Online Markdowns:luckymag.com.
What you need to know this instant for markdowns. Great list of your favorite shop’s discounts!!
Online Markdowns:luckymag.com.
What you need to know this instant for markdowns. Great list of your favorite shop’s discounts!!
So I came across this article this morning, on Fashion Mag.com. The headline caught my attention straight away:
France mulls ‘health warning’ for fashion photos |
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| Could this be true? Are steps finally being taken to help the young kids of today, taking a responsible step in the right direction to stop the warped image of women’s bodies in the media. Read the story below, fellow bloggers and let me know your thoughts. Will it be enforced? Will it actually be against the law? “Could lead to various kinds of psychologial problems – COULD?!?!? Does, has, encourages, how about using those words?!!?
Till next time, - Jules PARIS (Reuters) – French politicians want to stamp a “health warning” on photographs of models that are altered in order to make them more appealing; part of a campaign against eating disorders. French parliamentarian Valerie Boyer, a member of President Nicolas Sarkozy’s UMP party, and some 50 other politicians proposed the law to fight what they see as a warped image of women’s bodies in the media. “These images can make people believe in a reality that often does not exist,” Boyer said in a statement on Monday 21 September, adding that the law should apply to press photographs, political campaigns, art photography and images on packaging as well as advertisements. Under the proposed law, all enhanced photos would be accompanied by a line saying: “Photograph retouched to modify the physical appearance of a person.” Digitally enhanced photographs have been at the centre of a string of scandals; two years ago, Paris Match altered a photo of Sarkozy to remove chubby love handles. Luxury brands and fashion magazines have been accused of digitally making models look thinner, enhancing their breasts, whitening teeth, lengthening legs and erasing wrinkles. Boyer said being confronted with unrealistic standards of female beauty could lead to various kinds of psychological problems, in particular eating disorders. Breaking the law, proposed last week, would be punished with a fine of 37,500 euros ($54,930), or up to 50 percent of the cost of the advertisement. (Reporting by Sophie Hardach; Editing by Jon Hemming) |
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From The Times September 19, 2009 ‘Nappy brain’: when mummy loses her marbles Motherhood and scattiness often go hand in hand.
But scientists are still struggling to find a physiological cause Rachel Carlyle If the car in front suddenly stops at a green light, don’t sound the horn right away. Instead, peer through the windows and check for children’s car seats. If they’re present, the driver may deserve sympathy, not anger — her momentary lapse may be the result of “nappy brain”, the mental fog that seems intent on ruining mothers’ best efforts at super-efficiency. But while blaming a foggy brain on pregnancy may be justified — an Australian study last year that found that a pregnant woman’s memory was comparable to that of a 60-year-old — should we still be looking for excuses when our children are well into primary school? Scientists have been investigating the existence of so-called mummy brain for 20 years, but there are still no clear answers. Forget stratospherically high achievers such as Kim Clijsters who, last weekend, won the US Open tennis title less than 18 months after giving birth to her daughter. According to Dr Catherine Loveday, a neuroscientist at the University of Westminster, there is roughly the same number of studies reporting cognitive decline in mothers as there are suggesting no effect. She began researching the topic after she had her sons, now aged 2 and 7, because she wondered what was happening to her own brain. “I had moments of complete amnesia, when I forgot whether something had happened or not. I was desperate to know if I was imagining it,” she says. “On balance, given the scientific evidence, there is probably some temporary impairment, which has been noted to be worse in older mothers and those with higher educational achievements. It is weighted towards a specific deficit in memory.” So what could be happening in the brain? Some believe that the problem is cultural: women are expecting a decline in their memory so will find evidence for it. A ten-year research project among 2,500 women in Australia, which ended this year, could find no evidence for mummy brain. Professor Helen Christensen, the lead researcher, concluded that mothers were suffering normal lapses, but attributing them to motherhood. Others believe that sleep deprivation is the cause; the primary caregiver is estimated to lose 700 hours of sleep in a baby’s first year. “If you are tired, you are much less likely to engage properly with a task — which means your brain is not processing it effectively, and you will find it more difficult to retrieve as a memory later on,” Robin Morris, Professor of Neuropsychology at the Institute of Psychiatry, says. There is also the problem of concentration. “When you have a child, there are constantly new things to learn, which take up a lot of brain space,” Loveday says. “We have a limited amount of attentional capacity and we are focused elsewhere.” Those who have investigated the physiology of the brain have discovered that having children, in some cases, actually sharpens the brain. Professor Craig Kinsley, of the University of Richmond, Virginia, has been researching the female brain for 13 years and found in experiments that mother rats (which have a similar brain profile to humans) have better spatial skills than non-mothers and can navigate a maze to find food much faster. The more offspring they had, the faster they found the food. They were also braver, better at multi-tasking, had sharper senses, and were less prone to anxiety and stress. He believes that the problem is down to changes in the hard-wiring of the female brain during pregnancy when new neurons and pathways are created at a dizzying rate. “We have evidence that these beneficial changes are long-lasting and, in some respects, permanent,” he says. But if our brains are so sharp, why can’t we remember the phone number that we committed to memory only 20 minutes ago? “The evolution of our brains over 10,000 years has prepared us to focus on the infant,” Kinsley says. “It has not prepared us to have the memory for running a business or thinking with numbers.” Katherine Ellison, who wrote The Mommy Brain (Perseus, £8.99), says that women should be positive: “Telling ourselves that we have mummy brain becomes a selffulfilling prophecy.” Avoiding ‘nappy brain’ Get organised: use lists, write down dates in a diary. Delegate: get your partner to take on some of the domestic chores that women seem to end up doing by default. Admit that you are finding it difficult to remember things: people will forgive the odd memory lapse. Laugh off the worst embarrassments. Do not take on too much: avoid returning to work immediately or organising big projects such as a house refurb or academic thesis.

Goop on AmoliaMae Blog
Bachelorette Jillian Harris and her sweetie Ed Swiderski are still going strong, it seems.
“I’m moving to Chicago on Tuesday,” Jillian, a native of Vancouver, told RadarOnline.com last night at the Rosa Cha fashion show in New York. “I’m all packed up and ready to go. I’m pumped up and excited.”
Ed wasn’t with her at the fashion event because of a scheduling conflict, but she watched with Mike Steinberg, one of the Bachelorette castoffs and a New York baseball camp owner. “We want everybody to know we are extremely happy and in love,” Swiderski said on Thursday’s Ellen DeGeneres Show.
Jillian told Radar she’s not thinking about selecting a wedding date until “we live together and we’ve spent six months together.”
By Bryan Bedder, Getty Images
It’s official. NBC has just announced that Susan Boyle, who became an overnight phenomenon this year on Britain’s Got Talent, will perform live for the first time on U.S. soil on the season finale of America’s Got Talent on Wednesday (NBC, 8-10 p.m. ET).
Score one for Jerry and Jessica Seinfeld. AP reports that New York judge Laura Taylor Swain today threw out a lawsuit brought against the Seinfeld couple by author Missy Chase Lapine, claiming they had copied her kid-food cookbook. The judge said there were many significant differences between Lapine’s book and a book written by Jessica Seinfeld. Both books were best-sellers.
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MILAN (Reuters) – Giorgio Armani sees profits falling again this year, emerging as one of the few fashion houses to give an outlook for 2009.The Italian company, which has been hit by the global luxury spending slump, also said in its 2008 annual report it planned to open shops in Tokyo, Dubai and Berlin among other places this year. ”The first few months of 2009 have not been easy and the forecast for the rest of the year sees a further profit reduction in 2009 versus 2008,” Armani, the 75-year-old chairman and founder of the brand, wrote in the report. Armani, widely regarded as the doyen of Italian fashion, is known for his classically elegant lines and muted colors in clothes. The company’s net profit fall to 128.1 million euros ($184.3 million) last year from 218.7 million euros the year before, the report showed. “The economic crisis has only slowed down, rather than interrupted the Armani Group’s growth,” the designer said. France’s Hermes, the maker of 10,000-euro handbags, stands out along Armani as one of a handful of luxury companies giving a forecast for this year. Hermes expects sales to remain flat at constant exchange rates, with a slight drop in operating margin. Armani’s earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) fell 14 percent to 303.2 million euros last year. Revenues edged up 1.5 percent to 1.62 billion euros, boosted by a strong rise in China. (Reporting by Marie-Louise Gumuchian; Editing by Richard Chang) |
Reuters September 9, 2009 8:01 PM
NEW YORK (Reuters) – A fan of tennis player Rafael Nadal, who breached U.S. Open security to embrace the Spaniard courtside, faces jail time after he was charged Wednesday with interfering with a sporting event.
Nadal was in the midst of changing shirts Tuesday after he beat France’s Gael Monfils when the male fan leaped out of the stands onto the center court in Arthur Ashe Stadium and put his arms around Nadal before kissing him on the cheek.
Noam Aorta, 23, of Queens, New York, who sprinted past courtside security to reach the 23-year-old Nadal, faces up to one year in jail and a $5,000 fine for criminal trespassing.
District Attorney Richard Brown said in a statement that authorities took such security breaches seriously after previous incidents including former world number one Monica Seles, who was stabbed in the back by a spectator in 1993 in Germany. The stabbing severely hampered her career.
“For me it wasn’t a problem,” Nadal, who appeared unruffled, told reporters about the encounter. “The guy was really nice. He was a great fan, he said ’I love you’ and he kiss me.”