Monday, July 2, 2012

Katie Holmes guest judges on 'Project Runway'

By Lesley Goldberg, The Hollywood Reporter

Mehdi Taamallah / AFP - Getty Images

Photographers surround Katie Holmes outside of Parsons The New School of Design, where "Project Runway" is filmed.

Katie Holmes?isn't wasting any time getting her career on track after filing for divorce from?Tom Cruise.?Just days after the "Dawson's Creek"?actress filed to split from the "Mission: Impossible"?star, Holmes spent six hours Monday in New York filming an episode of Lifetime's "Project Runway: All Stars,"?The Hollywood Reporter?has confirmed.

While a premiere date has not yet been set for the upcoming incarnation of the unscripted fashion and design series, Holmes will be a guest judge on the?Heidi Klum?series.

More from THR: Fallout continues in Cruise-Holmes divorce

"She did great," judge Isaac Mizrahi?told?People of her time on the Parsons The New School of Design set of "Runway."

Holmes filed for divorce from Cruise on Friday in New York after five years of marriage, citing "irreconsilable differences" and seeing full custody of the couple's 6-year-old daughter, Suri.

More from THR: Cruise and Holmes: A timeline

The actress allegedly feared that Cruise would send the little girl away for training in the Church of Scientology's Sea Organization, where children begin a lifelong commitment to the religion.

"Project Runway's" 10th season?returns?Thursday, July 19 on Lifetime. An airdate for its upcoming "All-Stars" edition has not yet been determined.

No word yet on which former contestants are returning for the next "All-Stars" edition. Who are you hoping to see on the show again? Tell us on our Facebook page!

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Rev. Earl E. Johnson: Jerry's Kids

It started at Glover's the Clothier when I went to get my Boy Scout uniform. He would measure my inseam and pretend to measure "accurately." It was 1962.

In summer school, there were tickle sessions and wrestling matches on the old sofa from the teacher's lounge placed in the main hallway while the floor was being varnished. Just an innocent grope. Playing dirty.

Then as Team Announcer, it was normal for him to be around the boys locker room, and to come into coach's office and watch while being treated for a really bad case of jock rash. One time another coach showered with us but we knew he had a hot girlfriend and was having sex in her convertible.

There was lots of premarital sex going on with the upperclassmen because Vietnam was raging. So many teenage girls were getting pregnant and marrying as an honorable draft deferment. Sex was in the air. Six packs and country roads make babies.

You could drive at 15 ? with a learner's permit. Mom and Dad worked all the time.

High School classes competed to gather the most soap bars to send to Vietnam. There was another competition that didn't cost postage to box and send stuff overseas. It was called Pennies Positive Nickels Negative. There were four jars outside the Principal's Office labeled for each class. The goal was to sabotage another class with Nickels (or Dimes and Quarters) while putting Pennies in your own class's jar. It was a huge success and really harnessed the glee in "penalizing" other classes with nickels (lunch money) while forging full speed ahead with bags of pennies for ones own class.

I was asked by him to help count the money after school. We would sit side by side with piles of coins to be wrapped and counted. The table covered our laps. He unzipped and put my hand on his erect penis. I kept moving my hand away. He kept putting it back.

At 14, you feel like you are an adult and in control of what happens to you and what doesn't. You are always horny. You already have a girlfriend and you know how to slow dance because of dance lessons in the seventh grade. Inspired by older kids talking about how they lost their virginity helped feed the imagination of those who hadn't, whether it is true or not. All you needed was a car.

You might have practiced on your mother's bra in the laundry basket, but that is another story.

Each new revelation of child sexual abuse can cause one to relive and re-experience ones own trauma even 40 years later. No one gets over anything. Whether it is a priest or a teacher, a trusted relative or family friend, each event is unique, and damage done over so-called "man lessons" (Sandusky). One issue may be that the predator doesn't understand or appreciate the consequences of their criminal actions. They are always "helping" the child.

So many stories, so many examples of abuse and how he did it and continued to do it.

Start your own charity as a "front" to help troubled and ignored young boys, get married and distract your wife with multiple foster kids, make travel and gifts normal, yet special for the intended special chosen one.

Jerry Sandusky's kids were subjected to Jerry's methods that the world simply doesn't understand. To teach penetration, penetrate. To show how to come, demonstrate. Soap, rinse and repeat. Make the dirty little secrets cleaner. And threaten. Your Dad will lose his job at the university and your family will lose their home and starve. No remorse for Jerry, after all, his methods worked! Until they didn't.

My Dad had a very bad temper and I think would have killed him if he had known.

That year, I missed 30 days out of school out of 180 and did everything I could to get attention even while not aware of the underlying motivation, the emotional pain that surfaced in chronic tardiness for marching band in the morning, to sinus infections in my sinus infections. The day I was to be admitted to the National Honor Society, the principal withdrew my name and initiated a "better behaved" student. The same for the American Legion's Boy State. Did he have any awareness or training on how to deal with a sexual predator on the high school faculty?

I took all that anger to college and excelled, in part, to get my parents to notice me. Thanks, therapist(s)! Then, on to Yale Divinity School, where closeted faculty sought disciples to share sacred intimacy. No need for sex ed in seminary. Liberation theology and the Living Theatre taught us to shed our modesty and our clothes. If it feels good, do it, until you remember that it didn't. To be so intelligent and so stupid. To help others as a distraction for not taking care of oneself. What's past is past until it resurfaces again and again. After the Age of Aquarius and before the Age of Consent, with the Vietnam War going on, King and Kennedy being assassinated, and a world gone crazy, whom could I tell? Who could I talk to? After all, I thought I had been an equal participant. My shame was my own. It was 1968.

When Dad died, he was in the VFW's Honor Guard holding a rifle across the edge of the cemetery. I had kept the secret. I imagined him shooting me even as I knew they were blanks. I worked to keep focus on remembering and treasuring my Dad and all of his sacrifices, and helping my young nephew put his teddy bear next to his grandfather in the coffin. It was 1989.

Back at my 40th high school reunion, I reconnected with my old classmates and my old rock band reunited and played great therapeutic rock and roll. I was able to directly ask my classmate why he had been so mean to me and discovered he had been abused by the same teacher. I thought I was the only one. Even after 40 years, it was so good to talk. It was 2008.

Thank you Pennsylvania jurors for making the right call. Even today, it's standard of practice for the defense to blame the victim for the crime. The college town has been educated and the crime prosecuted. Jerry still doesn't think he did anything wrong.

There are thousands out there who have come forward and will come forward but only when they are ready, their memory triggered, the pain re-surfaces and is too much to carry and own in 2012. And forgiveness without justice may not be forgiveness. He is dead but his crimes live on. I will not carry him anymore. I will not keep his crimes secret.

?

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rev-earl-e-johnson/jerrys-kids_b_1635074.html

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Spain: No regrets for not eliminating Italy

By CHRIS LEHOURITES

AP Sports Writer

Associated Press Sports

updated 4:29 p.m. ET June 30, 2012

KIEV, Ukraine (AP) -Two weeks ago, long before either team had earned a spot in the final, Spain had a chance to eliminate Italy from the European Championship.

In the final round of group matches, Spain played Croatia knowing that a 2-2 draw would send both teams to the quarterfinals - and send Italy home early for the third straight time at a major championship.

It didn't happen, and now it is Italy that will be trying to stop Spain from winning its third straight major championship on Sunday at the Olympic Stadium in Kiev.

"We'll never regret not having drawn with Croatia to eliminate Italy," Spain coach Vicente del Bosque said. "That wouldn't have been good for the sport."

Xavi Hernandez, the man in the middle of Spain's attack, said Saturday that the world champions did what they were supposed to do against Croatia: win the match and the group.

"We did our job in the group stage despite all the speculation about a 2-2 draw leaving Italy out," Xavi said. "We'll never remember that, win or lose tomorrow, we could have eliminated Italy already."

The Italians will head into Sunday's match as an unexpected finalist but looking very much like the kind of team that can finally knock Spain off its perch at the top of the football world.

In their opening Group C match, Italy held the defending champions to a 1-1 draw. Antonio Di Natale scored first, but Cesc Fabregas equalized in a game in which the Azzurri looked more similar to Spain than to the stereotype of a defensive Italian team.

"Italy and ourselves have come through a similar route and now we have to reach the maximum level that a final will require," Del Bosque said. "In the group stage match, they were possibly better than us in the first half. They were the team that caused us the most problems."

Even if the route was similar, Italy's path may have been more impressive.

They played needing a win against Ireland, at the same time that Spain turned in a 1-0 victory over the Croats on June 18, putting both through. The Italians then struggled to finish against England in the quarterfinals but still advanced by winning a penalty shootout after a 0-0 draw.

It wasn't until the semifinals against Germany that Italy really showed its strength, controlling play throughout the match and holding on to beat the three-time champions 2-1 with two goals from striker Mario Balotelli.

"I am convinced that a team needs to have a specific system and style of play. He was part of this strategy," Italy coach Cesare Prandelli said of Balotelli. "He made lots of forward runs, he was a target up front when we had to counterattack, and therefore he played a great match."

The Spanish had less trouble against France in the quarterfinals, but their finishing then seemed to go fishing for the semifinal match against Cristiano Ronaldo's Portugal. Spain needed penalties to get through that one.

"Sure, our attack may not have been as aesthetically pleasing to watch as we would have liked, but we were always in control of all of our matches," Del Bosque said.

So heading into Sunday's match, it's the Italians who are scoring more goals, leaving the Spanish to worry about the back line when the superstar midfield loses the ball.

If the superstar midfield, which has been the key to Spain's titles at Euro 2008 and the 2010 World Cup, does lose the ball.

"(Our defensive) work has been fundamental to our game plan, especially in the last few games where our back line was always there when it needed to be," Spain defender Sergio Ramos said. "We're proud that our work is being valued and hopefully we don't concede a goal in the final because that would be the ultimate compliment to our work."

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/48024406/ns/sports-soccer/

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Sunday, July 1, 2012

Statement Necklaces: Michelle Obama, Sarah Jessica Parker And Other Celebs Accessorize With Huge Jewelry (PHOTOS)

Chunky may not be a compliment, but when it comes to summer jewelry it is -- small and simple chains are out and bulky and embellished statement necklaces are in.

Style mavens like Michelle Obama have been rocking the statement-making look for years, but now the jewelry trend is becoming more and more prevalent. Bib necklaces, layered necklaces and unique metalwork have added an extra flair to basic red carpet dresses... and, like our beloved shoes and bracelets, you can't grow out of a good necklace. That's what we call #fashionwinning.

Check out the gallery to see which celebs have incorporated statement necklaces into their personal style. Which are your faves?

  • Michelle Obama

    The first lady's layered look complimented the color of her gown. (Photo credit should read SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Sarah Jessica Parker

    The "Sex and the City" actress added a dash of glam with multiple gem-encrusted necklaces. (Photo by Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images)

  • Kristen Bell

    The "Forgetting Sarah Marshall" actress accessorized a simple yellow blouse with a long, embellished silver chain. (Photo by Michael Buckner/Getty Images for Bing)

  • Heidi Klum

    The supermodel wore this turquoise Lorraine Schwartz necklace to the 2012 Golden Globes. It's the <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/04/26/beyonce-heidi-klum-necklace_n_1455077.html" target="_hplink">same look that Beyonce borrowed</a> for her spread in <em>People</em>'s 2012 Most Beautiful issue. (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

  • Olivia Palermo

    The fashion maven known for her stint on "The City" wore a heavy, almost-over-the-top necklace with a skinny-strapped top. (Photo by Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images)

  • Claudia Schiffer

    The actress made a splash at Cannes with this embellished design. (Photo by Ian Gavan/Getty Images)

  • Beyonce

    The singer wore a uniquely designed, gem-encrusted gold necklace with a plunging sequin blouse. (AP Photo/Jonathan Short, file)

  • Jessica Alba

    The stunning actress accessorized her laid-back outfit with a heavy necklace. (Photo by Andrew H. Walker/Getty Images for Ebel)

  • Lucy Hale

    The "Pretty Little Liars" star donned a unique necklace composed of metal shaped to her neck. (AP Photo/Jonathan Short, file)

  • Katherine Heigl

    Katherine layered multi-colored pearls and beads. (Photo credit MARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Rachel Zoe

    The stylist to the stars donned a unique beaded necklace. (Photo by Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images)

  • Olivia Palermo

    The socialite and actress donned several necklaces to add more color to her ensemble. (Photo by Francois Durand/Getty Images)

  • Selena Gomez

    The actress and singer enhanced a simple white blouse with a black-and-brown beaded design. (Photo by Ian Gavan/Getty Images)

  • Dita Von Teese

    The goth style icon accentuates her dark ensemble with a similarly dark layered necklace. (Photo by Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images)

  • Kristen Bell

    Kristen added an old-fashioned piece to her vintage outfit. (Photo by Charley Gallay/Getty Images for UNICEF)

  • Claudia Schiffer

    Claudia added some bling to her black ensemble with a flat, angled gold necklace. (Photo by Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images)

  • Statement Necklaces

Contribute to this Story:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/30/statement-necklaces-huge-jewelry-celebrity-style_n_1628571.html

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Rooms with Views: Olympic Village ready to go

Tower blocs of the Athletes' Village soar over Victory Park on Saturday, June 30, 2012. Olympic organizers showed off the village to a select group of visitors as a test run of their services before athletes arrive for the London Olympics, which start July 27 and end Aug. 12. (AP Photo/Danica Kirka)

Tower blocs of the Athletes' Village soar over Victory Park on Saturday, June 30, 2012. Olympic organizers showed off the village to a select group of visitors as a test run of their services before athletes arrive for the London Olympics, which start July 27 and end Aug. 12. (AP Photo/Danica Kirka)

A few trees are lined up and ready for planting on Saturday June 30, 2012 as Olympic organizers put the final touches on preparations for the games. Olympic organizers showed off the village to a select group of visitors as a test run of their services before athletes arrive for the London Olympics, which start July 27 and end Aug. 12.(AP Photo/Danica Kirka)

A runner goes out for a jog on the edge of Victory Park in the Athletes' Village on Saturday June 30, 2012. Olympic organizers showed off the village to a select group of visitors as a test run of their services before athletes arrive for the London Olympics, which start July 27 and end Aug. 12. (AP Photo/Danica Kirka)

(AP) ? Usain Bolt can thank me anytime for helping ensure that he gets a good night's sleep at this summer's London Olympics.

Organizers held a slumber party this weekend, opening the big glass doors and immense dining halls of the Athletes' Village to several hundred journalists, local officials and assorted others in a trial run - giving games planners a chance to work out the glitches before the Olympians arrive. I was a willing guinea pig.

This wasn't a stress test really. Stress comes in just a few weeks when 16,000 athletes and officials come rolling in, a flag-waving tide of youth and vigor, ready to play. No, no, this was just a little warm up trot - and let's be frank - a big party at a way above average location.

"It's to help us flesh out the glitches," said Nigel Garfitt, the director of the village and games services.

There were a few of those. The chatter at the breakfast table Saturday morning, particularly at the journalist end, was about all the things that went wrong. There was no water in my room for example (whoops!) and a village crew thought that 3:30 a.m. was a good time to dig up paving stones outside my window.

That's why Usain, the word-famous Jamaican sprinter, can thank me, because it gives me a chance to make this suggestion to Sebastian Coe, the head of the organizing committee: Please don't dig up the street in the middle of the night! Olympians are slumbering.

That said, since this is the closest I'll ever come to being an Olympian, these minor mishaps must be taken in stride, particularly as it is clear that the village is within a whisker of being ready. For this village there will be no disasters in landscaping such as occurred in the Athens Olympics, where the outside of many venues were bare. In London, the grass is manicured within an inch of its existence - you weren't even allowed to walk on its lush cushiness unless you ditched your shoes.

Much of the village is that way - it looks as if it were lifted from an architectural drawing and broadcast on a big empty space. It's kind of boxy and utilitarian, but very tidy. Its monochrome-ness will offer a good backdrop for the athletes, who will drape flags from the balconies and transform it with color.

The rooms are spare but designed first and foremost with the athletes in mind. Beds for the tall and small. Mattresses wear-tested by former Olympians. Bedside lamps that work. Blackout curtains to make the room dark should the sun ever decide to shine in this light-deprived nation.

The duvets feature pictograms of the Olympic sports, and the communal areas offer sofas in electric aqua with hot pink cushions.

The televisions will feature an Olympic broadcast channel showing the action but no commentary. There's WiFi and a laundrette in the basement.

There are no kitchens - but who needs to cook? Just a short stroll away, in the shadow of the basketball arena known as "the Meringue," is the massive dining facility, which will operate for 24 hours a day and seat 5,000 at a time.

The size of several American football fields, it features cuisine from each of the continents, and includes a Halal pod - food prepared in compliance with Islamic guidelines. It is the pride and joy of Jan Matthews, the head of catering.

Matthews once ran catering for the British army in Germany and knows a thing or two about serving on a huge scale. That's kind of necessary, as this is a place where having seconds or sixths is just fine. Portion sizes are up to the athletes. No charge.

Non-Olympians won't really get a chance to eat here, unless they have some super special reason to be with a team. Heads of state are known to pull up trays with their squads, but there's no VIP treatment for them here.

"This is about the athletes," she said. "It's not about anyone else."

Besides food, other diversions and services beckon along tidy paths with sporty names such as Champions Walk, Medals Way or Celebration Avenue. There is a post office, a nail bar, a Lloyds Bank, and hairdressers where free styling and shaves are on offer.

Judging by past games, athletes will get the Olympic rings shaved into their hair, according to Emily Brett, the athletes' services manager.

But just to make sure no one gets bored, there's also a recreation zone called The Globe, after the theater most closely associated with William Shakespeare. It has sort of a pub-like feel, though no alcohol will be served, making it unpub-like to anyone who lives in Britain, but never mind.

It features light boxes that say things like "fun fun fun," ''Wow" and "Boogie." There's a bar, a stage, a music studio, pool tables, a computer gaming area and TVs.

"It is going to be the buzziest place in the Athletes' Village," Brett said.

Just over 200 national Olympic committees will be represented, and each will get a little welcoming ceremony all their own that features the playing of national anthems. With so many athletes and committees, it may take as long as four days to run through them all. But there will be one for everyone, as organizers want to make it special for the athletes - the people without whom there wouldn't be any games.

As one might expect at an event about the Athletes' Village, concerns about the competitors' happiness came up a lot. But the slumber party was also about the thousands of people who make up an Olympics - the caterers, the transport workers, the firefighters and so on who have worked - some for many years - on a project whose primary goal is to show Britain at its most welcoming.

"We wanted to use it as a thank you to them," Garfitt said before he gleefully described all the forms he would scoop up with "feedback," on the event.

"It makes it all real," he said.

Associated Press

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UEFA under fire for 'manipulated' images

By CIARAN FAHEY

Associated Press

Associated Press Sports

updated 4:29 p.m. ET June 30, 2012

BERLIN (AP) -UEFA has come under fire in Germany for allowing prerecorded scenes to be cut into live coverage of games from the European Championships.

Images of a German fan crying after Mario Balotelli's second goal in Thursday's 2-1 defeat to Italy were in fact taken before the semifinal, when she was overcome with emotion during the anthems.

The issue came to light when the woman received e-mails from friends at home wondering why she was so upset with almost an hour still to play.

"We are surprised and irritated," Joerg Schoenenborn, the Euro 2012 chief editor of German broadcaster ARD, told Saturday's Sueddeutschen Zeitung newspaper. "These pictures aren't acceptable for us, especially since we spoke to UEFA about this problem a few days ago. We're now looking for further talks."

UEFA told The Associated Press that it was striving to show "the human story of the game" in its television coverage, and had "no aim whatsoever to exercise any form of control over the images delivered to broadcasters."

European football's ruling body said footage of tears trickling down the fan's cheek was shown "to translate the emotion and the tension of the German fans for this game" but "our production did not agree with the editorial choice to put this at this exact place after the goal".

UEFA also said it had issued instructions "not to use these reactions again directly in a chain of replays of a live action, to avoid any misleading understanding."

ARD had first sought UEFA's clarification after Germany coach Joachim Loew was shown playfully knocking a ball from a ball boy's arm during the country's group game against Netherlands, despite the incident happening before the game took place.

UEFA said that footage was shown "to illustrate, in conformity with our editorial concept, the mood and ambiance of the event. The image was positive and in order not to mislead the audience, the director used replay wipes before and after, showing clearly that this event was not live."

Schoenenborn felt otherwise at the time, when he said: "Any form of censorship or manipulation is not acceptable for us. That's why we clearly told UEFA that the German public expects coverage to be live when it says it's live. Live is live and has to stay live."

UEFA said its "director guidelines" had been made available to all broadcasters.

But ZDF, which broadcast the Germany vs. Netherlands game, said it was unaware pre-match footage was being shown as part of the live match package. The channel's chief of sports, Dieter Gruschwitz, described it as "completely unusual."

"That does not correspond to our journalistic standards," ZDF editor-in-chief Peter Frey said.

"All these production techniques ... are fairly standard and well known by broadcasters," UEFA said.

Sueddeutschen Zeitung reported that UEFA maintains a policy of censorship in its TV coverage, avoiding any images of political banners, empty seats, pyrotechnics or streakers on the pitch.

"UEFA is committed to deliver an unbiased and complete coverage," the football body said.

? 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Opinion: Balotelli challenging minds with his feet

KIEV, Ukraine (AP) - The ignoramus who scrawled "non sei un vero italiano, sei un africano nero'' - "You are not a true Italian, you are a black African'' - on a wall near the San Siro stadium in Milan. Did he, despite himself, leap off his sofa in delight when Mario Balotelli thumped home his goal for Italy with a powerful nod of his shaven black head and put their country into the final of Europe's top soccer tournament?

Source: http://nbcsports.msnbc.com/id/48026139/ns/sports-soccer/

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