Friday, December 26, 2008

Scarlett Johansson: the sex symbol

Scarlett Johansson
Scarlett Johansson
is relaxing, legs stretched out before her on a sofa in one of London’s most luxurious hotels, and pondering the strange phenomenon that is life as a modern-day sex symbol. Think Marilyn Monroe or Sophia Loren transported through time – the hour-glass figure and sprayed-on frocks – and you have some idea of the cinematic heritage of Ms J, a woman who, at just 24, has men young and old (including Woody Allen and just about every other director she’s worked with), praising her as a siren, a muse and a pin-up for our times. Women, too, can appreciate La Johansson. According to one glossy, she possesses the body that most admire.

“Oh yeah, that stuff,” she drawls in that unmistakable, husky voice, raising a pencil-thin eyebrow. “Well, I never expected that kind of thing, to be honest. I think that comes with my age, the whole sex-symbol thing. I’ll grow out of that. It’s a phase. And people want to turn you into merchandise in some way, don’t they?”
Scarlett Johansson
If it’s an image that she hasn’t particularly courted, it’s also one that she’s not afraid to exploit. In one of her two new films about to be released in the UK, The Spirit, a visually striking adaptation of a comic book, she’s a femme fatale with the kind of plunging neckline that will ensure teenage boys flock to the multiplexes in their droves, while their girlfriends weigh up the merits of a Wonderbra. “I was inspired by those actresses from the Forties and Fifties, and all that movie-star glamour… you know, that Golden Age of Hollywood. I like that look,” she admits.

Today, her look is more Pippi-Longstocking-meets-Gap: her hair is piled up in plaits, and she’s wearing blue jeans, white and green trainers and a grey slip over a matching cardigan (which is covering a recently acquired tattoo, of a sunrise, on her right forearm). In person, she’s friendly, bright, articulate and supremely composed. If anything, she appears even younger than she is. Indeed, the casually dressed, tiny (she’s 5ft 4in) woman who walked past me in the corridor – followed by a minder twice her size – a few minutes earlier didn’t attract so much as a second glance.
Scarlett Johansson
But put Johansson in front of a camera and you see genuine screen presence. She commands the eye in a way that few of her contemporaries do – she was luminous in Girl With a Pearl Earring (playing the maid who inspires Vermeer to his greatest work), and drop-dead sexy in the Forties-set noir thriller The Black Dahlia.

“I think it’s hard to have any kind of perspective on the image that builds up around you,” she says. “It’s funny because I live a quiet life. I do. I turn up for a premiere or a charity event, and then I have my life. And, really, it’s a relatively normal life.”

Johansson has been in the spotlight since she was a teenager. She was born in New York and has a twin brother and an older sister and brother. Her mother, Melanie, is a film and TV producer, and her father, Karsten, a Danish-born architect. Johansson loved acting and singing as a child, and from school plays graduated to TV appearances and minor film roles. Her breakthrough came with The Horse Whisperer, playing an awkward young girl traumatised by a riding accident. Directed by Robert Redford, it announced her as a talented actress with huge potential. But even though she earned good reviews, not even Johansson herself could have predicted the meteoric rise that would follow. She looks back on that performance with a mix of fascination for her younger self and pride.

“That feels like an age ago, and yet it’s also fresh in my mind,” she says. “I was 12 when I made the film and 14 when it was released. It feels like for ever. I’ve spoken to other artists about this and there’s a purity, an ease, an innocence that comes with earlier performances. And although you learn from experience and you grow, there’s something that you never really get back.”

This is a little harsh. Although Johansson was indeed remarkably natural in The Horse Whisperer – and excellent as a 17-year-old in the much darker Ghost World – she has made the difficult transition from child to adult actor with ease. Her best performances have come opposite heavyweight players, too. She matched Bill Murray – no mean feat – in Lost in Translation, in which she played the new wife of a musician stranded alone in a Tokyo hotel, who strikes up an unlikely bond with a middle-aged actor in town to do a commercial. Directed by Sofia Coppola, Johansson was thoroughly charming and won herself a Bafta for Best Actress in the process.

She earned another Bafta nomination for Girl With a Pearl Earring, and even when the films she’s appeared in have been duds (The Island, with Ewan McGregor) or average (The Nanny Diaries), Johansson is usually worth the price of a ticket. “I’ve been fortunate,” she says. “I’ve worked in a lot of really great productions.”
Scarlett Johansson
Now the aim is to ensure career longevity. It may seem a long way off, but, in one sense, she is anxious to leave her twenties – and that sex-symbol baggage – behind and get on with it. “I look forward to growing in the industry and ageing in the industry. A lot of actresses take their meatiest roles in their thirties and forties. And I’m looking forward to that. I’m at a little bit of a funny age where I get that ‘sexiest woman’ thing, and it feels like a label for right now. But maybe when I get older, it won’t be like that.”

Not that she’s complaining. Mostly, she seems rather bemused by the fuss that surrounds her. There are stories of a feud with Lindsay Lohan and songs written in her honour by a pop star (Katy Perry’s I Kissed a Girl) she has never met; there’s gossip – flatly denied – of a passionate encounter with Benicio del Toro in an elevator, and one fan bidding $40,000 on eBay to attend a party at her side. “It’s part of the whole media circus,” she says of the relentless tittle-tattle. “But why me and not somebody else? I guess it has something to do with the fact that I’m confident and speak my mind, so I guess I’m labelled in some way or another.”

She claims that an article in Cosmopolitan about her private life contains quotes that were fabricated. Her complaint is being investigated as we go to press. The Lohan “story” is another good example, she feels. Lohan apparently scrawled “Scarlett is a c***” on the wall in the bathroom of a New York nightclub. Quite why is a mystery to Johansson. “The first I heard about it was when a journalist mentioned it to me,” she says. “I’ve only met Lindsay Lohan a couple of times. But you know, as soon as you mention her name, the media loves it. They like to be able to say, ‘Scarlett answers back!’ I just thought that it was a little tacky and it makes me seem like I’m holding some kind of grudge, which is just nonsense.”

She likes to keep her private life to herself. A few months ago, she married Canadian actor Ryan Reynolds in a “quiet ceremony” near Vancouver after dating him for 19 months. They pulled off the remarkable coup of keeping the event secret until it was all over. “Being married is lovely, thank you,” she says, clearly on guard. “I feel like I’m in a good place. I’ve grown up. Everything seems to be going in the right direction.” Does being married make her feel more secure? “Maybe. That’s something I think you need a little perspective on. But it’s nice when you go out in the world to know that you are married. It’s kind of liberating.”

The work, she stresses, is still a huge part of her life. She can pick and choose from the best scripts on offer for the young Hollywood A-list, on which she occupies, arguably, top spot. This year, she even found the time to record an album, Anywhere I Lay My Head, which features her take on ten Tom Waits songs. When an actor dabbles in music, the result is usually an embarrassment; not so with Johansson. “Sexy, intoxicating and haunting,” gushed one critic, while another suggested that if she were an unknown, we would all be hailing a major new talent. Her singing voice is a sexy, late-night rasp that suits Waits perfectly. “I grew up listening to Tom Waits. Yeah, I would do more music. I would always hope to be able to explore different things. I love film, but I also love music and fine art and fashion. You never know, I might be the next Philippe Starck…”
Scarlett Johansson
She has worked with Woody Allen three times: on Scoop, Match Point and, now, Vicky Cristina Barcelona. The latter is viewed as the director’s best film for years – it received glowing reviews and a standing ovation when it premiered at Cannes. It’s smart, funny and very sexy: Johansson plays a young American, Cristina, who, along with her friend Vicky (portrayed by the excellent Rebecca Hall, daughter of Sir Peter Hall), spends a summer in Barcelona, where they meet and are wooed by a bohemian artist, Juan Antonio (Javier Bardem). Allen is on familiar territory – exploring the complexities of relationships – but it feels fresh and contemporary.

She is, understandably, delighted with the finished film. “I’m always surprised when I see a movie I did with Woody because we never get to see anything when we are making it; the monitor, the dailies, nothing. So you have no idea what the movie looks like or whether it’s going to make any sense. You are working scene to scene, and everything is out of order and you have no real sense of the story as a whole. So yes, I was very pleasantly surprised.”

Allen is clearly besotted, at least professionally, with Johansson, and admits that he’s written several screenplays with her in mind. “Every now and then, I find an actress with the kind of gift that inspires me to create parts,” says Allen. “Scarlett’s very smart, sexy, very gifted and with a big range. And she’s lightning fast with her sense of humour.” Praise indeed. You do wonder, though, whether it’s just a little embarrassing being Woody’s muse? “Um, yeah,” she laughs. “We both kind of cringe when we hear that word used. It’s like I suddenly appeared in his life looking for a story and a plotline: ‘Scarlett! Here she is.’ I think I fit into the young-woman category in his mind, and I feel, of course, I’m replaceable. But I love working with Woody because we get along so well, it’s always fun and interesting and what actor wouldn’t want to have that dialogue?”

The Spirit couldn’t be more of a contrast to a Woody Allen movie. “But that’s the point, right? To try different things. And I really wanted to work with that man [Frank Miller]. He’s a genius.” Miller, the comic-book writer and artist who turned to directing with an acclaimed adaptation of his own Sin City, has now brought Will Eisner’s The Spirit to the screen. Starring alongside Samuel L. Jackson and Eva Mendes, Johansson is the gloriously named Silken Floss, which sounds like an upmarket dental treatment. “It’s a great name,” she agrees. “Silken Floss. It just rolls off the tongue.”
Scarlett Johansson
Doubtless, the teen boys will love it. “Oh, and the girls and the older guys and women, too,” she protests. Maybe so. But for Scarlett Johansson, it’s just one step nearer to the time when everyone stops referring to her as a sex symbol. “I feel like I’ve done a lot of different kinds of work, and it would be such a waste, I think, if I could only be a sexy sidekick or something. I would have to open up a store somewhere and quit the business,” she says.

This is followed by a low, throaty laugh. Ms Johansson is joking, of course. After all, you have to have a sense of humour about this sex symbol stuff.

(Times Online)

Tom Brady and supermodel Gisele Bundchen engaged

Tom Brady and Gisele Bundchen
Tom Brady and Gisele Bundchen arrive
at the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute Gala.


Football star Tom Brady and supermodel Gisele Bundchen are getting married.
Brady, quarterback for the New England Patriots, popped the question
on a private jet on Christmas Eve.
Tom Brady
Brady, 31, proposed to Brazilian-born Bundchen, 28, as their jet took off
from Teterboro Airport in New Jersey – with her parents onboard, TMZ reports.
They celebrated with white roses and champagne after she accepted.
Gisele Bundchen and Tom Brady
Brady and Bundchen have both made headlines with previous
high-profile break-ups.
Bundchen dated actor Leonardo DiCaprio on-and-off for years
before the couple split for good in 2005.

Tom Brady, Bridget Moynahan
Tom Brady, Bridget Moynahan 2006
Brady dropped then-pregnant girlfriend actress Bridget Moynihan
two years ago and paired off with Bundchen soon after.
=========

Reports of wedding bells are nothing new here on the Brady beat.
Before today’s Tom bomb, there was a rumor that the couple
would get hitched at Gi’s retreat in Costa Rica in March.
Gisele Bundchen and Tom Brady
Earlier this month, the Daily News dished that when Tom and Gi
went ring shopping, he wanted to buy her a big piece of bridal bling,
but the world’s richest supermodel said she’d rather have
something “antique-looking and understated.”

And in October, In Touch Weekly gossiped that Tommy snuck into chi-chi Cartier
in Beverly Hills prior to his first knee surgery to check out a $145,000 five-carat
yellow diamond engagement ring. Which is hardly understated.

Tom and Gisele hooked up two years ago after Brady broke it off
with his longtime galpal, actress Bridget Moynahan.
Gi already kicked “Shutter Island” star Leonardo DiCaprio to the curb in 2005.

As the hot celebrity couple were on their getting-to-know-you tour of Europe
in February 2007, Moynahan went public with her pregnancy.

John Edward Thomas Moynahan, who is called Jack, was born in August 2007
and lives with his mom on the Left Coast, but visits with his Dad and his galpal.
In fact, Brady and Bundchen recently purchased an $11.75 million piece of property
in a gated community in Brentwood, Calif., where they intend to build a home.

Gisele Bundchen
Gisele Bundchen

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Kate Winslet's sex

Kate Winslet, Leonardo DiCaprio, Revolutionary Road
Cast member Kate Winslet poses with co-star Leonardo DiCaprio
at the premiere of the movie "Revolutionary Road" at the Mann Village theatre
in Westwood, California December 15, 2008.
The movie opens limitedly in the U.S. on December 26.

Kate Winslet nude
Kate Winslet couldn't wait for her latest sex scene with Leonardo DiCaprio to end.
The 33-year-old actress - who first starred alongside the handsome actor
in 1997 epic 'Titanic' - admits her steamy scenes in new movie
'Revolutionary Road' were "too weird".
more...


Thursday, December 11, 2008

Jennifer Aniston goes naked

Jennifer Aniston goes naked on cover of GQ men's magazine
Jennifer Aniston naked

Jennifer Aniston is sure to make a few more Friends
after this almost naked pose on the cover
of the US version of GQ magazine.

The star stripped off with just a necktie to cover her modesty,
it's even saucier than her front page of the mag in 2005,
which saw her strip down to just a denim skirt.
Jennifer Aniston naked
In the accompanying interview in the mag, which goes on sale on December 23,
Jennifer also reveals that she's still in touch with ex husband Brad Pitt.
She said:
"When there's something to congratulate or celebrate, there's always an exchange."

But when asked if she ever talked to his new partney Angelina Jolie,
she snapped: "No. Nuh-uh." 

Jen is busy doing publicity at the moment for her THREE forthcoming new movies
He's Just Not That Into You, Travevling and Marley and Me.

All are due out in the new year.
Jennifer Aniston naked

========================
Jennifer Aniston nude

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Nurse's sex with patient

Nurse's registration cancelled after sex with patient
sex doctor
New Zealand
Ian Marsh Mete was a nurse in the Auckland District Health Board acute
mental health unit from December 2003 to December 2006.

On June 30 2006, Ms B, a young woman with a history of using psychiatric services,
was admitted to the unit.
After being treated for self-harm she was released on July 5.
She was readmitted on July 17.

During her time in the unit Mr Mete was seen to take Ms B into a staff-only area
where he massaged her feet for over half an hour.
Following Ms B's discharge on July 21 she stayed in contact with Mr Mete
via text message and the two met for coffee and walks on the beach.
Ms B stayed temporarily at Mr Mete's house in early August 2006
and a sexual relationship began.

It continued for several months.
At a work party in August, Mr Mete told a colleague about the relationship.
The colleague reported it to their employer.
Mr Mete denied the relationship to his employer and resigned on December 16, 2006.

When he was first told of the Health Practitioners Disciplinary Tribunal investigation
he denied the relationship. He finally admitted to it in a letter to the tribunal on May 7 this year.

The tribunal said Mr Mete's registration should be cancelled.
It said Ms B was "particularly vulnerable" and the relationship began only two weeks
after Mr Mete had cared for her.
The breach of standards was "very serious" and the tribunal imposed conditions
on Mr Mete should he try to re-register.

It said he should undergo psychiatric assessment and any treatment required,
should undertake a medical assessment in relation to drug and alcohol abuse
and take a postgraduate course focused on ethics and professional boundaries.

Mr Mete was ordered to pay $7500 in costs, but was not fined.

He told the tribunal he was sorry and "profoundly ashamed" of what he had done.
He said he had never done anything like it before, was depressed at the time
following the break-up of his marriage and the suicide of a patient
and had been using methamphetamine to cope.
He loved nursing and, with his drug use and depression under control,
hoped to return to the profession.

(Stuff.co.nz)

sex doctor

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Scientists report mental 'Body-Swapping'

sex robot

TUESDAY, Dec. 2 (HealthDay News) --
The illusion of body-swapping -- making people perceive the bodies of mannequins
and other people as their own -- has been achieved by Swedish neuroscientists.

In one experiment, the team fitted the head of a mannequin with two cameras
connected to two small screens placed in front of volunteers' eyes,
so that they had the same view as the mannequin.
When the mannequin's camera eyes and a participant's head were directed downwards,
the participant saw the mannequin's body where the person would normally
have seen their own body.
sex robot
The researchers created the illusion of body-swapping by touching the stomach
of both the mannequin and the volunteer with sticks.
The person saw the mannequin's stomach being touched while feeling (but not seeing)
a similar sensation on their own stomach.
As a result, the person developed a strong belief that the mannequin's body
was actually their own.

"This shows how easy it is to change the brain's perception of the physical self.
By manipulating sensory impressions, it's possible to fool the self not only out of its body
but into other bodies, too,"

project leader Henrik Ehrsson, of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm,
said in a news release.

The research, published online Wednesday in the journal PLoS One,
could prove useful in virtual reality applications and in robot technology, the team said.

(WashingtonPost)

sex robot
sex robot