaped the attention of Danish authorities.Link
"What am I supposed to put on my toast now?" asked British advertising executive Colin Smith, who has lived in the country for six years. "I still have a bit left in the cupboard, but it’s not going to last long."
I say it’s about time! My taste buds still recoil from the horror of trying it once many years ago. What do you think?
Cab driver from Irving arrested after bomb squad removes suspicious materials from home near D/FW Airport
A cab driver from Irving was arrested Sunday after a bomb squad removed suspicious materials from his
Sharif Ahmed Nour, 41, was charged with possession of prohibited weapons after theFBI determined that the unspecified didn't add up to a federal offense.
Irving firefighters found the materials after extinguishing a small fire at Nour's home in the 3600 block of Block Drive, near Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport. The FBI and the Joint Terrorism Task Force assisted in the investigation.
The materials were ultimately determined not to be an imminent threat.
Nour is originally from Somalia and has been driving cabs at the airport for years, a friend told WFAA-TV (Channel 8).
Watch Channel 8's full report below:
Ancestry.com launches Web Search
Eric Shoup of Ancestry.com announced the release of Ancestry Web Search at a reception Thursday night of the 2011 NGS Conference. Once burnt by their Internet Biographical Collection, Ancestry.com is not shy about explaining how this time things have changed.
The Internet Biographical Collection
The Internet Biographical Collection (IBC) was a collection Ancestry.com released on 26 August 2007. It consisted of copies of web pages containing genealogically relevant information. The copies were made without warning to or permission from page owners. See Becky Wiseman’s “Is this Fair Use?” and another example from USGenNet for examples showing how the IBC worked.
Hundreds of people blasted Ancestry.com. Dozens of bloggers flogged them. Page owners objected. And Ancestry.com capitulated. Just three days after launch, Ancestry.com pulled the plug on the collection.
My favorite flogging was done visually:
Susan K. Kitches, image composer, “Ancestry.com Scrapes Websites,” Family Oral History Using Digital Tools(http://familyoralhistory.us : dated 28 August 2007, accessed 21 May 2011).
Web Search versus IBC
Ancestry.com says they have addressed the complaints made about the original version of the IBC. Here’s my comparison:
Internet Biographical Collection | Web Search |
Made copies of owners’ web pages without their knowledge or approval. | Sites can be added or removed by owner request. I think I asked and Ancestry.com said that they had the permission of the three sites that they have currently indexed. |
Required subscriptions. (On the 28th, Ancestry.com opened the collection to registered users.) | Anyone can use it. |
Result lists contained links to Ancestry.com’s copies of the pages, not the owners’. This deprived owners of several benefits, including advertisement revenues. | No improvement. Still no links to owners’ pages. |
Result pages contained information abstracted from the owners’ pages. | Same. Ancestry.com’s stated intent is to limit the information shown so users are incented to click through to the owners’ pages. |
Result pages contained links to Ancestry.com’s copies of the pages, not the owners’. (On the 28th, Ancestry.com supplemented the links to their copies with links to the owners’ originals.) | Result pages contain links to the owners’ websites. |
Ancestry.com made nearly complete copies of owners’ web pages, including text and graphic design. Many felt this was a clear violation of the law. I felt that they had, indeed, crossed the line, but that they were playing in a gray area and had not wantonly violated the law. | Does not copy others’ pages. I believe this is the key difference between the IBC and web Search. |
Citations did not specify the original sources. Thus, citations did not give credit to the owners. | Citations do not specify the derivative sources. Thus, citations do not disclose Ancestry.com’s involvement. They need to read my series oncitation principles so they understand why a citation needs to specify both the derivative and the original. |
Links went directly to the pages with the indexed information. | Links do not go directly. Links go to the search page and users must retype the search parameters. This might be owners’ preferred behavior, but as a user I’d like the links to take me directly to the results. |
Indexed the same content as search engines likeGoogle. | According to Ancestry.com’s Brian Edwards, Web Search indexes deep web content, stuff you can’t find doing a Google search. |
Ancestry.com seems to have followed the advice of fellow blogger, Randy Seaver.
I wish that Ancestry would carefully consider the reaction to adding a database like this before they do it.
I spoke with Web Search product manager, Brian Edwards. He said, “We’ve spoken with many members within the genealogical community to try to make sure we approach this in the right way.” He said Ancestry.com believes it’s important to respect the wishes of the owners of the content indexed by this new product.
Really? No Caching?
Caching others’ web pages (copying, really) was at the heart of the IBC controversy. If you know where to look, Google.com has links to cached copies of indexed pages. As I wrote this on Saturday, I experienced the downside of Ancestry.com not caching pages. IndyGov.org, the website indexed by “Web: Marion County, Indiana Marriages since 1925,” was down. Ancestry.com's misuse of caching in the IBC may have poisoned the possibility of using it now.
I think web page owners will be more amenable to Web Search than to the Internet Biographical Collection. And I think Ancestry.com haters and conspiralists will like it in their own way; it gives them more fodder. But I’m not so certain about the rest of you. What do you think?
Private message to Brian Edwards: In our interview I mentioned I wondered if Google.com might be doing deep web searches on some websites. While researching this article, I came across an example of why I think this might be so. I did a Google search for ["internet biographical collection" (source OR citation)]. I clicked on one of the results, Kimberly Powell’s “Cache 22” article. The page came up with my search terms already in the About.com search box. Interesting, huh?
The Biggest Loser Winner is ...
Olivia Ward is now a living, breathing testament to the benefits of determination and putting one's mind to accomplishing a goal, no matter how substantive.
After an incredible 129-pound weight loss over a span of eight months, the New York City opera singer was crowned Season 11's Biggest Loser on NBC Tuesday.
Here's a before-and-after display of what she achieved:
Ward and sister Hannah Curlee became breakout stars following a sensational run during the trip to New Zealand earlier this year, both making the finals.
Also in the final four ahead of the finale were Irene Alvarado and Jay Jacobs, who vied for America's vote and the right to compete for the ultimate prize.
Joining Hannah and Olivia in an all-female final three was Irene, who became a best buddy to the Purple Team during the season. All four were worthy.
In the end, it was Olivia Ward who edged the competition and was crowned the winner. But obviously, all of these giant losers were winners last night!
Read more: http://www.tvfanatic.com/2011/05/the-biggest-loser-winner-is/#ixzz1NN9tA8YX
Dancing With The Stars' Winner: Hines Ward, Kym Johnson Win Season 12 Mirror Ball Trophy
When Hines Ward took home the mirrorball trophy on the hit show Tuesday, he joined its winningest group of alumni: Athletes. Professional athletes have taken the "Dancing" title six times in the past 12 seasons.
Since the show premiered stateside in 2005, three Olympians, two football stars and one race-car driver have been named "Dancing" champs. Three other NFL stars and an Olympic skater finished the popular show in second place.
Ward, a Pittsburgh Steelers wide receiver and former Super Bowl most valuable player, credits his professional dance partner, Kym Johnson, with their dance victory. He plans to keep his new mirrorball right next to his Super Bowl trophy.
"It's special," the 35-year-old said, glittery trophy in hand. "With football, it takes all 53 guys. With this mirrorball, it was just Kym and I together in the studio putting in the hours. I'm just glad I didn't let her down."
Ward consistently posted high scores throughout the 10-week competition, and judges praised his showmanship and dedication.
"We've had some great footballers on `Dancing With the Stars,' but I don't think any compare with Hines Ward," head judge Len Goodman said during the season finale.
Ward was up against Kirstie Alley and Chelsea Kane for the season 12 title. The actresses finished second and third respectively.
His commitment was especially evident after Johnson suffered a serious neck injury during rehearsals two weeks ago. The couple triumphantly returned to the dance floor, earning perfect scores for their performance and drawing tears from Ward, Johnson and judge Carrie Ann Inaba.
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- Don't You Forget About Me
- Rascal Flatts, Brad Paisley Split the Charts
- Beyonce and Jackie Evancho Sing Farewell to Oprah
- DWTS' Backstage Q&A: Hines Ward and Kym Johnson on...
- The Dancing With the Stars Season 12 Winner is Re...
- Marmite Banned in Denmark
- Cab driver from Irving arrested after bomb squad r...
- Ancestry.com launches Web Search
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- Dancing With The Stars' Winner: Hines Ward, Kym Jo...
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