Friday, October 15, 2010

‘Bus was going way too fast’, claim passengers

SEREMBAN: The express bus, which crashed into a guardrail and rammed onto the path of oncoming vehicles near the Simpang Ampat toll plaza, was going very fast at the time of the accident.

Nurshazwina Nordin, 23, who was onboard the bus, said she was almost flung out of the vehicle due to the impact.

“Other motorists who stopped to help us hurried us away from the bus as they were afraid it might explode,” she said, adding that she had been sleeping when the accident took place.

Nurshazwina, who was hurt, said she felt the bus was going fast prior to the accident.

Another male bus passenger, in his 20s, claimed that the bus was accelerating before the accident.

Emergency aid: Paramedics rushing a victim to the hospital Sunday.
“I thought he was driving fast for an express bus. I can’t say for sure the speed he was driving at but he seemed to be ahead of all the other vehicles,” he said.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Movies Release 2010 - The Switch

Starring: Jason Bateman, Victor Pagan, Jennifer Aniston, Jeff Goldblum, Juliette Lewis

Director: Josh Gordon, Will Speck

Genre: 
Comedy
With a predictable plot and a lead actress who's part is forgettable, the only saving grace is a once child actor named Jason Bateman.

Release Date: 7-Oct-2010

Language: English

Distributor: Nusantara Edaran Filem

Synopsis: 
A neurotic and insecure man finds out his best friend wants to have a child through artificial insemination. He decides to replace her donor's semen with his own and is then forced to live with the secret that he is the child's real father.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Baby dies in monkey attack

This incident happened near my hometown

SEREMBAN: A four-day-old baby girl died after she was attacked by a troop of monkeys at her Taman Happy Garden house in Rasah here Wednesday.

The yet-to-be-named baby suffered injuries to the head, ear, neck and face, caused by scratches and bites during the attack at 1.15pm.
Decorative image only

Friday, March 5, 2010

Barbara Walters: Last Oscars TV special the best


NEW YORK (AP) - Barbara Walters says her last Oscars television special will be her best.

Walters will sit down with actresses Sandra Bullock and Mo'Nique, both nominated for Academy Awards. Bullock is up for Best Actress for "The Blind Side," and Mo'Nique is nominated for Best Supporting Actress for "Precious."

Walters said she believes both will win. By bidding adieu, Walters is ending a 29-year-old tradition of talking to celebrities on Hollywood's biggest night. It wasn't until 1988, though, that she began interviewing nominees.

"For the first seven years we were not allowed to interview any of the nominees because the (Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences) thought it would interfere with their Oscar special," Walters said.

That year she sat down with Glenn Close and Cher, who were contenders for Best Actress. Cher ended up taking the award for her role in "Moonstruck."

While Walters, 80, is known for getting stars to open up and often tear up on camera, she says the celebrity interview has become less special in recent years and many stars are overexposed.

"I don't find it harder to interview celebrities now," Walters said. "I find it harder to interview a celebrity who hasn't been all over the place. And now everybody's a celebrity if that's the word you're using." Just because Walters is stopping her Oscars special doesn't mean she's done with TV.

"I am not retiring!" she insists. "I will still be doing the 10 most fascinating people, I will still be on 'The View,' which I love. I will still be doing pieces for ABC News."

Still, she recognizes the long-standing tradition her Oscars special has created for TV viewers, who made a point to tune in year after year.

"I'm kind of sad, too," she says, "but television has changed. Some nominees have just been in one movie. It's a different time, and I'd rather we left when people say, 'Weren't they wonderful?' than they said, 'Oh, I've seen that.' I want the memories to be fresh."

The Oscar Night edition of "The Barbara Walters Special" will air Sunday

Monday, March 1, 2010

What a heart-thRob


ROBERT Pattinson is arguably one of the biggest stars to have shaken up Hollywood and is the subject of almost every woman’s fantasy. In its March 1 issue, Galaxie takes a bite into the Pattinson phenomenon to uncover the man behind the vampire.

In terms of success, Pattinson has hit the jackpot. He appeared in a relatively small role in the Harry Potter franchise and was killed off in the end, yet after Twilight – in which he played the decade-old vampire Edward Cullen – Pattinson now generates more star power than Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint combined.

However, despite his status as a Hollywood “it” boy, Pattinson remains unaffected by the magnitude of his star power.

Many people have never failed to mention that on meeting Pattinson, they find themselves confronted by a huge celebrity who is totally laid-back, relaxed and unassuming.

“It’s strange because I don’t really know what my everyday life is. When you’re on a set, it doesn’t really matter if you’re famous or not because you’re doing the same thing,” Pattinson revealed in an exclusive interview with Galaxie’s US correspondent Philip Berk.

“You wake up at 5am and you go home very rarely. All I want to do when I’m not working is to go to bed. On movie promo trips, all I really get to see are a lot of nice bathrooms in hotels around the world.”

His ability to remain unfazed by fame and fortune has endeared Pattinson to the media, co-stars and the millions of people who idolise him. And even if he has admitted to having awful hygiene habits, everybody wants a piece of the heart-throb who is blazing his way through box-office glory.

This issue of Galaxie also sizzles with exposés on some of the biggest names in Hollywood. Kristen Stewart, Galaxie observes, has no problems stripping, while a Heroes’ star gets busted and Matthew McConaughey has to go without sex for 40 days.