Gisele Bundchen Dons Nude Bodysuit For Vivara Photo Shoot

Gisele Bundchen slipped on a nude bodysuit during a recent photo shoot for jewelry brand Vivara.

Bundchen looked gorgeous, albeit a bit unimpressed, during the shoot dressed in the one-piece and decked out in bracelets, rings, and a necklace. The 33-year-old shared a photo from the day on her Instagram Thursday, May 29. In the shot, she sits crossed-legged as a team of people fix her hair with a brush and some hairspray.

Oh, the life of a supermodel.

Obama Climate Change Policy Comes With Perils

WASHINGTON (AP) — The new pollution rule the Obama administration announces Monday will be a cornerstone of President Barack Obama’s environmental legacy and arguably the most significant U.S. environmental regulation in decades.

But it’s not one the White House wanted. As with other issues, the regulation to limit the pollution blamed for global warming from power plants is a compromise for Obama, who again finds himself caught between his aspirations and what is politically and legally possible.

It will provoke a messy and drawn-out fight with states and companies that produce electricity, and may not be settled until the eve of the next presidential election in 2016, or beyond.

“It’s going to be like eating spaghetti with a spoon. It can be done, but it’s going to be messy and slow,” said Michael Gerrard, director of the Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University.

At the crux of the problem is Obama’s use of a 30-year-old law that was not intended to regulate the gases blamed for global warming. Obama was forced to rely on the Clean Air Act after he tried and failed to get Congress to pass a new law during his first term. When the Republicans took over the House, the goal became impossible.

The new rule, as the president described it in a news conference in 2010, is another way of “skinning the cat” on climate change.

“For anybody who cares about this issue, this is it,” Heather Zichal, Obama’s former energy and climate adviser, said in an interview with The Associated Press. “This is all the president has in his toolbox.”

The rule will tap executive powers to tackle the single largest source of the pollution blamed for heating the planet: carbon dioxide emitted from power plants. They produce about 40 percent of the electricity in the nation and about one-third of the carbon pollution that makes the U.S. the second largest emitter of greenhouse gases.

“There are no national limits to the amount of carbon pollution that existing plants can pump into the air we breathe. None,” Obama said Saturday in his weekly radio and Internet address.

“We limit the amount of toxic chemicals like mercury, sulfur, and arsenic that power plants put in our air and water. But they can dump unlimited amounts of carbon pollution into the air. It’s not smart, it’s not safe, and it doesn’t make sense,” he said.

While Obama has made major reductions in carbon pollution from cars and trucks by increasing fuel efficiency, manufacturers cooperated after an $85 billion government bailout.

His rule requiring new power plants to capture some of their carbon dioxide and bury it underground, while significant, has little real-world impact because few new coal plants are expected to be built due to market conditions.

Both those rules also prescribed technological fixes or equipment to be placed on the automobile or power plant.

The rule released Monday, though, would allow states to require power plants to make changes such as switching from coal to natural gas or enact other programs to reduce demand for electricity and produce more energy from renewable sources.

They also can set up pollution-trading markets as 10 other states already have done to offer more flexibility in how plants cut emissions. Plans from states won’t be due until 2016, but the rule will become final a year before.

That hasn’t stopped the hoopla over the proposal.

Some Democrats worried about re-elections have asked the White House, along with Republicans, to double the length of the rule-making comment period, until after this November’s elections.

The Chamber of Commerce said the rule would cost $50 billion to the economy and kill jobs. Harvard University said the regulation wouldn’t just reduce carbon but also would have a beneficial side effect: cleansing the air of other pollutants.

Environmental groups, meanwhile, are taking credit for helping shape it and arguing it would create jobs, not eliminate them.

Rep. Nick Rahall, a Democrat from West Virginia, which gets 96 percent of its power from coal, said Thursday that while he didn’t have the details, “from everything we know we can be sure of this: It will be bad for jobs.” Rahall faces a difficult re-election in November.

Obama said such pessimistic views are wrong.

“Now, special interests and their allies in Congress will claim that these guidelines will kill jobs and crush the economy,” Obama said in his address. “Let’s face it, that’s what they always say.”

Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Gina McCarthy and other government officials have promoted the proposal’s flexibility as way to both cut emissions and ensure affordable electricity. But that flexibility could backfire.

Some states, particularly those heavily reliant on fossil fuels, could resist taking action, leading the federal government to take over the program. That happened in Texas when it initially refused to issue greenhouse gas permits through another air pollution program.

Lawyers for states and industry also are likely to argue that controls far afield of the power plant violate the law’s intent.

The rule probably would push utilities to rely more on natural gas because coal emits about twice as much carbon dioxide. The recent oil and gas drilling boom in the U.S. has helped lower natural gas prices and, by extension, electricity prices. But it still generally is cheaper to generate power with coal than with natural gas. Also, natural gas prices are volatile and can lead to fluctuations in power prices.

The rule will push the U.S. closer to the 17 percent reduction by 2020 it promised other countries at the start of Obama’s presidency, it will fall far short of the global reductions scientists say are needed to stabilize the planet’s temperature. That’s because U.S. fossil-fueled power plants account for 6 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions.

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Follow Dina Cappiello’s environment coverage on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/dinacappiello

Border Patrol Tightens Rules Amid Complaints Of Excessive Force

As the U.S. Border Patrol grapples with complaints of excessive force, a new policy has emerged that will tighten restrictions on agents.

The Arizona Republic reports that the new use-of-force policy will require agents to avoid situations where deadly force may be necessary. Examples include refraining from blocking moving vehicles’ paths or firing at rock-throwers unless in imminent danger. Additionally, agents will be trained on how to carry and use lighter weapons, while also facing restrictions on taser use.

“This is a monumental victory for border communities advocating for transparency and policy reform,” Andrea Guerrero, co-chair of the Southern Border Communities Coalition, told the Arizona Republic.

The new rules are in response to a critical report that was first obtained by the Los Angeles Times and released Friday, showing that agents were deliberately engaging in those aforementioned types of actions. Since January 2010, at least 20 people have been killed in Border Patrol incidents, according to the Times.

The Associated Press broke down how the report was conducted by the Police Executive Research Forum, a nonprofit group that advises law enforcement agencies. In total 67 case files, were reviewed on deadly force use from January 2010 through October 2012. Administrative action was taken against employees in two of those cases, while 10 investigations remain open, and the other 55 cases went without any disciplinary action. Additionally, 14 cases saw disciplinary action from 2010 to 2013, with eight employees being suspended and five more being reprimanded.

For more on “Force At The Border,” check out the Arizona Republic’s project here.

Drug Kingpin Busted After Living Openly In Rural Pennsylvania For Decades

A Mexican-born U.S. citizen living in rural Pennsylvania for two decades was arrested and accused of smuggling $60 million of cocaine into the U.S. over the last 20 years.

Salvador Lemus lived openly in Chester County as the owner of a landscaping company, but authorities contend it was a ruse to cover his illicit ties to the notorious La Familia cartel in Mexico, according to CBS Philly.

Operation Telarana, Spanish for spiderweb, led to the recent arrests of Lemus and dozens of other violent suspects by a task force including federal, state and local authorities. The takedown was announced on Wednesday, Fox News Latino reports.

The raid also nabbed his son Francisco Lemus, his nephew Mario Hernández-García, his wife, Jovita Lemus and other family members, the Unionville Times reports.

Lemus, 65, and nicknamed El Viejo — the Old One — was tripped up by a wiretap on his cellphone. He has been charged with more than 600 counts, mainly conspiracy, drug possession and dealing.

Criminal informants were instrumental in getting the case off the ground, according to Chester County District Attorney Thomas Hogan.

“My phone, my phone – nobody can track it,” Lemus allegedly said to an associate who suggested recently that he change his number. “I have 20 years with my number,” Lemus said, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.

Little did he know that the task force had been listening to allegedly incriminating conversations for more than a year, the Inquirer reports.

Suspects blended in with the local Mexican community in the mushroom-farming region of southern Pennsylvania by holding down day jobs.

Lemus’ supposed dealing was well-known to authorities for years, according to Hogan, but authorities were impeded from building a case. Members of the local Mexican community were reluctant to speak against Lemus and his ring because family members living in Mexico could be harmed by Lemus’ cartel allies, Hogan said.

Bail was set at $1 million for Lemus.

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Ex-Con Slaughtered Father With Machete: Cops

An Ohio man who once served 11 months for assault is accused of chopping up his dad with a machete.

Police in Heath say Adam Runyons Jr., 32, called a relative Thursday and confessed to slaughtering his father, 51-year-old Adam Runyons Sr. The victim’s 4-year-old son was reportedly in the home at the time of the fatal attack.

Investigators discovered the bloody weapon in a sink, where they also found the victim’s body, according to the Associated Press.

It is not clear what the victim’s 4-year-old son saw or heard. The boy is safe and staying with family, according to the Coshocton Tribune.

Neighbors say Runyons Jr. had moved in with his father about a month ago after he was released from prison, the Columbus Dispatch reports. He had served 11 months for assaulting a peace officer and falsification.

Runyons Jr. faces a preliminary charge of murder. His bond was set at $2 million.

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Netanyahu: Playing Us for Fools

Over the past few weeks a number of comments related to the now collapsed Israeli-Palestinian peace talks caught my attention. Collectively they establish why the talks failed and make clear what must change if any negotiated settlement is to be successful in the future.

To be blunt, what they reveal is that there will be no Israeli-Palestinian peace as long as Benjamin Netanyahu remains Prime Minister of Israel. They also establish that by ignoring this simple fact continued US efforts risk becoming a “fool’s errand”.

The first comment came from an “anonymous US official” (widely believed to be Martin Indyk) appearing in an Israeli publication. Here is the reason the “US official” gave for the collapse of the peace process:

The negotiations had to start with a decision to freeze settlement construction. We thought that we couldn’t achieve that because of the current makeup of the Israeli government, so we gave up. We didn’t realize Netanyahu was using the announcements of tenders for settlement construction as a way to ensure the survival of his own government. We didn’t realize continuing construction allowed ministers in his government to very effectively sabotage the success of the talks.

There are a lot of reasons for the peace effort’s failure, but people in Israel shouldn’t ignore the bitter truth – the primary sabotage came from the settlements. The Palestinians don’t believe that Israel really intends to let them found a state when, at the same time, it is building settlements on the territory meant for that state. We’re talking about the announcement of 14,000 housing units, no less. Only now, after talks blew up, did we learn that this is also about expropriating land on a large scale. That does not reconcile with the agreement.

The second comment came from Netanyahu, speaking to a group of young members of his political party. Here’s what he said:

When I entered the Prime Minister’s Office for my second term, I was summoned to Washington. “Not one brick,” they told me. I was threatened specifically: “Not one brick.” The pressure from the international community and the Americans was enormous. I don’t think anyone in Israel was under such pressure. And still, after five years on the job, we built a little more than ‘one brick.’ But the important thing is to do it in a smart way, in a quiet way, without inflammatory statements… A leader knows to stand up to international pressure by maneuvering… What matters is that we continue to head straight toward our goal, even if one time we walk right and another time walk left.

It is difficult to fathom how anyone in the US Administration could claim to have been surprised by Netanyahu’s behavior. He is not the “new kid on the block.”

Netanyahu was elected in 1996 on a platform dedicated to ending the Oslo peace process. Working with his allies in the American neo-conservative movement who authored his “Making a Clean Break” speech to Congress, the new prime minister set out to play the Republican-led Congress against Clinton in order to bury Oslo. In time, Netanyahu succeeded in so distorting the process that he could claim five years later how he “played the US” and won. Here is Netanyahu, in 2001, describing how he handled America:

I know what America is. America is a thing that can be easily moved, moved in the right direction. They will not bother us. Let’s suppose that they will say something… so they say it? Eighty per cent of the Americans support us…We have such support there! And we say… what shall we do with this [support]? Look, the other administration [that of Bill Clinton] was pro-Palestinian in an extreme way. I was not afraid to maneuver there. I did not fear confrontation with Clinton. I was not afraid to clash with the UN.

Why anyone would have thought upon his reelection as Prime Minister in 2009 that Netanyahu would be a “horse of a different color” is difficult to understand. Yes, he claimed to endorse a “two state solution”, but with sufficient enough caveats as to render his endorsement meaningless. And yes, he agreed to a short-term “settlement freeze”, but as the facts on the ground made clear, his agreement was full of holes.

On the one hand, Netanyahu can be seen as a maneuverer, but in reality, he is an ideologue, relentless in his efforts to maintain control of what he refers to as Judea and Samaria. He will feint to the left or right, as need be, but the key to understanding him is to judge him by his actions, not his words.

During Clinton’s second term, Netanyahu so tested his patience that Clinton began to apply subtle but real pressure to send the message to the Israeli people that the US could no longer tolerate his behavior. I recall Clinton’s frustration when Netanyahu, using the same argument he has used recently, expressed the fear that his government would fall if he agreed to what the US was asking him to do. Clinton knew that if Netanyahu moved toward peace he would in fact lose some hardline supporters. But what Clinton also knew was that Netanyahu would pick up more support from centrist parties. Then, as now, Netanyahu chose to keep his hardline coalition and to forgo peace. Clinton’s pressure continued until Israelis got the message and elected a new prime minister.

President Obama tried to pressure Netanyahu during his first term, but after the Israeli prime minister played the US Congress against him, Obama relented. If the president still hopes to succeed in his second term, he has a choice to make. Leaving it up to the parties to make peace will not work, because Netanyahu doesn’t want peace on any terms other than those that would leave both his coalition intact and the Palestinians as a humiliated and still captive people. If the US is serious, then the only course of action is to apply sufficient pressure to force Israelis to choose between Netanyahu and peace. It’s politically risky, to be sure, but unless we are ready to play hardball with Netanyahu, he will continue to play us for the fools he thinks we are.

Stage Door: <i>Forbidden Broadway's</i> Gerald Alessandrini

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As always, the legendary Forbidden Broadway franchise at the Davenport Theater is a satiric love letter to Broadway musicals. Writer/creator Gerald Alessandrini is The Great White Way’s ultimate critic — and he pierces its pretensions with rapier wit. Or in the show’s words: “Lyrics perverted to put producers through hell.”

This year, he deliciously spoofs Hedwig and the Angry Inch and Aladdin, among other targets. This isn’t camp; it’s a masterwork of clever commentary on New York’s greatest cultural institution, staged at lightning speed.

Forbidden Broadway Comes Out Swinging! pays homage to the very institution it savages. Only a passionate theater lover could pen such a smart, insightful score, and Alessandrini shares his thoughts about the show’s longevity.

You’ve been zinging Broadway for 32 years. It’s a fantastic way to vent. What’s the secret to its long success?

I think the secret is that it renews itself all time — keeping it fresh and always topically funny.

What’s new in the current show?

This rendition has more new numbers than ever before! We spoof Matilda, Rocky, The Bridges Of Madison County, the live network TV version of The Sound of Music with Carrie Underwood, Bullets Over Broadway, Idina Menzel in Frozen, as well as the new revivals of Pippin, Les Miserable and Cabaret.

The best part about FB is that you go after sacred cows — Sondheim, Lupone, Peters, etc. What’s been the general reception among the actors and writers?

Most are very generous and love to come and enjoy the show. They are good sports — at least to our faces! Who knows what they think when they are at home. Most all the writers have come. I believe we have been kinder to writers than various stars. Of course, legendary stars like Carol Channing have been very kind to us!

What do you think about the staggering trend of movies into musicals?

I can see how it happened because people recognize a film name. And they like the idea of seeing it done on stage live before them. After all, people know what they like, and they like what they know. But it’s all really silly because they are such different mediums. And if a film is beloved, a stage show version can look ridiculous and ultimately disappoint its fans.

Do you have a favorite season of Forbidden Broadway?

I really loved the one in the 1980s when both La Cage Aux Folles and Sunday In The Park were on Broadway. I also loved the 1995-96 season with Rent, The King and I and Julie Andrews in Victor/Victoria. Most recently, I loved the 2012 season with Book Of Mormon.

Has the reception abroad been similar to New York or audiences get less of the infra digs?

Yes! In London, they love the show as much if not more than here in New York. We are going there this June for our fifth time. I have to make alterations to the running order and change a few references, but you’d be surprised how almost everybody everywhere loves Broadway musicals! They even loved Forbidden Broadway in Tokyo and Singapore.

The final song, the chilling “Tomorrow Belongs To Me” about corporate ascendance, is this the future of Broadway?

Right now, we like to joke it is in the corporate era, but the fun thing about Broadway: It’s always full of surprises. So who knows? It’s just thrilling to wait and see what’s new and what’s fabulous.

Photo: Carol Rosegg

Batman and Captain Picard Fight Aliens: Prometheus: First Contact Rises

The team-up you never thought you would ever see has happened. Batman and Captain Picard fighting Aliens in a cave. This is the best piece of nerd art that you will see all day.

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Picard has his phaser, Batman his batarang, and the aliens are closing in. A few questions though. Why can’t Jean-Luc just beam out of there? How did the two of them get together? Did the Enterprise crew travel through time, or a rip in space? Does this make Picard Robin? If so, why isn’t he wearing his tights? Mostly I want to know how this ends!

This amazing piece of art from Jimsmash is simply the best.

[via Geek Tyrant]

Sikorsky's VH-92 Is The New Presidential Helicopter

Sikorsky's VH-92 Is The New Presidential HelicopterWith the announcement by the United States Naval Air Systems Command that the next generation of Presidential helicopters will be made by Sikorsky, one of the U.S. governments most lengthy and convoluted procurement programs has finally reached its conclusion.

Snappgrip turns iPhone into point-and-shoot camera

snappgripI know, the iPhone already comes with a pretty decent camera by all means and purposes, and for a particular moment in time where the world of smartphones is concerned, the iPhone’s camera was the best out of the lot, bar none. However, its competitors have definitely caught up and surpassed Apple’s efforts for some time already, and in a recent blind test, it was the Samsung Galaxy S5’s camera that actually came out tops. Still, this is not to say that the iPhone 5s’ camera is a slouch – far from it. This is where BiteMyApple.co comes in, having announced the availability of the Snappgrip for the iPhone 5 as well as iPhone 5s. The Snappgrip happens to be an add-on controller which will transform your smartphone from Cupertino into that of a point-and-shoot camera, allowing you to capture favorite memories with one hand, while sporting additional control and functions.

The Snappgrip will comprise of a protective case, and a camera controller accessory which snaps into the case back whenever you are ripe and ready to snap photos. In addition, this particular design helps you to steadily hold the iPhone with one-hand to ensure clearer images, at the same time to take full advantage of the smartphone’s camera capabilities. In fact, one can say that the buttons are more or less what one should expect to find on a real DSLR camera.

In order to take a photo, all that you need to do is to fully press the shutter button, and you’re good to go. Need to focus your shot? Just half a press will do, where you can then adjust the shooting mode to portrait, landscape, flash, and video. Last but not least, there is also a zoom function which would enable you to zoom in or out on a subject. You can opt to pair the device using Bluetooth with the Snappgrip photography companion app in order to edit or share images, and picking up the Snappgrip will cost you $69.99 in either black or white shades.

Press Release
[ Snappgrip turns iPhone into point-and-shoot camera copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]