Archive for May, 2010

Technology News India

Posted by Filed Under technology news with No Comments

For technology enthusiasts, technology news is an important part of their day to day life chores. What device was recently launched? What are the latest games in the market? The latest upgrade available etc…, are some of the questions that technology news answers. We are all quite familiar as to what it is supposed to mean. Technology has been the driving force behind the significant changes that have dignified the evolution of human being. Almost everything thing we see around is related to technology in some or the either way. From the trendy cell phone models to the complicated machinery, everything is technology driven.

For tech geeks Technology news are a must have, as their inquisitive mind wants to know more about what’s happening around in the world of technology. PC or personal computers is one discovery that has offered a major contribution to the technology. The device has significantly reduced human efforts to increase the speed of work, and the efficiency at the same time. Today, it is used almost everywhere, whether it is a school, office or even a railway station. Technology has been pretty dynamic, and keeping a track of all the latest technology news is a tough ask, and with almost 7-8 new launches everyday, the task becomes more tedious. Undoubtedly, you have to gather data from different sources, and that may cost you a lot of time. Technology magazines are a better way to stay in touch with all the latest technology news. Digit is one such popular tech magazine that gives you an inside out overview of what’s making a buzz in the tech industry.

It follows up with the latest Technology News around the world, and computes different articles, review stories, and performance based features. Digit features Mobile Phones news, with the expert reviews on the latest mobile phone launches, coupling participatory forums, and technology guides. The Digit magazine’s expert ratings are based on the widely recognized Digit test center ratings. These ratings are based on the industry standard benchmarks for product testing, and give you an unbiased overview of the product. The magazine also gives you an overview of the Digital Cameras news, with the information about the launch of latest models, their updated prices, feature comparison, and the best suggestions for you.

Digit magazines are a dedicated edition to the Technology news in India and around the world. Further, the latest information, and Digit subscription forms are available at the website www.thinkdigit.com.

Madagascar

Posted by Filed Under celebs news with No Comments

History

Main article: History of Madagascar

As part of East Gondwana, the territory of Madagascar split from Africa approximately 160 million years ago; the island of Madagascar was created when it separated from the Indian subcontinent 80 to 100 million years ago. Most archaeologists estimate that the human settlement of Madagascar happened between 200 and 500 A.D., when seafarers from southeast Asia (probably from Borneo or the southern Celebes) arrived in outrigger sailing canoes. Bantu settlers probably crossed the Mozambique Channel to Madagascar at about the same time or shortly afterwards. However, Malagasy tradition and ethnographic evidence suggests that they may have been preceded by the Mikea hunter gatherers. The Anteimoro who established a kingdom in Southern Madagascar in the Middle Ages trace their origin to migrants from Somalia.

The written history of Madagascar begins in the 7th century, when Muslims established trading posts along the northwest coast. During the Middle Ages, the island’s kings began to extend their power through trade with their Indian Ocean neighbours, notably Arab, Persian and Somali traders who connected Madagascar with East Africa, the Middle East and India.

Large chiefdoms began to dominate considerable areas of the island. Among these were the Sakalava chiefdoms of the Menabe, centred in what is now the town of Morondava, and of Boina, centred in what is now the provincial capital of Mahajanga (Majunga). The influence of the Sakalava extended across what are now the provinces of Antsiranana, Mahajanga and Toliara. Madagascar served as an important transoceanic trading port for the east African coast that gave Africa a trade route to the Silk Road, and served simultaneously as a port for incoming ships.

The wealth created in Madagascar through trade created a state system ruled by powerful regional monarchs known as the Maroserana. These monarchs adopted the cultural traditions of subjects in their territories and expanded their kingdoms. They took on divine status, and new nobility and artisan classes were created. Madagascar functioned in the East African Middle Ages as a contact port for the other Swahili seaport city-states such as Sofala, Kilwa, Mombasa and Zanzibar.

European contact began in the year 1500, when the Portuguese sea captain Diogo Dias sighted the island after his ship separated from a fleet going to India. The Portuguese continued trading with the islanders and named the island So Loureno (St. Lawrence). In 1666, Franois Caron, the Director General of the newly formed French East India Company, sailed to Madagascar. The Company failed to establish a colony on Madagascar but established ports on the nearby islands of Bourbon and Ile-de-France (today’s Runion and Mauritius). In the late 17th century, the French established trading posts along the east coast.

The most famous pirate utopia is that of Captain Misson and his pirate crew, who allegedly founded the free colony of Libertatia in northern Madagascar in the late 17th century. From about 1774 to 1824, Madagascar was a favourite haunt for pirates, including Americans, one of whom brought Malagasy rice to South Carolina. Many European sailors were shipwrecked on the coasts of the island, among them Robert Drury, whose journal is one of the few written depictions of life in southern Madagascar during the 18th century. Sailors sometimes called Madagascar “Island of the Moon”.

Andrianampoinimerina

(1795-1819)

Radama I

(1810-1828)

Ranavalona I

(1828-1861)

Radama II

(1861-1863)

Rasoherina

(1863-1868)

Ranavalona II

(1868-1883)

Ranavalona III

(1883-1897)

Beginning in the 1790s, Merina rulers succeeded in establishing hegemony over most of the island, including the coast. In 1817, the Merina ruler and the British governor of Mauritius concluded a treaty abolishing the slave trade, which had been important in Madagascar’s economy. In return, the island received British military and financial assistance. British influence remained strong for several decades, during which the Merina court was converted to Presbyterianism, Congregationalism and Anglicanism.

With the domination of the Indian Ocean by the Royal Navy and the end of the Arab slave trade, the western Sakalava lost their power to the emerging Merina state. The Betsimisaraka of the east coast also unified, but this union soon faltered.

Queen Ranavalona I “the Cruel” (r. 1828-61) issued a royal edict prohibiting the practice of Christianity in Madagascar. By some estimates, 150,000 Christians died during the reign of Ranavalona. The island grew more isolated, and commerce with other nations came to a standstill.

France invaded Madagascar in 1883, in what became known as the first Franco-Hova War seeking to restore property that had been confiscated from French citizens. (Hova is one of three Merina classes: andriana aristocracy, hova common people, andevo slaves. The term hova was wrongly used by the French to mean Merina.) At the war’s end, Madagascar ceded Antsiranana (Diego Suarez) on the northern coast to France and paid 560,000 francs to the heirs of Joseph-Franois Lambert. In 1890, the British accepted the full formal imposition of a French protectorate.

In 1895, a French flying column landed in Mahajanga (Majunga) and marched to the capital, Antananarivo, where the city’s defenders quickly surrendered. Twenty French soldiers died fighting and 6,000 died of malaria and other diseases before the second Franco-Hova War ended.

After the conclusion of hostilities, in 1896 France annexed Madagascar. The 103-year-old Merina monarchy ended with the royal family being sent into exile in Algeria.

During World War II, Malagasy troops fought in France, Morocco, and Syria. Some leaders in Nazi Germany proposed deporting all of Europe’s Jews to Madagascar (the Madagascar Plan), but nothing came of this. After France fell to Germany, the Vichy government administered Madagascar. During the Battle of Madagascar, British troops occupied the island in 1942 to preclude its seizure by the Japanese, after which the Free French took over.

In 1947, with French prestige at low ebb, the Malagasy Uprising broke out. It was suppressed after over a year of bitter fighting, with 8,000 to 90,000 people killed. The French later established reformed institutions in 1956 under the Loi Cadre (Overseas Reform Act), and Madagascar moved peacefully towards independence. The Malagasy Republic was proclaimed on October 14, 1958, as an autonomous state within the French Community. A period of provisional government ended with the adoption of a constitution in 1959 and full independence on June 26, 1960. In 2006 the country experienced an attempted coup.

Politics

Main articles: Government of Madagascar and Politics of Madagascar

Although the present head of State has self-proclaimed himself, Madagascar is usually a semi-presidential representative democratic republic, whereby the Prime Minister of Madagascar is head of government, and of a pluriform[disambiguation needed] multi-party system. Executive power is exercised by the government. Legislative power is vested in both the government and the Senate and the National Assembly. The Judiciary is independent of the executive and the legislature.

The political situation in Madagascar has been marked by struggle for control. After Madagascar gained independence from France in 1960, assassinations, military coups and disputed elections featured prominently.

Didier Ratsiraka took power in a military coup in 1975 and ruled until 2001, with a short break when he was ousted in the early 1990s. When Marc Ravalomanana and Ratsiraka both claimed victory after presidential elections in December 2001, Ratsiraka’s supporters tried to blockade the capital, Antananarivo, which was pro-Ravalomanana. After eight months of sporadic violence with considerable economic disruption, a recount in April 2002 led the High Constitutional Court to pronounce Ravalomanana president, but it was not until July that Ratsiraka fled to France and Ravalomanana gained control of the country.

Internal conflict in Madagascar had been minimal in the years that followed and since 2002, Ravalomanana and his party, Tiako-I-Madagasikara (TIM), have dominated political life. In an attempt to restrict the power and influence of the president, the prime minister and the 150-seat parliament have been given greater power in recent years.

Tension since was generally associated with elections. A presidential election took place in December 2006 with some protests over worsening standards of living, despite a government drive to eradicate poverty. Calls by a retired army general in November 2006 for Ravalomanana to step down were said to have been ‘misinterpreted’ as a coup attempt.

2009 Malagasy protests

Main article: 2009 Malagasy protests

The latest, and ongoing, spate of violence pitted then-President Marc Ravalomanana against Andry Rajoelina, former mayor of the capital, Antananarivo. Since the power tussle started on 26 January, more than 170 people were killed. Rajoelina mobilized his supporters to take to the streets of Antananarivo to demand Ravalomanana’s ousting on the grounds of his alleged “autocratic” style of government.

Ravalomanana’s resignation

After losing support of the military and under intense pressure from Rajoelina, President Ravalomanana resigned on 17 March 2009. Ravalomanana assigned his powers to a military council loyal to himself headed by Vice-Admiral Hyppolite Ramaroson. The military called the move by Ravalomanana a “ploy” and said that it would support Rajoelina as leader. Rajoelina had already declared himself the new leader a month earlier and has since assumed the role of acting President. He has appointed Monja Roindefo as Prime Minister. Rajoelina announced that elections would be held in two years and that the constitution would be amended.

The European Union, amongst other international entities, has refused to recognize the new government, due to it being installed by force. The African Union, which proceeded to suspend Madagascar’s membership on 20 March and the Southern Africa Development Community both criticized the forced resignation of Ravalomanana. United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s spokesperson said he is “gravely concerned about the evolving developments in Madagascar”.

Provinces and regions

Main articles: Provinces of Madagascar and Regions of Madagascar

Madagascar is currently divided into six autonomous provinces (faritany mizakatena), and subdivided into 22 regions (faritra), the latter created in 2004. The regions will be the highest subdivision level when the provinces are dissolved in accordance with the results of the 4 April 2007 referendum, which means by 4 October 2009.

Antananarivo (1)

Analamanga

Bongolava

Itasy

Vakinankaratra

Antsiranana (2)

Diana

Sava

Fianarantsoa (3)

Amoron’i Mania

Atsimo-Atsinanana

Haute-Matsiatra

Ihorombe

Vatovavy-Fitovinany

Mahajanga (4)

Betsiboka

Boeny

Melaky

Sofia

Toamasina (5)

Alaotra Mangoro

Analanjirofo

Atsinanana

Toliara (6)

Androy

Anosy

Atsimo-Andrefana

Menabe

The regions are further subdivided into 116 districts, 1,548 communes, and 16,969 fokontany. The major cities have a special status as “commune urbaine”, at the same level as the districts.

Geography

Main article: Geography of Madagascar

Isalo National Park

At 587,000 square kilometres (227,000 sq mi), Madagascar is the world’s 46th-largest country and the fourth largest island. It is slightly bigger than France, and is one of 11 distinct physiographic provinces of the South African Platform physiographic division.

Towards the east, a steep escarpment leads from the central highlands down into a ribbon of rain forest with a narrow coastal further east. The Canal des Pangalanes is a chain of natural and man-made lakes connected by canals that runs parallel to the east coast for some 460 km (286 mi) (about two-thirds of the island). The descent from the central highlands toward the west is more gradual, with remnants of deciduous forest and savanna-like plains (which in the south and southwest, are quite dry and host spiny desert and baobabs). On the west coast are many protected harbours, but silting is a major problem caused by sediment from the high levels of erosion inland.

Along the crest of this ridge lie the central highlands, a plateau region ranging in altitude from 2,450 to 4,400 ft (747 to 1,341 m) above sea level. The central highlands are characterised by terraced, rice-growing valleys lying between barren hills. Here, the red laterite soil that covers much of the island has been exposed by erosion, showing clearly why the country is often referred to as the “Red Island”.

The island’s highest peak, Maromokotro, at 2,876 metres (9,440 ft), is found in the Tsaratanana Massif, located in the far north of the country. The Ankaratra Massif is in the central area south of the capital Antananarivo and hosts the third highest mountain on the island, Tsiafajavona, with an altitude of 2,642 metres (8,670 ft). Further south is the Andringitra massif which has several peaks over 2,400 metres (7,900 ft) including the second and fourth highest peaks, Pic Imarivolanitra, more widely known as Pic Boby (2,658 metres/8,720 feet), and Pic Bory (2,630 metres/8,600 feet). Other peaks in the massif include Pic Soaindra (2,620 metres/8,600 feet) and Pic Ivangomena (2,556 metres/8,390 feet). This massif also contains the Andringitra Reserve. On very rare occasions, this region experiences snow in winter due to its high altitude.

There are two seasons: a hot, rainy season from November to April, and a cooler, dry season from May to October. South-eastern trade winds predominate, and the island occasionally experiences cyclones.

Ecology

Main articles: Fauna of Madagascar, Ecoregions of Madagascar, and Agroecology in Madagascar

Tsingy in Madagascar

Madagascar’s long isolation from the neighboring continents has resulted in a unique mix of plants and animals, many found nowhere else in the world; some ecologists refer to Madagascar as the “eighth continent”. Of the 10,000 plants native to Madagascar, 90% are found nowhere else in the world. Madagascar’s varied fauna and flora are endangered by human activity, as a third of its native vegetation has disappeared since the 1970s, and only 18% remains intact. Since the arrival of humans 2000 years ago, Madagascar has lost more than 90% of its original forest. The elephant birds, which were giant ratites native to Madagascar, have been extinct since at least the 17th century. Aepyornis was the world’s largest bird, believed to have been over 3 metres (10 ft) tall.

Most lemurs are listed as endangered or threatened species. Many species have gone extinct in the last centuries, mainly due to habitat destruction and hunting.

The eastern, or windward side of the island is home to tropical rainforests, while the western and southern sides, which lie in the rain shadow of the central highlands, are home to tropical dry forests, thorn forests, and deserts and xeric shrublands. Madagascar’s dry deciduous rain forest has been preserved generally better than the eastern rainforests or the high central plateau, presumably due to historically low population densities. Madagascar has several national parks.

The Indri is 1 of 99 recognized species and subspecies of lemur found only in Madagascar.

Extensive deforestation has taken place in parts of the country, some due to mining operations. Slash-and-burn activity, locally called tavy, has occurred in the eastern and western dry forests as well as on the central high plateau, reducing certain forest habitat and applying pressure to some endangered species. Slash-and-burn is a method sometimes used by shifting cultivators to create short-term yields from marginal soils. When practiced repeatedly without intervening fallow periods, the nutrient-poor soils may be exhausted or eroded to an unproductive state. The resulting increased surface runoff from burned lands has caused significant erosion and resulting high sedimentation to western rivers.

As a part of conservation efforts, the Wildlife Conservation Society has recently opened a Madagascar! exhibit at the Bronx Zoo. The New York Academy of Sciences recently published a Podcast about the Madagascar! exhibit, which details the fauna and flora of Madagascar and what types of projects the WCS is involved with in the country. The Podcast can be listened to here

Madagascar is represented in the FIPS 10-4 geographical encoding standard by the symbol MA.

Economy

Main article: Economy of Madagascar

Antananarivo is the political and economic capital of Madagascar

Agriculture, including fishing and forestry, is a mainstay of the economy. Major exports are coffee, vanilla (Madagascar is the world’s largest producer and exporter of vanilla), sugarcane, cloves, cocoa, rice, cassava (tapioca), beans, bananas, peanuts and livestock products. Vanilla has historically been of particular importance, and when in 1985 Coca-cola switched to New Coke which involved less vanilla, Madagascar’s economy took a marked downturn, but returned to previous levels after the return of Coke Classic.

Structural reforms began in the late 1980s, initially under pressure from international financial institutions, notably the World Bank. An initial privatization program (19881993) and the development of an export processing zone (EPZ) regime in the early 1990s were key milestones in this effort. A period of significant stagnation from 1991 to 1996 was followed by five years of solid economic growth and accelerating foreign investment, driven by a second wave of privatizations[citation needed] and EPZ development. Although structural reforms advanced, governance remained weak and perceived corruption in Madagascar was extremely high. During the period of solid growth from 1997 to 2001, poverty levels remained stubbornly high, especially in rural areas. A six-month political crisis triggered by a dispute over the outcome of the presidential elections held in December 2001 virtually halted economic activity in much of the country in the first half of 2002. Real GDP dropped 12.7% for the year 2002, inflows of foreign investment dropped sharply, and the crisis tarnished Madagascar’s budding reputation as an AGOA standout and a promising place to invest. After the crisis, the economy rebounded with GDP growth of over 10% in 2003. Currency depreciation and rising inflation in 2004 have hampered economic performance, but growth for the year reached 5.3%, with inflation reaching around 25% at the end of the year. In 2005 inflation was brought under control by tight monetary policy of raising the Taux Directeur (central bank rate) to 16% and tightening reserve requirements for banks. Thus growth was expected to reach around 6.5% in 2005.

Following the 2002 political crisis, the government attempted to set a new course and build confidence, in coordination with international financial institutions and donors. Madagascar developed a recovery plan in collaboration with the private sector and donors and presented it at a “Friends of Madagascar” conference organized by the World Bank in Paris in July 2002. Donor countries demonstrated their confidence in the new government by pledging $1 billion in assistance over five years. The Malagasy Government identified road infrastructure as its principle priority and underlined its commitment to public-private partnership by establishing a joint public-private sector steering committee.

Rice paddies in Madagascar

In 2000, Madagascar embarked on the preparation of a Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative. The boards of the IMF and World Bank agreed in December 2000 that the country had reached the decision point for debt relief under the HIPC Initiative and defined a set of conditions for Madagascar to reach the completion point. In October 2004, the boards of the IMF and the World Bank determined that Madagascar had reached the completion point under the enhanced HIPC Initiative.

The Madagascar-U.S. Business Council was formed as a collaboration between the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and Malagasian artisan producers in Madagascar in 2002. The U.S.-Madagascar Business Council was formed in the United States in May 2003, and the two organisations continue to explore ways to work for the benefit of both groups.

The government of President Ravalomanana is aggressively seeking foreign investment and is tackling many of the obstacles to such investment, including combating corruption, reforming land-ownership laws, encouraging study of American and European business techniques, and active pursuit of foreign investors. President Ravalomanana rose to prominence through his agro-foods TIKO company, and is known for attempting to apply many of the lessons learned in the world of business to running the government. Some recent concerns have arisen about the conflict of interest between his policies and the activities of his firms. Most notable among them the preferential treatment for rice imports initiated by the government in late 2004 when responding to a production shortfall in the country.

Madagascar’s sources of growth are tourism; textile and light manufacturing exports (notably through the EPZs); agricultural products; and mining. Madagascar is the world’s leading producer of vanilla and accounts for about half the world’s export market. Tourism targets the niche eco-tourism market, capitalizing on Madagascar’s unique biodiversity, unspoiled natural habitats, national parks and lemur species. Exports from the EPZs, located around Antananarivo and Antsirabe, comprise the majority of garment manufacture, targeting the US market under AGOA and the European markets under the Everything But Arms (EBA) agreement. Agricultural exports consist of low-volume high-value products like vanilla, litchies and essential oils. A small but growing part of the economy is based on mining of ilmenite, with investments emerging in recent years, particularly near Tulear and Fort Dauphin. Mining corporation Rio Tinto Group expects to begin operations near Fort Dauphin in 2008, following several years of infrastructure preparation. The mining project is highly controversial, with Friends of the Earth and other environmental organizations filing reports to detail their concerns about effects on the local environment and communities.

Autoclave enters Madagascar, 2008, as part of new mining operation

Several major projects are underway in the mining and oil and gas sectors that, if successful, will give a significant boost to the Malagasy economy.

In the mining sector, these include the development of coal at Sakoa and nickel near Tamatave. In oil, Madagascar Oil is developing the massive onshore heavy oil field at Tsimiroro and ultra heavy oil field at Bemolanga.

Foreign relations

Main article: Foreign relations of Madagascar

Madagascar was historically perceived as being on the margin of mainstream African affairs despite being a founding member of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), which was founded in 1963. President Albert Zafy, taking office in 1993, expressed his desire for diplomatic relations with all countries. Early in his tenure, he established formal ties with South Korea and sent emissaries to Morocco.

Starting in 1997, globalisation encouraged the government and President Ratsiraka to adhere to market-oriented policies and to engage world markets. External relations reflect this trend, although Madagascar’s physical isolation and strong traditional insular orientation have limited its activity in regional economic organizations and relations with its East African neighbours. It enjoys closer and generally good relations with its Indian Ocean neighbours Mauritius, Runion and Comoros. Active relationships with Europe, especially France, Germany, and Switzerland, as well as with Britain, Russia, Japan, India and China have been strong since independence. More recently, President Ravalomanana has cultivated strong links with the United States, and Madagascar was the first country to benefit from the Millennium Challenge Account (MCA). Madagascar is also a member of the International Criminal Court with a Bilateral Immunity Agreement of protection for the US-military (as covered under Article 98).

The OAU dissolved in 2002 and was replaced by the African Union. Madagascar was not permitted to attend the first African Union summit due to the dispute over the results of the election in December 2001, but rejoined the African Union in July 2003 after a 14-month hiatus triggered by the 2002 political crisis. However, Madagascar was suspended again by the African Union in March 2009 due to the ongoing political crisis.

During his presidency, Marc Ravalomanana traveled widely promoting Madagascar abroad and consciously sought to strengthen relations with Anglophone countries as a means of balancing traditionally strong French influence. He also cultivated strong ties with China during his tenure.

In November 2004, after an absence of almost 30 years, Madagascar re-opened its embassy in London. On 15 December 2004 the Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, announced the closure of the British embassy in Antananarivo to save 250,000 a year. He also announced an end to the government’s aid to Madagascar, the DFID-funded Small Grants Scheme. The embassy closed in August 2005 despite petitions and protests from African heads of state, a European commissioner, the Malagasy Senate, many British companies, 30 or so NGOs operating in Madagascar, and members of the public.[citation needed]

The British Embassy was previously closed (also for financial reasons) from 1975 to 1980. The Anglo-Malagasy Society are campaigning to have it re-opened.

Demographics

Main article: Demographics of Madagascar

Antananarivo, Madagascar

Madagascar’s population is predominantly of mixed Austronesian (i.e.South-East Asian/Pacific Islander) and African origin. Those who are visibly Austronesian in appearance and culture are the minority, found mostly in the highland regions. Recent research suggests that the island was uninhabited until Austronesian seafarers arrived about 1,500 to 2,000 years ago. Recent DNA research shows that the Malagasy people are approximately of half Austronesian and half East African descent, although some Arab, Indian and European influence is present along the coast. Malagasy language shares some 90% of its basic vocabulary with the Ma’anyan language from the region of the Barito River in southern Borneo.

Subsequent migrations from the East Indies and Africa consolidated this original mixture, and 36 separate tribal groups emerged. Austronesian features are most predominant in the Merina (3 million) ; the coastal people (called ctiers) are of more clearly African origin. The largest coastal groups are the Betsimisaraka (1.5 million) and the Tsimihety and Sakalava (700,000 each). The Vezo live in the southwest. Two of the southern tribes are the Antandroy and the Antanosy. Other tribes include Tankarana (northern tip), Sihanaka and Bezanozano (east), Tanala (south-east), An-Taimoro, Tambahoaka, Zafisoro, An-Taisaka and Timanambondro (south-east coast), and Mahafaly and Bara (south-west). Chinese and Indian minorities also exist, as well as Europeans, mostly French. The number of Comorans residing in Madagascar was drastically reduced after anti-Comoran rioting in Mahajanga in 1976.

During the French colonial administration (18951960) and some time after independence, people were officially classified in ethnic groups. This practice was abandoned in the first census (1975) after independence, so any recent classification and figures for ethnic groups is an unofficial estimate. There is for instance no mention of ethnicity or religion in the national identity cards. Also, territorial divisions (provinces, regions) do not follow any ethnic division lines, despite an attempt by the colonial administration in the early 20th century. Ethnic divisions continue, and may cause violence, but their role is limited in today’s society. Ethnic tensions in Madagascar often produce violent conflict between the Merina highlanders and coastal peoples. Regional political parties are also rare, although some parties receive most of their support in certain areas.

Only two general censuses, 1975 and 1993, have been carried out after independence.

In 1993 (last census) there were 18,497 foreign residents on Madagascar, or 0.15% of the population.

Health

The fertility rate is at about 5 children per woman. There are about 29 physicians per 100,000 persons. Infant mortality was at 74 per 1,000 live births in 2005. Life expectancy at birth was at 58.4 in the early 21st century. Expenditure on health was 29 US$ (PPP) in 2004.

Language

Main article: Languages of Madagascar

The Malagasy language is of Malayo-Polynesian origin and is generally spoken throughout the island. Madagascar is a francophone country, and French is spoken among the educated population of this former French colony. English, although still rare, is becoming more widely spoken, and in 2003, the government began a pilot project of introducing the teaching of English into the primary grades of 44 schools, with hopes of taking the project nationwide. Many Peace Corps volunteers are serving to further this effort and train teachers.

In the first Constitution of 1958, Malagasy and French were named the official languages of the Malagasy Republic.

No official languages were recorded in the Constitution of 1992. Instead, Malagasy was named the national language; however, many sources still claimed that Malagasy and French were official languages, as they were de facto. In April 2000, a citizen brought a legal case on the grounds that the publication of official documents in the French language only was unconstitutional. The High Constitutional Court observed in its decision that, in the absence of a language law, French still had the character of an official language.

In the Constitution of 2007, Malagasy remains the national language while official languages are reintroduced: Malagasy, French, and English. The motivation for the inclusion of English is partly to improve relations with the neighbouring countries where English is used and to encourage foreign direct investment.

Culture

Main article: Culture of Madagascar

Malagasy culture reflects a blend of Southeast Asian, Arab, African and European influences. Houses in Madagascar are typically four-sided with a peaked roof, in a style commonly seen in Southeast Asia, rather than the circular style of hut construction more commonly found in Eastern Africa. Rice forms the basis of every meal in most parts of the country as in Asia. The dishes prepared to accompany the rice vary depending on local availability of food products and are known as laoka.

Arab influence

Arab immigrants were few in number compared to the Indonesians and Bantus, but they left a lasting impression. The Malagasy names for seasons, months, days, and coins are Arabic in origin, as is the practice of circumcision, the communal grain pool, and different forms of salutation. The Arab magicians, known as the ombiasy, established themselves in the courts of many Malagasy tribal kingdoms. Arab immigrants imposed the patriarchal system of family and clan rule on Madagascar. Previous to the Arabs, the Malagasies practiced the Polynesian matriarchal system whereby rights of privilege and property are conferred equally on men and women.

Education

A significant proportion of the adult population are illiterate. The female youth literacy rate is below the male youth literacy rate. Public expenditure on education was at 16.4 % of total government expenditure in the 2000-2007 period. Public current expenditure on primary education per pupil is at about US$ 57 (PPP). Madagascar has several universities.

Cuisine

Main article: Cuisine of Madagascar

Music

Main article: Music of Madagascar

Madagascar has a distinctive and rich musical heritage. The early Austronesian settlers brought with them the predecessor to the bamboo tube zither known as the valiha as well as other instruments that would form the basis for traditional Malagasy music. The influence of Africans is evident in certain drumming and polyharmonic singing styles, while the tendency toward minor chords along the coasts reflects an Arab musical influence. European pirates likewise contributed to Malagasy musical traditions, importing the guitar, accordion, piano and the instruments used in hiragasy performance including the violin, trumpet and clarinet.

Mythology

Main article: Malagasy mythology

The country has a rich oratory tradition in the form of hainteny, kabary and ohabolana. An epic poem, the Ibonia, has been handed down over the centuries in several different forms across the island and showcases the lively and highly developed oral traditions of Madagascar.

Hainteny

Main article: hainteny

The zebu, or humped cattle, occupies an important place in traditional Malagasy culture. The animal can take on sacred importance and constitutes the wealth of the owner, a tradition originating on the African mainland. Cattle rustling, originally a rite of passage for young men in the plains areas of Madagascar where the largest herds of cattle are kept, has become a dangerous and sometimes deadly criminal enterprise as herdsmen in the Southwest attempt to defend their cattle with traditional spears against increasingly armed professional rustlers. Where African influences are strongest, as in the Southern region around Tulear, wealth and social status are measured in cattle, and the zebu can outnumber the inhabitants by two or three to one. Zebu are a popular motif on aloalo, the carved wooden poles that decorate tombs among some tribes in the southwestern part of the country.

Andrianampoinimerina (circa 17451810) united the Merina kingdom, moving his capital from Ambohimanga to Antananarivo and building his royal palace, or rova, on a strategic location on the highest hilltop overlooking the city. A number of cultural traditions, including the kabary and the hiragasy, were popularized during the period of his administration.

Religion

Main article: Religion in Madagascar

Traditional religion

Main article: Malagasy mythology

Approximately 50% of the country’s population practice traditional religion, which tends to emphasize links between the living and the dead. The Merina in the highlands particularly tend to hold tightly to this practice. They believe that the dead join their ancestors in the ranks of divinity and that ancestors are intensely concerned with the fate of their living descendants. The Merina and Betsileo reburial practice of famadihana, or “turning over the dead”, celebrates this spiritual communion. In this ritual, relatives’ remains are removed from the family tomb, rewrapped in new silk shrouds, and returned to the tomb following festive ceremonies in their honor where sometimes the bodies are lifted and carried high above the celebrants heads with singing and dancing before returning them to the tomb.

Traditionally, the Malagasy hold their ancestors in high esteem and many believe they continue to intervene in events on Earth after their death. A powerful individual may establish a fady (taboo) in his or her lifetime that all their descendents or those of community members will be required to respect well after their death, meaning that when traveling in Madagascar it is advisable to seek out village elders or authorities and inquire into local fady in order not to inadvertently transgress and offend the local population. This veneration of ancestors has also lead to the tradition of tomb building and the famadihana, a practice whereby a deceased family member’s remains may be taken from the tomb to be periodically re-wrapped in fresh silk shrouds before being replaced in the tomb. The event is an occasion to celebrate the loved one’s memory, reunite with family and community, and enjoy a festive atmosphere. Residents of surrounding villages are often invited to attend the party, where food and rum are often served and a hiragasy troupe or other musical entertainment is typically present.

Christianity

Main article: Roman Catholicism in Madagascar

See also: Ranavalona I#Christian persecution

Roman Catholic cathedral in Antsirabe.

Today about 45% of the Malagasy are Christian, divided almost evenly between Catholics and Protestants. Many incorporate the cult of the dead with their other religious beliefs and bless their dead at church before proceeding with the traditional burial rites. They also may invite a Christian minister to attend a famadihana. Many of the Christian churches are influential in politics. The best example of this is the Malagasy Council of Churches (FFKM) comprising the four oldest and most prominent Christian denominations(Roman Catholic, Church of Jesus Christ in Madagascar, Lutheran, and Anglican). In the 19th century under Queen Ranavalona I, there was infamous persecution and mass extermination of Christians.

Islam

Main article: Islam in Madagascar

Islam in Madagascar constitutes about 7% of the population. The Arab and Somali Muslim traders who first brought Islam in the Middle Ages had a deep influence on the west coast. For example, many Malagasy converted to Islam and the Malagasy language was, for the first time, transcribed into an alphabet, based on the Arabic alphabet, called Sorabe. Muslims are concentrated in the provinces of Mahajanga and Antsiranana (Diego Suarez). Muslims are divided between those of Malagasy ethnicity, Indians, Pakistanis and Comorians.

Hinduism

Main article: Hinduism in Madagascar

Hinduism in Madagascar began with Gujarati from the Saurashtra region of India as far back as 1900, when Madagascar was a French colony. Most Hindus in Madagascar speak Gujarati or Hindi.

International rankings

Organization

Survey

Ranking

Institute for Economics and Peace

Global Peace Index

72 out of 144

United Nations Development Programme

Human Development Index

145 out of 182

Transparency International

Corruption Perceptions Index

99 out of 180

World Economic Forum

Global Competitiveness Report

121 out of 133

See also

Main articles: Outline of Madagascar and Index of Madagascar-related articles

Military of Madagascar

Transport in Madagascar

Communications in Madagascar

Malagasy diplomatic missions

Firaisan’ny Skotisma eto Madagasikara

References

^ “Malagasy” is the correct form in English; Embassy of Madagascar, Washington D.C. “Madagascan” is used only for the island, not its people National Geographic Style Manual

^ Central Intelligence Agency (2009). “Madagascar”. The World Factbook. https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ma.html. Retrieved January 9, 2010. 

^ a b c d “Madagascar”. International Monetary Fund. http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2009/02/weodata/weorept.aspx?sy=2006&ey=2009&scsm=1&ssd=1&sort=country&ds=.&br=1&c=674&s=NGDPD,NGDPDPC,PPPGDP,PPPPC,LP&grp=0&a=&pr.x=54&pr.y=18. Retrieved 2009-10-01. 

^ Human Development Indices, Table 3: Human and income poverty, p. 35. Retrieved on 1 June 2009

^ BBC NEWS | Science/Nature | Giant palm tree puzzles botanists

^ Malagasy languages, Encyclopdia Britannica

^ Migration from Kalimantan to Madagascar by O. C. Dahl

^ Archaeology, Language, and the African Past by Roger Blench

^ The African diaspora in the Indian Ocean By Shihan de S. Jayasuriya, Richard Pankhurst pg 82

^ “Background Note: Madagascar”. U.S. Department of State. http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/5460.htm. Retrieved 2008-08-12. 

^ Cities of the Middle East and North Africa By Michael Dumper, Bruce E. Stanley, Janet L. Abu-Lughod pg 391

^ Kingdoms of Madagascar: Maroserana and Merina

^  ”Madagascar”. Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913. http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Catholic_Encyclopedia_(1913)/Madagascar. 

^ Vincent, Rose (1990). The French in India: From Diamond Traders to Sanskrit Scholars. Popular Prakashan. ISBN 0-8613-2259-2. 

^ From MADAGASCAR to the MALAGASY REPUBLIC, by Raymond K. Kent pg 6571

^ Madagascar: An Historical and Descriptive Account of the Island and Its Former Dependencies by Samuel Pasfield Oliver., p. 6. (excerpted in Google Book Search)

^ Ranavalona I (Merina queen). Britannica Online Encyclopedia.

^ Keith Laidler. Female Caligula. Ranavalona, the Mad Queen of Madagascar. Wiley (2005) ISNB -13 978-0-470-02223-8 (HB). 

^ (French) 1947 L’insurrection Madagascar – Jean Fremigacci – Marianne[dead link]

^ a b IRIN Africa | Southern Africa | Madagascar | MADAGASCAR: ‘Violence could escalate’ | Governance Conflict | News Item

^ IRIN Africa | Southern Africa | Madagascar | MADAGASCAR: Former president sentenced to five years in prison | Governance | News Item

^ IRIN Africa | Southern Africa | Madagascar | MADAGASCAR: Hoping for fair, transparent, uncontroversial elections | Economy Governance Other | Feature

^ IRIN Africa | Southern Africa | Madagascar | MADAGASCAR: Appeal launched despite political uncertainty | Children Economy Food Security Governance Health & Nutrition Conflict …

^ a b Corbett, Christina; McGreal, Chris (18 March 2009). “Madagascar’s president resigns as rival claims power”. The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/mar/18/madagascar-marc-ravalomanana. 

^ a b c “Military backs Madagascar rival”. BBC News. 17 March 2009. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7949596.stm. 

^ “Madagascan opposition takes over prime minister’s office”. Xinhua. 14 March 2009. http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-03/14/content_11011120.htm. 

^ “Madagascar President Resigns”. Voice of America. http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-03-16-voa65.cfm. Retrieved 2009-03-17. 

^ African Union suspends Madagascar over ‘coup’ – Africa, World – The Independent

^ (UPDATE) Army puts Madagascar opposition leader in charge | Home >> Other Sections >> Breaking News

^ The Eighth Continent: Life, Death, and Discovery in the Lost World of Madagascar

^ a b “Science News: New Genus of Self-destructive Palm found in Madagascar”. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. http://www.kew.org/scihort/news/new_palm_genus.html. Retrieved 2008-01-30. 

^ Terrestrial Ecoregions — Madagascar subhumid forests (AT0118), National Geographic.

^ Davies, S. J. J. F. (2003)

^ Lemurs Hunted, Eaten Amid Civil Unrest, Group Says. National Geographic News. August 21, 2009.

^ Science & the City | Public Gateway to the New York Academy of Sciences

^ “Independent States in the World”. United States Department of State. 2008-03-20. http://www.state.gov/s/inr/rls/4250.htm. Retrieved 2008-05-24. 

^ Madagascar – Country Facts- Goway Travel Experiences

^ “Made in Madagascar: Exporting Handicrafts to the U.S. Market: a Project with the UN Public-Private Alliance for Rural Development; Final Report”, A Project with the UN Public-Private Alliance for Rural Development.

^ Madagascar – Mining: Heavy Minerals Mining

^ Rio Tinto’s Madagascar mining project

^ “Africa rejects Madagascar ‘coup’” bbc.co.uk 20 March 2009 Link accessed 20 March 2009

^ U.S. Library of Congress,”Madagascar – Minorities”

^ L’ethnicisation des rapports sociaux Madagascar

^ “Ethnic strife rocks Madagascar”. BBC News. May 14, 2002.

^ a b c d e f g http://hdrstats.undp.org/en/countries/data_sheets/cty_ds_MDG.html

^ “Le malgache et le franais sont les langues officielles de la Rpublique Malgache.” Constitution, Titre I, Art. 2; Constitutional Law 14 October 1958.

^ Haute Cour Constitutionnelle De Madagascar, Dcision n03-HCC/D2 Du 12 avril 2000

^ Madagascar adopts English as official language, ClickAfrique.com, 10 April 2007.

^ a b http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/madagascar_statistics.html

^ Madagascar and Africa III. The Anteimoro: A Theocracy in Southeastern Madagascar, by R. K. Kent The Journal of African History 1969 pg 62

^ “Vision of Humanity”. Vision of Humanity. http://www.visionofhumanity.org/gpi/home.php. Retrieved 2010-02-04. 

External links

Find more about Madagascar on Wikipedia’s sister projects:

Definitions from Wiktionary

Textbooks from Wikibooks

Quotations from Wikiquote

Source texts from Wikisource

Images and media from Commons

News stories from Wikinews

Learning resources from Wikiversity

Government

The Madagascar Government

National Assembly of Madagascar

Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Madagascar

Embassies and Consulates

Canada Hungary Washington DC

Chief of State and Cabinet Members, from CIA

General information

Country Profile from BBC News

Madagascar entry at The World Factbook

Madagascar from UCB Libraries GovPubs

Madagascar at the Open Directory Project

Wikimedia Atlas of Madagascar

Madagascar travel guide from Wikitravel

News media

Madagascar Humanitarian news and analysis from IRIN United Nations

Madagascar news headline links from allAfrica.com

Ecology

Madagascar’s National Parks and Reserves official park website

Conservation International Madagascar overview pages

Madagascar Wildlife Conservation MWC is a Malagasy non-profit association, which organises and pursues community-based conservations projects

New York Academy of Sciences Conserving Madagascar Podcast by Helen Crowley

Madagascar conservation story

Journal Madagascar Conservation & Development

Miscellaneous

The Madagascar Project, Project set up to help Malagasy communities tackle the causes and effects of poverty

Old maps of Madagascar by CEGET library (CNRS, France)

Azafady UK charity and Malagasy NGO working in southeast Madagascar to alleviate poverty, improve well-being and protect beautiful unique environments with the help of its award winning volunteering programmes.

Shama Foundation of Madagascar charitable organization providing scholarships for underprivileged students in Madagascar

Opinions of La Haute Cour Constitutionelle du Madagascar

Blue Ventures award winning not-for-profit organisation dedicated to facilitating projects and expeditions that enhance global marine conservation and research. Based in Andavadoaka, South West coast of Madagascar.

Foko-madagascar not-for-profit organization and Rising Voices grantee project dedicated to the use of ICT as a tool to promote sustainable development, especially combining human development and the protection of the environment.

WildMadagascar.org Overview, news, photos, cultural history. English and French

Madagascar Photos Madagascar

The Palmarium reserve, is situated on the East coast of Madagascar.

Keelonga, keelonga is an organisation dedicated to assisting rural primary schools with infrastructures and teachers

 

Articles Related to Madagascar

 

 Geographic locale

Lat. and Long. 1855 4731 / 18.917S 47.517E / -18.917; 47.517 (Antananarivo)

v  d  e

Countries and territories of Africa

West Africa

Benin  Burkina Faso  Cape Verde  Cte d’Ivoire  The Gambia  Ghana  Guinea  Guinea-Bissau  Liberia  Mali  Mauritania  Niger  Nigeria  Senegal  Sierra Leone  Togo

North Africa

Algeria  Egypt  Libya  Mauritania  Morocco  Sudan  Tunisia

Central Africa

Angola  Burundi  Cameroon  Central African Republic  Chad  Democratic Republic of the Congo  Republic of the Congo  Equatorial Guinea  Gabon  Rwanda  So Tom and Prncipe

East Africa

Burundi  Comoros  Djibouti  Eritrea  Ethiopia  Kenya  Madagascar  Malawi  Mauritius  Mozambique  Seychelles  Somalia  Tanzania  Uganda  Zambia  Zimbabwe

Southern Africa

Botswana  Lesotho  Namibia  South Africa  Swaziland

 States with

limited recognition

Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic  Somaliland

 Partially in Africa

France (Runion)  Italy (Pantelleria)  Portugal (Madeira)  Spain (Canary Islands / Ceuta / Melilla / Plazas de soberana)  Yemen (Socotra)

 Dependencies

Iles Eparses (France)  Mayotte (France)  Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha (United Kingdom)

 Disputed areas

Western Sahara

v  d  e

Countries and territories bordering the Indian Ocean

Africa

Comoros  Djibouti  Egypt  Eritrea  Kenya  Madagascar  Mauritius  Mayotte  Mozambique  Runion  Seychelles  Somalia  South Africa  Sudan  Tanzania

Asia

Bahrain  Bangladesh  Burma  Christmas Island  Cocos (Keeling) Islands  India  Indonesia  Iran  Iraq  Israel  Jordan  Kuwait  Malaysia  Maldives  Oman  Pakistan  Qatar  Saudi Arabia  Sri Lanka  Thailand  United Arab Emirates  Yemen

Oceania

Australia  Christmas Island  Cocos (Keeling) Islands

Islands

Bahrain  British Indian Ocean Territory  Christmas Island  Cocos (Keeling) Islands  Comoros  Madagascar  Maldives  Mauritius  Mayotte  Runion  Seychelles  Sri Lanka

 

International membership

v  d  e

Southern African Development Community (SADC)

Member states

Angola  Botswana  Democratic Republic of the Congo  Lesotho  Madagascar  Malawi  Mauritius  Mozambique  Namibia  South Africa  Swaziland  Tanzania  Zambia  Zimbabwe

Leaders

Chairpersons: Levy Mwanawasa  Kgalema Motlanthe

Secretaries-General: Kaire Mbuende  Prega Ramsamy  Tomaz Salomo

See also

Southern African Development Coordination Conference  Southern African Customs Union  Common Monetary Area  Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa

v  d  e

African Union (AU)

Algeria  Angola  Benin  Botswana  Burkina Faso  Burundi  Cameroon  Cape Verde  Central African Republic  Chad  Comoros  Democratic Republic of the Congo  Republic of the Congo  Cte d’Ivoire  Djibouti  Egypt  Eritrea  Ethiopia  Equatorial Guinea  Gabon  The Gambia  Ghana  Guinea  Guinea-Bissau  Kenya  Lesotho  Liberia  Libya  Madagascar  Malawi  Mali  Mauritania  Mauritius  Mozambique  Namibia  Niger  Nigeria  Rwanda  Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic  So Tom and Prncipe  Senegal  Seychelles  Sierra Leone  Somalia  South Africa  Sudan  Swaziland  Tanzania  Togo  Tunisia  Uganda  Zambia  Zimbabwe

v  d  e

Portuguese Empire

North Africa 

15th century

14151640  Ceuta

14581550  Alccer Ceguer (El Qsar es Seghir)

14711550  Arzila (Asilah)

14711662  Tangier

14851550  Mazagan (El Jadida)

1487 middle 16th century  Ouadane

14881541  Safim (Safi)

16th century

15051769  Santa Cruz do Cabo de Gu (Agadir)

15061525  Mogador (Essaouira)

15061525  Aguz (Souira Guedima)

15061769  Mazagan (El Jadida)

15131541  Azamor (Azemmour)

15771589  Arzila (Asilah)

Sub-Saharan Africa 

15th century

14551633  Arguin

14701975  So Tom1

14741778  Annobn

14781778  Fernando Poo (Bioko)

14821637  Elmina (So Jorge da Mina)

14821642  Portuguese Gold Coast

14961550  Madagascar (part)

14981540  Mascarene Islands

16th century

15001630  Malindi

15001975  Prncipe1

15011975  Portuguese E. Africa (Mozambique)

15021659  St. Helena

15031698  Zanzibar

15051512  Quloa (Kilwa)

15061511  Socotra

15571578  Accra

15751975  Portuguese W. Africa (Angola)

15881974  Cacheu2

15931698  Mombassa (Mombasa)

17th century

16421975  Cape Verde

16451888  Ziguinchor

16801961  So Joo Baptista de Ajud

16871974  Bissau2

18th century

17281729  Mombassa (Mombasa)

17531975  So Tom and Prncipe

19th century

18791974  Portuguese Guinea

18851975  Portuguese Congo (Cabinda)

1 Part of So Tom and Prncipe from 1753.   2 Part of Portuguese Guinea from 1879.

Southwest Asia 

16th century

15061615  Gamru (Bandar-Abbas)

15071643  Sohar

15151622  Hormuz (Ormus)

15151648  Quriyat

1515?   Qalhat

15151650  Muscat

1515??   Barka

15151633? Julfar (Ras al-Khaimah)

15211602  Bahrain (Muharraq and Manama)

15211529?  Qatif

1521?1551? Tarut Island

15501551  Qatif

15881648  Matrah

17th century

1620?   Khor Fakkan

1621??   As Sib

16211622  Qeshm

1623?   Khasab

1623?   Libedia

1624?   Kalba

1624?   Madha

16241648  Dibba Al-Hisn

1624??   Bandar-e Kong

Indian subcontinent 

15th century

14981545  Laccadive Islands (Lakshadweep)

16th century

Portuguese India

   15001663  Cochim (Kochi)

   15021661  Quilon (Coulo/Kollam)

   15021663  Cannanore (Kannur)

   15071657  Negapatam (Nagapatnam)

   15101962  Goa

   15121525  Calicut (Kozhikode)

   15181619  Paliacate (Pulicat)

   15211740  Chaul

   15231662  Mylapore

   15281666  Chittagong

   15341601  Salsette Island

   15341661  Bombay (Mumbai)

   15351739  Baam (Vasai-Virar)

   15361662  Cranganore (Kodungallur)

   15401612  Surat

   15481658  Tuticorin (Thoothukudi)

   15591962  Daman and Diu

   15681659  Mangalore

   15791632  Hugli

   15981610  Masulipatnam (Machilipatnam)

15181521  Maldives

15181658  Portuguese Ceylon (Sri Lanka)

15581573  Maldives

17th century

Portuguese India

   16871749  Mylapore

18th century

Portuguese India

   17791954  Dadra and Nagar Haveli

East Asia and Oceania 

16th century

15111641  Portuguese Malacca

15121621  Banda Islands

15121621  Moluccas (Maluku Islands)

   15221575  Ternate

   15761605  Ambon

   15781650  Tidore

15121665  Makassar

15531999  Macau

15331545  Ningbo

15711639  Decima (Dejima, Nagasaki)

17th century

16421975  Portuguese Timor (East Timor)1

19th century

Macau

   18641999  Coloane

   18491999  Portas do Cerco

   18511999  Taipa

   18901999  Ilha Verde

20th century

Macau

   19381941  Lapa and Montanha (Hengqin)

1 1975 is the date of East Timor’s Declaration of Independence and subsequent invasion by Indonesia. In 2002, the independence of East Timor was recognized by Portugal and the rest of the world.

North America and the North Atlantic Ocean 

15th century

1420           Madeira

1432           Azores

16th century

15001579?  Terra Nova (Newfoundland)

15001579?  Labrador

15161579?  Nova Scotia

Central and South America 

16th century

15001822  Brazil

15361620  Barbados

17th century

16801777  Nova Colnia do Sacramento

19th century

18081822  Cisplatina (Uruguay)

Portuguese colonization of the Americas

Theory of Portuguese discovery of Australia

 

Languages

v  d  e

Member states and observers of the Francophonie

Members

Albania  Andorra  Armenia  Belgium (French Community)  Benin  Bulgaria  Burkina Faso  Burundi  Cambodia  Cameroon  Canada (New Brunswick  Quebec)  Cape Verde  Central African Republic  Chad  Comoros  Cyprus1  Democratic Republic of the Congo  Republic of the Congo  Cte d’Ivoire  Djibouti  Dominica  Egypt  Equatorial Guinea  France (French Guiana  Guadeloupe  Martinique  St. Pierre and Miquelon)  Gabon  Ghana1  Greece  Guinea  Guinea-Bissau  Haiti  Laos  Luxembourg  Lebanon  Macedonia2  Madagascar  Mali  Mauritania  Mauritius  Moldova  Monaco  Morocco  Niger  Romania  Rwanda  St. Lucia  So Tom and Prncipe  Senegal  Seychelles  Switzerland  Togo  Tunisia  Vanuatu  Vietnam

Observers

Austria  Croatia  Czech Republic  Georgia  Hungary  Latvia  Lithuania  Mozambique  Poland  Serbia  Slovakia  Slovenia  Thailand  Ukraine

1 Associate member. 2 Provisionally referred to by the Francophonie as the “former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia”; see Macedonia naming dispute.

v  d  e

Austronesian-speaking countries and territories

Formosan

Taiwan

Malayo-Polynesian

American Samoa  Brunei  Burma (Myanmar)  Cambodia  Christmas Island  Cocos (Keeling) Islands  Cook Islands  Easter Island  East Timor  Fiji  French Polynesia  Guam  Hainan  Indonesia  Kiribati  Madagascar  Malaysia  Marshall Islands  FS Micronesia  Nauru  New Caledonia  New Zealand  Niue  Northern Mariana Islands  Orchid Island  Palau  Papua New Guinea   Philippines  Samoa  Singapore  Solomon Islands  Sri Lanka  Suriname  Tokelau  Tonga  Tuvalu  United States (Hawaii)  Vanuatu  Vietnam  Wallis and Futuna

v  d  e

English-speaking world

Anglosphere

Dark blue: Countries and territories where English is spoken natively by a significant population.

Light blue: Countries where English is an official language but not widely spoken.

Click on the coloured regions to view the related article.

 

 

Regions where English is an official language and spoken by a significant population:

Africa

Nigeria  Mauritius  Saint Helena  South Africa

 Americas

Anguilla  Antigua and Barbuda  The Bahamas  Barbados  Belize  Bermuda  British Virgin Islands  Canada  Cayman Islands  Dominica  Falkland Islands  Grenada  Guyana  Jamaica  Montserrat  Netherlands Antilles (Saba, Saint Eustatius, Saint Maarten)   Saint Kitts and Nevis  Saint Lucia  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines  Trinidad and Tobago  Turks and Caicos Islands  United States  United States Virgin Islands

Asia

Hong Kong  Philippines  Singapore

Europe

Gibraltar  Guernsey  Isle of Man  Jersey  Malta  Republic of Ireland  United Kingdom

Oceania

Australia  Marshall Islands  Federated States of Micronesia  Nauru  New Zealand  Palau

 

Regions where English is an official language but not widely spoken:

Africa

Botswana  Cameroon  Ghana  Kenya  Lesotho  Liberia  Madagascar  Malawi  Namibia  Rwanda  Sierra Leone  Sudan  Swaziland  Tanzania  Uganda  Zambia  Zimbabwe

Americas

Puerto Rico

Asia

India  Malaysia  Pakistan

   Oceania

Fiji  Papua New Guinea  Solomon Islands

English Wiktionary

Categories: Madagascar | African countries | African Union member states | Countries of the Indian Ocean | East Africa | French-speaking countries | Island countries | Islands of Africa | Islands of Madagascar | Least Developed Countries | Malay-speaking countries and territories | Member states of La Francophonie | Physiographic provinces | Southern Africa | States and territories established in 1960Hidden categories: All articles with dead external links | Articles with dead external links from April 2009 | Wikipedia indefinitely semi-protected pages | Articles containing French language text | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from June 2008 | Articles with links needing disambiguation | Articles with unsourced statements from December 2007 | Articles with unsourced statements from August 2009

Johnny Carson

Posted by Filed Under celebs news with No Comments

Early life and career

Born in Corning, Iowa, Carson grew up in Norfolk, Nebraska. He left college after one year to join the United States Navy, being commissioned an ensign. He joined the U.S. Navy on June 8, 1943, as an apprentice seaman enrolled in the V-5 program, which trained Navy and Marine pilots.

He hoped to train as a pilot, but was sent instead to Columbia University for midshipman training. He performed magic for classmates on the side. Commissioned an ensign late in the war, Carson was assigned to the USS Pennsylvania, a battleship on station in the Pacific. He was en route to the combat zone aboard a troopship when the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki brought the war to a close.

The Pennsylvania was torpedoed on August 12, 1945 and Carson reported for duty on August 14  the last day of the war. Although he arrived too late for combat, he got a firsthand education in the consequences of war. The damaged warship sailed to Guam for repairs, and as the newest and most junior officer, Carson was assigned to supervise the removal of 20 dead sailors. He later served as a communications officer in charge of decoding encrypted messages. He recalls that the high point of his military career was performing a magic trick for Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal.

He began his performing career in 1950 at WOW radio and television in Omaha, Nebraska. He appeared on radio with Ken Case, an Omaha native who was later a news anchor and sportscaster in Monroe, Louisiana. Carson soon hosted a morning television program called The Squirrel’s Nest. One of his routines involved interviewing pigeons on the roof of the local Court House that would allegedly report on the political corruption they had seen. Carson supplemented his income by serving as master of ceremonies at local church dinners, attended by some of the same politicians and civic leaders that he had lampooned on the radio. The wife of one of the political figures owned stock in a radio station in Los Angeles and referred Carson to her brother, who was influential in the emerging television market in Southern California. Carson went to work at CBS-owned Los Angeles television station KNXT. He would later joke that he owed his success to the birds of Omaha.

In 1953, comic Red Skelton  a fan of Carson’s sketch comedy show Carson’s Cellar, which appeared from 1951 to 1953 on KNXT  asked Carson to join his show as a writer. Skelton once accidentally knocked himself unconscious an hour before his show went on the air live. Carson filled in for him.

Carson hosted several shows before The Tonight Show, including the game show Earn Your Vacation (1954), and the variety show The Johnny Carson Show (1955-1956). He was a regular panelist on the original To Tell the Truth until 1962, and hosted the game show Who Do You Trust? (1957-1962), where he met his future sidekick Ed McMahon.

In 1960, Carson was considered to play TV writer “Rob Petrie” in a sitcom by Carl Reiner called Head of the Family. Reiner starred in the pilot, but it was decided that someone else should play the role. However, on the suggestion of producer Sheldon Leonard, Dick Van Dyke was given the part, and the series was retitled The Dick Van Dyke Show. He was also a guest star in two episodes of Get Smart!

The Tonight Show

This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably. Please consider moving more of the content into sub-articles and using this article for a summary of the key points of the subject. (January 2010)

Carson became host of NBC’s The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson in October 1962, after Jack Paar left the previous March. His announcer and sidekick was Ed McMahon throughout the program. His opening line, “Heeeere’s Johnny” became a hallmark.

Most of the later shows began with music and the announcement “Heeeeeere’s Johnny!”, followed by a brief monologue by Carson. This was often followed by comedy sketches, interviews, and music. Carson’s trademark was a phantom golf swing at the end of his monologues, aimed stage left where the Tonight Show Band was. Guest hosts sometimes parodied that gesture. Bob Newhart rolled an imaginary bowling ball toward the audience.

Paul Anka wrote the theme song (“Johnny’s Theme”), a reworking of his “Toot Sweet”, given lyrics, renamed “It’s Really Love,” and recorded by Annette Funicello in 1959. Anka gave Carson co-authorship and they split the royalties for three decades.

The show was originally produced in New York City, with occasional stints in California. It was not live in its early years, although during the 1970s, NBC fed the live taping from Burbank to New York via satellite for editing (see below). The program had been done “live on tape” (uninterrupted unless a problem occurred) since the Jack Paar days. In May 1972 the show moved from New York to Burbank, California. Carson often joked about “beautiful downtown Burbank” and referred to “beautiful downtown Bakersfield,” which prompted Mayor Mary K. Shell to chide Carson and invite him to her city to see improvements made during the early 1980s.[citation needed]

After July 1971, Carson stopped doing shows five days a week. Instead, on Monday nights there was a guest host, leaving Carson to do the other four each week. Shows were taped in Burbank at 5:30pm (8:30 pm Eastern time) to be shown that evening at 11:30pm Eastern time. On September 8, 1980, at Carson’s request, the show cut its 90-minute format to 60 minutes; Tom Snyder’s Tomorrow added a half hour to fill the vacant time. Joan Rivers became the “permanent” guest host from September 1983 until 1986, when she was fired for accepting a competing show on Fox without consulting Carson. The Tonight Show returned to using guest hosts, including comic George Carlin. Jay Leno then became the exclusive guest host in fall 1987. Leno stated that although other guest hosts upped their fees, he kept his low, assuring himself the show. Eventually, Monday night was for Leno, Tuesday for the Best of Carson, rebroadcasts usually of a year earlier but occasionally from the 1970s.

Carson had a talent for quick quips to deal with problems. If the opening monologue fared poorly, the band would start playing “Tea for Two” and Carson danced, to laughs from the studio audience. Alternately, Carson might pull the boom mike close to his face and announce “Attention K-Mart shoppers!”

Carson’s show was the launch for many performers, notably comedians. Many got their break on the show, and it was an achievement to get Carson to laugh and be called to the guest chair. Carson was successor to The Ed Sullivan Show as a showcase for all kinds of talent, as well as continuing a vaudeville-style variety show.

In 1973, Carson had a run-in with psychic Uri Geller. Carson, a magician, wanted a neutral demonstration of Geller’s abilities, so, at the advice of his friend and fellow magician James Randi, he gave Geller spoons and asked him to bend them with his psychic powers. Geller proved unable, and his appearance on The Tonight Show has been regarded as Geller’s fall from glory.

Carson successfully sued a manufacturer of portable toilets who wanted to call its product “Here’s Johnny”.

On December 13, 1976, comedian Don Rickles was a guest when comedian Bob Newhart guest-hosted. While poking fun at Newhart and improvising an “immigration” bit, Rickles stamped an imaginary passport, slamming the cigarette box Carson kept on his desk and breaking it. When Carson returned the next night and discovered this, he took a camera crew to the studio next door where CPO Sharkey, a sitcom starring Rickles, was being taped. Carson barged into the studio, shouting, “RICKLES!” He disrupted the taping, berating the embarrassed Rickles with a barrage of insults, in imitation of Rickles’s act. Carson also teased CPO Sharkey’s African-American actor Harrison Page by speaking to him in an exaggerated southern dialect. The entire incident appeared to be spontaneous, but comedy writer Mark Evanier published an opinion: “Carson’s show was taped in Studio 1 at NBC Burbank. The Rickles sitcom was in Studio 3, where Leno now tapes … While Johnny did his best to make it all look spontaneous and unarranged, it had to have been carefully planned. Rickles probably was not in on it and may have been genuinely surprised, but Johnny’s producers and director must have been prepared for what transpired, and the producers of CPO Sharkey almost certainly knew. At the moment Johnny entered, Don just ‘happened’ to be shooting on the set closest to that door. The surprise wouldn’t have worked as well if they’d been on one of the other sets. It wouldn’t have worked at all if they’d been between scenes or taping a portion of the show that Rickles wasn’t in.”

An oft-repeated story  since dismissed as an “urban legend”  involved a guest appearance by Zsa Zsa Gabor carrying a white Persian cat. Gabor is said to have asked Johnny if he would like to “pet my pussy?” During a 1989 appearance, Jane Fonda noted that her son had repeated the claim, and “my son said that you said, uh, ‘I’d love to, if you’d remove that damned cat!’ Is it true?” Carson denied the episode on-air saying, “No, I think I would recall that…” He and Gabor both responded to researchers stating the event “never happened.” Despite widespread insistence by people who claim to have seen the episode, no audio or video has ever been produced.

However, a bit of adult humor was not beyond Carson. During an interview with Dolly Parton, in reference to her large bust, she said, “People are always asking if they’re real and … I’ll tell you what, these are mine.” Carson replied, “I have certain guidelines on this show. But I would give about a year’s pay to peek under there.” Unlike the alleged Gabor exchange, videotape of the Parton interview survives and has been rebroadcast several times during Tonight Show retrospectives.

In a 1980 Rolling Stone article, Carson caused quite a public backlash when he called the Brian Wilson-penned (Beach Boys) song “Johnny Carson” from 1977′s Love You album “not a work of art”. Wilson wrote the song tribute citing the fact no such song had existed previously about the ‘king of late night’.

Carson made several routine jokes at the expense of other celebrities, like Wayne Newton (after Newton had performed on Carson’s show several times). Newton claimed in his 1991 autobiography, among other times including a 1989 interview with Phil Donahue, that the circumstances led to a confrontation in Carson’s dressing room where Newton threatened a physical altercation if Carson didn’t cease the barrage of jokes with homosexual connotations. In a November 29, 2007 interview on Larry King Live, Wayne Newton said, “I’m going to say something I’ve never said on television, Mr. King. Johnny Carson was a mean-spirited human being. And there are people that he has hurt that people will never know about. And for some reason at some point, he decided to turn that kind of negative attention toward me. And I refused to have it.”

Another famous feud came on the heels of an appearance by iconic author Truman Capote in 1966. The diminutive writer was already embroiled in a public feud with fellow novelist Jacqueline Susann when he told Johnny  and millions of viewers  that Susann looked “like a truck driver in drag.” The remark was not censored from the broadcast, and made headlines the next day. Capote subsequently issued a public apology  to truck drivers.

Carson reportedly loathed what he felt was disloyalty among friends. The comedian was displeased when former “Tonight Show” guest hosts John Davidson and Joan Rivers got their own talk shows. Rivers’ FOX show directly competed with Carson during the 1986-1987 season, but died a quick death. On June 24, 2009 following Ed McMahon’s death, Rivers lauded McMahon on “Larry King Live” but stated that Carson “never again spoke to me, up to his death”. Another guest host, Jay Leno, was treated coolly for being perceived as ushering Carson into retirement. Leno’s agent ignited the then false rumor in Hollywood circles that Carson’s retirement was pending, and Leno was heir to the “Tonight Show”. Carson vowed not to return to the show while Leno headed it, and indeed would make his final TV appearance about a year after his retirement on the competing Late Show with David Letterman.

Some of Carson’s good-natured barbs were directed at his friends. Ronald Reagan’s hair and Frank Sinatra’s temper and mob connections were frequent topics. Carson humorously chided Nancy Reagan for falling down and “breaking her hair.”

Comic characters

Carson as the character “Carnac the Magnificent”

Carson played several continuing characters on sketches during the show, including

Art Fern, the “Tea Time Movie” announcer (always selling strange or shoddy merchandise). The character was based on late-show TV hosts who would deliver commercials throughout the movie. Carson originally played the fast-talking huckster in his own voice (as Honest Bernie Schlock or Ralph Willie), and finally settled on a nasal, high-pitched, smarmy drone reminiscent of Jackie Gleason’s “Reginald Van Gleason III” character. The character, now permanently known as Art Fern, wore a lavish toupee, loud jackets, and a pencil mustache. Actress Carol Wayne became famous for her 100-plus appearances (1971-1982) as Art’s buxom assistant, the Matine Lady. While Art gave his spiel, she would enter the stage behind him. Art would react to her attractive body, wincing loudly, “Ho  leeeee!”. After Carol Wayne’s death in 1985, Carson kept Art Fern off the air for most of the next year, and finally hired Danuta Wesley and then Teresa Ganzel to play the Matine Lady. Carson also used these sketches to poke fun at the intricate Los Angeles interstate system, using a pointer and map to give confusing directions to shoppers (often including points where he would unfold the cardboard map to point out, via the appropriate picture, when the shopper would arrive at “the fork in the road”. Another freeway routine in the same theme centered around the somewhat uniquely named “Slauson Cutoff.” Art Fern would advise drivers to take some road until they reached the Slauson Cutoff, and then “Cut Off Your Slauson!”, often accompanied by the audience to peals of laughter, led by McMahon).

Carnac the Magnificent, a turbaned psychic who could answer questions before seeing them. (This same routine had been done by Carson’s predecessor, Steve Allen, as “The Question Man.”) Carnac had a trademark entrance in which he always turned the wrong direction when coming onto stage and then “tripped” on the step up to Carson’s desk. (In one episode, technicians rigged Carson’s desk to fall apart when Carnac fell into it.) These comedic missteps were an indication of Carnac’s true prescient abilities. Ed McMahon would hand Carnac a series of envelopes, containing questions. Carnac would place each envelope against his forehead and predict the answer, such as “Gatorade.” Then he would read the question: “What does an alligator get on welfare?” Some of the jokes were feeble, and McMahon used pauses after terrible puns and audience groans to make light of Carnac’s lack of comic success (“Carnac must be used to quiet surroundings”), prompting Carson to return an equal insult. McMahon would always announce near the end, “I hold in my hand the last envelope,” at which the audience would applaud wildly, prompting Carnac to pronounce a comedic “curse” on the audience, such as “May your sister elope with a camel!” (In fact, “Carnac the Magnificent” was the stage name Johnny used in his magic act as a youth.)

Floyd R. Turbo American (with no pause between words). A stereotypical redneck wearing a plaid hunting coat and cap, who offered “editorial responses” to left-leaning causes or news events. Railing against women’s rights in the workplace, for example, Turbo would shout, “This raises the question: kiss my Dictaphone!”

Aunt Blabby, a cantankerous and sometimes amorous old lady, invariably being interviewed by straight man Ed McMahon about elder affairs. McMahon would innocently use a common expression like “check out,” only to have Aunt Blabby warn him, “Don’t say ‘check out’ to an old person!” Aunt Blabby was an obvious copy of Jonathan Winters most famous creation, Maude Frickert, including her black spinster dress and wig.

El Mouldo, a mentalist, who would attempt to perform mind-reading and mind-over-matter feats, all of which failed. Often his tricks would include an attempt to bilk money from Ed McMahon or would end with him begging for money.

Carson uncensored on satellite

Even though Carson’s program was based in Burbank, NBC’s editing and production services for the program were located in New York, resulting in the requirement that Carson’s program be transmitted from Burbank to New York. Beginning in 1976, NBC used the Satcom 2 satellite to do this, feeding the live taping (which usually took place in the early evening) directly to New York, where it would be edited prior to the normal broadcast. This live feed lasted usually from two to two-and-a-half hours a night, and was uncensored and commercial-free. During the commercial breaks the audio and picture would be left on, capturing at times risque language and other events that would certainly be edited out later going out over the feed.

At the same time, however, satellite ground stations owned by private individuals began to appear, and some managed to find the live feed. Satellite dish owners began to document their sightings in technical journals, giving viewers knowledge of things they were not meant to see. Carson and his production staff grew concerned about this, and pressured NBC into ceasing the satellite transmissions of the live taping in the early 1980s. The satellite link was replaced by microwave landline transmission until the show’s editing facilities were finally moved to Burbank.

Business ventures

Carson was a major investor in the ultimately failed DeLorean Motor Company. Founder John DeLorean was involved in a drug scandal, causing Carson’s guest Red Skelton to quip, “The DeLorean, is that a hopped-up car?”

Carson was head of a group of show business people and businessmen who purchased and operated two television stations  channel 5 KVVU-TV in Henderson, Nevada, serving Las Vegas, now owned by Meredith Broadcasting, and channel 23 KNAT in Albuquerque, New Mexico. KVVU had been the earliest Las Vegas independent station and was sort of a local in-joke for its threadbare operation and ragtag program lineup. Many thought it ironic that a leading entertainer like Carson, along with Sal Durante, Neil Simon and others, would own such a station. There was talk at the time that the station would become the NBC affiliate, as then long-time affiliate KORK-TV was in the process of being replaced by KVBC-TV, but it never happened. KNAT started at exactly the wrong time. Several new channels  2, 9, 11, 14, and 23  were starting up in the southwest and the competition for good syndicated shows was fierce. KNAT was later sold to Trinity Broadcasting.

Carson’s other business ventures included a successful clothing line, through which his turtlenecks became a fashion trend, and a failed restaurant franchise.

Retirement

Carson retired from show business on May 22, 1992, when he stepped down as host of The Tonight Show. His farewell was a major media event, and stretched over several nights. It was often emotional for Carson, his colleagues, and the audiences, particularly the farewell statement he delivered on his 4,531st and final Tonight Show:

And so it has come to this: I, uh  am one of the lucky people in the world; I found something I always wanted to do, and I have enjoyed every single minute of it. I want to thank the gentlemen who’ve shared this stage with me for thirty years, Mr. Ed McMahon  Mr. Doc Severinsen  and  you people watching, I can only tell you that it has been an honor and a privilege to come into your homes all these years and entertain you  and I hope when I find something that I want to do, and I think you would like, and come back, that you’ll be as gracious in inviting me into your home as you have been. I bid you a very heartfelt good night.

NBC gave the role of host to the show’s then-current permanent guest host, Jay Leno. Leno and David Letterman were soon competing on separate networks.

Post-retirement appearances

Carson, 1994

At the end of his final Tonight Show appearance, Carson indicated that he might, if so inspired, return with a new project, but instead chose to go into full retirement, rarely giving interviews and declining to participate in NBC’s 75th Anniversary celebrations. He made the occasional cameo appearance, including voicing himself on a 1993 episode of The Simpsons (“Krusty Gets Kancelled”), telephoning David Letterman on a November 1993 episode of Late Show with David Letterman, and appearing in the 1993 NBC Special Bob Hope: The First 90 Years. On May 13, 1994, Carson appeared on The Late Show with David Letterman. During a week of shows from Los Angeles, Letterman was having Larry “Bud” Melman (Calvert DeForest) deliver his “Top Ten Lists” under the guise that a famous personality would be delivering the list instead. On the last show of the week, Letterman indicated that Carson would be delivering the list. Instead, DeForest delivered the list, insulted the audience (in keeping with the gag), and walked off to polite applause. Letterman then indicated that the card he was given did not have the proper list on it and asked that the “real” list be brought out. On that cue, the real Johnny Carson emerged from behind the curtain (as Letterman’s band played “Johnny’s Theme”), an appearance which prompted a standing ovation from the audience. Carson then requested to sit behind Letterman’s desk; Letterman obliged, as the audience continued to cheer and applaud. After some moments, Carson departed from the show without having spoken to the audience. He later cited acute laryngitis as the reason for his silence. This night turned out to be Carson’s last television appearance.

Letterman

Just days before Carson’s death, it was revealed that the retired “King of Late Night” occasionally sent jokes to Letterman. Letterman would then use these jokes in the monologue of his show, which Carson got “a big kick out of” according to Worldwide Pants, Inc., Senior Vice-President Peter Lassally, who formerly produced both men’s programs; he also claimed that Carson had always believed Letterman, not Leno, to be his “rightful successor”. Letterman frequently employs some of Carson’s trademark bits on his show, including “Carnac” (with band leader Paul Shaffer as Carnac), “Stump the Band,” and the “Week in Review.”

Personal life

Carson was born in Corning, Iowa, to Homer “Kit” Lloyd Carson, a power company manager, and Ruth Hook Carson. He grew up in southwest Iowa until the age of 8, when the family moved to Norfolk, Nebraska. There he learned to perform magic tricks, debuting as “The Great Carsoni” at 14. He attended Millsaps College in Jackson, Mississippi, where he received V-12 officer training, and then served in the Navy from 1943-1946. He served in USS Pennsylvania (BB-38) in the final days of the war. Carson then attended the University of Nebraska in Lincoln where he joined Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, graduating with a bachelor of arts degree in radio and speech with a minor in physics in 1949.

Despite his on-camera demeanor, Carson was famously shy off-camera. In fact, he was referred to as “the most private public man who ever lived”.

Marriages

Carson married his college sweetheart Joan “Jody” Wolcott on October 1, 1949. The marriage was volatile, with infidelities by both parties, finally ending in divorce. They had three sons. Their son Richard died in a car accident on June 21, 1991.

In 1963, Carson got a “quickie” Mexican divorce from Joan and married Joanne Copeland on August 17, 1963. After a protracted divorce in 1972, Copeland received nearly half a million dollars in cash and art and US$100,000 a year in alimony for life.

Joanne Copeland recently discovered 39 episodes of the debut season of The Johnny Carson Show which were originally telecast in 1955 and 1956. She then made an arrangement with Shout! Factory to produce and distribute selected programs on DVD. The two-disk DVD set contains Johnny’s “top 10″ episodes. Johnny’s first wife Joan and the couple’s three sons appear in the first episode on the DVD.

At the Carson Tonight Show’s 10th anniversary party on September 30, 1972, Carson announced that he and former model Joanna Holland had been secretly married that afternoon, shocking his friends and associates. Carson kidded that he had married three similarly named women to avoid “having to change the monogram on the towels.” A similar joke was made by Bob Newhart during Carson’s roast by Dean Martin. On March 8, 1983, Holland filed for divorce. Under California’s community property laws, she was entitled to 50 percent of all the assets accumulated during the marriage, even though Carson earned virtually 100 percent of the couple’s income. (Since, under the community property provisions of California law, each party legally earns half for themselves and half for their spouse.) During this period, he joked on The Tonight Show, “My producer, Freddy de Cordova, really gave me something I needed for Christmas. He gave me a gift certificate to the Law Offices of Jacoby & Meyers.” The divorce case finally ended in 1985 with an 80-page settlement, Holland receiving $20 million in cash and property.

Carson married Alexandra Mass on June 20, 1987; Johnny was 61, Alexis 35.

Children

Carson’s son from his first marriage, Richard, died on June 21, 1991, when his car plunged down a steep embankment along a paved service road off Highway 1 near Cayucos, a small town north of San Luis Obispo. Apparently, Richard had been taking photographs when the accident occurred. Carson was deeply shaken by his son’s death. On his first show after Ricky’s death, he gave a stirring tribute in the final minutes of his show as samples of his son’s photographic work (and images of Ricky, himself) were displayed with the music accompaniment of “Riviera Paradise” by blues guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan. In addition, the final image  as well as some “More To Come” bumpers  of Carson’s last show in May 1992 featured a photo Richard had taken.

Donations

In 1981, Carson created the John W. Carson Foundation, dedicated to supporting children, education and health services. The Foundation continues to support charitable causes.

In November 2004, Carson announced a $5.3 million gift to the University of Nebraska Foundation to support the Hixson-Lied College of Fine and Performing Arts’ Department of Theatre Arts, which created the Johnny Carson School of Theatre and Film. Another $5 million donation was announced by the estate of Carson to the University of Nebraska following his death.

Carson also donated to causes in his hometown of Norfolk, including the Carson Cancer Center at Faith Regional Health Services, the Elkhorn Valley Museum, and the Johnny Carson Theater at Norfolk Senior High School.

Other events

Carson was cited in a 1982 drunk-driving incident while driving a DeLorean DMC-12 sports car in Beverly Hills. Represented by Robert Shapiro, he pleaded no contest to the charges, and played off the incident by having a uniformed police officer escort him on to the Tonight Show stage.

Carson, an amateur astronomer, was close friends with astronomer Carl Sagan, who often appeared on The Tonight Show. The unique way Sagan had of saying certain words, like “billions” of galaxies, would lead to Carson ribbing his friend, imitating his voice and saying “BILL-ions and BILL-ions”, a phrase soon erroneously attributed to Sagan himself. According to Sagan’s biographer, Keay Davidson, Carson was the first person to contact Sagan’s wife with condolences when the scientist died in 1996. He owned several telescopes, including a Questar, considered at the time an expensive and top-of-the line telescope.

Also a talented amateur drummer, Carson was shown on a segment of 60 Minutes practicing at home on a drum set given to him by close friend jazz legend Buddy Rich who was the jazz musician with the most frequent appearances on The Tonight Show. Writer Gore Vidal, another frequent Tonight Show guest and personal friend, writes about Carson’s personality in his 2006 memoirs.

Death and tributes

Johnny Carson’s Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame

On March 19, 1999, Carson, then 73, suffered a severe heart attack at his home in Malibu, California. Carson was sleeping when he suddenly awoke with severe chest pains. He was rushed to a hospital in nearby Santa Monica where he underwent quadruple-bypass surgery.

At 6:50 AM PST on January 23, 2005, Carson died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, of respiratory arrest arising from emphysema. He was 79 years old. Carson had revealed his illness to the public in September 2002. Following Carson’s death his body was cremated, and the ashes were given to his wife. In accordance with his family’s wishes, no public memorial service was held. There were countless tributes paid to Carson upon his death, including a statement by then President George W. Bush, all recognizing the deep and enduring affection held for him.

Tributes published after his death confirmed that he had been a chain-smoker. While The Tonight Show was broadcast live, he would frequently smoke cigarettes on the air; it was reported that Carson had said “these things are killing me” as far back as the 1970s.

On January 24, 2005, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno paid tribute to Carson with guests Ed McMahon, Bob Newhart, Don Rickles, Drew Carey and K.D. Lang. Letterman followed suit on January 31 with former Tonight Show executive producer Peter Lassally and bandleader Doc Severinsen. During the beginning of this show, Letterman said that for 30 years no matter what was going on in the world, no matter whether people had a good or bad day, they wanted to end the day by being “tucked in by Johnny.” Letterman also told his viewers that the monologue he had just given had consisted entirely of jokes sent to him by Carson in the last few months of his life. Doc Severinsen ended the Letterman show that night by playing one of Carson’s two favorite songs, “Here’s That Rainy Day” (the other was “I’ll Be Seeing You”). It had been reported over the decades of Carson’s fame that he was, off-camera, so intensely private that he had never once invited McMahon to his home. After Carson’s death, though, McMahon disputed those rumors and claimed that a close friendship existed. On his final Tonight Show appearance, Carson himself said that while sometimes people who work together for long stretches of time on television don’t necessarily like each other, this was not the case with him and McMahon: They were good friends who would have dinner together, and the camaraderie that they had on the show could not be faked. Carson and McMahon were friends for 30 years.

A week or so after the tributes, Dennis Miller was on the Tonight Show and told Jay Leno about the first time he tried to host a talk show, and how miserably it went. He said that he got a call immediately after the first show, from Carson, telling him, “It’s not as easy as it looks, is it, kid?”

The 2005 film The Aristocrats was dedicated to Carson, as well as the episode Mommie Beerest of The Simpsons.

References

^ Johnny Carson. Encyclopdia Britannica Online. (2009). In Encyclopdia Britannica. Retrieved July 30, 2009.

^ “Famous Veterans,” Military.com

^ The Official Tonight Show starring Johnny Carson

^ The Johnny Carson Show at the Internet Movie Database

^ Weissman, Ginny (2002-12-01). The Dick Van Dyke Show. St. Martin’s Press. pp. 6. ISBN 0312087667. 

^ http://articles.latimes.com/2007/oct/11/business/fi-nbc11

^ Carson v. Here’s Johnny Portable Toilets, Inc., 810 F.2d 104, 105 (6th Cir. 1987)

^ Carson, Johnny (Host, Executive Producer). (2003) The Ultimate Carson Collection Vol. 3 [DVD]. USA: Carson Productions.

^ “Johnny Carson letter to Robert E. Baker”. Snopes. http://67.19.222.106/radiotv/graphics/carslet.jpg. Retrieved 2008-05-11. 

^ “Zsa Zsa Gabor letter to David Mikkelson”. Snopes. http://67.19.222.106/radiotv/graphics/zsalet.jpg. Retrieved 2008-05-11. 

^ “Wayne Newton on Larry King Live”. CNN. http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0711/29/lkl.01.html. Retrieved 2008-05-11. 

^ http://www.quotationspage.com/quote/600.html

^ Cooper, Jr., Robert B.. (2006). Television’s Pirates: Hiding Behind Your Picture Tube. 

^ Bernstein, Adam (2005-01-24). “For Decades, Comic Ruled Late-Night TV”. The Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A30475-2005Jan23. 

^ “Carson Feeds Letterman Lines”. The New York Times. http://pqarchiver.nypost.com/nypost/access/781543221.html?dids=781543221:781543221&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=Jan+20,+2005&author=Post+Wire+Services&pub=New+York+Post&edition;=&startpage=102&desc=CARSON+FEEDS+LETTERMAN+LINES. Retrieved 2008-05-11. 

^ “Carson Feeds Letterman Lines”. The New York Post. http://pqarchiver.nypost.com/nypost/access/781543221.html?dids=781543221:781543221&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=Jan+20,+2005&author=Post+Wire+Services&pub=New+York+Post&edition;=&startpage=102&desc=CARSON+FEEDS+LETTERMAN+LINES. Retrieved 2008-05-11. 

^ Reader’s Digest September 2005, p. 178; Book Bonus: Ed McMahon Here’s Johnny, Berkley Trade, 2006 ISBN 978-0425212295

^ Pleading Poverty and Demanding Money, Johnny Carson’s First Wife Tells the Sad Secrets of Her Troubled Marriage By Michelle Green, Sue Carswell, Eleanor Hoover May 7, 1990 Vol. 33 No. 18 People Magazine

^ “Video uncovers a forgotten Johnny Carson DVD”. CNN. http://www.cnn.com/2007/SHOWBIZ/TV/03/20/apontv.heres.johnny.ap/index.html. Retrieved 2008-05-11. 

^ “Making a World of Difference”. Childrens Hospital Los Angeles. November 2008. http://www.childrenshospitalla.org/atf/cf/{1cb444df-77c3-4d94-82fa-e366d7d6ce04}/CAMPAIGNNEWS FALL 08.PDF. Retrieved 2010-01-31. 

^ Biography for Johnny Carson

^ Longtime host of onight Show dies at 79 Associated Press, February 8, 2005

^ Net mourns death of Johnny Carson Jeff Pelline CNET News February 8, 2005

^ Quotations on Johnny Carson’s Death Associated Press January 23, 2005

^ Tribute To Johnny Carson Friends Return To Stage Where They And Johnny Carson Made TV Magic By Chris Hawke CBS News Burbank, Calif. January 25, 2005

^ Letterman Pays Special Tribute to Carson February 1, 2005 Associated Press

^ Fort Lauderdale By Jack Drury

^ HBO The Aristocrats Synopsis

Further reading

Accounts on work and life

Bart, Peter (1992-05-18). We Hardly Knew Ye.. Los Angeles: Variety. 

Corkery, Paul (August 1987). Carson: The Unauthorized Biography. Randt & Co. ISBN 0942101006. 

Cox, Stephen (2002-08-15). Here’s Johnny: Thirty Years of Americas Favorite Late Night Entertainer. Cumberland House Publishing. ISBN 1581822650. 

De Cordova, Fred (1988-03-15). Johnny Came Lately. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0671558498. 

Hise, James Van (1992). 40 Years at Night: the Story of the Tonight Show. Movie Publisher Services. ISBN 1556983085. 

Knutzen, Erik (1992-05-21). Celebs Say Thanks, Johnny.. Herald. 

Leamer, Laurence (2005-03-29). King of the Night: The Life of Johnny Carson. Avon. ISBN 0060840994. 

McMahon, Ed (2005-10-18). Here’s Johnny!: My Memories of Johnny Carson, The Tonight Show, and 46 Years of Friendship. Thomas Nelson. ISBN 1401602363. 

Smith, Ronald L. (October 1987). Johnny Carson: An Unauthorized Biography. St. Martin’s Press. ISBN 0312010516. 

Zoglin, Richard (1992-03-16). And What A Reign It Was: In His 30 Years, Carson Was The Best.. Time. 

Humor material collections

Carson, Johnny (1965). Happiness is a Dry Martini. Double Day and Company. 

Carson, Johnny (1967). Misery is a blind date. Double Day and Company. 

Johnny Carson Collection, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

External links

United States Navy portal

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Johnny Carson

Johnny Carson at the Internet Movie Database

Johnny Carson at the Internet Broadway Database

Johnny Carson at Find a Grave

Official website for The Tonight Show starring Johnny Carson

“Article on Johnny Carson”. Archived from the original on 2007-10-13. http://web.archive.org/web/20071013161038/http://dir.salon.com/people/bc/2001/02/20/carson/index.html.  at Salon

“On Carson’s contribution to Late Night”. Archived from the original on 2007-10-14. http://web.archive.org/web/20071014103641/http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?i=online&s=siegel012405.  at The New Republic

1978 profile from The New Yorker by Kenneth Tynan

The Johnny Carson Show from USA Today

Johnny Carson biography at FilmReference.com

Posthumous Letter to Carson from Steve Martin published in The New York Times

Johnny Carson School of Theatre and Film at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Johnny Carson Death onight Show

Obituaries

CNN obituary

MSNBC obituary

Johnny Carson obituary by James Wolcott

“Johnny Carson, Low-Key King of Late-Night TV, Dies at 79″. The New York Times. January 24, 2005. http://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/24/arts/television/24john.html?ex=1264309200&en=6f658f88eb80aabd&ei=5090. 

“A Good Friend Has Left Us”. James Randi Educational Foundation. http://www.randi.org/jr/carson.html. Retrieved 2008-05-11. 

Media offices

Preceded by

Jack Paar

Host of The Tonight Show

October 1, 1962 May 22, 1992

Succeeded by

Jay Leno

Preceded by

Bob Hope

Host of the Academy Awards

197982

Succeeded by

Liza Minnelli, Dudley Moore, Richard Pryor and Walter Matthau

Preceded by

Liza Minnelli, Dudley Moore, Richard Pryor and Walter Matthau

Host of the Academy Awards

1984

Succeeded by

Jack Lemmon

v  d  e

The Tonight Show

The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson The Tonight Show with Jay Leno (1992) The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien (episodes) The Tonight Show with Jay Leno (2010) (episodes)

Hosts

Steve Allen (19541957) Jack Paar (19571962) Johnny Carson (19621992) Jay Leno (19922009, 2010resent) Conan O’Brien (20092010)

Announcers/sidekicks

Gene Rayburn Hugh Downs Ed McMahon Edd Hall John Melendez Andy Richter Wally Wingert

Tonight Show Band

O’Brien era Leno era

Bandleaders

Skitch Henderson Jos Melis Milton DeLugg Doc Severinsen Branford Marsalis Kevin Eubanks Max Weinberg

Taping locations

Hudson Theatre NBC Studios New York NBC Studios Burbank Universal Studios Hollywood

Prime-time spinoffs

The Steve Allen Show The Jack Paar Program The Jay Leno Show

Recurring sketches

Carnac the Magnificent Floyd R. Turbo Headlines O’Brien era sketches

Production companies

Carson Productions Big Dog Productions Conaco

Related articles

Carson’s Comedy Classics Late Night The Late Shift (book) The Late Shift (film) 2010 host and timeslot conflict

v  d  e

Hosts of the Academy Awards ceremonies

Bob Hope (1961)  Bob Hope (1962)  Frank Sinatra (1963)  Jack Lemmon (1964)  Bob Hope (1965)  Bob Hope (1966)  Bob Hope (1967)  Bob Hope (1968)  None (1969)  None (1970)  None (1971)  Helen Hayes / Alan King / Sammy Davis, Jr. / Jack Lemmon (1972)  Carol Burnett / Michael Caine / Charlton Heston / Rock Hudson (1973)  John Huston / Burt Reynolds / David Niven / Diana Ross (1974)  Sammy Davis, Jr. / Bob Hope / Shirley MacLaine / Frank Sinatra (1975)  Goldie Hawn / Gene Kelly / Walter Matthau / George Segal / Robert Shaw (1976)  Warren Beatty / Ellen Burstyn / Jane Fonda / Richard Pryor (1977)  Bob Hope (1978)  Johnny Carson (1979)  Johnny Carson (1980)

Complete List  (19291940)  (19411960)  (19611980)  (19812000)  (2001-present)

v  d  e

Hosts of the Academy Awards ceremonies

Johnny Carson (1981)  Johnny Carson (1982)  Liza Minnelli / Dudley Moore / Richard Pryor / Walter Matthau (1983)  Johnny Carson (1984)  Jack Lemmon (1985)  Alan Alda / Jane Fonda / Robin Williams (1986)  Chevy Chase / Goldie Hawn / Paul Hogan (1987)  Chevy Chase (1988)  None (1989)  Billy Crystal (1990)  Billy Crystal (1991)  Billy Crystal (1992)  Billy Crystal (1993)  Whoopi Goldberg (1994)  David Letterman (1995)  Whoopi Goldberg (1996)  Billy Crystal (1997)  Billy Crystal (1998)  Whoopi Goldberg (1999)  Billy Crystal (2000)

Complete List  (19291940)  (19411960)  (19611980)  (19812000)  (2001-present)

v  d  e

1993 Kennedy Center Honorees

Johnny Carson Arthur Mitchell Sir Georg Solti Stephen Sondheim Marion Williams

Persondata

NAME

Carson, Johnny

ALTERNATIVE NAMES

Carson, John William

SHORT DESCRIPTION

Talk show host

DATE OF BIRTH

October 23, 1925

PLACE OF BIRTH

Corning, Iowa

DATE OF DEATH

January 23, 2005

PLACE OF DEATH

Los Angeles

Categories: 1925 births | 2005 deaths | People from Iowa | Deaths from emphysema | American game show hosts | American stand-up comedians | American television talk show hosts | Nebraska entertainers | University of Nebraska-Lincoln alumni | United States Navy officers | American military personnel of World War II | Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients | Emmy Award winners | Kennedy Center honorees | Peabody Award winners | Television preservation | People from Adams County, IowaHidden categories: Articles that may be too long from January 2010 | Too long article | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from April 2009

Ten Celebrities Who’ve Had Nose Jobs

Posted by Filed Under celebs news with No Comments

Who’s had a nose job and who hasn’t? Did she get her nose fixed or is it natural? You may wonder but the only way you may know for sure is to actually know the celebrity in question. But let’s face it, for the majority of us, meeting, knowing and rubbing shoulders with a celebrity is not going to happen. Therefore, we have to rely on before and after photographs, or a straight-up admission by the celebrity having the guts to fess up to their fans that yes, I’ve had a nose job. Just for fun and convenience, I have assembled my top ten list of celebrities who’ve had nose jobs.

Marilyn Monroe

Marilyn Monroe also known as Norma Jean Baker is probably one of the most famous and well loved of celebrities to get a nose job to enhance her appearance. She is also one of the bravest of female celebrities for being truthful with the world by admitting to the plastic surgery. No one ever stopped loving Marilyn for this admission.

Ashton Kutcher

Aston Kutcher is one of the hottest male celebrities in the world today. He is well loved by many fans and some of them can’t help but wonder if he’s had a nose job, since his nose appears to be a bit different from in his younger days. Although, there have been other male celebrities who’ve had nose jobs, we think this one should have the nerve to admit to the world that yes, I did it, if indeed he has. Goodness knows this small admission would not turn any of his loving fans against him; they would most likely lift him up further on his pedestal for coming forth with such news.

Matt Dillon

Matt Dillon was one of the worlds best-loved teenage heartthrobs, just about every teenage girl at the time could not deny that this was one pretty boy; they would all love to get their hands on. He’s still a very handsome man after all these years, but you cannot help but to notice that his nose no longer has the rounded tip and is much more pointed today. Come on Matt, admit it, you are strong, talented, and handsome and always will be in the eyes of your fans.

Michael Jackson

There would be no use for Michael Jackson to have ever denied having a nose job. Although, he was and is still well loved; unfortunately, it seems that he suffered with an obsession of continually changing his appearance. He went from a lively chubby cheeked, sweet-faced teenybopper heartthrob to a man that was terribly disfigured by the cosmetic surgeries, but people around the world still love him.

Lil Kim

Lil Kim, an actress, songwriter and rapper was a member of the Junior M.A.F.I.A. She also appeared in the Dancing with the Stars reality show during its eighth season. She began her promo tour at the end of May. She is yet another popular icon who has had a nose job.

Tori Spelling

The daughter of the talented Aaron Spelling and wife Candy, Tori Spelling is another lovely woman with a down to earth appearance who has had a nose job to try to enhance her looks. She was one of the five cast members of one of her father’s shows, Beverly Hills, 90210. And as of recently, claims to have spoken with the spirit of Farrah Fawcett‘s via the psychic John Edward.

Ozzy Osbourne

Ozzy Osbourne is a rock icon famous for biting off the heads of live rats on stage. Despite the macho image he willingly admits to having a nose job to improve his appearance. He is a singer and songwriter from England, who has enjoyed many years as the Godfather of Heavy Metal. He has plans of featuring various hard rock and heavy metal bands at the 2010 Ozzfest with his wife Sharon from mid-August to mid-September.

Halle Berry

Halle Berry has played in various productions such as A Different World, the Flintstones movie, Introducing Dorothy Dandridge, the X-Men movies as Storm and in the Monster’s Ball. Although, she may not want to admit it, she is also another famous female celebrity to get a nose job to enhance her beauty.

Beyonce Knowles

Beyonce Knowles is a rhythm and blues singer and recording artist, a fashion model and an actress. In the late 90′s she was the lead singer for the girl group Destiny’s Child. If you look closely at before and after photographs of this lovely beauty, you will notice that she is another great celebrity who’s had her nose fixed.

Dolly Parton

Dolly Parton is still loved by many fans the world over. Sure, she’s been around for a while, but she continues to be an icon when it comes to music. Although many people will first point out that her breast augmentations are her most obvious adjustments, she is another hot mama with a nose job.

Whether or not they admit the fact of having a nose job, each of these people are celebrities who’ve had nose jobs and they all still have a multitude of fans that think the world of them. Although, please keep in mind that this is a short list of celebrity rhinoplasty patients, there are many, many more famous people who feel the need to enhance his or her appearance for some reason or another. Still we love them!

ADVANTAGES OF LATEST TECHNOLOGY NEWS

Posted by Filed Under technology news with No Comments

The world has rapidly developed into a small village thanks to the latest technology which has made communication as easy and convenient as the touch of a button. With latest technological innovations such as iphones and ipads, it has become possible to communicate with people in as far off places as you could never have imagined in old times.

 

It is quite an obvious fact that communication equipment plays a major role in the enhancement of business in the current world.  For a very long time, business could only be done between people who knew each other well and at some point or the other, it would be very necessary to hold meetings to forge a way forward on the running of the business. In many such cases, decision making was quite difficult since it would involve the traveling of partners to one place and holding of meetings in order to reach some consensus. This has changed greatly with the latest communication equipment such as iphones and ipads which make it possible to hold virtual meetings with persons miles away.

 

The gains of knowledge cannot be evaluated in any way since they are practically endless. Being equipped with the latest technology news is a very important step towards making an informed decision when it comes to matters technology. Having acknowledged the fact that technology is the driving force behind the economy, it is very important for any modern business person to understand the latest technology news so that they can always be in a position to make the right decisions when called upon to do so.

 

In order to help the public in getting the relevant information, some concerned players in the communication sector such as techinfospotlight.com have thought  it wise to establish a platform on which the upload all the latest technology news on communication equipment. However insignificant a number of people may think of the technology news, the truth is that the technology news plays a major role in shaping the world and people’s private as well as business lives.

 

In order to make the right choices and to be able to exploit all the available opportunities, it is an indisputable fact that the communication equipments that come to the market have made not only the process of doing business simplified but also ensured hat the costs of doing the business have been drastically reduced. For any technology news enthusiasts interested in constantly following upon the latest information concerning communication equipments and the latest technology news, taking a few minutes of the day on a regular basis to update yourself with the latest technology news at techinfospotlight.com should not only provide pleasure but an endless source of relevant and important information.

 

The good thing about getting the latest technology news from such online sites is that you do not have to pay for the information. It is also highly convenient since you will have the privilege of getting regular updates on all the latest communication equipment and any relevant technology news concerning the same.

 

LATEST TECHNOLOGY NEWS

Posted by Filed Under technology news with No Comments

In recent times, technology has emerged as the driving force behind the entire economy. The processes of doing business have all been simplified by the use of technology. Judging by the sheer importance of communication in any business setting, it is very important for any current business man or a potential business man to be well versed with the latest technology news.

 

Talking of technology news, we have to narrow down our target to the latest technology news and particularly the latest information and communication gadgets in the market. It would be impossible to talk technology without the mention of great communication gadgets such as iphones and ipads. These gadgets have brought an unmatched revolution in the communication and the entire business sector. It is therefore no wonder that the media is overflowing with iphone news amidst other similar gadgets.

 

Having carefully evaluated the trends in the business world very accurately, manufacturers of technology equipment have carefully designed the iphone with an aim of trying to capture the demands of the market in terms of communication and entertainment services conveniently combined. it is for this reason that the iphone news seams to be rocking both the communication as well as entertainment industries.

 

Getting the right information and at the right time is always a vital part of success in any business that you take part in. with this reality in mind, it is important for all players in the industry to try and keep their eyes and ears always open for the latest technology news. In this respect however, we must acknowledge the difficulty of gathering all he important and latest technology news since you cannot be every where as things happen. This is not to say that you should give up. Instead all you need to do is identify a few reputable sources of technology news from where you can always log in and get all the iphone news and any other breaking technology news within the shortest time possible.

 

There are lots of such sites on the web where you can always get the latest technology news at the click of your mouse. One such site is techinfospotlight.com which takes pride in having some of the latest iphone news and a list of information researchers who work round the clock to bring you all the latest technology news in one single package at your convenience.

 

For people who are in the business of selling or maintenance of technology related stuff, it is vital to keep abreast with the latest trends as well as being able to foresee the coming trends so that you do not get caught unawares when the market changes towards a particular item. By checking for constant updates on the technology news websites, you can go along way in judging the market’s reaction to certain products and with the information, you can adjust your business plans.

 

Iphone news is released almost every other day as the iphone manufacturers strive to outdo each other in the market. With the major players in the communication industry introducing new brands of equipment on a daily basis, it is important to always catch up with the latest iphone news if you expect to stay ahead of your competition. It is nonetheless worth noting that the latest technology news is not only vital for players in the sale of iphone and other technology gadgets but to the consumers as well.

 

Reading Health News Articles

Posted by Filed Under health news with No Comments

If you want to stay up to date with the current trends in health, it would help to read at least one or two health news articles daily. Even if you are under the care of a good general practitioner, you can never be sure that he is aware of all the latest in health news. Health articles sometimes need months, even years, before they generate enough popularity for people to take note of them. It seems that people who read health newsletters, health bloggers, and health pioneers are the only ones able to keep abreast of the most recent developments.


Regular reading of health articles is beneficial especially if you are dealing with any chronic health problem. Scientists researching on the many different diseases are on the verge of finding a cure. Reports are made almost everyday about a new radical treatment for AIDS, cancer, diabetes and other life-threatening diseases. There are diseases deemed hopeless just a few years ago that can now be treated with newly formulated drugs and other unconventional methods.


Needless to say, caution is necessary when reading any health article particularly if the item was penned by a journalist without any scientific or medical background. Health articles are usually slanted towards promises of miraculous cures, which would only be disproved later. An ordinary reporter may reference the health article on complicated research studies that are often times beyond his comprehension. Thus, it comes as no surprise if the report will focus on the therapeutic claims scientists make while remaining silent on the veracity of such claims. Even preliminary findings are presented as if they are already the conclusions and recommendations.


Therefore, you need to make sure before following any of the recommendations given in a health article. When you are able to distinguish the good from the bad, you will find that there are many health articles that include sensible advice. You can learn on ways of getting the best workout, choosing the foods to eat or avoid to alleviate seasonal problems, and similar things. However, be wary about health articles that sound too good to be true. If you are interested about a miracle cure mentioned in a health article, it is best that you talk with your physician before experimenting with it. Being skeptical is good once in a while if only to be realistic. It will also prevent you from trying every new thing that comes out. On the other hand, if a health article sounds really convincing, logical and right, you may do test it out. Health article recommendations are, at the very least, unlikely to be harmful. For all you know, it could be the miracle cure you are waiting for.

Safal Ganesh Chaturthi

Posted by Filed Under celebs news with No Comments

This spectacular 11 day festival honors the birth of the beloved Hindu elephant-headed god, Lord Ganesha, popularly worshiped for his ability to remove obstacles and bring good fortune as he is remembered by almost everyone before the start of any auspicious activity.

Ganesha having the wide appeal as “the god for everybody”, and is popularized as a national festival which bridges the gap amongst all religions and promotes unity & harmony between them thus generating nationalistic enthusiasm.

Objective

To celebrate a safe and harmonious Ganesh Chaturthi this year

Thought

To celebrate a harmonious ,safe  & successful Ganesh Chaturthi  highlighting the major problems faced during and post Chaturthi which are Sound Pollution , Traffic Jams , Polluted Beaches etc . We wish to start a trend of celebrating a Ganpati festival in which all the worshipers can enjoy the 10 days of fun and frolic without the complications that are experienced at this time every year.

Concept

To change the mindset of the people that the festival can be celebrated causing less harm to the environment and others through various on air programmes/promos supported by ground activities Activities with TV celebrities through which we propose to lessen the problems of Beach Pollution /Traffic Jams in Mumbai during the 10 days of Ganpati Festival.

Activity :

Celebrity Visits

To start with, Celebrities will choose top 5 mandals which meet all ecofriendly  standards such as less noise pollution , cleanliness , people management etc .

Painting Competition:

TV celebs to invite audience through TV to paint Lord Ganesha and upload the same on zeenews.com/ganesha . The best painting would be rewarded by a celebrity and all the paintings would be showcased on www.zeenews.com/ganesha. A painting competition of TV Celebs painting for the same would also be highlighted through programming .

A painting competition by over 1 lakh students will be organized in Maharashtra. A small talk on celebrating Safe and Safal Ganapati along with prize distribution for best paintings to be done by a TV celebrity .

Best Photo Competition :

Viewers to click a truly captivating picture which accentuates the flavor of the festival  and send them to www.zeenews.com/ganesha to be uploaded on the website.

Activity at Traffic signals

Traffic Volunteers to help at various Diverted traffic routes wearing zee news t shirts containing client logo on all days thus benefitting the cause .

Emma Watson

Posted by Filed Under celebs news with No Comments

Early life

Emma Watson was born in Paris, the daughter of British lawyers Jacqueline Luesby and Chris Watson. Watson has one French grandmother, and lived in Paris until the age of five. Later, following her parents’ divorce, she moved with her mother and younger brother, Alex, to Oxfordshire. From the age of six, Watson wanted to become an actress, and for a number of years she trained at the Oxford branch of Stagecoach Theatre Arts, a part-time theatre school where she studied singing, dancing and acting. By the age of ten, she had performed in various Stagecoach productions and school plays, including Arthur: The Young Years and The Happy Prince, but she had never acted professionally before the Harry Potter series. “I had no idea of the scale of the film series,” she stated in a 2007 interview with Parade; “if I had I would have been completely overwhelmed.”

Career

Harry Potter

In 1999, casting began for Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (released as Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone in the United States), the film adaptation of British author J. K. Rowling’s bestselling novel. Of importance to the casting directors were the lead role of Harry Potter and the supporting roles of Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley, Harry’s best friends. Casting agents found Watson through her Oxford theatre teacher, and producers were impressed by her confidence. After eight auditions, producer David Heyman told Watson and fellow applicants Daniel Radcliffe and Rupert Grint that they had been cast for the roles of Hermione, Harry and Ron, respectively. Rowling supported Watson from her first screen test.

The release of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone in 2001 was Watson’s debut screen performance. The film broke records for opening-day sales and opening-weekend takings and was the highest-grossing film of 2001. Critics praised the performances of the three leads, often singling out Watson for particular acclaim; The Daily Telegraph called her performance “admirable”, and IGN said she “stole the show”. Watson was nominated for five awards for her performance in Philosopher’s Stone, winning the Young Artist Award for Leading Young Actress.

A year later, Watson again starred as Hermione in Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, the second installment of the series. Although the film received mixed reviews, reviewers were positive about the lead actors’ performances. The Los Angeles Times said Watson and her peers had matured between films, while The Times criticised director Chris Columbus for “under-employing” Watson’s hugely popular character. Watson received an Otto Award from the German magazine Bravo for her performance.

In 2004, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban was released. Watson was appreciative of the more assertive role Hermione played, calling her character “charismatic” and “a fantastic role to play”. Although critics panned Radcliffe’s performance, labelling him “wooden”, they praised Watson; The New York Times lauded her performance, saying “Luckily Mr. Radcliffe’s blandness is offset by Ms. Watson’s spiky impatience. Harry may show off his expanding wizardly skills … but Hermione … earns the loudest applause with a decidedly unmagical punch to Draco Malfoy’s deserving nose.” Although Prisoner of Azkaban remains the lowest-grossing Harry Potter film as of April 2009, Watson’s personal performance won her two Otto Awards and the Child Performance of the Year award from Total Film.

With Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2005), both Watson and the Harry Potter film series reached new milestones. The film set records for a Harry Potter opening weekend, a non-May opening weekend in the US, and an opening weekend in the UK. Critics praised the increasing maturity of Watson and her teenage co-stars; the New York Times called her performance “touchingly earnest”. For Watson, much of the humour of the film sprang from the tension among the three lead characters as they matured. She said, “I loved all the arguing. … I think it’s much more realistic that they would argue and that there would be problems.” Nominated for three awards for Goblet of Fire, Watson won a bronze Otto Award. Later that year, Watson became the youngest person to appear on the cover of Teen Vogue, an appearance she reprised in August 2009. In 2006, Watson played Hermione in The Queen’s Handbag, a special mini-episode of Harry Potter in celebration of Queen Elizabeth II’s 80th birthday.

Watson signing autographs for fans outside Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, 2007

The fifth film in the Harry Potter franchise, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, was released in 2007. A huge financial success, the film set a record worldwide opening-weekend gross of $332.7 million. Watson won the inaugural National Movie Award for Best Female Performance. As the fame of the actress and the series continued, Watson and fellow Harry Potter co-stars Daniel Radcliffe and Rupert Grint left imprints of their hands, feet and wands in front of Grauman’s Chinese Theater in Hollywood on 9 July 2007.

Despite the success of Order of the Phoenix, the future of the Harry Potter franchise became surrounded in doubt, as all three lead actors were hesitant to sign on to continue their roles for the final two episodes. Radcliffe eventually signed for the final films on 2 March 2007, but Watson was considerably more hesitant. She explained that the decision was significant, as the films represented a further four-year commitment to the role, but eventually conceded that she “could never let [the role of] Hermione go”, signing for the role on 23 March 2007. In return for committing to the final films, Watson’s pay was doubled to 2 million per film; she concluded that “in the end, the pluses outweighed the minuses”. Principal photography for the sixth film began in late 2007, with Watson’s part being filmed from 18 December to 17 May 2008.

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince premiered on 15 July 2009, having been controversially delayed from November 2008. With the lead actors now in their late teens, critics were increasingly willing to review them on the same level as the rest of the film’s all-star cast, which the Los Angeles Times described as “a comprehensive guide to contemporary UK acting”. The Washington Post felt Watson to have given “[her] most charming performance to date”, while The Daily Telegraph described the lead actors as “newly-liberated and energized, eager to give all they have to what left of the series”.

Watson’s filming for the final installment of the Harry Potter film series, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, began on 18 February 2009. The film, divided into two parts filmed back to back for financial and scripting reasons, is scheduled for release in November 2010 and July 2011.

Other acting work

Watson’s first non-Potter role was the 2007 BBC film Ballet Shoes, an adaptation of the novel of the same title by Noel Streatfeild. The film’s director Sandra Goldbacher commented that Watson was “perfect” for the starring role of aspiring actress Pauline Fossil: “She has a piercing, delicate aura that makes you want to gaze and gaze at her.” Ballet Shoes was broadcast in the UK on Boxing Day 2007 to an audience of 5.7 million viewers, despite generally poor reviews.

Watson also lent her voice to the role of Princess Pea in the animated film The Tale of Despereaux, a children’s comedy starring Matthew Broderick. The Tale of Despereaux was released in December 2008 and grossed $87 million worldwide.

In April 2008, Watson was widely rumoured to have been cast as “Betsy” Bonaparte in an upcoming film titled Napoleon and Betsy, but her official website denied that any commitment had been made and the film failed to materialize. Watson has chosen to focus on her education rather than pursuing other film or television roles.

Fashion and modelling

As she has grown older, Watson has become something of a fashion devotee, saying that she sees fashion as very similar to art, which she studied in school. In September 2008, she told a blogger, “I’ve been focusing on art a lot, and fashion’s a great extension of that.”

In 2008, the British press reported that Watson was to replace Keira Knightley as the face of the fashion house Chanel, but this was flatly denied by both parties. In June 2009, following several months of rumours, Watson confirmed that she would be partnering Burberry as the face of their new campaign; she received an estimated six-figure fee for modelling Burberry’s Autumn/Winter 2009 collection. She later appeared in Burberry’s 2010 Spring/Summer campaign alongside her brother Alex, musicians George Craig and Matt Gilmour, and Max Hurd.

In September 2009, Watson announced her involvement with People Tree, a Fair Trade fashion brand. Watson says she has been working closely with People Tree to create a spring line of clothing, due to be released at the end of February 2010. The line will feature styles inspired by southern France and the City of London. Later, The Times released a short article on Watson’s progress with the collection. The range was highly publicized, appearing in subsequent tabloids such as You magazine, Heat Magazine, Teen Vogue, Cosmopolitan, and People. Watson admitted that her competition was minimal. She also stated, “I think young people like me are becoming increasingly aware of the humanitarian issues surrounding fast fashion and want to make good choices but there aren’t many options out there.”

Personal life

Watson at the premiere of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

Watson’s extended family has grown as her divorced parents each have new partners. Her father has a son, Toby, and identical twin girls, Nina and Lucy. Her mother’s partner has two sons (Watson’s stepbrothers), who “regularly stay with her”. Watson’s full brother, Alexander, has appeared as an extra in two Harry Potter films, and her half-sisters were cast as the young Pauline Fossil in the BBC’s Ballet Shoes adaptation.

After moving to Oxford with her mother and brother, Watson attended The Dragon School, an independent preparatory school, until June 2003 and then moved to Headington School, an independent school for girls, also in Oxford. While on film sets, Watson and her peers were tutored for up to five hours a day; despite the focus on filming she maintained high academic standards. In June 2006, Watson took GCSE examinations in 10 subjects, achieving eight A* and two A grades; she was a target of friendly ridicule on the Harry Potter set because of her straight-A exam results. She received A grades in her 2008 A level examinations in English Literature, Geography and Art, and in her 2007 AS (advanced subsidiary) level in History of Art.

After leaving school, Watson took a gap year to film Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows beginning in February 2009, but said she “definitely want[ed] to go to university”. Despite numerous contradictory news stories, some from highly-reputable sources, claiming that she would “definitely” attend Trinity College, Cambridge, Columbia University, Brown University or Yale University, Watson was reluctant to commit publicly to any one institution, saying that she would announce her decision first on her official website. In interviews with Jonathan Ross and David Letterman in July 2009, she confirmed that she was planning to study liberal arts in the United States, saying that having missed so much school as a child for filming the “broad curriculum” of American higher education appealed to her more than British universities, “where you have to just choose one thing to study for three years”. In July 2009, after a second storm of rumour, The Providence Journal reported that Watson had “grudgingly admitted” that she had chosen Brown University, located in Providence, Rhode Island. Watson defended her attempts to avoid announcing her choice of university accidentally slipped by Daniel Radcliffe and producer David Heyman, during interviews publicising the release of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, and finally confirmed in September 2009 after the university’s academic year had started saying that she “want[ed] to be normal. … I want to do it properly, like everyone else. As long as I don walk in and see … Harry Potter posters everywhere, Il be fine.”

Watson’s work in the Harry Potter series has earned her more than 10 million, and she has acknowledged she will never have to work for money  in March 2009 she was ranked 6th on the Forbes list of “Most Valuable Young Stars” and in February 2010 was named as Hollywood’s highest paid female star, having earned an estimated 19 million in 2009. However, she has declined to leave school to become a full-time actress, saying “People can understand why I don want to … but school life keeps me in touch with my friends. It keeps me in touch with reality.” She has been positive about working as a child actress, saying her parents and colleagues helped make her experience a positive one. Watson enjoys a close friendship with her fellow Harry Potter stars Daniel Radcliffe and Rupert Grint, describing them as a “unique support system” for the stresses of film work, and saying that, after working with them for the ten years of the film series, “they really are like my siblings”.

Watson lists her interests as dancing, singing, field hockey, tennis, art and fly fishing, and she donates to WTT (Wild Trout Trust). She describes herself as “a bit of a feminist”, and admires fellow actors Johnny Depp and Julia Roberts.

Filmography

Year

Film

Role

Notes

2001

Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone

Hermione Granger

Released as Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone in the US and India

Nominated for Best Performance by a Young Actor Saturn Award

Nominated for Best Debut at Empire Awards

Nominated for Best Youth Performance PFCS Award

Won Best Performance in a Feature Film Leading Young Actress Young Artist Award

2002

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets

Nominated for Best Youth Performance PFCS Award

2004

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban

Nominated for Best Young Actress Critics Choice Award

2005

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

Nominated for Best Young Actress Critics Choice Award

Nominated for Best On-screen Actress MTV Movie Award

2007

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

Nominated for Best Actress at Empire Awards

Won Best Performance by a Female National Movie Award

Ballet Shoes

Pauline Fossil

Television film shown on BBC One

2008

The Tale of Despereaux

Princess Pea

Voice part

2009

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

Hermione Granger

15 July 2009 (UK, US, AUS)

Nominated for Best Actress Scream Award

2010

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part I

Release Date USA and UK 19 November 2010

2011

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part II

Filming

Awards

Year

Organisation

Award

Film

Result

2002

Young Artist Awards

Best Performance in a Feature Film  Leading Young Actress

Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone

Won

Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films

Saturn Award

Nominated

Empire

Empire Award

Nominated

American Moviegoer Awards

Outstanding Supporting Actress

Nominated

Young Artist Awards

Best Ensemble in Feature Film

Nominated

2003

Otto Awards

Best Female Film Star (Silver)

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets

Won

2004

Otto Awards

Best Female Film Star (Silver)

Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban

Won

Total Film

Child Performance of the Year

Won

Broadcast Film Critics Association

Best Young Actress

Nominated

2005

Otto Awards

Best Female Film Star (Gold)

Won

Broadcast Film Critics Association

Best Young Actress

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

Nominated

2006

Otto Awards

Best Female Film Star (Bronze)

Won

MTV Movie Awards

Best On-Screen Team

Nominated

2007

ITV National Film Awards

Best Female Performance

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

Won

UK Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards

Best Movie Actress

Won

2008

UK Sony Ericsson Empire Awards

Best Actress

Nominated

Constellation Award

Best Female Performance

Won

Otto Awards

Best Female Film Star (Gold)

Won

SyFy Genre Awards

Best Actress

Won

Glamour Awards

Best UK TV Actress

Ballet Shoes

Nominated

References

^ a b “Emma Watson”. The Late Show with David Letterman. CBS. 8 July 2009. No. 3145.

^ “Emma Watson”. The New York Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/person/300014/Emma-Watson. Retrieved 12 January 2008. 

^ Warner Bros. (23 March 2007). “Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson to Reprise Roles in the Final Two Installments of Warner Bros. Pictures’ Harry Potter Film Franchise”. Press release. http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/March2007/23/c6173.html. Retrieved 23 March 2007. 

^ a b Stenzhorn, Stefan (27 July 2007). “Potter star Watson “rich enough to retire”". RT.ie Entertainment. http://www.emmaempire.net/archives/news.en.4339.html. Retrieved 27 July 2007. 

^ a b Watson, Emma. “Emma Watson official website news”. http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com/#news/show/152. Retrieved 27 August 2007. 

^ Gould, Lara (5 August 2007). “Hermione Set for BBC Role”. The Sunday Mirror. http://www.mirror.co.uk/sunday-mirror/2007/08/05/hermione-all-set-for-bbc-role-98487-19572308/. Retrieved 6 August 2007. 

^ a b c d e Watson, Emma. “Biography”. Emma Watson’s Official Website. http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com/#bio. Retrieved 3 August 2007. 

^ “Warner Bros. Official site”. (Flash: click appropriate actor’s image, click “Actor Bio”). harrypotter.warnerbros.co.uk. http://harrypotter.warnerbros.co.uk/gobletoffire/master/index.html. Retrieved 28 March 2006. 

^ Barlow, Helen. “A life after Harry Potter”. The Sydney Morning Herald. http://www.smh.com.au/news/film/a-life-after-harry-potter/2007/07/01/1183228944244.html. Retrieved 16 March 2006. 

^ a b c d Watson, Emma. “Emma”. Emma Watson’s Official Website. http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com/#emma. Retrieved 3 August 2007. 

^ Harry Potter drama school to float – Telegraph

^ a b c d Listfield, Emily (8 July 2007). “We’re all so grown up!”. Parade. http://www.parade.com/articles/editions/2007/edition_07-08-2007/AEmma_Watson. Retrieved 3 August 2007. 

^ a b c “Emma Watson”. Friday Night with Jonathan Ross. BBC One. 5 July 2009. No. 22, series 16. 7:4019:40 minutes in.

^ “”Harry Potter” magically shatters records”. Hollywood.com. 18 November 2001. http://www.hollywood.com/news/Box_Office_Analysis_Harry_Potter_breaks_records/1097810. Retrieved 21 September 2007. 

^ “2001 Worldwide Grosses”. Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/yearly/chart/?view2=worldwide&yr=2001&p=.htm. Retrieved 29 May 2007. 

^ “Magic is the only word for it”. The Daily Telegraph. 4 November 2007. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1361526/Magic-is-the-only-word-for-it.html. Retrieved 23 September 2007. 

^ Linder, Brian (17 November 2001). “Review of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone”. IGN. http://uk.movies.ign.com/articles/316/316273p1.html. Retrieved 23 September 2007. 

^ a b c “2002 nominations and winners”. Young Artist’s Awards. http://www.youngartistawards.org/noms23A.htm. Retrieved 13 September 2007. 

^ Kenneth Turan (15 November 2002). “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets”. Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 28 December 2005. http://web.archive.org/web/20051228225730/http://www.calendarlive.com/movies/reviews/cl-et-turan15nov15,0,1767241.story. Retrieved 22 September 2007. 

^ Ellen, Barbara (14 November 2002). “Film of the week”. The Times (London). http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/film/article828645.ece. Retrieved 23 September 2007. 

^ a b “Bravo Otto  Sieger 2003″ (in German). Bravo magazine. http://www.bravo-archiv.de/auswahl.php?link=ottosieger2003.php. Retrieved 22 September 2007. 

^ Trout, Jonathon (1 June 2004). “Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson”. BBC. http://www.bbc.co.uk/films/2004/06/01/daniel_radcliffe_emma_watson_rupert_grint_azkaban_interview.shtml. Retrieved 3 August 2007. 

^ A. O. Scott (3 June 2004). “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban: Film review”. The New York Times. http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?_r=4&res=980DE2D81431F930A35755C0A9629C8B63&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin. Retrieved 23 September 2007. 

^ a b “Dan Wins Another Otto Award”. DanRadcliffe.com. http://www.danradcliffe.com/news/fullnews.php?id=630. Retrieved 13 September 2007. 

^ a b Presseportal.com. “Bravo Otto Awards 2005″ (in German). Press release. http://www.presseportal.de/story_rss.htx?nr=819426. Retrieved 13 September 2007. 

^ a b “Emma Watson wins award”. HPANA. 4 November 2004. http://www.hpana.com/news.18379.html. Retrieved 22 September 2007. 

^ Dargis, Manohla (17 November 2005). “The Young Wizard puts away childish things”. The New York Times. http://www10.nytimes.com/2005/11/17/movies/17pott.html?_r=5&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin. Retrieved 24 September 2007. 

^ “Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint”. IGN. 15 November 2005. http://movies.ign.com/articles/667/667146p1.html. Retrieved 3 August 2007. 

^ a b “Dan & Emma win Bravo Otto awards”. HPANA. 8 May 2006. http://www.hpana.com/news.19406.html. Retrieved 22 September 2007. 

^ a b “Goblet of Fire awards”. Broadcast Film Critics Association. Archived from the original on 29 December 2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20071229055819/http://www.bfca.org/individual_movie.asp?id=1769. Retrieved 13 September 2007. 

^ a b Carroll, Larry (24 April 2006). “Alba, Carell, ‘Crashers,’ ‘Virgin’ Big Nominees For MTV Movie Awards”. MTV. http://www.mtv.com/movies/news/articles/1529112/story.jhtml. Retrieved 22 September 2007. 

^ a b c Horn, Steven (26 June 2007). “Interview with Emma Watson”. IGN. http://movies.ign.com/articles/798/798992p1.html. Retrieved 30 September 2007. 

^ Waterman, Lauren. “emma enchanted”. Teen Vogue. http://www.teenvogue.com/industry/coverlook/2009/06/teen-vogue-cover-girl-emma-watson_090622. Retrieved 12 October 2009. 

^ “New Harry Potter scene for queen”. BBC News. 12 June 2006. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/5072118.stm. Retrieved 6 August 2007. 

^ “All Time worldwide opening records”. Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/alltime/world/worldwideopenings.htm. Retrieved 25 September 2007. 

^ a b Pryor, Fiona (28 September 2007). “Potter wins film awards hat-trick”. BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7019374.stm. Retrieved 29 September 2007. 

^ “Stardom fades, but cement lives on”. The Toronto Star. 11 January 2008. http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/article/293005. Retrieved 22 January 2008. 

^ a b “Harry Potter Will Be Played By Daniel Radcliffe In Final Two Flicks”. MTV.com. 2 March 2007. http://www.mtv.com/movies/news/articles/1553722/20070302/story.jhtml. Retrieved 2009-04-18. 

^ “Will Harry Potter lose one of its stars?”. Newsweek. 2 October 2006. Archived from the original on 5 October 2006. http://web.archive.org/web/20061005101208/http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14966267/site/newsweek/. Retrieved 25 September 2007. 

^ “Hermione is back”. news.com.au. 25 March 2007. http://www.news.com.au/perthnow/story/0,21598,21447024-5005368,00.html. Retrieved 12 April 2009. 

^ Edidin, Peter (24 March 2007). “Gang’s all here”. New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/24/arts/24arts.html?ref=arts. Retrieved 12 April 2009. 

^ Boshoff, Alison (12 July 2007). “Worth 8m and preparing to be the face of Chanel, Emma Watson is a girl with a magic touch”. The Daily Mail. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-467822/Worth-8m-preparing-face-Chanel-Emma-Watson-girl-magic-touch.html. Retrieved 2009-04-18. 

^ Watson, Emma (28 November 2007). “Ballet Shoes interviews”. Emma Watson’s official website news. http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com/#news/show/220. Retrieved 12 April 2009. 

^ Watson, Emma (22 May 2008). “Ballet Shoes interviews”. Emma Watson’s official website news. http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com/#news/show/330. Retrieved 12 April 2009. 

^ “‘Harry Potter’ sweeps into theaters 2 days early”. Yahoo!. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090415/ap_en_mo/film_harry_potter. Retrieved 14 April 2009. 

^ “Potter film release date delayed”. BBC News. 15 August 2008. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7562557.stm. Retrieved 28 July 2009. 

^ Turan, Kenneth (14 July 2009). “Review: ‘Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince’”. Los Angeles Times. http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/reviews/movies/la-et-potter14-2009jul14,0,1421215.story. Retrieved 28 July 2009. 

^ Kois, Dan (14 July 2009). “Critic Review for Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince”. The Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/gog/movies/harry-potter-and-the-half-blood-prince,1145253/critic-review.html#reviewNum1. Retrieved 28 July 2009. 

^ Sandhu, Sukhdev (16 July 2009). [newly-liberated and energized, eager to give all they have to what left of the series "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, review"]. The Daily Telegraph. newly-liberated and energized, eager to give all they have to what left of the series. 

^ Watson, Emma (17 February 2009). “Filming begins”. Emma Watson’s official website news. http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com/#news/show/376. Retrieved 12 April 2009. 

^ Jack Malvern (14 March 2008). “Longer spell at box office for Harry Potter”. The Times. 

^ a b Olly Richards (14 March 2008). “Potter Producer Talks Deathly Hallows”. Empire. http://www.empireonline.com/news/story.asp?NID=22200. Retrieved 14 March 2008. 

^ “Final ‘Harry Potter’ book will be split into two movies”. The Los Angeles Times. 12 March 2008. http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/movies/la-et-potter13mar13,0,7162166.story. Retrieved 12 March 2008. 

^ Warman, Matt (21 December 2007). “Dancing towards their dreams”. The Daily Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2007/12/21/nosplit/bvtvballet21.xml. Retrieved 12 January 2008. 

^ Pielou, Adriaane (26 December 2007). “Ballet Shoes saw me through”. The Daily Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2007/12/26/baheidi126.xml. Retrieved 1 January 2008. 

^ BBC. “A Christmas treat for all the family”. Press release. http://web.archive.org/web/20071130080712/http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/proginfo/tv/wk52/feature_balletshoes.shtml. Retrieved 1 January 2008. 

^ BBC. “BBC One Transmission Details, weeks 52/1″. Press release. http://web.archive.org/web/20071209071634/http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/proginfo/tv/wk52/trans_bbc1.shtml. Retrieved 1 January 2008. 

^ Tryhorn, Chris (27 December 2007). “Viewers sold on Old Curiosity Shop”. The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2007/dec/27/tvratings.television. Retrieved 1 January 2008. 

^ Wollaston, Sam (27 December 2007). “Last Night’s TV”. The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2007/dec/27/television2. Retrieved 1 January 2008. 

^ Teeman, Tim (27 December 2007). “Last Night’s TV”. London: The Times. http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/tv_and_radio/article3097342.ece. Retrieved 1 January 2008. 

^ Walton, James (27 December 2007). “Ballet Shoes”. The Daily Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml;jsessionid=DTSNVNAO5CHXDQFIQMGCFGGAVCBQUIV0?xml=/arts/exclusions/tvondemand/nosplit/LNoTV/bvballet26.xml. Retrieved 1 January 2008. 

^ “Emma Watson in Napoleon and Betsy”. Empire Movies. 18 April 2008. http://www.empiremovies.com/?p=23069. Retrieved 12 April 2009. 

^ “Harry Potter’s Emma Watson to play Napoleon’s lover”. The Daily Mirror. 19 April 2008. http://www.mirror.co.uk/celebs/news/2008/04/19/harry-potter-s-emma-watson-to-play-napoleon-s-lover-115875-20387437/. Retrieved 12 April 2009. 

^ Watson, Emma. “Emma Watson official website news”. http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com/#news/show/327. Retrieved 30 April 2008. 

^ a b Long, Camilla (7 December 2008). “What next in life for Emma Watson”. London: Times Online. http://women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/celebrity/article5279807.ece. Retrieved 10 December 2008. 

^ “Emma Watson’s Other Options”. Teen Vogue. 18 September 2008. http://www.teenvogue.com/style/blogs/fashionweek/2008/09/emma-watsons-other-options.html. Retrieved 12 April 2009. 

^ Neate, Rupert (19 June 2008). “Chanel: ‘No contract’ for Harry Potter’s Emma Watson”. The Daily Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/celebritynews/2157750/Chanel-No-contract-for-Harry-Potters-Emma-Watson.html. Retrieved 2009-04-18. 

^ Kay, Nathan (15 June 2008). “Chanel casts a 3million spell on Mademoiselle Hermione”. The Daily Mail. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1026524/Chanel-casts-3million-spell-Mademoiselle-Hermione.html. Retrieved 2009-04-18. 

^ Nicholl, Kate (12 April 2009). “That’s magic  Potter star Emma Watson makes her competition vanish”. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1169274/That-8217-s-magic–8211-Potter-star-Emma-Watson-makes-competition-vanish.html. Retrieved 12 April 2009. 

^ “Burberry’s new girl!”. Emma Watson official website news. 9 June 2009. http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com/#news/show/392. Retrieved 28 June 2009. 

^ Craik, Laura (9 June 2009). “Harry Potter star Emma Watson charms Burberry”. The Evening Standard. http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/fashion/article-23705207-details/Harry+Potter+star+Emma+Watson+charms+Burberry/article.do. Retrieved 28 June 2009. 

^ a b http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com

^ http://www.peopletreeyouth.co.uk/

^ http://women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/fashion/article6985147.ece

^ a b c Watson, Emma (24 September 2007). “Emma’s sisters in Ballet Shoes”. Emma Watson’s official website. http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com/#news/show/191. Retrieved 30 September 2007. 

^ a b c Gordon, Jane (13 August 2007). “Touched by magic: Harry Potter’s Hermione”. http://www.mailonsunday.co.uk/you/article-466631/Touched-magic-Harry-Potters-Hermione.html. Retrieved 2009-04-18. 

^ Muir, Kate (15 May 2004). “Cast Interviews”. London: The Times. http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/film/article423860.ece. Retrieved 12 January 2008. 

^ “Pupils “sitting too many GCSEs”". BBC News. 24 August 2006. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/education/5280906.stm. Retrieved 27 May 2007. 

^ a b Tibbetts, Graham (14 August 2008). “A-levels: Harry Potter actress Emma Watson gets straight As”. The Daily Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/article2559694.ece. Retrieved 10 December 2008. 

^ “Emma’s A/S Results”. Emma Watson’s Official Website. 17 August 2007. http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com/#news/show/144. Retrieved 18 August 2007. 

^ Walker, Tim (22 January 2009). “Emma Watson chooses Cambridge rather than America”. The Daily Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/mandrake/4317547/Emma-Watson-chooses-Cambridge-rather-than-America.html. Retrieved 30 January 2009. 

^ Nocera, Kate (29 June 2009). “Life after ‘Harry Potter’: Emma Watson is heading to Columbia University in the fall”. NYDailyNews. http://www.nydailynews.com/gossip/2009/06/29/2009-06-29_life_after_harry_potter_emma_watson_sets_her_sights_and_.html#ixzz0KMSPFb1a&D. Retrieved 3 July 2009. 

^ Smith, Lizzie (29 June 2009). “‘I’m hoping to fade into the background,’ says cover girl Emma Watson on life after Harry Potter”. Daily Mail UK. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1196203/Emma-Watson-life-Harry-Potter-Im-hoping-fade-background.html. Retrieved 3 July 2009. 

^ http://www.celebla.com/2009/07/01/emma-watson-life-will-be-over-after-potter/

^ “University ‘nerd’ Emma Watson”. The Boston Globe. 25 April 2009. http://www.boston.com/ae/celebrity/articles/2009/04/25/university_nerd_emma_watson/. Retrieved 2 May 2009. 

^ Watson, Emma (15 April 2009). “19th Birthday!”. Emma Watson’s official website. http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com/#ems/show/1879. Retrieved 15 April 2009. 

^ Wootten, Dan (11 April 2009). “Potter’s girl leaves Hogwarts: Brainy Harry Potter star Emma Watson is flying off-to uni”. News of the World. http://www.newsoftheworld.co.uk/showbiz/xs/260958/BRAINY-Harry-Potter-star-EMMA-WATSON-is-flying-offmdashto-uni.html. 

^ Ford, James (14 July 2009). “Catching up with Emma Watson”. Paste. http://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2009/07/catching-up-with-emma-watson.html. Retrieved 15 July 2009. 

^ a b “Emma Watson, of Potter fame, heading for Brown”. The Providence Journal. 7 July 2009. http://www.projo.com/lifebeat/content/lb-people_column0707_07-07-09_75EV50A_v13.2784f2f.html. 

^ Coyle, Jake (12 July 2009). “Harry Potter cast reflects on childhood at Hogwarts”. Chicago Sun-Times. http://www.suntimes.com/entertainment/movies/1661033,harry-potter-daniel-radcliffe-grow-up-071209.article. 

^ McLean, Craig (4 July 2009). “Dan the man”. The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2009/jul/04/daniel-radcliffe-harry-potter-jk-rowling. 

^ Watson, Emma (8 September 2009). “Hi everyone”. Emma Watson’s official website. http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com/#news/show/410. Retrieved 13 September 2009. 

^ Burman, John (10 March 2009). “In Pictures: Hollywood’s Most Valuable Young Stars”. Forbes. http://www.forbes.com/2009/03/10/teen-star-currency-business-media-forbes-star-currency_slide_7.html?thisSpeed=30000. Retrieved 2009-04-18. 

^ “Harry Potter star Emma Watson is top-earning actress”. BBC News (BBC). 5 February 2010. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/8500494.stm. Retrieved 5 February 2010. 

^ Cawthorne, Alec (7 November 2007). “Rupert Grint and Emma Watson”. BBC. http://www.bbc.co.uk/films/2001/11/07/rupert_grint_emma_watson_2001_interview.shtml. Retrieved 3 August 2007. 

^ “Emma Watson loves to go fishing for a spell”. The Daily Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/1582427/Emma-Watson-loves-to-go-fishing-for-a-spell.html. Retrieved 19 May 2008. 

^ “Emma Watson donates items for WTT auction”. Harry Potter Automatic News Aggregator. http://www.hpana.com/news.19797.html. Retrieved 19 May 2008. 

^ “Emma Watson donates items for WTT auction again”. Harry Potter Automatic News Aggregator. http://www.hpana.com/news.20403.html. Retrieved 19 May 2008. 

^ “The Wild Trout Trust  Internet & Postal Auction 2008″ (PDF). Wild Trout Trust. http://www.wildtrout.org/images/PDFs/webauctioncat08.pdf. Retrieved 19 May 2008. 

^ Watson, Emma. “emma-faq”. Emma Watson’s Official Website. http://www.emmawatsonofficial.com/#emma/facts/. Retrieved 3 August 2007. 

^ “2002 Saturn Awards”. IMDB. http://www.imdb.com/Sections/Awards/Academy_of_Science_Fiction_Fantasy_And_Horror_Films_USA/2002. Retrieved 13 September 2007. 

^ “2002 Empire Awards”. IMDB. http://www.imdb.com/Sections/Awards/Empire_Awards_UK/2002. Retrieved 13 September 2007. 

^ “American Moviegoer Award nominations”. Time Warner. http://www.timewarner.com/corp/newsroom/pr/0,20812,669203,00.html. Retrieved 13 September 2007. 

^ “Prisoner of Azkaban awards”. Broadcast Film Critics Association. Archived from the original on 2007-12-29. http://web.archive.org/web/20071229055804/http://www.bfca.org/individual_movie.asp?id=1386. Retrieved 13 September 2007. 

^ Akers, Shelley (20 October 2007). “Emma Watson Is Named Nickelodeon’s Best Actress”. People. http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20153408,00.html. Retrieved 24 October 2007. 

^ “Six Nominations for “Order of the Phoenix” at Empire Awards”. The Leaky Cauldron. 3 February 2008. http://www.the-leaky-cauldron.org/2008/2/4/six-nominations-for-order-of-the-phoenix-at-empire-awards. Retrieved 3 February 2008. 

^ “Will Smith, Emma Watson & ransformers Win Canadian Film/TV Awards”. marketwire. July 2008. http://www.marketwire.com/press-release/The-Constellation-Awards-878788.html. Retrieved 15 July 2008. 

^ “Dan and Emma won Otto Awards”. Bravo Germany. May 2008. http://www.bravo.de/online/render.php?render=065757&size=big. Retrieved 6 May 2008. 

^ “‘Battlestar Galactica’ Leads Way With 11 SyFy Genre Awards Nods”. SyFy Portal. August 2008. http://www.airlockalpha.com/news425320.html. Retrieved 15 April 2009. 

^ “Emma Watson Nominated for Glamour Awards”. The Leaky Cauldron. 11 February 2008. http://www.the-leaky-cauldron.org/2008/2/11/emma-watson-nominated-for-otto-and-glamour-magazine-awards. Retrieved 2009-04-18. 

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Emma Watson

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Emma Watson

Official website

Emma Watson at the Internet Movie Database

Emma Watson at TV.com

Guides: Harry Potter Actors at the BBC

Persondata

NAME

Watson, Emma

ALTERNATIVE NAMES

Watson, Emma Charlotte Duerre

SHORT DESCRIPTION

British actress

DATE OF BIRTH

1990-04-15

PLACE OF BIRTH

Paris, France

DATE OF DEATH

PLACE OF DEATH

Categories: English film actors | English television actors | English voice actors | English child actors | Old Headingtonians | Old Dragons | People from Oxford | People from Paris | English people of French descent | British film actors | 1990 births | Living peopleHidden categories: Pages containing cite templates with deprecated parameters | Wikipedia indefinitely semi-protected biographies of living people | Wikipedia indefinitely move-protected pages | Featured articles

Economy/ News/ Prices

Posted by Filed Under business & economy news with No Comments

The city of Aliso Viejo is located in the Orange County region of the United States. It has an estimated population of around 41,424 and continues to grow by leaps and bounds. It is bordered by well publicized cities of Laguna Beach and Laguna Hills.

The economic picture of Aliso Viejo is quite diverse with many large scale options.  Many large companies exist in the area and job seekers of all types can find employment opportunities with relative ease. The unemployment rate of the area is around 6% which is slightly lower than the national average. Some of the larger companies in the area include, AND1, Buy.com, UST Global, Smith Micro Software, Qlogic, and many more.

Commercial Properties:

Office space and retail space abound in and around the Aliso Viejo area. Upon searching the vacancies in and around the greater Orange County area, many options were available for business owners looking to start or expand business. In a recent survey of available options, many smaller office spaces started at around $675 a month for all inclusive offices. Retail space was available at around $3 – $5 a square foot for options up and over 1,000 square feet. Various factors go into the pricing of many spaces in the area.  How long have you been in business?  Are you a new company?  Whatever your situation is, you need to plan ahead and decide what type of lease (or rental agreement) you will agree to.  For newer companies the best idea is to sign a shorter lease – like say 6-12 months (maybe even monthly if possible), because this will give you flexibility.  If you find an amazing deal on a commercial office park that offers free move in, free months rent, or any other promotion, then you should consider that.

On the other hand, if you have an established business that has a bright future, you should try to sign a long term rental lease – say 24 months or longer – since you will typically get a big discount on your lease.

The climate of Aliso Viejo is on par with many other areas in Southern California. On average the area gets no extreme temperatures, and although there have been record setting points, the average is temperate and warm with cool winters, but not getting snowfall or extreme weather often.

The Aliso Viejo area and Orange County in general has a deep concentration of conservative political movements. The area is also known for its high concentration of religious buildings and large denominations with many churches growing by tens of thousands.

« Older Entries