Monday, January 30, 2012

Oscar-nominated Glenn Close film opens strong (omg!)

U.S. actress Glenn Close smiles during a photocall to promote the movie "Albert Nobbs" on the third day of the 59th San Sebastian Film Festival September 18, 2011. REUTERS/Vincent West

LOS ANGELES, Jan 29 (TheWrap.com) - Buoyed by three Oscar nominations, "Albert Nobbs" took a solid $772,730 in its first weekend of wide release.

The Roadside Attractions movie, which earned Glenn Close a best actress nomination, Janet McTeer a best supporting actress nomination and the makeup team a best makeup nomination, opened at 245 locations. Including its Oscar-qualifying numbers in December, the R-rated movie has taken in $822,981.

That's a per-location average of $3,154.

Academy Award nominations were good for a raft of indie films this weekend: The Weinstein Company's "The Artist," nominated for 10 Oscars, including best picture, and "The Iron Lady," nominated for two, each passed $15 million at the box office.

"The Artist," now in its 10th weekend in release, took in $3.3 million at 897 locations. It has grossed $16.7 million. "The Iron Lady" took $3.2 million at 1,244 locations, for a total of $17.5 million. That movie is in its fifth weekend.

And "The Descendants," nominated for five Oscars, including best picture, best director and, for George Clooney, best actor, had its best weekend since its debut 11 weeks ago.

Fox Searchlight expanded the film by 1,441 locations, to 2,001, and saw its numbers increase by 176 percent over last weekend -- to $6.55 million. That's good enough to put it at No. 7 at the overall box office.

"This is a great result for the Academy-nominated movie that has benefited big time from the award season and has become the darling of the general moviegoing audience," Sheila DeLoach, Fox Searchlight's executive VP distribution, told TheWrap. "When you nurture these pictures on this journey and then they break through like this to the general audience, it becomes such a special movie."

It also broke -- or is about to break -- a few records.

With its new total of $58.8 million, "The Descendants" is now the top-grossing independent film released in 2011. Sony Pictures Classics' "Midnight in Paris" -- also a best picture nominee -- had been No. 1 with $56.43 million.

"Descendants" is on the way to becoming director Alexander Payne's top-grossing film. His 2002 "About Schmidt" grossed $65 million, and his 2004 "Sideways" took $71.5 million.

Finally, "The Descendants" is about to surpass "Little Miss Sunshine" as Fox Searchlight's fifth-highest-grossing film ever. The 2006 "Little Miss Sunshine" took $59.9 million.

Another Oscar nominee, Wim Wenders' "Pina," broke the million-dollar mark this week, according to Rentrak.

The 3D film, nominated for best documentary, is about dancer and choreographer Pina Bausch. It expanded from 10 locations to 35, and now has grossed just short of $1.05 million.

Other new indie films opening this weekend include IFC's "Declaration of War," which, according to Rentrak, took $14,400 at six locations, and "An Inconsistent Truth," which grossed $20,282 at one location.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/entertainment/*http%3A//us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/external/omg_rss/rss_omg_en/news_oscar_nominated_glenn_close_film_opens_strong233305164/44348453/*http%3A//omg.yahoo.com/news/oscar-nominated-glenn-close-film-opens-strong-233305164.html

walmart black friday sales michelle obama booed at nascar polio cutler christina aguilera tony stewart amas

Monday, January 16, 2012

Family of Mexican marines kidnapped, slain (AP)

MEXICO CITY ? Mexican officials say they have arrested four men in the kidnapping and slaying of a marine officer, his two sons and his wife in the western state of Guerrero.

The Secretary of the Navy's office said in a statement that the victims disappeared on Dec. 16. One of the children is also a marine officer and the other is an enlisted marine. Several of the suspects arrested Friday have confessed to kidnapping them at a fake checkpoint and killing them.

The Navy Secretary's statement on Saturday said that the four men had been seized along with several firearms, ammunition and a set of handcuffs. It did not say if the men were associated with a particular criminal group. Investigators are searching for the bodies.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120114/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_drug_war_mexico

cj wilson

Sunday, January 15, 2012

AP source: House Republicans got discounted loans (AP)

WASHINGTON ? Two veteran House Republicans received discounted mortgage loans from the now-defunct Countrywide Financial Corp. under a VIP program, a congressional official said Friday.

The discounts went to Reps. Howard McKeon and Elton Gallegly of California, said the official, who was not authorized to speak publicly about the loans and requested anonymity. Their identities were first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee has been investigating whether members of Congress received VIP discounts. The Associated Press reported previously that four House members had received the discounts. One of the four remains unidentified publicly.

Records show that Rep. Edolphus Towns, D-N.Y, also received discounts. Towns told the AP previously that he was not aware of receiving any discounts. McKeon and Gallegly told the Journal that they also were not aware of receiving discounted loans and did not know their mortgages were processed by the VIP unit.

The Journal said the 1998 loan to McKean, who is chairman of the Armed Services Committee, totaled $315,000. Gallegly's 2005 loan totaled $77,000 in 2005.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., chairman of the oversight committee, informed both lawmakers that documents received from Bank of America ? it bought Countrywide ? showed they went through the special unit.

Issa has sent the information to the House Ethics Committee, which determines whether House members violated standards of conduct. A discounted loan could be considered a gift. Gifts are virtually banned under House rules.

None of the lawmakers has been accused by the ethics panel of any wrongdoing, and may never be if they convince investigators they had no knowledge of the discounts.

Countrywide was the nation's largest mortgage company and played a major role in the U.S. financial crisis by issuing subprime loans. The company also had its VIP program, with some of the favored customers known as "Friends of Angelo" ? a reference to chief executive Angelo Mozilo.

Mozilo in 2010 agreed to more than $67 million in penalties in a settlement with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/gop/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120114/ap_on_go_co/us_countrywide_house

karina smirnoff pumpkin cheesecake deviled eggs pie crust pie crust stuffing recipe happy thanksgiving

Thursday, January 5, 2012

The best of Australia ? on a budget, mate

William West / AFP

A kangaroo stands next to a rare waterhole as sheep gather as they look for food on a station near White Cliffs, Australia.

?

By Andrea Minarcek, Budget Travel

Lessons from the Outback

Skip: Ayers Rock; it sees a half-million tourists a year; four-hour flight from Sydney
Do: Chillagoe; easier Outback access, and a population of just 350

Slideshow:?Breathtaking scenes of Australia and New Zealand

Every afternoon at about 4 p.m. in the Chillagoe Hotel Motel, owner Ray Neary assumes his perch on a bar stool by the entrance and waits to greet his clientele. First come the wild peacocks, which usually show up once Neary tosses them a few leftover scraps from lunch. Soon after, almost everyone else in Chillagoe, Queensland (population: 350), files in to take the birds? place. Off-duty hands from the cattle station, miners from the nearby gold quarries, a few aboriginal men in jeans ? they all come to eat Frisbee-size steaks with drafts of XXXX (pronounced ?fourex?), the Queensland state beer. The wood-paneled walls are lined with posters of Australian rugby teams, and the jukebox plays (no joke) Men at Work?s "Land Down Under." ?Everyone thinks you have to go out in the middle of nowhere, fly all the way to Ayers Rock or something, to find the Outback,? Neary says. ?But this? ? he slams his palm on the pine bar ? ?is the real deal, and it?s a heck of a lot closer to civilization.?

Now, that?s what you might call a real Outback steak house, and if it doesn?t exactly look like you?d expect ? peacocks instead of kangaroos, XXXX instead of Foster?s ? maybe that?s because Americans have been playing by the wrong Aussie rules. Many tourists heading Down Under get stuck in a sort of Australian triangle between the country?s three most popular sites: Sydney to the Great Barrier Reef to Ayers (which the locals call Uluru) ? despite the fact that it takes three intra-country flights to do it all. Not that there?s anything wrong with the triangle trip. Australia is halfway around the world for everything this side of New Zealand, and no one wants to save up all the necessary time and money and miss the greatest hits.

But what if you like going your own way, skipping the usual, packaged-tour suspects in favor of something more authentic? Could you plan a vacation to Australia with substitutions that won?t leave you feeling like you?ve missed the boat? No Ayers Rock. No Sydney Harbour Bridge climb. No Great Ocean Road. It?s a tempting idea: fewer crowds, lower cost, plus a genuine Aussie sense of adventure. It?s also pretty fraught: How will you feel when your friends back home ask to see photos of Ayers Rock and you say ? well, actually, check out these great shots from Chillagoe!

Five years ago, before social media connected everyone in a near-endless network of friends of friends of kinda-sorta-friends, pulling off a no-tourist tour might not have worked. You could study up before you left and make educated guesses about decent alternates, but you?d still be traveling largely by the guidebook. Now, thanks to Facebook and Twitter, anyone and her mother can get insider tips from locals ? new ?friends? you made via that old neighbor?s ex-roommate who spent a year abroad in Sydney.

That?s the only way you?re going to find yourself in the likes of Chillagoe, an all-around charming town, from the peacock lunch-guests at the Chillagoe Hotel Motel (Tower St., 011-61/7-4094-7168, steaks from $14) to the limestone caves in nearby Chillagoe-Mungana Caves National Park, where there are 30,000-year-old aboriginal rock-wall paintings. It sits just past a string of coffee and sugar-cane plantations on the west side of the Great Dividing Range, and it?s dotted with turn-of-the-century buildings, such as the Chillagoe Guesthouse, a six-room inn housed in the town?s original 1906 post office (16-18 Queen St., doubles from $124, including breakfast). Can any of this compete with majestic Ayers Rock in terms of eye candy? Probably not. That?s the thing about icon-free traveling: It?s about trade-offs. As many as a half-million people visit Uluru every year. It?s a four-hour flight from Sydney, and once you?ve seen it ? well, you?ve seen it. There?s not much else to do. Chillagoe, on the other hand, gets a couple thousand visitors annually and you can make it there from Cairns?a North Queensland base camp ? in less than three hours by car. ?We get a lot of Aussie visitors from the coast,? says Eugene Miglas, the owner of Chillagoe Guesthouse, ?but I don?t think Chillagoe?s on the radar for most international tourists yet.??

Lessons from?Sydney

Skip: Harbour Bridge Climb; sky-high vistas and cost: $194 for the cheapest tour
Do: Mrs. Macquarie's Chair; spectacular city views at a down-to-earth price: free

Finding Outback stand-ins in this big, empty country isn?t terribly difficult. Things get harder when you?re looking for experiences that will measure up to two of the country?s biggest urban landmarks: the Sydney Opera House and the Harbour Bridge. You wouldn?t want to skip them entirely; they?re beautiful structures that look even better in person, where you get a real sense of how they frame, and are framed by, the city around them. But if it?s lovely views you want, you don?t need to tour the opera house or haul yourself up for a walk across the bridge just because Oprah did. (Besides, if she wants to spend $200-plus for a ticket, more power to her.) For a stunning, free ? and less heart-attack inducing ? perch, you could head to a place called Mrs. Macquarie?s Chair, a 201-year-old bench carved out of a natural rock ledge in the Royal Botanic Garden (Mrs. Macquarie's Rd., free entry). Looking out on the city from Mrs. Macquarie?s as dusk approaches, the dipping sun paints a spectrum of citrus colors over the white sheen of the opera house. Nearby, thousands of flying-fox bats swoop into ginkgo biloba trees, where they nest each day. ?Bats in Sydney? isn?t listed in most guidebooks ? and, frankly, would that be much of a selling point? ? but the sight of thousands of them spiraling through the dusk is unexpectedly captivating. ?There?s this idea of them being scary, but if you come here in the evening, you can see the light shine through their wings, and they?re so translucent and smooth, it?s magical,? says Larissa Trompf, who?s studying animal behavior at Macquarie University, in Sydney.

That?s another fringe benefit of skipping the marquee routes to the monuments ? when you?re not running around dutifully checking items off of a must-see list, your eyes are open enough to make your own discoveries. In Sydney, that might mean skipping famous Bondi Beach in favor of the 3.7-mile coastal path to Coogee, a lovely, quieter stretch of sand that?s home to dads tossing a rugby ball with their sons and a class for tween surfers.

Lessons from the wild side

Skip: Taronga Zoo; $45 entry; "encounters" programs: $26 each
Do: Hunter Valley Zoo; $18 entry fee ? petting included; bonus: surrounded by gorgeous, world-class wineries!

On a day trip out of town, you could find yourself at the Hunter Valley Zoo, which is tucked away in one of Australia?s many wine regions, a two-hour drive north. Sydney is practically papered with ads for its famed Taronga Zoo, but admission costs $45 and up-close ?encounters? with koalas, owls and reptiles run an extra $26. Hunter Valley Zoo is small ? 10 acres, at most ? yet it?s home to every Aussie creature you could hope to see: kangaroos, wallabies, dingoes, wombats and a menagerie of rainbow-hued birds (138 Lomas Lane, Nukalba, free entry). The best part is that twice a day, a handler lets visitors into the koala pen and nudges one awake from its perch on a eucalyptus. You aren?t allowed to hold them, but you can pet them, and their fur is as soft as a rabbit?s.

Lessons from the road

Skip: the Great Ocean Road; Sees a lot of traffic in high-tourist season; three-hour flight from Sydney
Do: Captain Cook Highway; the 47-mile coastal road runs between Cairns, in the south, and Mossman, in the north, and connects to the spectacular Cape Tribulation rainforest and Great Barrier Reef

Of course, any dream trip to Australia requires one splurge: the Great Barrier Reef. The only time- and cost-effective way to get there is to hop a three-hour flight from Sydney to Cairns, on the Queensland coast. Plenty of operators run reef trips right out of Cairns ? 85 percent of the 1.6 million tourists who see the reef annually go through Cairns and the Whitsunday Islands, the two most popular sites, and 40 percent of visitors use one of the 10 largest tour groups. But for the reef, avoiding tourists is all the more crucial ? the more people you snorkel with, the fewer fish you?ll see. You?ll need to go through Cairns, but only because it offers access to lesser-known reef towns such as Cape Tribulation.

Cape Tribulation, in the heart of the ancient Daintree Rainforest, is a tropical playground of hiking paths and wide, empty swaths of sand, with easy access to some of the most pristine parts of the reef. The area looks a lot like Hawaii 100 years ago: palm-tree-wrapped peaks reaching for the sky above and sliding into the ocean below ? and not a single resort or mega-development mucking up the view. The two-and-a-half-hour drive from Cairns is a treat in its own right. Two-lane Captain Cook Highway hugs the ocean like a paved wave, curving between sand-dollar white beaches and the camouflage-colored foothills of the Great Dividing Range. It?s a worthy replacement for the famed Great Ocean Road near Melbourne, which, pretty though it is, would require yet another flight from Sydney.

Lessons from the reef

Skip: Cairns; 27 dive outfits; gets 70 percent of visitors from overseas
Do: Cape Tribulation; one dive company ? and it's the only one you'd want

?People come to Australia to meet real Australians,? says Dawn Gray, who owns and runs the Cape Trib Farmstay, ?and here I am. At a big hotel, you maybe get to say hello to other travelers around the pool.? Gray?s tropical-fruit farm has 88 acres and five Swiss Family Robinson?type cabins, each with its own veranda and views of Mt. Sorrow, to the north (Cape Tribulation Rd., from $139, with breakfast, two-night minimum). Every morning, guests find a basket in the refrigerator with their name on it, overflowing with complimentary fruit such as papaya, wattleseed and jackfruit, many grown by Gray on the property. (Just down the road ? the only road in town ? another farm charges $26 per person for an ?Exotic Fruit Tasting.?) In the evenings, Gray makes tea and helps book tours on the reef and in the rain forest. She knows all the operators personally; just 101 people live in Cape Tribulation year-round.

That said, there is only one snorkeling outfitter in Cape Tribulation ? though it?s the same one you?d choose even in a sea of options. Ocean Safari Adventure keeps crowds in check by only running one or two trips a day on a 25-passenger vessel (Cape Tribulation Rd., half-day snorkeling trips from $123 per person). The snorkeling trips last well over two hours, and in wetsuits, the 70-degree water feels balmy. ?The sections of the reef we?re heading to are in such better condition than most of the rest,? says Tristan Giardini, an Ocean Safari snorkeling instructor with blond dreads and a sunburn. ?Even people with good intentions sometimes bump it and break parts off when they snorkel, but here in the cape, it?s just us, so the reef is almost perfect.?

The Mackay and Undine reef sections, where Giardini leads tours, are just as spectacular as he promises: orange-and-white striped anemone fish, ledges of pink coral, curious sea turtles, and starfish of such a startlingly bright cornflower blue that they seem spray-painted. But the boat rides to and from shore can be just as exciting. As the catamaran is pounding through the choppy surf, about 200 yards away a massive blue torpedo shoots out of the ocean toward the sky. Giardini had mentioned that humpback whales migrate along this stretch of coast from August to September, but this looks more like a rocket than a mammal. When it crashes back into the water, it shakes the boat like an earthquake.

The passengers, of course, are thrilled, but they?re mellow compared with Giardini. While everyone else stays obediently glued to their seats, he grabs his camera and races to the front of the rocking boat to try to photograph a whale in midair. ?Ah, isn?t this amazing?? he yells, followed by a few ecstatic expletives, shouted into the wind. And suddenly, you realize you?ve just seen the highlight of your icon-free trip. The whale? Sure ? the friends at home are going to love seeing those pictures. But it?s Giardini?s utterly unjaded reaction ? doesn?t he do this every day? ? that reminds you of the difference between a trip crammed with must-see destinations and one designed for maximum spontaneity and authenticity. Any time your tour guide is having at least as much fun as the tourists, you know that you?ve had a very g?day, mate.?

More from Budget Travel

?

??

Source: http://todaytravel.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/12/9393646-the-best-of-australia-on-a-budget-mate

city of ember virgin diaries kevin smith