Monday, April 30, 2012

Reuters: People News: "Octomom" files for bankruptcy in California

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"Octomom" files for bankruptcy in California
May 1st 2012, 02:49

California Octuplets mom Nadya Suleman has a new Web site (www.thenadyasulemanfamily.com) shown in this screenshot taken on February 11, 2009.

Credit: Reuters/www.thenadyasulemanfamily.com

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Reuters: People News: Artist Lucian Freud leaves $156 million in will: paper

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Artist Lucian Freud leaves $156 million in will: paper
Apr 30th 2012, 07:34

Impressionist art expert David Norman holds artist Lucian Freud's ''Self Portrait'' at Sotheby's before its preview exhibition of highlights from its upcoming London sale of Impressionist Modern and Contemporary art in New York January 10, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Shannon Stapleton

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Reuters: People News: Murdochs face tough week over scandal

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Murdochs face tough week over scandal
Apr 30th 2012, 07:02

News Corporation Chief Executive and Chairman, Rupert Murdoch, leaves with his wife Wendi after giving evidence for the second day at the Leveson Inquiry at the High Court in London April 26, 2012. REUTERS/Olivia Harris

News Corporation Chief Executive and Chairman, Rupert Murdoch, leaves with his wife Wendi after giving evidence for the second day at the Leveson Inquiry at the High Court in London April 26, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Olivia Harris

By Kate Holton

LONDON | Mon Apr 30, 2012 3:02am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Rupert Murdoch's tetchy and uncompromising appearance at a British inquiry into phone hacking could come back to haunt him this week when politicians give their verdict on the scandal at his defunct News of the World newspaper.

Three days of grilling at the Leveson judicial press inquiry last week extracted few new facts from Rupert and his son James as the 81-year-old casually threw out insults at politicians and described himself as a victim of a corporate cover-up.

That appearance will only increase pressure on a powerful parliamentary committee to be harsh in its verdict on the scandal, putting Murdoch's News Corp further on the defensive.

"The timing of the select committee report, following the week we've just had at Leveson, is crucial," a person familiar with the thinking and mechanics of the committee, told Reuters.

"Anyone putting their name to an amendment that supports Rupert and James, or dilutes the criticism of Rupert and James, would look very different now than they would have done a week ago."

Another person familiar with the situation said the report had become much more critical in recent months.

The committee will meet on Monday to vote and agree the final wording for the report, which had originally been expected late last year. It will be published on Tuesday.

Murdoch shut the 168-year-old News of the World in July after journalists and investigators admitted hacking the phones of ordinary people, crime victims and politicians to gather exclusive and salacious news.

INFLUENCE

The evidence from the Leveson inquiry could particularly increase the pressure on members of the committee from Prime Minister David Cameron's Conservative party, traditionally seen as close to the world's most powerful media tycoon.

The release of emails between James Murdoch and his top London lobbyist suggesting possible influence over the government led to the resignation of a senior ministerial aide and demands for the minister himself to quit.

The committee is expected to criticize James Murdoch for his handling of News Corp's British newspaper arm and is considering whether to implicate Rupert Murdoch for his influence over the wider company culture.

A tough report could make it harder for 39-year-old James Murdoch in his role as News Corp's deputy chief operating officer after the damage the company has already taken to its value and reputation.

Committee members believe Murdoch staff have shown little respect for the parliamentary system and accused them at one point of suffering from "collective amnesia".

Since the committee has to be careful of criticizing any of the people arrested over phone- and computer-hacking and bribery to avoid prejudicing court cases, the criticism of the Murdochs may be even more pointed. They have not been arrested.

Rupert Murdoch told the Leveson inquiry on Thursday that staff within the News of the World had hidden the hacking scandal from himself, James and ex-News of the World editor Rebekah Brooks, a protégée of his.

He put the blame on the journalists and the paper's former top lawyer and said he wished he had shut the paper sooner. He brushed off any suggestion that he could be held responsible for a culture that allowed criminality to flourish.

"I think Rupert showed his true lights... belligerent, testy, laying the blame everywhere but himself and passing the buck," Roy Greenslade, who worked under Murdoch at the Sun and Sunday Times, told Reuters.

(Editing by Matthew Tostevin)

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Sunday, April 29, 2012

Reuters: People News: Johnson biographer Caro says political genius is his subject

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Johnson biographer Caro says political genius is his subject
Apr 30th 2012, 04:13

Author Robert Caro is pictured in this undated handout photo, supplied by Random House Publishing. With the long-awaited fourth volume of his Johnson biography ''The Passage of Power'' due out on May 1, 2012, Caro said he never wanted to write just about the life of the president who rammed through civil rights and welfare laws that transformed the nation but then was destroyed by the Vietnam War. To match story CARO-JOHNSON/ REUTERS/Joyce Ravid/Random House Publishing/Handout

1 of 2. Author Robert Caro is pictured in this undated handout photo, supplied by Random House Publishing. With the long-awaited fourth volume of his Johnson biography ''The Passage of Power'' due out on May 1, 2012, Caro said he never wanted to write just about the life of the president who rammed through civil rights and welfare laws that transformed the nation but then was destroyed by the Vietnam War. To match story CARO-JOHNSON/

Credit: Reuters/Joyce Ravid/Random House Publishing/Handout

By Ian Simpson

WASHINGTON | Mon Apr 30, 2012 12:13am EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Robert Caro has spent almost 40 years writing his monumental prize-winning biography of President Lyndon Johnson, but says it is not the 1960s leader that held his fascination for so long, but how political power works in America.

With the long-awaited fourth volume of his Johnson biography "The Passage of Power" due out on Tuesday, Caro said he never wanted to write just about the life of the president who rammed through civil rights and welfare laws that transformed the nation but then was destroyed by the Vietnam War.

"What I'm interested in, and what I think all my books are, or what they try to be, is about different aspects of political power," Caro, his voice hoarse from previous interviews, told Reuters by phone from his New York office.

As far as U.S. political power goes, "Lyndon Johnson was the guy who understood that better than anyone else in the second half of the 20th century."

Johnson's "awesome" political skills were such that he even could find a way to break through the partisan gridlock that grips Washington today, the 76-year-old author said.

But how would Johnson do it? Caro could not say.

"It is in the nature of political genius to find a way to solve problems no one else can solve," said Caro, whose voice carries deep inflections of his native New York, with "foind" for "find" and "oar" for "awe."

Caro has written that power not only corrupts, it reveals character. Johnson was a master politician who rose from poverty in the hardscrabble Hill Country of Texas to unrivaled power as president from 1963 to 1969.

As drawn by Caro, he was ruthless, insecure, compassionate, greedy and secretive. As president, Johnson oversaw landmark civil rights and social legislation such as Medicare and Head Start as part of his Great Society program aimed at ending poverty.

'BITCH OF A WAR'

But his presidency ended in rioting and tragedy, destroyed by Johnson's escalation of the war in Vietnam. "'That bitch of a war,' I think was his phrase," Caro said.

"The Passage of Power," published by Alfred A. Knopf, is more than 700 pages long but covers only six years starting in 1958, when Johnson, a Democrat, was Senate majority leader.

The book chronicles his misery as John Kennedy's vice president, his blood feud with Kennedy's brother Robert, and Johnson's seizing the reins of power just hours after President Kennedy's assassination in 1963.

The fifth and final book will cover the rest of Johnson's presidency, including passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 that "made it possible for Barack Obama to become the first African American in the White House," Caro said.

"I think I can do this (last book) rather fast, in three or four years. But I don't know why you'd believe me, because every time it takes a lot longer than I think it's going to," Caro said, laughing.

THROWBACK

Caro's vast and complex portrait of Johnson is a throwback to 19th century writers who believed a great subject demanded not just a big book, but a shelf of big books.

Caro has been writing about Johnson since 1977, or longer than the Texan was in politics. "The Passage to Power" alone took 10 years to write.

It and the other three volumes in Caro's "The Years of Lyndon Johnson" - "Path to Power," "Means of Ascent" and "Master of the Senate" - total more than 3,000 pages.

"The Power Broker," his Pulitzer Prize-winning 1974 biography of New York public works czar Robert Moses, a dissection of what Caro called the "naked essence of urban power," is another big book at more than 1,100 pages.

Famed for the doggedness he honed as an investigative reporter at New York's Newsday, Caro's quest to get every detail has included sleeping outdoors in a sleeping bag to get a feel for Johnson's beloved Texas Hill Country.

His interviews run into the thousands, and he said he has stumbled on discoveries while poring through many of the 44 million documents at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library in Austin, Texas.

'TURN EVERY PAGE'

"I had an editor who once told me, 'Turn every page. Don't assume a damn thing,'" Caro said. His sole assistant is his wife, Ina, herself an author.

Caro has won two Pulitzer Prizes in biography, the National Book Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award twice, among other prizes. Obama awarded him the National Humanities Medal in 2010.

Caro's writing technique is as old-fashioned as the scope of his books is vast.

To give himself a framework, Caro said he spends weeks writing two or three paragraphs setting out a book's theme, then writes the last line. He declined to give the last line of his next Johnson book.

Caro said he types an outline on pages that he tacks in three rows of about 20 feet (six meters) each on corkboard in his office. Then he types an expanded outline stored in loose-leaf notebooks.

He writes three or four drafts in pen on narrow-lined white legal pads. Then he writes more drafts on a Smith Corona Electra 210 typewriter, a model that went out of production decades ago.

He revises constantly, even in the galleys part of production, to give his books the narrative sweep, character and sense of place they need to make them last for generations.

"If a non-fiction writer, a writer of history, wants his writing to endure, the writing has to be at the same level as the writing in a novel that will endure," Caro said.

(Reporting By Ian Simpson; Editing by Jackie Frank)

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Reuters: People News: Artist Lucian Freud leaves $156 million in will: paper

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Artist Lucian Freud leaves $156 million in will: paper
Apr 29th 2012, 19:13

LONDON | Sun Apr 29, 2012 3:13pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Portrait painter Lucian Freud left a record 96 million pounds ($156 million) in his will, the largest sum bequeathed by a British artist, the Mail on Sunday newspaper reported.

Freud died in July last year aged 88, by which time his uncompromising, fleshy portraits had made him one of the world's most revered and coveted artists, whose subjects ranged from England's Queen Elizabeth II to the supermodel Kate Moss.

His "Benefits Supervisor Sleeping", a 1995 portrait of an obese woman asleep in the nude on a sofa, fetched $33.6 million at Christie's in 2008, an auction record for a living artist.

Freud left 2.5 million pounds and a house, the paper said, to his long-term assistant, David Dawson, who is pictured in Freud's last unfinished work "Portrait of the Hound", which also featured the artist's pet whippet Eli.

Representatives of Freud in Britain and the United States were not immediately available for comment on Sunday.

The remainder of the estate was left to his lawyer Diana Rawstron and one of his daughters, Rose Pearce, who are identified as trustees in Freud's will and are instructed to dispose of his personal possessions in line with wishes expressed during the artist's life, the newspaper reported.

Freud, the grandson of psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud, married twice and had several children, although he was widely believed to have fathered many more than he acknowledged.

(Reporting by David Milliken; Editing by Louise Ireland)

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Friday, April 27, 2012

Reuters: People News: Strauss-Kahn suspects "political enemies" in sex scandal: paper

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Strauss-Kahn suspects "political enemies" in sex scandal: paper
Apr 27th 2012, 23:03

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Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn, seen in this September 29, 2011 file photo. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/Files

Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn, seen in this September 29, 2011 file photo.

Credit: Reuters/Gonzalo Fuentes/Files

LONDON | Fri Apr 27, 2012 7:03pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - The Guardian newspaper said on its website on Friday that former International Monetary Fund boss Dominique Strauss-Kahn believes his French presidential bid was scuppered last year by "political enemies" who made sure his sexual encounter with a New York maid was made public.

It is the first time Strauss-Kahn has spoken publicly about the events surrounding a sexual encounter with a maid in a Sofitel hotel in New York last May, which put an end to his political ambitions.

The Guardian said a more than two-hour interview with Strauss-Kahn revealed that the former IMF boss was convinced his downfall had been choreographed by his political enemies.

According to the newspaper, Strauss-Kahn believes that while his opponents may not have gone so far as to set up the encounter with hotel maid Nafissatou Diallo, "he believes they did play a role, through intercepted phone calls, in making sure that the hotel maid went to the police and thus turned a private tryst into a public scandal."

The paper published no direct quotes from Strauss-Kahn on his version of those events.

Strauss-Kahn had been expected to announce his candidacy for the French presidency last year.

"I planned to make my formal announcement on 15 June and I had no doubt I would be the candidate of the Socialist party," The Guardian quotes Strauss-Kahn as saying.

Those hopes crashed when he was arrested on suspicion of attempted rape and sexual assault. He resigned from the IMF days later.

Prosecutors dismissed the charges in August because of concerns about Diallo's credibility.

Strauss-Kahn has said the sexual encounter was consensual, and his lawyers have accused Diallo of financial motives.

She is now pursuing civil claims in New York. A judge is considering a motion from Strauss-Kahn's lawyers to dismiss the lawsuit because he enjoyed diplomatic immunity as head of the IMF at the time of the encounter.

The paper said that during the past months Strauss-Kahn has carried out his own investigations, aided by a private detective service.

Separately, Strauss-Kahn has been formally put under investigation in a prostitution scandal in the northern city of Lille. He declined to talk about that case with The Guardian.

The second round of the French election is set for May 6 and pits the incumbent centre-right President Nicolas Sarkozy against his Socialist rival Francois Hollande.

(Reporting by Avril Ormsby; editing by Geert De Clercq)

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We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/

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Reuters: People News: Music fans hanker for Ray Charles hologram: poll

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Music fans hanker for Ray Charles hologram: poll
Apr 27th 2012, 21:53

Singer Ray Charles, performing in this April 9, 2003 file photograph, has received seven Grammy Award nominations posthumously, as nominations were announced at a news conference in Hollywood by the Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences December 7, 2004. Charles died at his home in Beverly Hills June 10, 2004. Charles album ''Genius Loves Company'' was nominated for Album of the Year.

Credit: Reuters/Jeff Christensen/Files

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Reuters: People News: Nobel winner Pamuk opens novel museum in Istanbul

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Nobel winner Pamuk opens novel museum in Istanbul
Apr 27th 2012, 20:17

Nobel-winning Turkish author Orhan Pamuk gestures during a news conference before the opening of the Museum of Innocence in Istanbul April 27, 2012. REUTERS/Osman Orsal

1 of 4. Nobel-winning Turkish author Orhan Pamuk gestures during a news conference before the opening of the Museum of Innocence in Istanbul April 27, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Osman Orsal

By Ayla Jean Yackley

ISTANBUL | Fri Apr 27, 2012 4:17pm EDT

ISTANBUL (Reuters Life!) - Nobel prize-winning Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk realizes a long-nurtured dream on Saturday with the opening of an actual "Museum of Innocence" - a collection of relics of a half-century of ordinary life - as depicted in his 2008 novel of the same name.

Pamuk set out "not to do a spectacular or monumental museum but something in the backstreets, something that represents the daily life of the city," he told a news conference after a press preview.

Situated in a bright, wine-red building in the district of Cukurcuma, the Museum of Innocence houses real and fabricated artifacts from everyday Turkish life between 1950 and 2000, in an homage both to the novel and to Pamuk's Istanbul.

"Our daily lives are honorable, and their objects should be preserved. It's not all about the glories of the past," he said. "It's the people and their objects that count."

He conceived of the museum more than a decade ago, at the same time he came up with the idea for the novel. A New York Times bestseller, "The Museum of Innocence" was his first book after winning the 2006 Nobel prize for literature.

The book tells the story of Kemal, who hoards ordinary items to recapture the happiness he felt during a passionate but ill-fated love affair.

The real life museum contains odds and ends that Pamuk collected from Cukurcuma junk shops, family and other donors. There are china dog figurines, old shaving kits and a wind-up film projector. A toothbrush collection, which features in the novel, was contributed by its real-life owner.

Pride of place goes to Kemal's lover's 4,213 cigarette butts, lovingly dated, archived and gently pinned to a canvas that occupies a full wall. Pamuk described the painstaking process of vacuuming out the tobacco to prevent worms.

The space was originally meant to open with the book's publication, but was beset with delays. It took Pamuk - working closely with a team of architects, artists and product designers - another four years to complete the project.

His Nobel prize money of more than 1 million euros did not fully cover costs, he said, declining to specify the exact cost of the museum. Royalties from the book will go towards upkeep.

While the project is distinctly personal, Pamuk insisted it is not autobiographical.

His protagonist Kemal is far too obsessed with his love and his compulsive hoarding to pay much attention to the social and political upheaval around him. His story takes place in Istanbul in the 1970s, a decade bookended with coups.

Pamuk, 59, is among Turkey's best selling writers. His work, including "My Name Is Red," "The Black Book" and the memoir "Istanbul," has been translated into some 60 languages.

He was charged with "insulting Turkishness" in 2005 for remarks he made about the World War One massacre of Armenians and the state's fight against Kurdish separatism since 1984. He was acquitted.

Pamuk is now at work on a new book told from the view of a street vendor eking out a living in one of sprawling Istanbul's shantytowns. His first book, 1982's "Cevdet Bey and His Sons," is now being made into a serial for television.

(Editing by Peter Graff)

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Thursday, April 26, 2012

Reuters: People News: Actor Lane Garrison charged with domestic violence

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Actor Lane Garrison charged with domestic violence
Apr 26th 2012, 22:05

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Actor Lane Garrison leaves Beverly Hills Superior Court in California March 8, 2007. REUTERS/Phil McCarten

Actor Lane Garrison leaves Beverly Hills Superior Court in California March 8, 2007.

Credit: Reuters/Phil McCarten

By Alex Dobuzinskis

LOS ANGELES | Thu Apr 26, 2012 6:05pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Former "Prison Break" star Lane Garrison was charged on Thursday with misdemeanor battery against his ex-girlfriend, which could violate his parole over a conviction for vehicular manslaughter.

Since his arrest on Sunday, Garrison, 31, has been held in jail without bail. His probation for the 2007 manslaughter conviction was set to expire in one week, his attorney said.

Security cameras at his ex-girlfriend's Beverly Hills apartment show a dispute on Saturday between Garrison and Ashley Mattingly in the lobby of the building.

Garrison struck Mattingly as the two were leaving an elevator, said Los Angeles deputy district attorney Elizabeth Marks. Witnesses approached the pair, and he fled the building, prosecutors said.

Video of the dispute was posted on celebrity website TMZ.com.

Garrison's Los Angeles attorney, Harland Braun, said the two were "in the process of breaking up" and were arguing over messages on their cell phones and over the devices.

"It's pretty clear he's trying to grab his phone, or she's got both phones basically," Braun said. "It's unfortunate that it happened just before he was going to terminate his parole."

In 2006, Garrison was driving a Land Rover carrying a 17-year-old Beverly Hills high school student and two teen girls when the vehicle struck a tree, resulting in one death.

Garrison in 2007 pleaded guilty to vehicular manslaughter, driving under the influence causing injury, and a misdemeanor count of providing alcohol to a minor.

A hearing will be held within two weeks to determine if Garrison violated his parole in the fight with Mattingly, said California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation spokesman Luis Patino.

If Garrison is found to have violated his parole, Garrison could face up to 90 days in jail, Patino said.

Garrison played the character Tweener in the Fox series "Prison Break," and he also appeared in 2007 film "Shooter."

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Jill Serjeant)

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Reuters: People News: Ex-president George H.W. Bush opens up for HBO film

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Ex-president George H.W. Bush opens up for HBO film
Apr 26th 2012, 18:45

Former President George H.W. Bush smiles as he listens to Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney speak as he met with Bush to pick up his formal endorsement in Houston March 29, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Donna Carson

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Reuters: People News: Bob Marley sings again in new film documentary

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Bob Marley sings again in new film documentary
Apr 26th 2012, 12:34

Director Kevin Macdonald attends a news conference to promote the movie ''Marley'' at the 62nd Berlinale International Film Festival in Berlin February 12, 2012. REUTERS/Morris Mac Matzen

Director Kevin Macdonald attends a news conference to promote the movie ''Marley'' at the 62nd Berlinale International Film Festival in Berlin February 12, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Morris Mac Matzen

By Jordan Riefe

LOS ANGELES | Thu Apr 26, 2012 8:34am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Director Kevin MacDonald has enjoyed a distinguished career making both documentaries - "One Day in September" and "Touching the Void," among them - as well as feature films such as "The Last King of Scotland."

For his latest non-fiction movie, the 44-year-old MacDonald has taken on iconic Jamaican reggae star Bob Marley in "Marley," which is currently playing in a limited number of U.S. theaters with plans to expand around the country in coming weeks.

Born in 1945 in the rural Jamaican town of Nine Mile, Marley spent his formative years in Kingston ghettos where he turned to music. His roots in early ska evolved into reggae when Marley became a Rastafarian, and with hits such as "No Woman, No Cry," he eventually became an international superstar. Marley died in 1981 of melanoma cancer.

Marley's music and his message of peace is brought to life in MacDonald's new documentary, and Reuters recently spoke with the Oscar-winning director about the man behind the image, his violent brush with death and his final years.

Q: What are some of the biggest misconceptions about Bob Marley that you came across preparing the movie?

A: "Misconception about him starts with the idea he was just a pot-smoking, lazy Caribbean guy who didn't do very much. And actually, as you see in the movie, he's driven and ambitious and hard working and disciplined. I think that will come as a surprise to many people."

Q: Jamaica gained its independence the same year he had his first hit. How much do you think he was shaped by his times?

A: "Jamaican independence, in 1962, coincides with the formation of The Wailers (Marley's band) and they do run in parallel, The Wailers and the history of Jamaica, they are the spokespeople. Obviously Bob's music in the 70s is intricately caught up with the political situation and with Jamaica's position as a kind of proxy state in the Cold War."

Q: You have a brief section on the attempt to assassinate Marley, which has long been thought to be politically motivated, two days before the Smile Jamaica concert in 1976. Who do you think was behind the attempt?

A: "If you listen to any two people in Jamaica they'll give you two different conspiracy theories on who shot Bob Marley. There was a CIA file on Marley, but then there was a CIA file on everybody. I'm sure the CIA was involved in bringing arms into the country, for instance. But I don't believe that there's any evidence that suggests Bob himself was targeted by the CIA."

Q: What are some of the rumors in Kingston?

A: "You can't find anyone in Jamaica who will talk about that on record, still, because they're terrified. It's amazing to think it's still so dangerous there to talk about something that happened 40 years ago, even now. I was told by two or three people that they - the guys who were actually responsible for it - faced ghetto justice and were dead within a few weeks. Certainly that's what Alan Cole, Bob's great friend and a very connected guy, told me. I have no reason to doubt that."

Q: And what followed was a two year exile in the UK.

A: "After he had the brush with death with the assassination attempt, that was when the first outpouring of creativity happened with 'Exodus' and 'Kaya' all within a few months. And the cancer, I think, gave him a sense of his immortality."

Q: Why didn't he seek treatment?

A: "I think he had a feeling of invincibility. He believed that Rastas don't die - a fundamental Rasta belief that you don't die. And he was hugely religious. I think everything in him was saying, ‘It'll be okay.' I think he knew that he was really ill. He wasn't stupid. I think he decided to just ignore it and say, 'let's carry on performing as long as we can.'"

Q: At the end of the movie you see the footage of everyone mourning him...

A: "And you have the funeral cortege going through Jamaica from Kingston up to Nine Mile. And you see this huge outpouring of grief. That's because he was a part of the country, part of Jamaica and somehow with his dying, part of the country disappears. I don't think there's any other country which is so uniquely identified with a single individual as Jamaica is with Bob Marley."

(Reporting by Jordan Riefe; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

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Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Reuters: People News: Beyonce named People's most beautiful woman

Reuters: People News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Beyonce named People's most beautiful woman
Apr 25th 2012, 22:43

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6:19pm EDT

Singer Beyonce poses at the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards in Los Angeles August 28, 2011. REUTERS/Danny Moloshok

Singer Beyonce poses at the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards in Los Angeles August 28, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Danny Moloshok

NEW YORK | Wed Apr 25, 2012 6:43pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Grammy-award winning singer and new mother Beyonce was named the world's most beautiful woman for 2012 on Wednesday by People magazine.

The 30-year-old entertainer was awarded People's top spot after she and her rapper husband Jay-Z welcomed their first child, a daughter named Blue Ivy Carter, who was born in New York in January.

"I feel more beautiful than I've ever felt because I've given birth. I have never felt so connected, never felt like I had such a purpose on this earth," the singer told the magazine.

Beyonce topped the magazine's annual list and joined other women who have held the title including Michelle Pfeiffer, Julia Roberts, Nicole Kidman, Halle Berry, Jennifer Aniston, Angelina Jolie and last year's winner Jennifer Lopez.

The former Destiny's Child singer, who married Jay-Z in 2008, is preparing for her first post-baby concert in Atlantic City, New Jersey next month.

The full list can be found on www.people.com/mostbeautiful

(Reporting by Patricia Reaney, Editing by Christine Kearney)

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Comments (1)

Beyonce is certainly attractive but most definitely NOT the most beautiful woman in the world. When you put her on a list with Michelle Obama(ugly) and some of the others, it makes you wonder why these editors aren't sitting in an opthamologists office right now.

Apr 25, 2012 3:20pm EDT  --  Report as abuse

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Reuters: People News: Judge to rule Tuesday on Strauss-Kahn suit's fate

Reuters: People News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Judge to rule Tuesday on Strauss-Kahn suit's fate
Apr 25th 2012, 20:18

Former IMF head Dominique Strauss-Kahn leaves after he voted in the first round of the 2012 French presidential election at a polling station in Sarcelles April 22, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Gonzalo Fuentes

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Reuters: People News: Beyonce named People's most beautiful woman

Reuters: People News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Beyonce named People's most beautiful woman
Apr 25th 2012, 13:47

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Singer Beyonce poses at the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards in Los Angeles August 28, 2011. REUTERS/Danny Moloshok

Singer Beyonce poses at the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards in Los Angeles August 28, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Danny Moloshok

NEW YORK | Wed Apr 25, 2012 9:47am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Grammy-award winning singer and new mother Beyonce was named the world's most beautiful woman for 2012 on Wednesday by People magazine.

The 30-year-old entertainer was awarded People's top spot after she and her rapper husband Jay-Z welcomed their first child, a daughter named Blue Ivy Carter, who was born in New York in January.

"I feel more beautiful than I've ever felt because I've given birth. I have never felt so connected, never felt like I had such a purpose on this earth," the singer told the magazine.

Beyonce topped the magazine's annual list and joined other women who have held the title including Michelle Pfeiffer, Julia Roberts, Nicole Kidman, Halle Berry, Jennifer Aniston, Angelina Jolie and last year's winner Jennifer Lopez.

The former Destiny's Child singer, who married Jay-Z in 2008, is preparing for her first post-baby concert in Atlantic City, New Jersey next month.

The full list can be found on www.people.com/mostbeautiful

(Reporting by Patricia Reaney, Editing by Christine Kearney)

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We welcome comments that advance the story through relevant opinion, anecdotes, links and data. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters. For more information on our comment policy, see http://blogs.reuters.com/fulldisclosure/2010/09/27/toward-a-more-thoughtful-conversation-on-stories/

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Reuters: People News: A Minute With: John Cusack on Poe and "The Raven"

Reuters: People News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
A Minute With: John Cusack on Poe and "The Raven"
Apr 25th 2012, 09:04

By Zorianna Kit

LOS ANGELES | Wed Apr 25, 2012 5:04am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - When dark, gothic thriller "The Raven" debuts in U.S. theaters on Friday, it will mark the return of actor John Cusack to more serious roles from recent forays into comedy with "Hot Tub Time Machine" and the sci-fi adventure in "2012."

Cusack portrays famed American writer Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849), who is known for macabre tales such as "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" and poems like "The Raven."

The fictional film tells the story of a serial killer who commits grisly murders based on Poe's stories and then kidnaps Poe's love, Emily (Alice Eve). With the murders piling up, Poe teams with a detective (Luke Evans) to capture the killer and get Emily back before she becomes a victim, too.

Cusack said the movie is just one of several he has coming up that show the dark side of humanity. He spoke to Reuters about playing Poe, living in the underworld and, among lighter subjects, his fondness for Twitter.

Q: How do prepare for playing someone as mysterious as Poe?

A: "Mentally it was immersing yourself into his stuff - reading his poetry, his letters, biographies. I was reading his stories at night during the shoot so I had all that stuff working in my brain."

Q: What did you do to physically prepare for the role?

A: "Since he was destitute and an alcoholic, I tried to get as gaunt as I could. I got down to a weight I was before high school, which is real thin. I felt kind of skeletal. I tried to do it the smart way but it still was a little bit of a bender. I just fasted and drank coffee."

Q: The story takes place in Baltimore, where Poe lived for a time, but you shot in Belgrade and Budapest. Why those cities?

A: "It was perfect for Poe. It was winter. It was black. It was cold and intense. I didn't sleep and felt like a vampire."

Q: You must have wanted to move to something light and funny after wrapping 'Raven.'

A: "Strangely, I stayed in the underworld all year. I shot 'The Paperboy' with Nicole Kidman. (Filmmaker) Lee Daniels made a sick movie (about the investigation of a death row inmate.) Then I shot 'Frozen Ground' about an Alaskan killer."

Q: Are you trying to exorcise some personal demons here, or are you just a glutton for punishment?

A: "It's weird, but I didn't choose any of them. They chose me. I wasn't going to turn down a chance to play Poe. Otherwise you should just retire as an actor because c'mon, that's a great character. He's so crazy and eccentric and out there. Usually roles like that go to the guy with the biggest box office."

Q: You're not exactly new to the movie business. You don't think you have box office clout?

A: "It's all about who is writing the checks and putting the movies together. It's a weird thing. If people like this movie, I'm going to become a good idea again. It's literally that simple. You come in and out of vogue. If you stay around the game, sometimes it comes your way. I got a good one (with 'The Raven'). You have to ride the business, have thick skin and be grateful that you're still around. The Irish, we're pretty stubborn. We're hard to kill. We don't die easy. We keep going and we don't quit."

Q: Along those lines, you've worked with just about everyone in Hollywood. What have you yet to accomplish?

A: "Doing different kinds of art forms. I'm not a good painter, but I throw paint around. Maybe writing in different forms, but I'd have to be disciplined. When you write films, you never have to stop because you get it good enough for the day of shooting but you can still tweak it. And you're still tweaking when you're editing. So I'm always getting it just pregnant enough to happen, but it would be good discipline to try and finish a book and say: 'Okay, this is it.' I'm not there yet."

Q: You recently joined Twitter. Do you like social media?

A: "I like having direct access to people who are interested in what I'm interested in without having to go through the filters of all these other people. If you like what I say about art and culture and politics, then you can follow me and I can introduce you to writers that I've read throughout my life that have impacted me. People want to know what I like in music because I did 'High Fidelity' so I can turn people on to Bob Dylan's 'Theme Time Radio Hour,' which a lot of people don't know about. I like sharing with people."

Q: You starred in the disaster flick "2012." Now that we're in the year 2012, should be preparing for the end of the world? Are we all going to die?

A: "No, I think we're going to be stuck with each other a little while longer."

(Reporting By Zorianna Kit; editing by Patricia Reaney)

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