Written By Unknown on Friday, May 18, 2012 | 4:50 PM
Former SCRUBS star Neil Flynn trades his janitorial supplies for a minivan on ABC's new comedy THE MIDDLE. Neil talks about the show, co-star Patricia Heaton and the middle-class bliss.
"Ready" is a romantic-comedy set in Mauritius. It is a story about Prem (Salman Khan) and Sanjana (Asin) who fall in love amidst a twisted plot of greedy uncles who want to gulp down Sanjana's family inheritance and Prem's crazy family who always form a part of their only son's plans. Comedy is essentially a part of the various schemes and conspiracies both parties plan to teach each other a lesson. But what happens when Sanjana's family find out they've been tricked? Revenge takes over their minds which lead to yet another series of plotting and adventures for both families.
On music front Ready has some amazing songs like Dhinka Chika, Character Dheela & many other grooving numbers.Music of the film is from bollywood hit machine Pritam. Enjoy this full movie & play only on T-Series
Get ready to ride on the roller coaster of laughter and fun as Comedy Circus is set to tickle your ribs with its fresh season, Kahani Comedy Circus Ki.This season essentially will go down the memory lane with the past successful seasons like Jadoo, Tansen, Circus, Teen ka Tadka as the themes for epsiodes... These themes will be seen as challenges for the contestants...
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SALT LAKE CITY (ABC 4 News) - A Salt Lake County man was arrested for exposing himself in front of neighbors, including children.
According to a probable cause statement from Salt Lake County Unified Police, Ignacio Arevalo was arrested and booked on 2 counts of Lewdness, 2 counts of Lewdness Involving a Child, and one count of Giving False Information to a Police Officer - all misdemeanors.
The probable cause statement said that on Thursday, officers were dispatched to the neighborhood after witnesses reported that Arevalo exposed himself to a woman who was looking for a dog along with her 5-year-old son.
Another witness also told investigators that Arevalo exposed himself through his home's front window in front of her and her teen aged children while pleasuring himself, according to the affidavit.
Investigators indicated that Arevalo also gave false information to officers who responded to the reports, and that he was being held for immigration officials.
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - A federal judge has overturned a key part of a Utah law that aimed to protect children from harmful online material.
U.S. District Judge Dee Benson's order expressly forbids any prosecution under the law, except when somebody sends inappropriate images or language directly to a child through email, text or instant messaging.
The Utah law sought to make website operators or content providers liable for any material that the state deems harmful to minors.
The judge says Utah must pay the legal fees of ACLU of Utah and other groups that challenged the law.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. - A condemned killer's fight to receive surgery for agonizing hip pain pushed Kentucky officials into an uncomfortable debate over security, politics and even the possibility of inviting scorn from Fox News pundits.
Emails and memos obtained by The Associated Press show corrections officials struggling for a year to reconcile their duty to provide medical care with the political ramifications of spending tens of thousands of dollars for surgery on a man they plan to execute. A key problem would turn out to be security issues that led several hospitals to balk at treating inmate Robert Foley, who still hasn't had the surgery.
"Hip replacement for an inmate who has exhausted all appeals and will soon be executed?" Kentucky State Penitentiary warden Phil Parker wrote in an email on Nov. 22, 2010. "I can see this making Fox News on a slow news day, maybe even on a busy news day. In fact, I bet (Fox News host Bill O'Reilly) would love to put this in his `Pinheads' commentary. Just a thought to consider before it goes too much further."
Prison officials also made contingency plans to call off the surgery if Gov. Steve Beshear set an execution date, and they considered whether to consult with him about the procedure.
"I think it is that important and all this may have political consequences," Parker wrote a year before Beshear's re-election. Ultimately, Beshear's spokeswoman said he wasn't contacted about it.
Foley, 55, was convicted of killing
six people in eastern Kentucky in 1989 and 1991, making him the most prolific killer on the state's Death Row. His status as an extremely dangerous prisoner was a key factor in the state's difficulty finding a surgeon and hospital, according to the documents obtained through a public records request and a lawsuit filed by Foley.
Foley still hasn't had the surgery, with Parker lamenting in an email they had no options after an exhaustive search.
On Death Row since 1993
State officials deny that politics played a role, and there's no evidence in the documents that political considerations prevented the surgery.
A spokeswoman for the Kentucky Justice Cabinet - which oversees corrections and law enforcement - declined to comment because of the pending lawsuit.
Foley's attorney, Jamesa Drake, said the state needs a way to care for condemned inmates, even those with complex needs. Foley, who has been on Death Row since 1993, is unable to get around without help because he's at risk of a dangerous fall, Drake said.
"If you're on Death Row, it's just like anybody else," Drake said. "If you need a new hip, you need a new hip. It hurts."
The Department of Corrections acknowledged his degenerative hip in a response to the lawsuit, but also said he has been receiving adequate care. The federal lawsuit filed in March is pending.
Corrections Department attorney Brenn Combs wrote to Drake that the Department of Corrections couldn't enter into a legal agreement about the hip surgery because it would impose requirements exceeding "our legal duty regarding inmate health care."
"The Department is not interested in doing that and, like me, nobody else here can see a way that it would help inmate Foley," Combs said in a Nov. 14 email.
It's not unusual for inmates to receive treatment outside of prison, and Foley has twice left Death Row for other surgical procedures.
Foley first complained to prison officials about the persistent pain in his right hip in September 2010, according to the lawsuit.
Foley initially didn't want the surgery and tried to fashion his own hip brace out of "flip flops and other everyday items." Foley said the brace helped with the pain in an affidavit signed in February, but prison officials confiscated it.
After Foley agreed to the surgery, officials searched for a doctor to perform the $56,000 operation. At the time, Foley was under a death warrant signed by Beshear.
"If and when an order is received to execute Foley, I will contact (then-prison medical director Dr. Scott Haas) to try to stop all medical procedures related to his hip replacement," Parker wrote.
No execution date was set, and a judge later halted lethal injections as the state weighs execution procedures. It's not clear when executions could resume.
While looking for a hospital, corrections officials increased Foley's pain medication and looked into the logistics of moving him.
But prison nurse Chanin Hiland wrote in a September 2010 email to Haas that orthopedists in Paducah, Madisonville and Murray had been contacted, and "none of them want any part of this."
"The farther we have to go, the more security will have to be sent with him; although, it is obvious he will not be running anywhere soon," Hiland wrote. Foley's hepatitis C infection was a further risk factor.
In November of that year, Parker and Haas asked Corrections Commissioner LaDonna Thompson for advice on security. Parker also wrote Hass about his concerns about publicity and whether he could be safety housed outside the prison system.
One hospital backs out
The difficulty in finding a surgeon illustrates the "gray area" between the law's requirement of treatment for inmates and a hospital's ability to turn down those patients, said Rebecca Walker, an associate professor of social medicine at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill.
"Everyone would probably agree he ought to get his care somewhere. It's a collective responsibility," Walker said in a phone interview. "Who does it is the question."
After finding a doctor to perform the surgery, Foley and corrections officials thought they had found a hospital when Frankfort Regional Medical Center initially agreed. Corrections officials and the hospital set the surgery for Feb. 28, 2011, and conducted preoperative testing.
During a meeting between corrections officials and hospital staff on Feb. 22, 2011, hospital CEO Chip Peal said he hadn't been aware the surgery was scheduled for less than a week later. A memo by Parker summarized security measures and noted that Peal needed others' approval.
Peal returned to the meeting after 30 minutes and said the surgery was off.
"CEO Peal stated that they never had a patient at the hospital that required security and that he felt this was too high a profile person to be the first," Parker wrote.
From her storefront on Tujunga Avenue in Studio City, shop owner Ann Booth frequently sees traffic officers nab parking scofflaws.
Shoppers and diners often neglect the one-hour meters on this quaint stretch, according to Booth, making it a popular spot for the city's ticket writers.
"They're always writing tickets," Booth said. "It seems like they come every two minutes."
And more traffic officers may be on their way.
As part of his budget plan, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa has proposed creating a team of 150 part-time ticketing officers, foot soldiers to fan across the city and issue parking citations.
Villaraigosa's budget, set for consideration by the City Council today, would add 50 part-time traffic officers, on top of the 100 part-timers hired last year. City officials believe the additional officers could bring in another $4 million next year by targeting dense neighborhoods like North Hollywood, downtown and Hollywood.
Hiring more traffic officers would reverse years of declining city-issued citations, while raising more revenue for the city, Los Angeles Department of Transportation officials argue.
Since 2003, the number of citations has dropped from 3.2 million to 2.5 million last year, according to the department. At the same time, pricier tickets and better collection methods are helping raise funds for the city.
Under the latest proposal, expired meter tickets would rise by $5 to $63 per citation. Advertisement
Another hike in both the number of traffic officers and the price of tickets angers residents who believe the city is penalizing retail customers and relying too heavily on parking fines to raise revenues.
"It's ridiculous," Booth said. "People are two minutes late coming back to their car and there's a $60 ticket."
Villaraigosa's spokesman Peter Sanders defended the plan, writing in an email that LADOT revenue must grow so "vital city services can be preserved."
At the LADOT, there are simply fewer full-time traffic officers available to write tickets, said department spokesman Bruce Gillman. Due to budget cuts and retirements, the city's seen a 10 percent drop in staffing since 2008.
Hiring part-timers to patrol meters is an efficient way to bring in revenue and bring down city employee costs, he said.
City Councilman Paul Koretz agrees the city should be collecting more parking revenues. He frequently gets complaints that scofflaws are parking illegally in preferential parking neighborhoods in his district, or that there's not enough turnover along commercial stretches like Beverly Boulevard.
But he wants wants the part-time officers hired full time.
"We're cheating them out of pensions, and health benefits," Koretz said. "We're getting them on the cheap."
Traffic officers, who tell stories of being spit on and yelled at by car owners, say they understand resistance to more of their ranks.
On a recent morning in Studio City, Traffic Officer Lisa Figueroa strolled along Tujunga Avenue, spied an expired meter and quickly dashed out a $58 ticket, tucking it under the windshield of a silver Toyota.
The owner was nowhere to be seen, perhaps a good thing.
"I've seen men cry," Figueroa said. "I've seen them get down on their knees."
She issued four parking citations in half an hour.
"Businesses want the turnaround," she said. "They want the spots for customers. But the irate customers don't want the ticket."
Glee's Matthew Morrison stars in 'What to Expect When You're Expecting'
Evan (Matthew Morrison) and Jules (Cameron Diaz) in "What to expect when you're expecting." (Melissa Moseley) Click photo to enlarge Emma (Jayma Mays, left), Will (Matthew Morrison, right) and Artie (Kevin McHale,... (Adam Rose/FOX)
Matthew Morrison plays Cameron Diaz's partner in the new film "What to Expect When You're Expecting," loosely based on Heidi Murkoff and Sharon Mazel's pregnancy guide that has sold more than 35 million copies worldwide. See photo gallery.
The couple in the film knows what to expect - a boy - which is more than Morrison knows about what is happening on next year's "Glee," in which he stars as teacher Will Schuester.
Though the Fox series is finishing up its third season Tuesday and has been renewed for a fourth - moving to a Thursday time slot after "The X Factor" - creator Ryan Murphy and his staff have been GLEE
Morrison's character has guided McKinley High School's glee club for three years, but Tuesday's season finale is graduation for many of the characters, some (all?) of whom may not be back.
The musical dramedy, said Fox Entertainment president Kevin Reilly at the network's fall season announcement on Monday, is "poised for a creative renaissance." But that was as far as anybody would go in spilling the beans.
"I think I'll be back because I play the teacher," says Morrison with a bit of a I-don't-know-for-sure shrug. At the time, the "Glee" cast was still filming the graduation episode.
"The last two weeks have been incredibly sad, kind of cathartic because the writing is so great and it's mirroring what we are actually going through," says the 33-year-old actor. "It's kind of like saying goodbye to a lot of people, but the thing is, is that we really don't know what is going to happen next and a lot of people don't know if they're going to have jobs next year."
In "What to Expect," opening Friday, Morrison plays a dancer on a "Dancing with the Stars"-style show who hooks up with his partner, a TV fitness/weight-loss guru played by Diaz. Though Will (Matthew Morrison, center) proposes to Emma in the "Yes/No" winter premiere episode of "Glee" on FOX. (Adam Rose/FOX) unmarried and not having known each other long, the couple decide to have the child together. When they find out it will be a boy, this inevitably leads to conflict over circumcision
In the movie, Morrison's Evan gets to help deliver the couple's baby. He says as an actor he had a plan as to how the scene would go, but Diaz took him in another direction and he was impressed on how "believable" she was. And this is something he knows firsthand. While in high school, he got to go to work with his dad - who is a midwife - and delivered two babies, albeit with his father's guidance.
Born at the Fort Ord base on Monterey Bay where his father was stationed in the Army, Morrison grew up in Cypress in Orange County. He got the acting bug when he was in fifth grade while visiting his grandmother in Arizona and did a children's theater production. At the Orange County High School of the Arts, then based in Los Alamitos, his teachers encouraged him to take the "leap of faith" and move to New York City.
"Luckily, I got my first Broadway show at 19," he says. And he has been working ever since, doing 10 years of Broadway shows with some movie and TV work in between.
"It kind of happened how I wanted it to happen," says Morrison. "I love that I started in the ensemble of the show. I really went through the ranks and learned my craft by being surrounded by so many great professionals. I got to talk to an older generation and learn from them."
He was doing a production of "South Pacific" at Lincoln Center in 2008 when he got the call from "Glee." Over the three seasons, Morrison has gotten to show off his singing and dancing as well as dramatic skills, and the hit show has kept Morrison busy. So getting the time off for a 10-day shoot in Atlanta last summer ("It was very hot") for "What to Expect" was unusual.
"`Glee' is kind of like the golden handcuffs because it's such a great job but it does constrict you from doing other jobs," he says. "At the same time, though, it does give you a world of opportunities."
"What to Expect" was one. Although he dances in the movie, Morrison says he turned down a lot of stuff "because I don't want everything I do to be musically Actor Matthew Morrison is in the movie "What to Expect When You're Expecting." He was photographed at the Four Seasons Hotel in Los Angeles on Saturday, May 5, 2012. (Michael Owen Baker/Staff Photographer) related.
"I won't do a project just to do a project," he says, adding that he's looking for things that aren't Mr. Schuester, especially dramas because that is "where my skill set is best represented."
Which sounds a bit surprising because of his musical background. Last year, Morrison released his self-titled debut album with some original songs and covers and guest vocalists like Elton John and Gwyneth Paltrow. Currently he's recording an album of mostly standards.
"Because I came from the Broadway world and haven't done a show in four years because of `Glee,' I wanted to include a number of Broadway standards to give something to those fans," he says. Among the show tunes he's recorded are "Luck Be a Lady" and "On the Street Where You Live."
Though he and his girlfriend, Renee Puente, were seen recently at the Coldplay concert at the Hollywood Bowl and the White House Correspondents' Association Dinner cocktail party, Morrison says the couple are kind of "homebodies." Right now, he's into cooking and trying a "whole gluten-free thing. I make really good chicken enchiladas. Mexican food is my favorite."
While "Glee" has made him "a lot more recognizable than I ever would be on the stage," Morrison says "There's nothing like performing live before an audience."
But the show also opened a new avenue in his career when he got to direct the holiday episode.
"It's a great place to start because the cast and crew have my back," says Morrison.
And that's why the last few weeks have been difficult.
"We've created such a great family there that I really feel like those are my kids," he says. "That's why the graduation episode is tremendously hard, because I feel like I'm really saying goodbye to my children."
Arjun (Siddardha) is a Germany-based NRI. He gives a commitment to his grandfather (ANR) that he would find a bride and marry soon. He returns to India and takes help of his childhood friend Puppy (Sunil). Arjun identifies three girl childhood friends - Sravani, Sandhya and Shalini. Sravani (Sada) is a middle class girl who is studying MBBS. Sandhya (Charmme) is an aggressive women activist. Shalini Rao (Saloni) is a tennis celebrity. Arjun rechristens his name as Krishna in-order to be a stranger to these three girls. His plan is to select the best girl as bride. The entire story of the film is all about who he ends up falling in love with.
प्रत्येक दिन बन्दको हल्ला र अन्योलताको दुबिधा भइरहे छ । संसारमा नेपाललाई अब सगरमाथाको देश वा बुद्ध जन्मेको देश भनेर चिनाउनु भन्दा बन्दै बन्दको देश ‘नेपाल बन्द ‘ को देश भनेर चिनाउने भए नेताहरुले जहाँ पूर्व मेचीदेखि पश्चिम महाकालीसम्म हरेक दिन बन्द, फेरी बन्द र फेरी पनि बन्दै बन्द भई रहेको छ । Power News-
नेपाली महिलामाथि हुने गरेको एक प्रमुख ज्यादतीको नमूना मानिएको घरेलु हिंसाको स्थितिमा कुनै सुधार आउनुको सट्टा बरु झन बढोत्तरी भएको पाइएको छ । हुनत सरकारले यो अवस्थालाई रोक्नका लागि विभिन्न नीति नियमहरुको समेत अख्तियार गरी करोडौं रुपैयाँ यसका खर्चिएको छ । तरपनि यसको प्रभाव त्यति सकारात्मक रुपमा भने पाइंदैन । सरकारी तथा गैरसरकारी निकायबाट जे जस्ता नीति तथा कार्यक्रम तय गरे पनि महिलाविरुद्ध हुने हिंसा नरोकिएको एक प्रतिवदेनले देखाएको छ । शक्तिको दुरुपयोग र महिलाको जीवनमाथि पुरुषको नियन्त्रणसँग समग्रमा घरेलु हिंसा जोडिएको देखिन्छ । घरेलु हिंसाविरुद्धको कानुन बने पनि व्यवहारमा घरेलु हिंसा अन्त्य गर्न समाजका सबै पक्षबाट धेरै पहल चाहिन्छ । विशेषगरी घरेलु हिंसापीडितहरूको पुनस्र्थापनामा अझ धेरै पहलको आवश्यकता देखिन्छ ।crime story-
विध्यार्थीले होमवोर्क नकारेको भन्दै प्लास्टिकको पाएपले विध्यार्थी कुट्ने शिक्षक माथी अभिभाबकले विधालय भित्रै शिक्षक लाई निर्घात कुटपिट गरे | तपाई लाईके लाग्छ शिक्षकले विध्यार्थी माथी कुटपिट गर्नु के राम्रो कुरा हो ?khabar bhitra ko khabar
Based in the beautiful locales of Lucknow and on the backdrop of a hospital setting, KTLK is a different love story between two very different people with a substanital age gap.The show highlights the nuances of a complicated relationship when people with a huge age difference fall in love.Kuch Toh Log Kahenge' is a heartwarming love story between people from two different generations:a young, spirited Dr. Nidhi Verma [age 24] and a brooding and handsome Dr. Ashutosh [age 38]. The duo share a connection from the past which they are blissfully unaware of.Will Nidhi be able to break in through the fort that Ashutosh has built around himself? What happens when both their pasts come to haunt them and pitch them against each other?
Somewhere in us all of us have for us a large dream. A dream we visit now and then secretly. A dream which we ourselves believe is out of our reach. Few of us see life throw the dream at us. But when dreams come true overnight they bring with them a set of challenges, complexities and difficult decisions. Muniya's dream of turning into a princess has come true.What will be the new challenges? Can Muniya live up to the challenges? Will hers be a happily-ever-after Story? Come witness the story unfold: Dekha Ek Khwaab.
Crime Patrol coming back in its 4th season attempts to bring stories of crime happening all around the country. Crimes that tell us, we need to be careful, we need to be watchful. Crimes that tell us lives could have been saved.Every crime we hear of, either warns us to be careful or scares us, it could happen to us. Every crime ignites a feeling, "It should not have happened".Would knowing the "Why" behind a crime, help in stopping a crime from happening?"I don't like the way he looks at me", "I don't like the way he/she is behaving", "I think he/she is out of his/her mind", "I think he/she has gone crazy". That gaze, that quirky smile, that persistent stare which unnerves. It is difficult to understand the intentions but the hints are there.In a house a husband and wife argue, fight. A vessel comes flying, a glass breaks. Husband is angry and the wife is upset. That hatred, that ego. The distance that keeps growing. It is difficult to comprehend the damage, but the cracks are there.Feelings... expressions. Misunderstood, unresolved callings of the heart. The cracks are there. Too wide to be missed. Yet when the heart takes over the mind, the outcome is a mindless tragedy.Crime Patrol- Dastak will attempt to look at the signs, the signals that are always there before these mindless crimes are committed. Instincts/Feelings/Signals that so often tell us that not everything is normal. May be, that signal/feeling/instinct is just not enough to believe it could result in a crime. Unfortunately after the crime is committed, those same signals come haunting.
. The first thrilling investigative series on Indian Television, is today one of the most popular shows on Sony Entertainment Television. Dramatic and absolutely unpredictable, C.I.D. has captivated viewers over the last eleven years and continues to keep audiences glued to their television sets with its thrilling plots and excitement. Also interwoven in its fast paced plots are the personal challenges that the C.I.D. team faces with non-stop adventure, tremendous pressure and risk, all in the name of duty.The series consists of hard-core police procedural stories dealing with investigation, detection and suspense. The protagonists of the serial are an elite group of police officers belonging to the Crime Investigation Department of the police force, led by ACP Pradyuman [played by the dynamic Shivaji Satam]. While the stories are plausible, there is an emphasis on dramatic plotting and technical complexities faced by the police. At every stage, the plot throws up intriguing twists and turns keeping the officers on the move as they track criminals, led by the smallest of clues.
"""For the past 15 years CID has been bravely fighting against crime A night where CID pays its tribute to common Indian citizens who have fought and also sacrificed their lives for justice An awards night honoring people who have shown exemplary courage Through entertaining acts, the spirit of bravery will be emphasized upon An evening which inspires Indians across the country to light the Saahas ki Mashaal, fight all injustice and be brave""."