Thursday, 15 August 2013

Charisma Carpenter Former the 'Buffy' Star Tweets Bikini-Clad Selfie

Former "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" star Charisma Carpenter might not slay evil beings for her day job anymore, but that doesn't mean the 43-year-old hasn't stayed in killer shape.
Carpenter tweeted two bikini selfies Sunday, revealing her rock-hard abs and incredibly toned physique while posing in an animal-print two-piece. "#workhard #earnit #ownit. PFT! 43 is fine with me! ❤" she wrote.

In February, Carpenter talked about how she stays in such great shape in an interview with OK! Magazine.
"I have to work so bloody hard at it. Let me tell you, hitting 40 is not fun," she said. "My weakness is potato chips and I love a good cocktail. My metabolism has changed so much and I just have to work really, really hard at it, so it’s not easy. It’s good, old-fashioned diet and exercise, which I sort of have to clean up right now because we’re going to be heading back to work pretty soon and I’ve gotta look good. I’ve got to feel good, I’m working with 20-year-olds. Are you kidding me? It’s so hard! They’re eating gummi bears and pretzels with peanut butter fillings and drinking whatever they want and I’m like, 'You frustrate me! I want to have that metabolism again!'"
"But after I had my son, that’s the best I ever looked," she added. "And when I posed for Playboy that’s the best I ever felt in my life. But it did feel really good when I was doing 'The Lying Game' and working with my trainer. They helped me rock it out. I’m lucky."
Since starring as cheerleader Cordelia Chase on "Buffy" and the spinoff "Angel," Carpenter went on to snag roles in "Charmed," "Veronica Mars," "Greek" and ABC Family's "The Lying Game." Next, she will host a show for Investigation Discoverycalled "Surviving Evil," set to premiere Aug. 28.
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charisma carpenter bikini
charisma carpenter

A Study shows that people who have sex 4 times a week makes more money

The next time you consider using the headache excuse to avoid getting busy, think about this: It pays to have more sex. Literally, new research finds.
People who have sex four times or more a week earn higher wages than their less-sexually active colleagues at a statistically significant level, according to a discussion paper from Nick Drydakis, a fellow at the Institute for the Study of Labor, a private, independent organization focused on labor market research.
To come up with the findings, Drydakis, who is also an economics lecturer in the business school at Cambridge, England-based Angila Ruskin University, analyzed a year-long survey of 7,500 Greek households. The survey asked the representative sample respondents how many times they had sex per week, whether they were employed, how much money they made and how many hours per week they worked, among other questions.
But before you rush to go between the sheets, it’s important to note that Drydakis' findings don't indicate that more sex directly translates into a raise. Instead, the study found that the two factors are correlated. See, people who have frequent sex tend to be happier, have higher self-esteem, better reasoning ability and are less likely to be depressed. Other research has found that workers with health problems tend to make less money due to limited productivity and in some cases, discrimination.
So to recap: More sex makes you healthier and happier. And happy, healthy people tend make more money.
Another factor may explain the positive correlation between more sex and higher wages. People who make more money are often more desirable in the dating market, which means they likely have more sex. Drydakis acknowledges this possibility in his paper, but laments that there isn’t really any literature out there directly addressing this theory.
Regardless, the positive relationship between sex and more money exists, his research claims, and workers between the ages of 26 and 50 tend to get higher financial returns on their sexual activity. But it doesn’t matter if you’re gay or straight, you get the same wage returns on your investment in sexual activity. So everyone have at it.

Wednesday, 14 August 2013

‘Ragini MMS 2’ is a date movie of Sunny Leone

Sunny Leone’s ‘Ragini MMS 2’ a date movie!
While the makers of Ragini MMS 2 have touted the film as a spook fest with sensuousness, drama, and, of course, Sunny Leone, the actress feels that the movie is a date flick.

While talking to a daily, Sunny Leone went candid about her next release, which was recently in the news for lesbian scenes featuring Sandhya Mridul and Sunny. “It's not about what people think it is. Ragini MMS 2 is a date movie. You can take your girlfriend to the movie and I guarantee you will enjoy it,” Sunny is quoted as saying.

The actress further adds that Ragini MMS 2, produced by Ekta Kapoor, is a kind of movie that has all the elements of a thrilling entertainer. Sunny Leone is sure that the audience will enjoy the experience of watching her horror film.
The sequel will take forward the story and will start from where the first part ended. The movie doesn’t have any lesbian scene, but it features a kiss between the two girls, and according to the makers, the script demanded it. Actress Sandhya Mridul was chosen to cast alongside Sunny Leone for the film after Richa Chadda walked out from the project as she wasn’t comfortable with the lesbian content.

As for now, Sunny Leone is soaking in the success of Laila -- her first item number in Bollywood. She’s even tweeting non-stop about the movie Shootout At Wadala that has started minting money at the box office.

Sunny has even signed a three-film deal with Parag Sanghvi, of Alumbra Entertainment. The first movie of the production house will be a thriller.

A fairytale love story that left its accurate finish


Trusting someone blindly does not always pay off and can sometimes lead to dire consequences. Moitrayee learned this the hard way.   A 21 year old girl from Delhi, who had just relocated to Mumbai, was a shy, docile, and dreamy girl. With no past relationships, she was slightly intimidated by men; but all this changed when she met Vivek through an online chat forum. Vivek was sweet, caring and the perfect boyfriend, which led her to let her guard down. Their love story took a spin when she met his parents to discuss marriage after Vivek's grand proposal.
Before the big day of meeting the parents, Moitrayee recalls a weird incidence wherein after receiving a call from a girl named 'Jhanvi', Vivek immediately left Moitrayee and rushed off. On returning however, Vivek clarified that Jhanvi was his elder brother Varun's girlfriend. Moitrayee met his parents, who then demanded for her Kundali. Since Moitrayee and her family were not traditional, they agreed to get her kundli done from Vivek's family astrologer – Sharmaji.
What was supposed to be just a formality turned into an insurmountable problem when Moitrayee was told that she is a manglik. This left Vivek in a fix, he shared his past experience with her, and where his engagement was called off since the girl was manglik. He was certain that his parents will oppose to this relationship due to the superstition attached to mangliks. While, Vivek couldn't get himself to a solution, Sharmaji instead suggested an arrangement that would sort out this situation. At first, Vivek and Moitrayee both disapproved the solution suggested. But eventually, both Vivek and Moitrayee agreed to it. What unfolded later were shocking truths of Vivek and his intentions.
What does Moitrayee discover that leaves her heartbroken? Is Vivek's family's belief in astrology the only explanation to their adamant behavior or is there something else?

Love reveils its actual colours on 'Emotional Atyachaar'

                                                       
The course of true love never runs smooth and Daljeet, an outspoken feisty girl from Delhi learned this the hard way. Daljeet was in a committed relationship with Puneet since the past four years. Puneet often made romantic gestures to make her feel special and they had a perfect fairy tale relationship.
But as they say, good things don't last long. Soon things started turning upside down for Daljeet when she witnessed Puneet's mysterious side on Valentine's Day. He could not celebrate the day with her since he claimed that he had to travel out of town for work. 
As Daljeet sulked over his absence, her friend, Shalini convinced her to attend a party to lift her spirits. However, this was only Shalini's effort to expose Puneet's true colors. Although Daljeet saw Puneet at the party, she didn't confront him and instead decided to hatch several plans which would eventually compel him to confess.
In the desperation to get the truth out, Daljeet came across hard hitting realities that left her completely broken and traumatized. After a few unsuccessful attempts, she finally caught him red-handed! Furious Daljeet then decided to cut off from Puneet completely and gave him a piece of her mind.

Tuesday, 13 August 2013

Now with Mobile Facebook Restaurants reservation can be done

If you're planning a dinner and movie night, Facebook can help. The social network announced three updates coming to its mobile platform: a quick way to book restaurant reservations, the integration of television and movie listings on relevant Pages, and hashtag support.
Facebook partnered with popular real-time reservation service OpenTable, which supports reservations for 28,000 restaurants, according to its website. Traditionally, users visit OpenTable's website or mobile app to search for restaurants by location or name, then pick a date and time to secure a reservation. OpenTable also supports menus and customer reviews.Facebook's integration with OpenTable puts a reservations option on participating restaurants' Facebook pages. Images from Facebook show this option below the restaurant's address and hours of operation and above customer reviews. Similar to OpenTable's website, users will be able to set a date, time and party size on the restaurant's Facebook page.
"The update represents a new way of discovering and booking great dining experiences, all within the Facebook mobile app," Facebook's announcement said. This feature will be available on the Facebook mobile Pages for more than 20,000 restaurants. You do not need to be an OpenTable user to access the feature on Facebook.
Facebook also announced that U.S. primetime television and movie Facebook Pages will be updated with a new feature that displays listing information. Listings will be based on your current time zone and include the channel name, air time and a description of the show or movie playing, Facebook said. The information you see on Facebook is the same that cable guides, magazines and newspapers show. TV and movie details will be displayed in a section named "Upcoming Airing," a photo showed.
"Millions of people are visiting TV and movie Pages on Facebook every day, especially on mobile," Facebook said. "Providing listings information on Facebook offers timely and relevant information about the media content people care about most."
Lastly, hashtag support will be included in Facebook's latest mobile update. The social network firstlaunched this feature, which makes words and phrases clickable and searchable, for desktop versions in June. You'll be able to search for hashtags and tap them directly when you see them in posts on your mobile device.
The new listings feature and hashtag support will be available to iOS users right now, Facebook said. OpenTable integration will launch to both iOS and Android users. These features will roll out automatically starting this week.
Facebook's latest mobile updates follow a handful of other changes Facebook has made recently. Last week, the social network announced changes to its News Feed that tweak which posts you see and when you see them. It also enabled secure browsing for all users and will reportedly launch video ads in news feeds starting this fall.

During pregnancy and delivery many of the brain changes seen in autism likely to be occur, says scientists

labor
Two new studies add to a growing body of evidence pointing to pregnancy as a critical period in the brain changes that lead to autism.
One study, published Tuesday in Annals of Neurology, finds a four-fold increase in autism among women who had very low levels of a key thyroid hormone, called thyroxine. Researchers found the link in a study of more than 4,000 Dutch mothers and children. Doctors took blood samples from women around the 13th week of pregnancy, then followed up six years later, asking women to fill out a standard psychological checklist about the child's behavior and emotional traits.
A second study, published Monday in JAMA Pediatrics, notes that pregnant women who have their labor started or sped up artificially are slightly more likely to have autistic children.
The increased autism risk in the JAMA study likely stems from an underlying problem with the pregnancy, rather than any of the methods used to jump-start labor, says lead author Simon Gregory of the Duke Institute of Molecular Physiology.
It's possible that "infants destined to develop autism are less likely to send out the correct biochemical signals for normal progression of labor," says Tara Wenger, a pediatric genetics fellow at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, who wasn't involved in either study.
Authors of the JAMA study note their research doesn't definitively prove a link betwen labor induction and autism. They say doctors shouldn't change the way they manage labor and delivery based on their study, funded by the Environmental Protection Agency.
Gustavo Roman,lead author of the thyroid research and a professor of neurology at at Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York, says his study can't prove cause and effect, either. But proper thyroid function is crucial to many aspect of health. So says it makes sense that women who are pregnant, or planning to become pregnant, ask doctors to check their thyroid function and urine iodine. These women also should take prenatal vitamins that contain iodine, a key element in thyroid function, Roman said in a statement.
Pregnancy complications increase the risk of many developmental disorders, says Michael Rosanoff, associate director for public health research and scientific review at Autism Speaks, an advocacy group.
And growing number of studies now link autism to a variety of things that can compromise the health of a pregnancy, says Rosanoff, who wasn't involved in either study. Researchers are increasingly looking at prenatal risk factors for autism, because this period plays a key role in brain development. Science has ruled out vaccines as a cause of autism, he says.
But studies have found that children are at higher risk for autism if they are born early or very small; if they are in medical distress during delivery; if they have older mothers or fathers; or if they are born less than a year after an older sibling. Autism risk also goes up if a mother has diabetes or high blood pressure; is obese; is infected with rubella, or German measles; is exposed to significant air pollution during pregnancy; had low levels of folic acid; takes medications such as an anti-seizure drug called valproic acid; or makes antibodies toxic to the fetal brain.
Science has ruled out vaccines as a cause of autism, says Gregory, who notes that the original myth about autism and immunizations arose from bogus research that has since been retracted.
And while the link between autism and jump-starting labor is consistent with smaller, earlier studies, the research doesn't prove that labor induction or augmentation actually causes autism, Gregory says.
In Gregory's study, researchers analyzed the records of 625,042 North Carolina births, which were linked to school records that noted any diagnosis of autism.
Those records didn't specify where children fell on the autism spectrum, the study says.
Doctors can induce or speed up labor in several ways, such as by applying a hormone gel to the cervix or giving women intravenous oxytocin, an artificial version of a natural hormone involved in labor, Gregory says.
Women whose labor was induced were 13% more likely to have an autistic child, compared to women whose labor wasn't induced. Women whose labor was sped up were 16% more likely to have a child later diagnosed with autism, the study found. Those whose labor was both induced and augmented were 27% more likely to have an autistic child.
In comparison, the risk of autism went up 23% when the mother had diabetes, and 25% when the fetus was in distress, the study says.
There was no increase in autism risk among women who had C-sections, Gregory says.
Women shouldn't be afraid to have their labor induced, says JAMA study co-author Chad Grotegut, a Duke maternal-fetal medicine specialist. The risk of harm to a baby in distress is far greater than the modest risk of autism. Inducing labor can often reduce the risk of stillbirth, such as when a pregnancy lasts more than a week or so beyond the usual 40 weeks, says Grotegut, a Duke maternal-fetal medicine specialist. Augmenting labor, which may be done when natural labor stalls, can reduce the risk of maternal or fetal infections or post-partum hemorrhage.
But Gregory says scientists should look more closely at labor induction with oxytocin. Oxytocin, sometimes called the "love hormone," plays a key role in social behavior and reasoning.
Gregory and other researchers are investigating oxytocin to treat some of the symptoms of autism.
About one in 88 American children have an autism diagnosis, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Rather than one disease, autism is now regarded as a collection of conditions with similar traits but different causes, Rosanoff says. People on the autism spectrum are extremely diverse. Some are non-verbal and profoundly disabled; others have successful careers, particularly in science and technology, describing themselves as different, rather than disabled.
"Autism is so heterogeneous," Rosanoff says. "We're never going to get to the one cause."