Ron Weasley For Band Of Outsiders

The summer of Harry Potter—and with it, the eight-film epic—is coming to a close. It’s farewell to sorcery, but hello to modeling for Rupert Grint (a.k.a. Ron Weasley) and Tom Felton (Draco Malfoy), two of the franchise’s stars. Band of Outsiders’ Scott Sternberg selected the duo for his Fall BOO lookbook, which he shoots personally every season—on vintage Polaroid film no less. (Previous stars have included James Marsden, Dave Franco,wholesale Bape cheap, Donald Glover, and Andrew Garfield; Harry himself, Daniel Radcliffe, hasn’t taken a turn, but he is a longtime fan of the label.)

“I love those films and the characters so much,” Sternberg told Style.com. “They’re full of imagination and endless ideas. With the last film coming out this summer, it felt like a cool opportunity to capture this moment in these two actors’ lives, and give them a chance to poke a little fun at the whole thing too.”
—Matthew Schneier

Photos: Scott Sternberg / Courtesy of Band of Outsiders

Go Figure Are we related

Sales of wide-screen TVs have risen, so has male life expectancy. Is there a connection? In his regular column, Michael Blastland asks why we feel the need to join the dots.

One hot summer, hard to recall in this week’s chill, Go Figure invited readers to fill in the details of a story about changes in ice cream sales and shark attacks.

When one goes up, so does the other.

This is true. There really are more shark attacks when ice creams sales rise. The question was why?

We didn’t want serious explanations, we wanted facetious ones. And boy did we get them.

In stats terms, this is an easy example of mixing up causation and correlation. Two numbers - for ice cream sales and shark attacks - rise and fall together and we ask if one causes the other. The real reason they’re in synch is… well, you work it out.
Did uncertainty over the outcome of the UK general election cause the stock market to fall?
I call this the dimputations game, as in dim-imputations. One for all the family at Christmas? You have to be that kind of family. Here’s another to try after the turkey.

The fatter turkeys get, the more people go to church. Why?

I’m making these up, by the way, though this one is probably true - as sales of wide-screen TVs have risen at Christmas, so has male life expectancy.

The connection? All hanging on for the next series of Strictly, obviously.

You tell us.

There’s an almost-serious point to all this. Namely, how stories about real-world facts can be compelling - even when nonsense. Because they work as stories, they work on our imagination in a similar way to the just-about truth of not being able to out-swim a shark one-handed.

This isn’t a dig at fiction. I wouldn’t be so unwise as to suggest that art is a poor imitation of life, just that stories about fact in the media and elsewhere often resemble bad storytelling or bad art in the way that they offer us little more than vague ideas suggestively stuck together.
Continue reading the main story “Start Quote
Once we have a story in mind, it’s easy to find evidence and impute connections to confirm it”
End Quote The shark and the ice cream
For a sober real-world example, take the period just after the indecisive UK general election when, as readers will recall, everyone felt uncertain about who would form the next government and what policies they would follow. Would it be an alliance of Nick and Dave or Gordon and Nick or - unlikely this one - Gordon and Dave?

Once we had convinced ourselves that the story was uncertainty, the media set out to find evidence to confirm that story. Among this evidence was a fall in the UK stock market. There’s uncertainty for you, we said, putting two and two together - markets are nervous following the uncertain outcome of the election.

Except that just about the whole world saw stock market falls that day. Frankfurt, Paris, New York, Moscow, Johannesburg…

All worried about UK uncertainty? One of the few exceptions was Sri Lanka,wholesale NBA, where the Colombo All Share Index rose, proof I guess that the Sri Lankans took a more benign view about whether Nick and Dave would get it together.

Mind you, there was something going on with Greece at that time.

UK political uncertainty and the UK stock market fall were correlated, though possibly not causally connected. But once we have a story in mind, it’s easy to find evidence and impute connections to confirm it.

This is not lying or playing with statistics. It’s simply the human instinct to seek links and fill in the details of a plausible story to make it whole and coherent. It is almost involuntary.

Which is why you know exactly what explains the typical rise in heating bills, just after peak consumption of mince pies.

Prabal Gurung Addicted To Love

The runway music for Prabal Gurung’s Fall ‘11 collection: “Addicted to Love”—as interpreted by Florence + the Machine. It was a deliberate choice. For his Fall offering, Gurung channeled one of amour’s great addicts, the lovelorn Miss Havisham from Dickens’ Great Expectations. “It’s a book that I was given when I was probably 6 or 7 years old,” the designer explains. “At that time I was kind of unclear about who she was—she’s a crazy old lady, that’s what I thought. As I got older and kept going back to it, [I found that] there’s something extremely, extremely sad, but all of us can somehow relate to her. There’s something beautifully melancholic and romantic about giving everything up for love, giving so much.” The result: a catwalk full of runway girls imagined as young, still hopeful but already fraying Havishams.

The character lives again—just in time for the collection to hit stores—in the new branding images Gurung created for the first time with photographer Daniel Jackson, model Julia Saner, and his longtime stylist, Tiina Laakkonen. The images, debuting exclusively on Style.com, are not quite a campaign and will run online-only,wholesale Juicy Couture t-shirts, but the designer doesn’t rule out print ad spots at some time in the future. “For a new company like mine, the media budget is very limited,” he explained. “The resources that are online for free—Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr—it’s extremely crucial that we use those tools. These images [will] get picked up in China, picked up in random places traditional media would never reach.”
—Matthew Schneier

Photos: Daniel Jackson / Courtesy of Prabal Gurung

Natural Evolution

As sisters and design partners, Phoebe and Annette Stephens of Anndra Neen enjoy an especially symbiotic relationship based on their shared history growing up in Mexico City among an artistic family, a background which informed their decision to launch the brand in 2009. Since the beginning, the duo has focused on shapes “inspired by the imperfect geometry of nature” and a handcrafted aesthetic. The results are dramatic yet approachable pieces forged from mixed metals, with solid cuff bracelets encrusted with abstract renderings of sea creatures and cascading breastplates etched with wave formations.

During their latest presentation at Milk Studios, Phoebe explained this season’s evolution. “We’re still using a lot of texture, but we also have cleaner silhouettes with the geometric breastplates and the quilted clutch.” The pieces, displayed on sculpted formations evoking driftwood, achieved a careful balance of natural authenticity and a bold statement, much like how Annette describes the women of their rapidly expanding fan base. “She’s fashion-forward and has a strong personality,Discount Mlb Jerseys, but is also open-minded. She truly dares to wear.”
—Nina Stotler

Photo: Courtesy of Anndra Neen

Accessorize Like Cameron Diaz With a Replica of Her Marc Jacobs Tote - UsMagazine.com

Cameron Diaz certainly has a knack for finding amazing accessories.

I always marvel at her street clothes and want to buy them off her back because somewhere in my fantasy mind, I will look like her. Reality check! I may not be as fab and tall and blonde but I can find something that’s equally posh and polished for less and still feel special.

Look at this bag. It’s Aldo and hello? It looks just like her Marc Jacobs bag! I mean, wow! Our accessories editor, Hannah,wholesale Crystal Rock, found this and immediately it was like, bingo — feeding my obsession.

Aldo really brings it. The color is lovely, the size, shape, price. It feels both classic and very luxe, And at $34.98…what’s not to love?

Buy it here.

By Sasha Charnin Morrison for UsMagazine.com. To read more of the Recessionista blog, click here.

Defiant Iran claims major steps in nuclear fuel

TEHRAN, Iran In defiant swipes at its foes, Iran said Wednesday it is dramatically closer to mastering the production of nuclear fuel even as the U.S. weighs tougher pressures and Tehran’s suspected shadow war with Israel brings probes far beyond the Middle East.

Iran further struck back at the West by indicating it was on the verge of imposing a midwinter fuel squeeze to Europe in retaliation for a looming boycott of Iranian oil, but denied reports earlier in the day that six nations had already been cut off.

The uncompromising messages from Iran, however, came with a counterpoint. The official IRNA news agency said Iran’s top nuclear negotiator, Saeed Jalili, told European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton that Iran is ready to return to talks with the U.S. and other world powers.

The dual strategy taking nuclear steps while proposing more talks has become a hallmark of Iran’s dealings for years and some critics have dismissed it as a time-buying tactic. The advances claimed Wednesday could likely feed these views.

In a live TV broadcast, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was shown overseeing what was described as the first Iranian-made fuel rod inserted into a research reactor in northern Tehran. Separately, the semiofficial Fars agency reported that a “new generation” of Iranian centrifuges used to enrich uranium toward nuclear fuel had gone into operation at the country’s main enrichment facility at Natanz in central Iran.

In Washington, the assistant secretary of state for International Security and Nonproliferation, Tom Countryman, dismissed the Iranian claims of reaching a pivotal moment. “The announcement today by Iran has much more to do with political developments in Iran than it has to do with factual developments,” he said.

White House press secretary Jay Carney said Iran’s “defiant acts” seek to “distract attention” from the damage brought by international sanctions.

Meanwhile,Replica Christian Dior Outlet, Iran is facing major new international complications: Accusations of bringing an apparent covert conflict with Israel to points stretching from Thailand and India to the former Soviet republic of Georgia.

Officials in Israel ramped up allegations that Iran was linked to international bomb plots, saying magnetic “sticky” bombs found in a Bangkok house rented by Iranians were similar to devices used against Israeli envoys in a foiled attack in Georgia on Monday and a blast in New Delhi that injured four people, including a diplomat’s wife.

“In recent days, Iran’s terror operations are being laid bare for all,” said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who convened his security cabinet. It included discussions about “preventive measures” against Iranian threats, said a statement from Netanyahu’s office that did not elaborate.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman, Ramin Mehmanparast, called the allegations “baseless” and an attempt to push “conspiracy” theories to discredit Iran with its Asian partners, including major oil buyer India.

Iran, in turn, accused Israel of being behind clandestine attacks that have claimed the lives of at least five members of Iran’s scientific community in the past two years, including a “sticky” bomb blast that killed a director at the Natanz labs last month.

Framed photos of the five scientists were shown by Iranian TV before a speech by Ahmadinejad, who was flanked by the flags of Iran and the country’s nuclear agency.

He repeated Iran’s goal of becoming a technological beacon for the Islamic world and insisted that scientific progress is the right of all nations. Here rests one of the biggest dilemmas for the West. Iran has merged the nuclear program with its national identity and is unlikely to make any concessions without huge incentives.

“I hope we reach the point where we will be able to meet all our nuclear needs inside the country so we won’t need to extend our hand before others, specifically before the world’s dastardly people,” Ahmadinejad said. “For a gentleman, for a chivalrous nation, the most difficult moment is when he has a need to ask (for something) from a dastardly person.”

Iran also used the announcements as a carefully crafted show of unity.

The families of the slain scientists attended the ceremonies. State TV showed the father of the scientist killed last month, Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan, clicking on the computer to inaugurate the advanced centrifuges inside the Natanz facility. TV showed tears in the eyes of Roshan’s mother and wife when the father opened the project.

Ahmadinejad put the young daughter of slain electronics student Darioush Rezaeinejad on his knee and patted her long hair.

The purported new frontiers for Iran’s atomic program showcase what could be significant steps at becoming self-sufficient in creating nuclear fuel the centerpiece of the dispute with the U.S. and its allies.

In the fuel cycle, mined uranium is processed into gas, then that gas is spun in centrifuges to purify it. Low-enriched uranium at around 3.5 percent is used to produce fuel rods that power a reactor. But the same process can be used to produce highly enriched uranium at around 90 percent purity that can be used to build a warhead.

Iran claims it only seeks reactors for energy and medical research.

The Tehran facility where IRNA said the new fuel rods were installed is intended to produce isotopes for cancer treatments. It requires fuel enriched to around 20 percent, considered a threshold between low- and high-enriched uranium.

Iran began enriching up to near 20 percent in February 2010 after attempts at a deal with the West to import the fuel rods broke down.

Iranian officials have long spoken of introducing faster, more efficient centrifuges at the Natanz facility. The Fars report did not give further details, but Iran also says it also has sophisticated centrifuges in a new site built into a mountainside south of Tehran and possibly impervious to airstrikes.

A diplomat accredited to the International Atomic Energy Agency, which monitors Iran’s known nuclear programs said the “new generation” of centrifuges appeared to be referring to about 65 IR-4 machines that were recently set up at an experimental site at Natanz. The new model can churn out enriched material at a faster rate than the more rudimentary IR-1 centrifuges, thousands of which are at work in Natanz producing low-enriched uranium, said the diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the information is privileged.

In still another development, the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization, Mohammad Abbasi, was quoted as saying Iran will open a new facility to produce “yellowcake,” which is concentrated natural uranium and is the foundation material in the process to make nuclear fuel. In the past, Iran has purchased most of its yellowcake abroad, including South Africa and China.

The U.S. and EU have tried to rein in Iran’s nuclear program with new boycotts and banking restrictions targeting Iran’s crucial oil exports, which accounts for about 80 percent of the country’s foreign revenue.

The Obama administration is now weighing an even harsher blow: possibly seeking Iran’s removal from SWIFT, an independent financial clearinghouse that is crucial to the country’s overseas oil sales. But such a move could push oil prices higher and undercut fragile Western economies.

Iran pushed back at Europe.

State TV quoted Foreign Ministry official Hasan Tajik as saying that six European diplomats were summoned Wednesday and told that Iran has no problem replacing customers an implied warning that Tehran would carry out plans to cut off EU countries immediately to pre-empt sanctions set to go into effect in July.

Conflicting information about the cutoff has been relayed by Iranian media throughout the day: first the full blockade on six countries, then a report carried by the semiofficial Mehr agency saying that exports were cut to France and the Netherlands with four other European countries receiving ultimatums to sign long-term contracts with Iran.

Iranian officials say an immediate cutoff will hit European nations before they can line up new suppliers, and that Tehran has already found buyers for the 18 percent share of its oil that goes to Europe.

In Vienna, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov criticized the U.S. and the EU for instituting “one-sided sanctions” on Tehran that “erode unified action against Iran’s nuclear program.”

At the same time, he said the suspicion nurtured by years of Iranian secrecy that Tehran is covertly working on a nuclear arms program “must be clarified without any doubt.”

In Bangkok, Thai officials held three Iranians rounded up after a cache of explosives detonated accidentally in their home. Bomb disposal teams combed the damaged house while security forces sought an Iranian woman they said had originally rented it.

Thai authorities have not disclosed any potential targets for the explosives.

Israeli defense officials, however, believe the Iranian men were plotting to attack the Israeli ambassador in Thailand, Israel’s Channel 10 TV reported. It said the investigation was still ongoing and its conclusions were not final.

In a reflection of how the attacks caught Israel off guard, the Israeli Counter Terrorism Bureau last month lifted a travel warning to Bangkok after Thai authorities arrested a suspect with alleged links to Hezbollah. The warning was issued Jan. 13 and lifted less than two weeks later.

The bureau lifted a similar travel advisory for Israelis going to Georgia in November.

___

Murphy reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Associated Press writers Josef Federman in Jerusalem, George Jahn in Vienna and Thanyarat Doksone and Todd Pitman in Bangkok contributed to this report.

Berlin Film Festival 3 documentaries on Japan nuclear disaster

Less than a year after the massive earthquake and tsunami in Japan devastated whole towns and crippled the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, causing a radioactive disaster, filmic portraits at the Berlin International Film Festival are presenting the human fallout. Three documentaries appearing at the Berlinale provide sort of post-nuclear ghost stories — landscapes and people haunted by the aftermath of the nuclear accident and residual radiation.

Atsushi Funahashi’s “Nuclear Nation,” which was to debut Friday night in a world premiere, documents life in exile for the residents of Futaba,Wholesale Gucci, a town that prospered and then all but perished, its rise and fall tightly woven together with the Fukushima nuclear plant.  National subsidies and major tax breaks came to Futaba starting in the 1960s, compensation for the presence of the plant. Along with jobs for citizens, the plant brought money for a new community center, library and sports facilities.

Funahashi’s film shows that all lies empty now, beyond the ornate city gates reading “Atomic energy makes our town and society prosperous” — the entire city has been designated as an exclusion zone, and will be uninhabitable for years.  Says Futaba Mayor Katsutaka Idogawa, “It was the perfect little town.” Now home for 1,400 of the town´s residents is an abandoned high school 155 miles away, where they sleep without privacy, eat tasteless box lunches, and are sporadically lifted from boredom by visits from out-of-tune military bands and a washed-up group of flabby costumed wrestlers.

Alternately moving and chilling are scenes of Futaba´s residents visiting their homes or now-empty foundations on two-hour “return permits.” Wrapped up in safety suits and masks, with radioactivity monitors around their necks, they search for family photos and beloved articles of clothing, or lay flowers at the sites where relatives lost their lives.  Though long at its festival screening length of 145 minutes, the film will be released in shorter cinema and television versions.

Toshi Fujiwara’s “No Man’s Zone” screens Sunday, and aspires to more artiness, featuring a voice-over by Armenian Canadian actress Arsinée Khanjian. Fujiwara hopes to show the beauty in the tainted landscape, while leveling a critique of the disaster and how it was handled.  And “Friends After 3.11,” bowing internationally here on Monday, follows director Shunji Iwai as he struggles to make sense of the country’s new reality. Iwai wanted to learn everything he could about nuclear power, and traveled the country speaking to researchers, anti-nuclear protesters, energy specialists and 14-year-old Kokoro Fujinami, an activist, former child model and television personality who has emerged as a sort of “anti-nuclear idol.”

The documentaries are screening just days after a fresh reminder of the ongoing problems at the Fukushima Daiichi plant. On Feb. 8, workers battled rising temperatures in one of the plant’s reactors, raising new questions about the stability of the facility.

The films should have a special resonance in Berlin, where anti-nuclear sentiment has been strong for years, partly due to secrecy around and problems following the Chernobyl accident in Ukraine in 1986.  After the disaster at Japan’s Fukushima nuclear power plant in March 2011, the German government decided to phase out all nuclear energy by 2022, and started by immediately shutting several plants.

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Berlin film fest kicks off with an international mix of upheaval

First new US nuclear reactors in decades approved

 — Susan Stone in Berlin

Photo: Workers pile up plastic bags containing radiation-contaminated fallen leaves and surface soil collected from the surrounding area in the municipal baseball field for temporary storage in Okuma, a town where the crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant is located, in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, Thursday, Feb. 9. Credit: AP Photo / Kyodo News

 

Let’s Dance

En pointe is on trend. We saw the germ of balletomania in the Spring collections in New York and Paris, where Hannah MacGibbon at Chloé showed bodysuits and wispy, tutulike skirts, Gilles Mendel tapped Christian Louboutin to customize shoes with ballerina ankle laces, and Cynthia Rowley borrowed her set pieces from NYCB ballet master Peter Martins. And what began on the runway is starting to take shape in the street, too. Opening Ceremony has just opened its dance-inspired Repetto shop-in-shop at its 35 Howard Street store, where pirouetting mannequins offer every variety of the classic dancers’ flat (pictured). MacGibbon’s version will hit stores, too, come spring—her brilliant vermilion model is one of the many you’ll find in our new Accessories Index when it launches next week. Don’t expect the trend to let up any time soon. The much anticipated, Rodarte-costumed ballet drama Black Swan,Cheap Tory Burch Shoes, which has been making the festival rounds for what feels like years, finally comes to U.S. theaters in December.

Photo: Courtesy of Openign Ceremony

Tony Oller lands starring role in Vigilandia

LOS ANGELES, Feb 3 (TheWrap.com) Tony Oller, who played Danny on the Disney Channel’s “As the Bell Rings,” has been offered the young male lead in Universal’s upcoming sci-fi thriller “Vigilandia,” TheWrap has learned.

Ethan Hawke and Lena Headey star in the movie, which James DeMonaco wrote and is directing.

Oller most recently starred alongside Dennis Quaid in “Beneath the Darkness.” Before that, he was one of the stars of the Nickelodeon series, “Gigantic.”

Oller also is set to star alongslide Lucas Till in an untitled found footage comedy from writer-director Jason Trost. A singer-songwriter, Oller is working with composer P. Thomas Georgio on original music for the film.

On Tuesday,wholesale Prada, TheWrap reported that Max Burkholder, the 14-year-old actor who plays Max Braverman in NBC’s “Parenthood,” has been offered the role of Charlie in the film. Adelaide Kane also stars.

James DeMonaco wrote and is directing the movie. DeMonaco previously worked on “Assault on Precinct 13,” starring Hawke and Laurence Fishburne. He also is the creator/executive producer of Spike TV’s mini-series “The Kill Point.”

Jason Blum, Michael Bay, Brad Fuller and Andrew Form are producing through Blum’s Blumhouse and Bay’s Platinum Dunes. Why Not Productions also is producing.

The movie is scheduled to begin shooting on February 13.

(Editing By Zorianna Kit)

Reese Witherspoon Goes Glam for the UK Premiere of ‘This Means War’

The rom-com/thriller combo, co-starring Chris Pine and Tome Hardy,Cheap MLB Jerseys, opens on Valentine’s Day in the States. 5:31 PM PST 1/31/2012 by Lauren Schutte

Dansette