Monday, 04 July 2011

  • EVENT PICS: CELEBS AT 2011 ESSENCE MUSIC FESTIVAL VIP LOUNGE (DAY 1)

    On Day 1 of the annual Essence Music Festival, many celebrities came out to celebrate contemporary African-American music and culture. While artists like Fantasia and Jennifer Hudson took the stage, others were backstage mingling and chatting it up. Check out … Continue

    Source: http://concreteloop.com/2011/07/event-pics-celebs-at-2011-essence-music-festival-vip-lounge-day-1

    Eliza Dushku Jamie Chung Maria Menounos Gabrielle Union Scarlett Johansson

  • Management Today's "35 Women Under 35" 2011 List - Spotlight on UK Entrepreneurs

    Every year, Management Today creates a list of 35 women under 35 who have shown outstanding performance in their industry, promoting the top younf high flyers in the country.

    This year, the list belongs to the entrepreneurs. The most striking thing about their 2011 line-up is that half the women on the list have been recognised for their success in start-ups - whether making Lady Gaga's knickers, a children's glasses retailer or a new hedge fund. 

    Here is their list of heroes under 35: 

    JO BEHARI 32

    Behari started her property maintenance company, Home Jane, which employs only female tradespeople, in 2006. More recently, she co-founded the Goodlife Centre, teaching the lost art of DIY. Behari has also co-presented Channel 4 show Make, Do and Mend. She won business of the year at the Thames Gateway Awards 2009.

    SHAZIA AWAN 28

    The market for stretchy, body-shaping underwear may be tightly packed, but Awan knew she could do it better. Since launching her Peachy Pink range in 2009. turnover has rocketed, sometimes doubling or tripling month on month. She now sells to 20 countries. In 2010 she received the female Asian entrepreneur of the year award from Theresa May.

    KATE BENTLEY 28, AND HAYLEY MARSDEN 31

    Bentley and Marsden collaborated on their first fashion project together - Vintage Hatics, a head-to-toe vintage clothing and stylist service - while holding down full-time day jobs. Multitasker Bentley is a criminal defence lawyer, runs a vintage frock shop with her husband, and is also a consultant for premium skincare and cosmetic range Arbonne. Meanwhile, Marsden is an art textiles teacher, as well as a milliner.

    Her headwear is sold in two upmarket boutiques in Liverpool, she has had her hats featured in Vogue and was involved in this year's Comic Relief campaign, alongside Vivienne Westwood. Fans include doyenne designer Zandra Rhodes.

    SOPHIE BIRSHAN 33

    Cambridge graduate Birshan is director of strategy at Mothercare. Formerly an engagement manager at McKinsey and a policy analyst at No. 10 under Tony Blair, she joined the retailer, which turns over £790m a year, early in 2010. She also runs customer relationship teams for its Early Learning Centre and Gurgle brands.

    JANE BURSTON 30

    Burston's wizard wheeze, Carbon Retirement, is an attempt to make the knotty challenge of carbon offsetting more effective, by buying up carbon credits to remove them from the EU trading scheme. Fans include Richard Ellis, head of CSR at Boots, and Joseph Romm, environmental adviser to Bill Clinton when he was president.

    JULIE DIEM LE 34

    Le was an eye surgeon before she began her business, Zoobug, producing safe sunglasses for children in 2006. The idea came to her when she couldn't find a pair of shades for her niece which were both safe and (crucially) cool. The company has come a long way since then: Le's glasses are now distributed in more than 21 countries and she is busy working on a line of Olympics-themed eyewear in time for 2012.

    ANNA BANCE 30

    Every girl knows the problem of finding the perfect frock. But with her business, Girl Meets Dress, Bance, formerly a PR manager at fashion house Temperley who once dressed Kate Winslet and Natalie Imbruglia, has found the solution. Instead of spending hard-earned cash on designer gear, rent it for a fraction of the price. Since the company was launched in 2009, it has gained legions of fans - not least style bible Vogue, which called it 'the answer to all your prayers'.

    KATE HERSOV 30

    New Zealand-born paediatrician Hersov founded Medikidz with Dr Kim Chilman-Blair in 2009. Their aim? To educate children about a wide range of medical conditions, from ADHD to scoliosis. Since its launch, presided over by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Medikidz has published 40 themed comic book titles, distributed one million copies worldwide, grown to a staff of 25 and counts corporate giants including Johnson & Johnson, Pfizer and GE Healthcare among its partners.

    AIMEE DI MARCO 32

    With degrees from Cambridge University and Guy's, King's and St Thomas' School of Medicine, Di Marco is a specialist registrar in general surgery at Imperial College and is on the leading edge of robotic surgery. Di Marco received the best clinical care award at St Mary's & Imperial College in 2009. She is also medical officer for All Stars Boxing Gym.

    ROSALIND CAMPION 31

    After training as a commercial lawyer, Campion decided she'd prefer to work in the civil service. She is now head of the newly established Office of the Sentencing Council. She lists a spell at SOCA and a stint in Syria as a human rights lawyer on her CV. In her current role she'll be leading the drive for more consistent sentencing in the UK.

    NATALIE DUNN 26

    As senior advertising manager for Sainsbury's, Dunn controls a significant chunk of a marketing budget which runs into tens of millions, and is responsible for managing the relationship with Jamie Oliver. The Lancaster University graduate has worked her way up through the ranks at Sainsbury's - she started on the check-outs, aged 16.

    KATHRINA FITZGERALD 32

    A former investment banker at JP Morgan, where she spent seven years in the corporate finance team, FitzGerald began working for media conglomerate DMGT in 2007 and was promoted to group director of strategy development in 2009. A competitor through and through, she also takes part in triathlons, windsurfing and horse-riding.

    HAYLEY GAIT-GOLDING 31

    Aerobics enthusiast Gait-Golding is an evangelist for healthy living. Thus, her company, Bear, makes wholesome snacks with 'no added nonsense'. Bear, launched in 2009, now has a turnover of £3.5m and its products are stocked in Waitrose, Holland & Barrett and the Co-op. She runs Bear with her husband, a former professional cricketer.

    KATE HENDERSON 31

    As the first female (and youngest) CEO at the Town and Country Planning Association, Henderson plays a leading role in shaping British planning policy around social justice and environmental demands. She has a masters in environmental technology from Imperial and a first class degree in geology from UCL.

    CLARE GILMARTIN 35

    German-speaking Gilmartin joined eBay UK in 2003 and has since worked her way up to become vice-president of marketplaces, Europe. Gilmartin is responsible for a team of 250, which supports eBay Europe's 50 million European buyers and 500,000 registered businesses. In her spare time, the mother of two is also a keen marathon runner.

    LUCY HUTCHINGS 29

    The jewellery designer is based in London but her inspiration comes from growing up in Suffolk. Hutchings honed her skills at the prestigious Erickson Beamon studio, before creating her own high-end jewellery range, which is now endorsed by Swarovski and stocked in Liberty, Harvey Nichols and Harrods. Fans include Kylie Minogue, Lady Gaga and Cheryl Cole.

    CAROLINA GONZALEZ-BUNSTER 28

    After quitting Goldman Sachs during the financial crisis, Gonzalez-Bunster set up the Walkabout Foundation. Inspired by her paralysed brother, the charity donates wheelchairs to the disabled in developing countries. She has supporters in high places: her 35 Under 35 entry included a recommendation from Bill Clinton.

    ANNMARIE HARRIS 33

    Australian-born Harris was a founder of Nude skincare. Despite offering fewer than 20 products, Nude generates $2m to $4m in revenues annually, retails in 200 locations in the UK, US and Australia and was sold to LVMH early this year. She is now working on a men's skincare line, due to launch in New York next year.

    MISHA PATEL 31

    Previously an M&A lawyer at Clifford Chance, Patel recently rose to the heights of assistant general counsel at KPMG. She has advised blue-chip companies including ABN, Merrill Lynch, Barclays Capital and Accenture and will continue to work on multimillion pound M&As at KPMG. The UCL graduate has been recognised by Financial News and the Sunday Times as a rising star.

    LOUISA MOGER, 34

    When Moger became MD of the family printing business Richard Edward in 2002, it was at crisis point, with £2.2m of debt and client attrition rates at an all-time high. After a strategy overhaul led by Moger, the company has paid off most of its debts and now turns over £5.3m a year. She has two daughters and also runs her own consultancy business.

    LYSSA MCGOWAN, 33

    After Oxford and Harvard Business School, McGowan is customer strategy director for BSkyB, which reaches more than 10 million homes. She also runs partnership businesses that deliver tens of millions in annual revenues to the broadcaster. A mother of two, her third is on the way this summer.

    STEPHANIE NIVEN, 27

    After taking a double first in history at Oxford in 2005, Niven joined Goldman Sachs, becoming an investment analyst. Four years later she left to help set up Majedie Investments-backed Javelin Capital, a hedge fund with assets of £157m, where she's the portfolio manager in charge of almost half of returns. Last year, she completed an Ironman triathlon.

    ALEXANDRA POPA, 28

    Popa launched Bordelle in 2007, an underwear range inspired by S&M. Her big break came when a substantial order was placed for Britney Spears' Circus Tour. Selfridges followed and within a day of her couture girdles hitting the shop floor they sold out. Popa and her creative partner now sell to over 30 countries and Lady Gaga and Rihanna are fans.

    NICOLA ROBERTS, 33

    Roberts is proof that you don't need a degree to be a successful professional.

    Starting as a trainee accountant after A-Levels, 12 years later she's a director at Deloitte, giving tax advice to the world's super rich. Roberts has helped her branch of the firm grow by 15% in the past year. When not burying her head in tax returns she enjoys sailing and scuba diving.

    ANGELA LEMOS, 29

    With a degree in statistics from UCL, Lemos made short work of the career ladder, becoming director of financial trading at Dresdner Kleinwort aged 27. Now executive director, financials trading desk at Nomura, Lemos provides market commentary and valuation and credit quality advice to institutions and hedge funds around the world.

    DEBRA LAM, 29

    Lam joined engineering and consultancy firm Arup in 2007 and specialises in climate change, sustainability and low-carbon issues. Fluent in Mandarin and Cantonese, she is advising the Vietnamese government on managing its carbon footprint. Lam contributed to a report for the World Economic Forum presented at Davos this year.

    SOPHIE LIVINGSTONE, 34

    A winning combination of third sector vision and private sector savvy, Livingstone made her name running financial sector children's charity the Private Equity Foundation. She is now CEO of City Year London, a full-time volunteering programme for 18-25 year olds communities across London, and joined President Obama's entourage during his recent London visit.

    LIZ MCCARTHY, 34

    In 2008, McCarthy co-founded Audacity, a communications agency which counts BT, Malibu and Unilever as clients. It now has billings of over £25m. McCarthy has worked in the industry for 12 years, and spent five years running a nightclub in Brixton. She lives in Clapham with her Mulberry handbag collection and husband Enda.

    HANNAH MCCAUGHEY, 34

    McCaughey has been at the forefront of climate change law and low-carbon energy investment for the past 10 years. As well as being the commercial lead on the project financing for one of the largest windfarms in Europe, she also is the commercial head in a £2.3bn low-carbon power joint-venture with EDF, with eight existing nuclear power plants and plans to build four new reactors. Her first child was born last year.

    ALEX PUMFREY, 32

    With a £22m budget and a team of 66, Pumfrey is the programme director of Digital UK, the organisation set up by broadcasters to make the potentially controversial switch from analogue to digital TV as pain-free as possible. Pumfrey is also a keen athlete, competing in half-marathons and triathlons.

    EMMA WOOLLCOTT, 32

    A media lawyer at Mishcon de Reya, privacy is Woollcott's speciality - so it's no surprise that she's acting for some of the claimants in the phone hacking saga. The Cambridge graduate also advises on reputation management and complaints to the PCC. She is in charge of the firm's sponsorship of the Pink Law advice service for the LBGT community.

    BECCI TAYLOR, 32

    Having graduated with a first class degree in engineering from Cambridge, Taylor is the second Arup star on this year's list. She is an expert adviser on low-energy building alternatives. Notable projects include finding low-carbon solutions for the Maltese parliament building and for museums in Boston and Texas.

    AISLING ZARRAGA, 35

    After Trinity College Dublin, Irish-born Zarraga became one of the legal world's rising stars: she's just been made a partner at Magic Circle law firm Linklaters. High-profile clients include Lehman Brothers' administrators, for which she acted on a proposal to distribute $35bn of assets to creditors. She also handled Dixons' £310m rights issue in 2009.

    RUTH WANDHOFER, 35

    As head of market strategy at Citi Global Transaction Services, EMEA, Wandhofer is highly influential in the arcane but important business of regulating the payment systems of European banks. She sits on a number of boards giving advice and recently published a book on payments integration in the EU. She speaks five languages.

    ZU RAFALAT, 29

    Rafalat founded Zuneta, described by Vogue as the 'net-a-porter of beauty', in 2008. The online beauty retailer already has 30,000 customers, 50% of whom are outside the UK, with huge demand in the US, Germany, Australia and China.

    Pre-Zuneta, Rafalat was an international brand development director for L'Oreal. She speaks French, Polish and Russian.

    For the full article visit their website.

    Source: http://www.thenextwomen.com/2011/06/28/management-todays-35-women-under-35-2011-list-spotlight-uk-entrepreneurs

    Blake Lively Ali Larter Haylie Duff Tessie Santiago Saira Mohan

Sunday, 03 July 2011

  • Elizabeth Hurley doesn't worry about opinions

    03 July 2011

    Rate this article

    Elizabeth Hurley is happy to try new things and doesn't worry about what other people think of her.

    Elizabeth Hurley no longer cares what people think.

    The 46-year-old beauty - who revealed earlier this year her marriage to Arun Nayar was over after it emerged she had been secretly dating former cricketer Shane Warne - finds getting older "liberating" because she is more open to new things.

    She said: "It helps to be open to new things. Some close off and become more insular as they grow older, for me it's the other way. I care less what people think. It's liberating."

    It helps to be open to new things. Some close off and become more insular as they grow older, for me it's the other way. I care less what people think. It's liberating.

    Elizabeth - who has a nine-year-old son Damian with former boyfriend Steve Bing - believes it is more important to take care of her appearance now she is getting older as she doesn't want to look like a "bag lady".

    She added in an interview with Grazia magazine: "As you get older it's the grooming - unkempt doesn't work.

    "At 19 you can have buttons hanging off and stringy hair, but as we get older we look like bag ladies if we let things slide."

    Buy Elizabeth Hurley DVDs

    Source: http://www.femalefirst.co.uk/celebrity/Elizabeth+Hurley-40201.html

    Kim Yoon jin Jodi Lyn OKeefe Trista Rehn The Pussycat Dolls Piper Perabo

  • Kingston Rossdale: Blue Mohawk!

    Kingston Rossdale debuts a new blue mohawk as he spends the day out in West Hollywood with his family on Saturday (July 2).

    Joining Kingston, 5, were his rocker parents, Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale, and Kingston?s 2-year-old brother, Zuma.

    The family visited a crafts center, where they drew pictures together and picked up ice cream. Gwen and Gavin also went shoe shopping with the boys during the day.

    How cute is Zuma on the drums?

    20+ pictures inside of Gwen Stefani and Gavin Rossdale taking Kingston and Zuma out for a fun day?

    Source: http://justjared.buzznet.com/2011/07/03/kingston-rossdale-blue-mohawk/

    Moon Bloodgood Rosario Dawson Eliza Dushku Jamie Chung Maria Menounos

  • Georgia Immigration Law: Thousands Protest For Reform At State Capitol

    ATLANTA (AP) -- Thousands of marchers stormed the Georgia Capitol on Saturday to protest the state's new immigration law, which they say creates an unwelcome environment for people of color and those in search of a better life.

    Men, women and children of all ages converged on downtown Atlanta for the march and rally, cheering speakers while shading themselves with umbrellas and posters. Capitol police and organizers estimated the crowd at between 8,000 and 14,000. They filled the blocks around the Capitol, holding signs decrying House Bill 87 and reading "Immigration Reform Now!"

    Friends Jessica Bamaca and Melany Cordero held a poster that read: "How would you feel if your family got broken apart?"

    Bamaca was born in the U.S., but her mother and sister are from Guatemala. She said she fears they will be deported.

    "I would be here by myself," said Bamaca, 13. "I have a feeling (the governor) doesn't know the pain affecting families. If he were to be in our position, how would he react?"

    Adelina Nicholls, executive director of the Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights, said the crowd was sending a message.

    "They are ready to fight," Nicholls said. "We need immigration reform, and no HB87 is going to stop us. We have earned the right to be here."

    Azadeh Shahshahani of the American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia called the rally inspiring and said she hoped lawmakers would recognize the law's potential to damage the state.

    "I think it's going to have an impact," she said. "Unfortunately, the damage has already been done as far as people of color having second thoughts about moving to Georgia."

    Several different groups stood with the largely Latino crowd, including representatives from the civil rights movement. The Rev. Timothy McDonald, an activist who has been supportive of immigration protesters, was among the speakers showing his solidarity.

    "You are my brothers and my sisters," McDonald told the crowd. "Some years ago, they told people like me we couldn't vote. We did what you are doing today. We are going to send a message to the powers that be ... that when the people get united, there is no government that can stop them. Don't let them turn you around."

    MiLi Lai, a student at Emory who is Chinese, also attended the rally because the immigration law doesn't just apply to Latinos, but "all non-American people."

    "We are the same community," Lai said. "We have to fight for our rights."

    Bellanira Avoytes came to the rally with her husband and three children. Although she is a legal resident and her children were born in Georgia, she does not see herself as separate from undocumented Latinos.

    "I have family who are not residents," she said. "I am together with the Latin people. I love Georgia. I have stayed here for 18 years. I want to buy a house here."

    Saturday's rally follows a "day without immigrants" organized Friday, when some parts of the law took effect. It was organized by the Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights. The organization asked businesses to close and community members not to work or shop to protest the law.

    On Monday, a judge temporarily blocked key parts of the law until a legal challenge is resolved. One provision that was blocked authorizes police to check the immigration status of suspects without proper identification. It also authorizes them to detain undocumented immigrants. Another penalizes people who knowingly and willingly transport or harbor undocumented immigrants while committing another crime.

    Parts of similar measures in Arizona, Utah and Indiana also have been blocked by the courts.

    Provisions that took effect Friday include one that makes it a felony to use false information or documentation when applying for a job. Another provision creates an immigration review board to investigate complaints about government officials not complying with state laws related to undocumented immigration.

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    Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/07/02/georgia-immigration-law-protest_n_889271.html

    Julianne Hough Rachel Weisz Julia Stiles Monet Mazur Blake Lively

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