Saturday, June 30, 2012

Reuters: People News: Katie Holmes finds Tom Cruise is "Mission: Impossible"

Reuters: People News
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Katie Holmes finds Tom Cruise is "Mission: Impossible"
Jun 30th 2012, 10:49

Actor Tom Cruise and his wife, actress Katie Holmes, arrive at the 2012 Vanity Fair Oscar party in West Hollywood, California February 26, 2012. REUTERS/Danny Moloshok

Actor Tom Cruise and his wife, actress Katie Holmes, arrive at the 2012 Vanity Fair Oscar party in West Hollywood, California February 26, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Danny Moloshok

By Bob Tourtellotte

LOS ANGELES | Sat Jun 30, 2012 6:49am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Actress Katie Holmes has filed for divorce from her superstar husband Tom Cruise, ending a six-year marriage that produced one daughter and captivated celebrity watchers worldwide.

Holmes filed papers in New York City on Thursday, citing irreconcilable differences and seeking sole custody of the couple's six-year-old daughter Suri in a move that came "out of the blue" for the "Mission: Impossible" actor, said one source with knowledge of the situation.

The source said Cruise is out of the country filming a movie in Iceland and the filing came as a surprise.

The actor's spokeswoman issued a brief statement, saying: "Kate has filed for divorce and Tom is deeply saddened and is concentrating on his three children. Please allow them their privacy to work this out." No further comment was made

Los Angeles-based attorney Bert Fields, who has represented Cruise in other matters but is not handling the divorce, confirmed the filing but declined to give further details.

"Tom wants to be very private," Fields said.

Earlier on Friday, People magazine quoted Holmes' attorney Jonathan Wolfe as calling it "a personal and private matter for Katie and her family ... Katie's primary concern remains, as it always has been, her daughter's best interest."

The couple's marriage, which began at an elaborate, Italian castle wedding in November 2006, has been closely followed by the celebrity press ever since the pair, dubbed TomKat, began dating in 2005.

At the time, Holmes, now 33, was a rising star and Hollywood ingรƒ©nue who found fame on TV's "Dawson's Creek" and earned her acting chops in independent films such as "Pieces of April."

Cruise, 16 years her senior, was among Hollywood's highest paid stars who enjoyed a string of box office blockbusters in action flicks ranging from 1986's "Top Gun" to his "Mission: Impossible" movies that began in 1996 and continue today.

He proposed to Holmes atop the Eiffel Tower in Paris and famously went on Oprah Winfrey's talk show, jumped on her couch and shouted out his love for Holmes in front of a TV audience of millions.

Cruise, a practitioner of Scientology, was previously married to actress Mimi Rogers and actress Nicole Kidman, with whom he has two children.

Holmes' marriage to Cruise was her first.

(Reporting by Bob Tourtellotte; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn and David Gregorio)

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Friday, June 29, 2012

Reuters: People News: Charlie Sheen's TV show sets cable audience record

Reuters: People News
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Charlie Sheen's TV show sets cable audience record
Jun 29th 2012, 22:05

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Actor Charlie Sheen arrives at the Hollywood FX Summer Comedies Party in Los Angeles, California June 26, 2012. REUTERS/Gus Ruelas

Actor Charlie Sheen arrives at the Hollywood FX Summer Comedies Party in Los Angeles, California June 26, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Gus Ruelas

LOS ANGELES | Fri Jun 29, 2012 6:05pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Charlie Sheen may have lost a man and a half, but the bad boy actor has rebounded from last year's television debacle with a record-setting audience for his new TV comedy.

More than 5.4 million U.S. viewers watched the debut episode of "Anger Management" on FX on Thursday night according to audience ratings data, making it was the most-watched, scripted comedy series debut in primetime cable TV history.

The comedy, in which Sheen plays a womanizing anger therapist with problems of his own, is Sheen's first TV series since he was fired in 2011 from his womanizing bachelor role in the top-rated CBS comedy "Two and A Half Men".

The audience for "Anger Management" was about a third of the viewers Sheen attracted for "Men". He lost that job after publicly insulting producers during months of erratic behavior.

TV critics gave "Anger Management" a lukewarm reception, with many feeling it was a tired version of Sheen's former character. The Los Angeles Times said the show was "just average", while the New York Daily News called it funny and said it had an oddball collection of characters.

Also on FX, comedian Russell Brand's new late-night stand-up show, "Brand X", got off to what the network called "a good start" on Thursday with 1.1 million viewers.

FX is the cable arm of Fox television, owned by News Corp, and is aimed mostly at young men.

(Reporting By Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

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Reuters: People News: Savannah Guthrie replaces Curry as "Today" co-host

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Savannah Guthrie replaces Curry as "Today" co-host
Jun 29th 2012, 20:52

Savannah Guthrie co-hosts NBC's 'Today' show in New York, June 29, 2012. Ann Curry announced on Thursday she was leaving as co-host of the 'Today' show after just a year in the high-profile job and following a recent slump in the ratings of the early morning program. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

1 of 2. Savannah Guthrie co-hosts NBC's 'Today' show in New York, June 29, 2012. Ann Curry announced on Thursday she was leaving as co-host of the 'Today' show after just a year in the high-profile job and following a recent slump in the ratings of the early morning program.

Credit: Reuters/Brendan McDermid

By Christine Kearney and Ronald Grover

NEW YORK | Fri Jun 29, 2012 4:52pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Savannah Guthrie will replace Ann Curry as co-host of NBC's "Today" Show, NBC announced on Friday, a day after Curry made an emotional early exit from one of America's most high-profile television slots.

Guthrie, 40, who previously served as co-host of the morning program's third hour, will join Matt Lauer in the main hosting chairs in a shake-up of the show's line-up aimed at curbing a recent decline in ratings, the network said.

"She's got an undeniable range, and she's earned the trust of the news community, her colleagues and our viewers alike. I couldn't be happier for Savannah and the entire รข€˜Today' team," NBC News President Steve Capus said in a statement.

Guthrie joined "Today" in June 2011 after a nearly three-year stint as a White House correspondent for NBC News. She holds a law degree from Georgetown University and will keep her title as chief legal correspondent for NBC News.

Guthrie replaced Curry after "Today" had slipped in the ratings since Curry took the chair co-hosting with Lauer in June 2011.

In April, ABC's "Good Morning America" moved ahead of "Today" in the weekly ratings race among total viewers for the first time in 16 years, according to Horizon Media. "Today" kept the lead among adults aged 25 to 54.

Since then, the two shows have traded the No. 1 spot among total viewers.

"It's going to take a while to see if Savannah Guthrie will make a difference in the ratings," said Syracuse professor Robert Thompson and director of its Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture. "Was Anne Curry the problem, or has Good Morning America just become more aggressive?"

The departing anchor was part of the show for 15 years as its news reader before becoming co-host, Thompson said, "so she ought to get some credit for its ratings success as well."

Curry made an emotional on-air departure from the show on Thursday after just a year in the job, tearfully thanking the viewers who had supported her and saying that for those "who saw me as a ground breaker, I am sorry I could not carry the ball across the finish line."

She will remain as an anchor-at-large for "Today" and other NBC newscasts while reporting on stories from around the globe.

"Today", a huge profit center for NBC, generated $848 million in advertising revenue for the company last year, while "Good Morning America" made about $298 million, according to Horizon Media.

Comcast Corp owns NBC, and Walt Disney Co owns ABC.

(Reporting by Christine Kearney; Editing by Dale Hudson)

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Reuters: People News: Seth Rogen waltzes to a dramatic beat in new movie

Reuters: People News
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Seth Rogen waltzes to a dramatic beat in new movie
Jun 29th 2012, 20:51

Actor Seth Rogen and his wife Lauren Miller arrive at the 2012 Vanity Fair Oscar party in West Hollywood, California February 26, 2012. REUTERS/Danny Moloshok

Actor Seth Rogen and his wife Lauren Miller arrive at the 2012 Vanity Fair Oscar party in West Hollywood, California February 26, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Danny Moloshok

By Zorianna Kit

LOS ANGELES | Fri Jun 29, 2012 4:51pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - He's better known for big studio comedies like "Superbad" and "Pineapple Express", but Seth Rogen strays from his beaten path when he stars in the low-budget comedy-drama "Take This Waltz".

Directed by Canadian actress/filmmaker Sarah Polley, and opening in U.S. theaters on Friday, the movie sees Rogen starring opposite Michelle Williams, who is better known for dramatic roles in films like "Blue Valentine".

Rogen plays a cookbook author with an alcoholic sister (Sarah Silverman) who doesn't seem to notice that his wife (Williams) has fallen for the handsome artist (Luke Kirby) that lives across the street.

Rogen, 30, talked with Reuters about working with Williams, and his upcoming directorial debut in "The End of the World".

Q: "Take This Waltz" is about a woman's marriage failing because she's in love with someone else. Not exactly a subject matter you're associated with. How did this project come about?

A: "I'm not one of those actors where filmmakers that I admire ask me to be in their movies. I meet them at parties and they're nice to me, but they never ask me to work with them. Sarah Polley is one of the first filmmakers that I've really liked that asked me."

Q: There is no trace here of the man-child roles you often play in your other movies. It's probably your most serious role to date, wouldn't you say?

A: "It's probably closer to what I am in real life. I think I'm one of those people that when fans meet, they're often very disappointed because I'm kind of quiet and shy. I think they expect me to have one of those hats with two beer cans strapped to my head and strippers on either side of me. So it was nice to do something where I didn't have to be really funny all the time."

Q: How did you enjoy working with Michelle Williams?

A: "She was very impressive. A lot of our scenes were emotionally demanding. The emotional turmoil that actors put themselves through at the drop of a hat is not the type of stuff I normally do."

Q: We seem to know more about Michelle Williams' character than yours. What's the back story you gave him?

A: "I think a lot of people aggressively stay stagnant, almost like a gauntlet that's thrown down. For Lou, the test of the relationship is 'Can we not change.' He thinks if it's strong enough to not change, that means it's strong enough to last. But that's not realistic or how real relationships are."

Q: You're currently making your feature directorial debut with writing partner Evan Goldberg on the comedy "The End of the World" that you also star in. How do you like directing?

A: "It was a little daunting because the movie itself is technically complicated. The story is something we've been working on for years and years. There have been several moments where I feel like, 'I can't believe we pulled this off!' But those wonderful moments have been shattered by the stress of 'We're not going to finish what we need to shoot in time!'"

Q: In that film, everybody plays a heightened version of themselves. You've got a lot of your friends in there like James Franco, Jonah Hill and Jason Segel. But also people like Rihanna and Emma Watson who seem unlikely to hang with your crowd in real life.

A: "It's James Franco's party in the movie. And the truth is, sometimes you go to a party and you can't believe who's there...I've had random famous people show up at my parties where I'm like, 'What the heck is this person doing here?' That's what we wanted to tap in to."

Q: How did you nab Rihanna?

A: "I read in an interview once that she was a fan of some of our movies. When we were working on this film, we thought, 'She seems not to hate us. She could be a good person to ask.' We got her on the phone, explained it to her and she agreed to do it. She was really funny, she improvised and did everything we asked her to do. And she seemed to have a good time."

Q: You act, write, direct, produce and are considered to be on Hollywood's A-list. Ever feel like you're on top of the world?

A: "As a Jewish person, you generally hate yourself, but there's moments where I feel that way."

(Reporting by Zorianna Kit, editing by Jill Serjeant and Carol Bishopric)

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Reuters: People News: Savannah Guthrie replaces Curry as "Today" co-host

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
Savannah Guthrie replaces Curry as "Today" co-host
Jun 29th 2012, 17:50

Savannah Guthrie co-hosts NBC's 'Today' show in New York, June 29, 2012. Ann Curry announced on Thursday she was leaving as co-host of the 'Today' show after just a year in the high-profile job and following a recent slump in the ratings of the early morning program.

Credit: Reuters/Brendan McDermid

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Reuters: People News: Tom Cruise, Katie Holmes seek divorce: report

Reuters: People News
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Tom Cruise, Katie Holmes seek divorce: report
Jun 29th 2012, 17:29

Actor Tom Cruise and his wife, actress Katie Holmes, arrive at the 2012 Vanity Fair Oscar party in West Hollywood, California February 26, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Danny Moloshok

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Reuters: People News: Gold medal for winning hearts? British royals

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Gold medal for winning hearts? British royals
Jun 29th 2012, 14:33

Britain's Zara Phillips, granddaughter of Queen Elizabeth, attends the Cheltenham Festival horse racing meet in Gloucestershire, western England March 15, 2012. REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth

Britain's Zara Phillips, granddaughter of Queen Elizabeth, attends the Cheltenham Festival horse racing meet in Gloucestershire, western England March 15, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Stefan Wermuth

By Belinda Goldsmith

LONDON | Fri Jun 29, 2012 10:33am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - As top athletes gain followers ahead of the London Olympics, another elite group starring at the Games is also rising in popularity - Britain's royal family - following a tradition for the Olympics to strengthen bonds between royalty and the people.

Queen Elizabeth, who is enjoying her highest level of public satisfaction in 20 years following her Diamond Jubilee celebrations this month, will open the Olympics on July 27 and her equestrian granddaughter, Zara Phillips, is competing.

Phillips, 31, is only the second British royal to compete at an Olympics and follows in the footsteps of her mother, Princess Anne, who rode for Britain at the 1976 Montreal Games. Her father, Captain Mark Phillips, also competed twice for Britain.

While royalty is not usually associated with international sporting competitions, the list of royals competing and involved with the Olympics over the past century is long. Currently 12 of 105 members on the International Olympic Committee are royal.

Royal and sports historians said the tradition for royals and heads of state to play a part dated back to Athens in 1896 when the founder of the modern Olympics, Pierre de Coubertin, ensured the aristocracy was involved to give the event prestige and credibility.

"Since the start of the modern Olympics, most heads of state have made a big deal about being seen at the Olympics," Martin Polley, an Olympic historian and senior lecturer in sport at Southampton University, told Reuters.

"Democracies, dictatorships and monarchies like to be on display. The Olympics gives the king, queen and other members of royal families the chance to be seen sharing the same activities as everyone else and coming together as a nation - although there is still a clear demarcation in roles."

SPORTS OF KINGS

Phillips may only be the second British royal to compete but she is the latest in a line of royals at the Olympics where horse-riding and sailing have proven to be the sports of kings.

The first royal competitors emerged in 1900 in Paris.

Australian sport scientist Rob Wood, who runs the website topendsports.com, said his research found the first royal competitors were Count Hermann Alexandre de Pourtales, from an old Huguenot family of Switzerland, who won gold and silver medals in sailing with his wife, Countess Helene de Pourtales, in his crew. She was one of the first women Olympians and female medalists.

Greece's Count Alexander Mercati competed in golf in 1900.

At Stockholm in 1912, Prince Friedrich Karl of Prussia, a German prince, won bronze in a team horse jumping and Russia's Grand Duke Dmitri Pavlovich also competed in equestrian.

Norway's Crown Prince Olav, who became king in 1957, won gold in sailing at the 1928 Amsterdam Games while his son, King Harald from 1991, sailed for Norway in 1964, 1968 and 1972.

Constantine II of Greece competed as Crown Prince Constantine at the Rome Games in 1960, winning a gold medal. He was king from 1964 until the Greek monarchy was abolished in 1973.

His sister, now Queen Sofia of Spain, sailed for Greece in the 1960 Olympics while her husband Juan Carlos, King of Spain, sailed for Spain in 1972, three years before becoming king.

Their daughter, Infanta Cristina, sailed for Spain at the 1988 Seoul Games while their son, Crown Prince Felipe, represented Spain in Barcelona in 1992, again in sailing.

Princess Haya of Jordan rode at Sydney in 2000.

ROYAL AFICIONADOS

Denmark's Princess Nathalie of Sayn-Wittgenstein-Berleburg was in team dressage at Beijing 2008, winning bronze, while Saudi Arabia's Prince Faisal Alshalan and Prince Abdullah Bin Miteb also competed in equestrian.

The most notable royal in the Winter Games is Prince Albert of Monaco, an IOC member since 1985, who is a five-time winter Olympian in bob-sledding.

"Some sports, like equestrian and sailing, do have a number of royal aficionados and there has been a quite number of royal competitors but not many royal medalists," said Carolyn Harris, a royal historian with a PhD from Queen's University, Canada.

"But sport is something the younger royals have always shown interest in and promoted and we are seeing this with the British royals now, particularly Prince William, Kate and Prince Harry."

Rebecca Hopkins, managing director of sports PR agency ENS Ltd, said Olympic involvement could only add to the rising popularity of the British royal family whose efforts to "rebrand" and put an emphasis on younger royals is paying off.

A Ipsos Mori poll this month found 90 percent of people were pleased with the Queen's work compared to 75 percent in 1992, the Queen's famous "annus horribilis" when two royal marriages broke down, including that of Prince Charles and Princess Diana, one royal marriage ended in divorce, and a fire destroyed large sections of Windor Castle.

This satisfaction level fell to 66 percent in 1998, the year after Princess Diana's death in a car crash in Paris.

"The Olympics is something they can do that is apolitical," Hopkins told Reuters. "With Zara Phillip competing as well, it is a good story for the royal family."

(Editing by Patrick Johnston)

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Reuters: People News: U.S. "Genius" visa attracts entrepreneurs and Playmates

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
U.S. "Genius" visa attracts entrepreneurs and Playmates
Jun 29th 2012, 14:55

Playboy magazine founder Hugh Hefner and girlfriends Anna Sophia Berglund (L) and Shera Bechard arrive at the Society of Singers annual dinner in Beverly Hills, California September 19, 2011. REUTERS/Fred Prouser

1 of 3. Playboy magazine founder Hugh Hefner and girlfriends Anna Sophia Berglund (L) and Shera Bechard arrive at the Society of Singers annual dinner in Beverly Hills, California September 19, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Fred Prouser

By Sarah McBride

SAN FRANCISCO | Fri Jun 29, 2012 10:55am EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Shera Bechard, the Canadian-born former girlfriend of Playboy Enterprises founder Hugh Hefner, would not be an obvious candidate for the special visas that the U.S. government reserves for "individuals with extraordinary ability."

Playboy magazine named Bechard Miss November in 2010, and she also started an online photo-sharing craze called "Frisky Friday." Neither seems quite on the level of an "internationally recognized award, such as a Nobel Prize," which the government cites as a possible qualification.

But Los Angeles immigration lawyer Chris Wright argued that Bechard's accomplishments earned her a slot. The government ultimately agreed.

That kind of success has put Wright on the map as the go-to visa fixer for both Hollywood and Silicon Valley. It also highlights the use of so-called genius visas known as O-1s and EB-1s, which have largely escaped political controversy and are now the immigration solution of choice for many entrepreneurs.

As many immigration lawyers see it, the paucity of immigration options for the most entrepreneurial foreigners mean they must use any avenue they can. This approach, along with seeming flexibility in Washington on what constitutes "extraordinary ability," means the O-1 is gaining traction in technology circles. Wider use could ultimately land it in political trouble.

For example, the H-1B visa, which allows employers to hire foreigners temporarily in certain specialized fields like technology, has drawn accusations from union groups and others that companies use it to bring in lower-skilled labor.

The O-1 visa allows individuals of "extraordinary ability" to come to the United States for up to three years, and can be extended. British journalist Piers Morgan used one when he replaced Larry King on his late-night TV show, Wright said.

The EB-1 is similar, but leads to a green card and permanent residency rather than a temporary stay, with "extraordinary ability" being one of the ways to qualify - along with being an outstanding professor or researcher, or a multinational executive.

Foreign entrepreneurs have another option - the Immigrant Investor Program, or EB-5 visa - but it requires a capital investment of at least $500,000 and the creation of at least 10 full-time jobs for U.S. workers.

By contrast, no proof of personal wealth or investment in the United States is required for the O-1 or the EB-1.

There is also no cap on the number of O-1s that the government can award each year; about 12,280 were approved in 2011, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services said, up from 9,478 in 2006. It issued about 25,000 EB-1s last year, below their cap of 40,000.

The H-1B is much more popular. Applications hit their annual cap of 85,000 earlier this month.

FALLBACK POSITION

While high-profile artists and entertainers have long used the O-1s, they are now becoming a fallback for businessmen and technologists who cannot get H1-Bs.

Josh Buckley, a 20-year-old British-born entrepreneur and a client of Wright's, is among the new crop of Internet entrepreneurs to win an O-1 visa. He applied after starting a few small companies, including one he sold at age 15 for a sum reaching the low six figures, he says.

He got his O-1 last year after lining up letters of recommendation from luminaries including Netscape co-founder and venture capitalist Marc Andreessen and Apple Inc co-founder Steve Wozniak.

Buckley, whose MinoMonsters gaming company is backed by Andreessen, saw little choice other than the O-1. The H-1B was off limits because it usually does not go to people who work for themselves. The O-1, unlike most H-1Bs, also does not require a college education--a key feature for the ever-younger entrepreneurs flocking to Silicon Valley.

Except when it comes to the O-1, visa officials "just don't understand the concept of someone being skilled without 12 years of experience or a bachelor's degree," says John Collison, a 22-year-old Irishman. He dropped out of Harvard University to work on Stripe, the payments company he co-founded with his brother, Patrick.

Like Buckley, he met Wright through the prestigious Silicon Valley start-up incubator known as Y Combinator. He won his O-1 in December 2010 and now has permanent residency status-- as does Buckley.

Wright, himself a South African immigrant, dismisses the notion that some of his clients might not rise to the level of "extraordinary ability."

"There's nothing in those regulations that requires you to be a genius," he says. "It's quite condescending to say, รข€˜Oh, the idiot Playboy Playmates, they don't qualify.'"

At the end of 2010, Bechard posted the first "Frisky Friday" photo on the Twitter microblogging service. Now young women all over the world tweet scantily-clad pictures of themselves on Fridays, with Playboy selecting a weekly winner.

Immigration officials "want to give (a visa) to someone who shows business skills," Bechard says. She also threw in such qualifications as her role as a mute Russian in a 2009 movie, "Sweet Karma," which won her a best actress award at the cult Fantastic Film Festival in Austin, Texas.

QUALIFICATION QUESTION

Many of Wright's young technology clients have had limited time to show they have "risen to the very top of the field of endeavor," as O-1 regulations state.

But quality rather than longevity is the key, Wright says. USCIS rules require extraordinary ability -- demonstrated by "sustained national or international acclaim" -- that he says his clients can prove with awards and testaments from leading players in their field.

The visas are "a lot of work," he said. "You can't just crank them out at high volume."

Asked about how it decides to grant O-1s, a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service spokeswoman said: "USCIS decides each benefit request on a case-by-case basis relying on the law and evidence provided for that case. There are a variety of factors that influence the number of visa applications received and approved from year to year."

Wright says he hopes that one day, immigration reform will make it easier for talented immigrants, especially entrepreneurs, to come to this country. That is a widespread goal in Silicon Valley, where immigrant entrepreneurs have helped start many leading companies. Google Inc co-founder Sergey Brin, for example, came to the United States from the Soviet Union when he was a child.

The immigrant entrepreneurs say that far from taking away jobs, they are creating them by founding companies that may go on to employ hundreds or even thousands of people.

They have managed to find allies even among the harshest critics of H-1Bs.

"The O-1 is one of the few visas we support," said Kim Berry, a spokesman for the Programmers Guild, which favors the suspension of the H-1B program. "When they need to bring in the best and the brightest and the entrepreneurs, that's the only visa that helps America."

Indeed, efforts to make it easier for educated and enterprising foreigners to stay in the United States generally enjoy bi-partisan support in Washington. The complicated status of the immigration issue as a whole, though, has blocked any changes.

"The issue is pretty well understood," said Steve Case, the founder of AOL and now head of the venture capital firm Revolution LLC. "But there is this skepticism around the politics of immigration."

Thus the O-1 will probably remain a key channel for many immigrant entrepreneurs - and it does carry some additional side benefits.

British-born Scott Allison, co-founder of a software company called Teamly, was returning to the United States earlier this month and enjoyed a rare welcome from customs officials after they caught a glimpse of his new O-1 visa.

"'Wow, you must be really awesome,'" he recalls one commenting before waving him through. "I'm like, 'Gee, thanks.'"

(Reporting By Sarah McBride; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Lisa Von Ahn)

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Thursday, June 28, 2012

Reuters: People News: U.S. "Genius" visa attracts entrepreneurs and Playmates

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
U.S. "Genius" visa attracts entrepreneurs and Playmates
Jun 29th 2012, 05:16

Playboy magazine founder Hugh Hefner and girlfriends Anna Sophia Berglund (L) and Shera Bechard arrive at the Society of Singers annual dinner in Beverly Hills, California September 19, 2011. REUTERS/Fred Prouser

Playboy magazine founder Hugh Hefner and girlfriends Anna Sophia Berglund (L) and Shera Bechard arrive at the Society of Singers annual dinner in Beverly Hills, California September 19, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Fred Prouser

By Sarah McBride

SAN FRANCISCO | Fri Jun 29, 2012 1:16am EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Shera Bechard, the Canadian-born former girlfriend of Playboy Enterprises founder Hugh Hefner, would not be an obvious candidate for the special visas that the U.S. government reserves for "individuals with extraordinary ability."

Playboy magazine named Bechard Miss November in 2010, and she also started an online photo-sharing craze called "Frisky Friday." Neither seems quite on the level of an "internationally recognized award, such as a Nobel Prize," which the government cites as a possible qualification.

But Los Angeles immigration lawyer Chris Wright argued that Bechard's accomplishments earned her a slot. The government ultimately agreed.

That kind of success has put Wright on the map as the go-to visa fixer for both Hollywood and Silicon Valley. It also highlights the use of so-called genius visas known as O-1s and EB-1s, which have largely escaped political controversy and are now the immigration solution of choice for many entrepreneurs.

As many immigration lawyers see it, the paucity of immigration options for the most entrepreneurial foreigners mean they must use any avenue they can. This approach, along with seeming flexibility in Washington on what constitutes "extraordinary ability," means the O-1 is gaining traction in technology circles. Wider use could ultimately land it in political trouble.

For example, the H-1B visa, which allows employers to hire foreigners temporarily in certain specialized fields like technology, has drawn accusations from union groups and others that companies use it to bring in lower-skilled labor.

The O-1 visa allows individuals of "extraordinary ability" to come to the United States for up to three years, and can be extended. British journalist Piers Morgan used one when he replaced Larry King on his late-night TV show, Wright said.

The EB-1 is similar, but leads to a green card and permanent residency rather than a temporary stay, with "extraordinary ability" being one of the ways to qualify - along with being an outstanding professor or researcher, or a multinational executive.

Foreign entrepreneurs have another option - the Immigrant Investor Program, or EB-5 visa - but it requires a capital investment of at least $500,000 and the creation of at least 10 full-time jobs for U.S. workers.

By contrast, no proof of personal wealth or investment in the United States is required for the O-1 or the EB-1.

There is also no cap on the number of O-1s that the government can award each year; about 12,280 were approved in 2011, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services said, up from 9,478 in 2006. It issued about 25,000 EB-1s last year, below their cap of 40,000.

The H-1B is much more popular. Applications hit their annual cap of 85,000 earlier this month.

FALLBACK POSITION

While high-profile artists and entertainers have long used the O-1s, they are now becoming a fallback for businessmen and technologists who cannot get H1-Bs.

Josh Buckley, a 20-year-old British-born entrepreneur and a client of Wright's, is among the new crop of Internet entrepreneurs to win an O-1 visa. He applied after starting a few small companies, including one he sold at age 15 for a sum reaching the low six figures, he says.

He got his O-1 last year after lining up letters of recommendation from luminaries including Netscape co-founder and venture capitalist Marc Andreessen and Apple Inc co-founder Steve Wozniak.

Buckley, whose MinoMonsters gaming company is backed by Andreessen, saw little choice other than the O-1. The H-1B was off limits because it usually does not go to people who work for themselves. The O-1, unlike most H-1Bs, also does not require a college education--a key feature for the ever-younger entrepreneurs flocking to Silicon Valley.

Except when it comes to the O-1, visa officials "just don't understand the concept of someone being skilled without 12 years of experience or a bachelor's degree," says John Collison, a 22-year-old Irishman. He dropped out of Harvard University to work on Stripe, the payments company he co-founded with his brother, Patrick.

Like Buckley, he met Wright through the prestigious Silicon Valley start-up incubator known as Y Combinator. He won his O-1 in December 2010 and now has permanent residency status-- as does Buckley.

Wright, himself a South African immigrant, dismisses the notion that some of his clients might not rise to the level of "extraordinary ability."

"There's nothing in those regulations that requires you to be a genius," he says. "It's quite condescending to say, รข€˜Oh, the idiot Playboy Playmates, they don't qualify.'"

At the end of 2010, Bechard posted the first "Frisky Friday" photo on the Twitter microblogging service. Now young women all over the world tweet scantily-clad pictures of themselves on Fridays, with Playboy selecting a weekly winner.

Immigration officials "want to give (a visa) to someone who shows business skills," Bechard says. She also threw in such qualifications as her role as a mute Russian in a 2009 movie, "Sweet Karma," which won her a best actress award at the cult Fantastic Film Festival in Austin, Texas.

QUALIFICATION QUESTION

Many of Wright's young technology clients have had limited time to show they have "risen to the very top of the field of endeavor," as O-1 regulations state.

But quality rather than longevity is the key, Wright says. USCIS rules require extraordinary ability -- demonstrated by "sustained national or international acclaim" -- that he says his clients can prove with awards and testaments from leading players in their field.

The visas are "a lot of work," he said. "You can't just crank them out at high volume."

Asked about how it decides to grant O-1s, a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service spokeswoman said: "USCIS decides each benefit request on a case-by-case basis relying on the law and evidence provided for that case. There are a variety of factors that influence the number of visa applications received and approved from year to year."

Wright says he hopes that one day, immigration reform will make it easier for talented immigrants, especially entrepreneurs, to come to this country. That is a widespread goal in Silicon Valley, where immigrant entrepreneurs have helped start many leading companies. Google Inc co-founder Sergey Brin, for example, came to the United States from the Soviet Union when he was a child.

The immigrant entrepreneurs say that far from taking away jobs, they are creating them by founding companies that may go on to employ hundreds or even thousands of people.

They have managed to find allies even among the harshest critics of H-1Bs.

"The O-1 is one of the few visas we support," said Kim Berry, a spokesman for the Programmers Guild, which favors the suspension of the H-1B program. "When they need to bring in the best and the brightest and the entrepreneurs, that's the only visa that helps America."

Indeed, efforts to make it easier for educated and enterprising foreigners to stay in the United States generally enjoy bi-partisan support in Washington. The complicated status of the immigration issue as a whole, though, has blocked any changes.

"The issue is pretty well understood," said Steve Case, the founder of AOL and now head of the venture capital firm Revolution LLC. "But there is this skepticism around the politics of immigration."

Thus the O-1 will probably remain a key channel for many immigrant entrepreneurs - and it does carry some additional side benefits.

British-born Scott Allison, co-founder of a software company called Teamly, was returning to the United States earlier this month and enjoyed a rare welcome from customs officials after they caught a glimpse of his new O-1 visa.

"'Wow, you must be really awesome,'" he recalls one commenting before waving him through. "I'm like, 'Gee, thanks.'"

(Reporting By Sarah McBride; Editing by Jonathan Weber and Lisa Von Ahn)

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Reuters: People News: France's Strauss-Kahn and wife have separated: source

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
France's Strauss-Kahn and wife have separated: source
Jun 29th 2012, 02:10

Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn (C) and his wife Anne Sinclair (2nd L) arrive at Charles-de-Gaulle airport in Roissy near Paris September 4, 2011. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard

1 of 2. Former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn (C) and his wife Anne Sinclair (2nd L) arrive at Charles-de-Gaulle airport in Roissy near Paris September 4, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Eric Gaillard

PARIS | Thu Jun 28, 2012 10:10pm EDT

PARIS (Reuters) - Former International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn, who is facing a probe into his alleged involvement with a prostitution ring in France, and his wife have separated, a source said.

Anne Sinclair, a wealthy heiress who recently relaunched her media career as a news editor at the Huffington Post's French edition, and Strauss-Kahn separated about a month ago and they are living in separate residences in Paris, said the source, who is close to Strauss-Kahn.

The weekly magazine, Closer, earlier reported in its online edition that Sinclair threw Strauss-Kahn out of their home in central Paris.

Strauss-Kahn is under investigation in France to establish whether he knew he was dealing with prostitutes and pimps when he attended sex parties in northern France, Paris and Washington in 2010 and 2011 allegedly organized by business acquaintances.

Public prosecutors last month widened the inquiry to include a possible gang rape charge after a prostitute told them Strauss-Kahn and friends had forced her to have sex in a group when she came to Washington to meet him in December 2010. The woman has not filed a formal complaint.

Strauss-Kahn denies knowing that the women at the parties were prostitutes or that there was any violence.

His career at the head of the Washington-based IMF was cut short when he was arrested in New York in May 2011 on charges, which he denied and that have since been dropped, of attempting to rape a hotel maid. After criminal charges were abandoned over concerns about her credibility, the maid, Nafissatou Diallo, pressed ahead with a civil case.

Strauss-Kahn, a former French finance minister, and Sinclair have been married for 20 years. She stuck close by him when he faced the rape accusations in New York.

The scandal destroyed his hopes of running for French president in the April-May 2012 election for the Socialist Party, which instead won power under Francois Hollande.

News of the separation comes after weeks of media speculation that the relationship was under pressure, in part as Strauss-Kahn grew depressed at his lack of career options.

"He's in a bad way. It's very sad," a person who knows Strauss-Kahn and recently saw him socially told Reuters this month. "He's mostly just at home on his own while Anne is out and about with her new job. He's shunned by everybody."

(Reporting By Catherine Bremer, additional reporting by Joseph Ax in Washington. Editing by Michael Roddy, Martin Howell and Christopher Wilson)

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Reuters: People News: France's Strauss-Kahn, wife have separated: media

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
France's Strauss-Kahn, wife have separated: media
Jun 28th 2012, 23:08

Former IMF head Dominique Strauss-Kahn (C) and Francois Pupponi (2ndR), Deputy Mayor of Sarcelles arrive at a polling station in the second round of the 2012 French presidential elections in Sarcelles May 6.

Credit: Reuters/Gonzalo Fuentes

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Reuters: People News: UK police demand Assange leave Ecuador embassy

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
UK police demand Assange leave Ecuador embassy
Jun 28th 2012, 15:15

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WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange speaks at a news conference in London, February 27, 2012. REUTERS/Finbarr O'Reilly

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange speaks at a news conference in London, February 27, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Finbarr O'Reilly

LONDON | Thu Jun 28, 2012 11:15am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - British police summoned WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to a London police station on Thursday as part of his extradition process, demanding he leave Ecuador's embassy where he has been holed up seeking political asylum.

Assange, 40, is wanted for questioning in Sweden over sex crime allegations and took refuge in Ecuador's London embassy in a surprise move last week.

He now risks being arrested the moment he steps outside the red-brick building after breaching bail terms, keeping both his supporters and police puzzled as to what he might do next.

On Thursday, police said it had formally "served a surrender notice upon a 40-year-old man that requires him to attend a police station at date and time of our choosing".

It added: "He remains in breach of his bail conditions, failing to surrender would be a further breach of conditions and he is liable to arrest."

The statement, in line with UK police policy, did not name him but local media quoted sources identifying him as Assange.

The BBC reported the extradition unit delivered a note to both Assange and the Ecuador embassy. The embassy declined to comment. Other media reported that he was due to present himself to a police station on Friday.

Assange enraged Washington in 2010 when his WikiLeaks website published secret U.S. diplomatic cables.

He denies any wrongdoing in Sweden and says he fears that if extradited there he could be sent on to the United States, where he could face criminal charges punishable by death.

Assange, known for his unpredictable behavior, caused a media storm in Britain with his asylum bid. Ecuador's ambassador has in the meantime flown home to discuss whether to grant him asylum but the decision has yet to be made.

By diplomatic convention, police cannot enter the embassy without authorization from Ecuador. But even if Quito granted him asylum, he has no way of travelling to Ecuador without passing through London and exposing himself to arrest.

(Writing By Maria Golovnina; Editing by Jon Boyle)

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