Tuesday 12 November 2013

Ginger Male Stereotype Challenged By Thomas Knights' Red Hot Project.

A sizzling, smoking hot exhibition celebrating the beauty of red-haired men will open in London next month.
The aptly named Red Hot project is the brainchild of photographer Thomas Knightsand will attempt to reverse the stigmas attached to ginger men.
We spoke to Knights about his efforts to rebrand red hair.
red hot ginger man
Thomas Knights wants to reverse the stigmas associated with ginger men
He said: “Being a redheaded male myself it's close to my heart and a very personal project.
“It amazed me how our Western culture holds redheaded women to such high regard, almost the 'ultimate' female, and redheaded males in such low esteem; emasculated and de-sexualised in film and TV and literature.
“I don't think any other hair colour has this polarised opinion between genders. If you think about it, there are no Hollywood leading men with ginger hair, and no superheros or action stars.
“Actually, it's almost laughable to imagine a ginger action star, we have been conditioned to think ginger men are ugly and weak. I wanted to flip this on its head and present the redheaded male as the 'ultimate' alpha male.”
Knights revealed the seed for the project was planted when he read an editorial piece applauding fellow gingers Homeland star Damian Lewis and Prince Harry as “hot”.
“I new something was changing, hot ginger guys were so taboo they were exciting. I knew that Red Hot was going to work and the next week I shot the first few guys and it snowballed from there,” he revealed.
As for why Knights chose to concentrate on just men, he believes ginger women do not face the same stigma as the opposite sex.
He explained: “One day I might do a female version, but as the moment it's the guys who need the rebrand.
“How often do you see the nerd, looser or fat kid in a TV show played by a ginger guy? It’s very rare to have a ginger hero, whereas for red headed females in Hollywood it’s a totally different story.
“It's filled with beautiful or sexy red headed females - they are the ultimate woman. I want to present red-headed men as the ultimate men, the alpha male, leading man. I want people to be aware that it’s even possible!”
Red Hot will be on display at The Gallery in Redchurch Street, London from 16-22 December 2013. You can back the project via this kickstarter. 

George Clooney not happy with Tesla Roadster he used to own

Actor George Clooney attends the BAFTA Los Angeles Britannia Awards in Beverly Hills, California November 9, 2013. REUTERS/Phil McCarten
Actor George Clooney attends the BAFTA Los Angeles Britannia Awards in Beverly Hills, California November 9, 2013.
CREDIT: REUTERS/PHIL MCCARTEN



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Tesla Motors Inc got more bad news this week following the third fire in its Model S electric sedan as actor George Clooney complained about being stuck on the side of the road in the Roadster sports car he used to own.
Clooney, currently starring in the movie "Gravity", was asked by Esquire magazine in an interview that was posted online on Monday whether he owned a Tesla car.
"I had a Tesla," Clooney told the magazine. "I was one of the first cats with a Tesla. I think I was, like, No. 5 on the list. But I'm telling you, I've been on the side of the road a while in that thing, and I said to them, ‘Look, guys, why am I always stuck on the side of the fucking road? Make it work, one way or another.' "
Tesla discontinued the Roadster and currently only sells the Model S sedan. Clooney last year auctioned off his Roadster for charity for $99,000, according to media reports.
Last week, Tesla reported the third fire in the car in Tennessee. Police reports said the vehicle had run over a tow hitch that punctured the armor plating that protects the battery pack of lithium-ion cells. Despite no injuries in any of the accidents, the headlines about the fires have been unwelcome news for a company whose stock had risen sixfold in the first nine months of the year before the first fire occurred on October 1.
Officials with the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said they were communicating with Tesla and Tennessee authorities and were gathering information about the incident to determine if additional action was necessary.
The owner of the car, Dr. Juris Shibayama, said in a blog posted by Tesla over the weekend that the car warned him to pull over after he hit a trailer hitch in the road. After he got out of the car, it caught fire but the flames did not reach the passenger cabin, Shibayama said, adding he would buy another Model S "in a heartbeat."
After the first fire, Tesla founder and Chief Executive Elon Musk defended the safety of electric cars, saying in a blog post that there was "absolutely zero doubt that it is safer to power a car with a battery" than a conventional gasoline-powered vehicle.
(Reporting by Ben Klayman in Detroit; For uk.reuters; Editing by Maureen Bavdek)

Monday 11 November 2013

Dark Knight Rises:

Batman jailed for theft and drug abuse. 


A Singaporean man with an unusual superhero-like name turned out to be a villain who consumed drugs and stole from his brother.
Batman bin Suparman, which means Batman son of Suparman in the Malay language, was jailed on Monday for two years and nine months for various offences including stealing his brother's automated teller machine card to make withdrawals, media reported.
The 23-year-old unemployed man had also broken into the office of a firm in western Singapore to steal money and taken heroin.
Batman, who has his own fan club on Facebook, became a social media sensation after an image of his identity card with his unusual name was circulated online.
(Credit; uk.reuters)

Early pieces by graffiti artist Banksy added to Los Angeles auction.


Four early works of elusive British artist Banksy will go on sale at an auction in December, joining the artist's "Flower Girl" piece, Julien's Auctions said on Monday.
The four graffiti works include "Happy Choppers," a 2002 mural that first appeared on a wall at the Whitecross Street Market in London and features a stenciled group of military helicopters, one adorned with a pink bow.
The piece is estimated to fetch between $150,000 and $200,000, and will join the sale of "Flower Girl," a stencil work that first appeared on a Los Angeles gas station wall. It is expected to fetch between $150,000 and $300,000.
Beverly Hills-based Julien's Auctions said the auction marked the first time that Banksy's public street art had gone on sale in the United States.
The works were all put up for sale by private owners whose identities remain confidential. The consignors to decide whether Banksy receives any part of the proceeds, Julien's said.
Also included in the sale are two other works from Banksy's 2003-2004 tour in Germany, which were discovered on walls in Berlin. "TV Girl" features a stencil of a girl holding a television set with an orange heart on the screen, while "Umbrella Rat" depicts a rat dressed in a bowler hat and tie, parachuting with an umbrella.
"TV Girl" is expected to fetch between $80,000 and $120,000 while "Umbrella Rat" is estimated between $40,000 and $60,000.
The final piece to be added to the collection is a 2003 work called "Black Bobby," from Banksy's tour in Sydney, Australia. It features a silhouette of a British policeman writing a ticket and is valued between $20,000 and $30,000.
Other works in the "Street Art" collection include canvases and paper pieces by artists Risk, Indie 184 and MearOne.
Banksy is the pseudonym of a graffiti artist who first emerged in Bristol, England, as part of an underground group. He hides his identity and real name, and his works have become collectors' items, prized for their trademark spray-paint stencils and offering social commentary.
The auction follows a month-long "street residency" by Banksy in New York through October, during which he placed murals, sculptures and artwork around the city.
One stunt included selling original canvas artwork for $60 at a street-side stall, with buyers having no idea they were purchasing Banksy originals. He also dropped off a painting at a Housing Works thrift shop, which funds charities for AIDS and the homeless, snubbing the art world. The thrift shop auctioned the painting, which fetched more than $600,000.
As Banksy's street work often appears on private property, it has brought up questions of ownership. This year, two of his murals were pulled from a Miami auction when questions arose about the ownership of one and how it had been obtained.
The work, "Slave Labour," eventually sold at a private auction in London for $1.1 million in June, a sign of growing demand, and prices, for a Banksy original.
The artist also appeared in the 2010 Oscar-nominated documentary "Exit Through the Gift Shop" with his face obscured and voice altered. His works are verified through his website (www.banksy.co.uk).

(Credit; uk.reuters)

Friday 8 November 2013



Anti-gay discrimination could be grounds for asylum: EU court.

Laws discriminating against gays can constitute grounds for granting asylum, the European Union's highest court said on Thursday in response to a request by Dutch judges for guidance.
The ruling related to three Africans seeking asylum in the Netherlands who told Dutch authorities they feared persecution for their sexual orientation if they returned.
But the issue is also part of a diplomatic row that flared up last month between the Netherlands and Russia.
After Dutch police entered the flat of a Russian diplomat and, according to Moscow, roughed him up, a Dutch diplomat was beaten in his home by masked assailants who scrawled "LGBT" (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) in lipstick on the mirror of his Moscow apartment.
This week, Foreign Minister Frans Timmermans said a new Russian law banning the spreading of gay "propaganda" could be grounds for asylum in the Netherlands, a country which has always been at the forefront of gay rights legislation.
The law, passed in June, has angered gay rights activists around the world, and some have called for a boycott of the Winter Olympics Russia will host in Sochi in February.
"A person's sexual orientation is a characteristic so fundamental to his identity that he should not be forced to renounce it," the Luxembourg-based European Court of Justice said in a statement, adding that it was not reasonable to expect gay people to conceal their sexual identity.
However, the mere existence of a discriminatory law would not in itself guarantee that an applicant should be offered asylum, the court said. There had to be a real risk of those laws being applied in practice.
The African asylum seekers were from Sierra Leone, Uganda and Senegal.
In addition to the assaults on diplomats and Dutch comments on Russia's gay rights, tensions have been strained by Russia's detention of environmental activists from the Amsterdam-based Greenpeace International, two of whom are Dutch, and the impounding of their Netherlands-registered vessel. Article delivered by uk.reuters

Thursday 7 November 2013


Scots have kilts, what do Catalans have?


'When Catalonia's local language was reintroduced in the northern Spanish region's schools three decades ago, Nati Grabiel was on the frontlines of the effort, training teachers to educate in the Catalan tongue.'


'Today, the 72-year-old retired schoolteacher is on another crusade: trying to convince the world that
Catalonia should break away from Spain. She and five other pro-independence senior citizens are travelling to the United States early next year to shoot a film that explains Catalan culture and history.' As reported by uk.reuters. 
"There is no going back. No, no, no," says the dynamic, white-haired Grabiel.
Grabiel's cinematic adventure is one of many marketing efforts, including movies, books and web projects, to promote a growing movement to make the region of 7.5 million people - 16 percent of Spain's total - an independent state.
Around half its residents would choose independence in a yes-no breakaway referendum, according to polls, and they are pushing for a vote similar to the one Scotland will hold next year on leaving the United Kingdom.
The central government has resisted the move, saying a referendum would be unconstitutional.
Most Spaniards struggle to understand the campaign for independence, since Catalonia has significant self-governing powers and last year received a financial rescue of billions of euros from Madrid. But many Catalans feel they would not have needed a bailout if their taxes weren't partly used to support poorer regions.
Catalonia's drive for more control over taxes and public spending has gained force in the last two years as all of Spain has undergone painful austerity measures to cut a dangerously high public deficit. Tensions between the region, which makes up a fifth of the Spanish economy, and Madrid over budget and other issues have raised the prospects of a break-up.
In hopeful anticipation, Catalans are trying to get their voices heard worldwide. Magazine editor Claudia Pujol recently raised more than 150,000 euros in an on-line campaign to produce a book of photos and English-language essays "Catalonia Calling". She says the book will be mailed to 10,000 world figures such as U.S. President Barack Obama, Pope Francis, former footballer Pele and Hollywood star Nicole Kidman.
"Everyone knows Scotland - the kilt, the whisky. But they don't know much about Catalonia, so we want to make it an international 'brand' and publicize our struggle to become an independent state," says Ferran Civit, one of the leaders of the Catalonia National Assembly.
His group, an independent civic organization, has organized mass demonstrations for independence, including a human chain formed on Catalan national day September 11, when hundreds of thousands of people held hands across the entire region.
CULTURAL, DIPLOMATIC DRIVE
Though Catalonia is one of Spain's most prosperous regions, with major banks and industry and the vibrant art and tourist city of Barcelona, resentment over perceived cultural and economic discrimination has grown over the past few years.
Public use of the Catalan language was widely banned under dictator Francisco Franco from 1939 to 1975, and education had to be in Castilian Spanish. Since Spain returned to democracy, Catalonia has implemented a Catalan-dominated curriculum.
Catalans like Grabiel have chafed at what they see as central government attempts to water down their Catalan education model by increasing daily class hours in Castilian.
"I want people to understand it's not all in our heads. They took away our language and culture. It's been centuries of hardship," she says.
The new marketing efforts are, therefore, aimed at celebrating and promoting Catalan culture and history beyond Spain as a way of putting pressure on Madrid, promoters say. Some books and films celebrate famous Catalans such as Antoni Gaudi, the sardana folk dance and food customs such as squeezing raw tomato on bread; others have a more political focus, such as two recent English-language essay collections "What's up with Catalonia" and "What Catalans Want", aimed at explaining the independence drive to outsiders.
Some saw Catalonia's 2011 ban on bullfighting as part of a drive to emphasize its distinction from the rest of the country.
There is also an official diplomatic drive underway via Catalonia's mini-embassies in New York, Brussels, London, Paris and Berlin, which together have a 3 million euro budget. The region's publicly funded Public Diplomacy Council, or Diplocat, is organizing seminars around Europe.
Catalan President Artur Mas, who only recently embraced the cause of full independence, has also stepped up diplomacy in Europe. He has hired British consultancy Independent Diplomat as an advisor to help convince European Union members to put pressure on Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy to change his mind and allow a referendum.
European Union officials have poured cold water on Catalonia's aspirations, saying the Spanish region, like Scotland, would have to reapply to enter the EU. Spanish opposition to such an application would be a major hurdle.
"It's an uphill struggle; at a diplomatic level they've received a lot of rebuffs," said Richard Gillespie, professor of politics at the University of Liverpool, who attended a recent debate in London organized by Diplocat.
BIG EXPECTATIONS
Mas has signaled that if Spain's Constitutional Court blocks a referendum for the independence of Catalonia, he would call early regional elections as a proxy for a secession vote.
But with polls showing Mas would lose the regional election to a radical pro-independence party, political analysts say he may try instead to strike a deal with Rajoy to abandon secession in exchange for greater tax freedoms for Catalonia.
Politicians from the left and right, along with nervous business leaders, have all pushed Rajoy to somehow engage with Mas. Spain's premier has been cautious, not wanting to open the door to demands from Spain's other 16 regions.
A middle road could be the solution. An October telephone poll of 1,000 adult Catalans, conducted by Metroscopia, showed that given three options, 40 percent would vote to remain Spanish with enhanced self-rule, 31 percent would choose independence, and 17 percent would prefer no change.
Committed secessionists like Grabiel, however, say they would accept nothing less than a referendum.
"We never got this far before. We've finally stood up for ourselves."