Nov 24, 2010

Sorry, Firefly fans — Nathan Fillion won’t be playing Nathan Drake in the upcoming Uncharted film.
Bostonian Mark Wahlberg will be taking the reigns, the actor confirmed Wednesday in an interview with MTV. Director David O. Russell has already started writing the script and they hope to start shooting next year, Wahlberg said.
“David is one of the best writer/directors I’ve ever worked with,” Wahlberg said. “The idea that he has is just insane. So hopefully we’ll be making that movie this summer.”
Wahlberg added that he and Russell have been in touch with Joe Pesci and Robert De NiroUncharted games. about parts in the film. De Niro could play Nathan Drake’s father while Pesci plays his uncle — two characters that have yet to appear in the
Wahlberg has some experience with videogame movies. In 2008, he starred in an adaptation of Max Payne that was critically panned. His most recent picture, upcoming biographical sports film The Fighter, is also directed by Russell.
The Uncharted film, based on the Naughty Dog-developed game series for PlayStation 3, was announced in 2009 but hasn’t progressed much since then. It’s good to hear that the movie is actually happening, even if Wahlberg isn’t exactly our first choice to play the lead.

Fouad: I excluded Fadaly from the film because of her clothes

Egypt Cinema:
Artist Mohamed Fouad Undo for his choice of artist, the youth Menna Fadaly to participate in the new film "Tifa and Tomé in the land of the government," said Fouad's "seventh day" that the cause of the decline is witnessed ceremony of rejoicing her past excesses, pay for a retreat from its decision, after it is the decision-maker in its choice to participate in the movie.
The Fouad to the role that was him a candidate for the play has been permanently deleted from the script, and being completed writing the script to start filming soon after the completion of the selection of team work, and the ceremony was rejoicing the birth of young artist from Fadaly witnessed abuses on her clothes, and style of her dancing at the ceremony, which which raised the criticism of many who are interested in rural art.
And film and events, he explained that the artist Muhammad Fuad is currently working on the follow-up scenario on its own without resorting to the authors or scriptwriter, in the belief that the successful work stems from writing the script tags are deep.
The last work of artist Mohamed Fouad series "the most expensive of my life" events, which took place on the man in charge of his family after the death of his father and mother, and corresponds to many difficult situations, but it is overcome because of his kindness, and for his good deeds.

New Mortgage Applications Hit Highest Level Since May

The number of applications for mortgages to buy homes rose to its highest level in six months last week.

The Mortgage Bankers Association Purchase Index rose 14.4% from a week earlier, the association said. No adjustment was made for Veteran's Day, which occurred in the previous week.

The index is now at it's highest reading since the week ending May 7, 2010.


"The increase in purchase applications last week aligns with other incoming data suggesting that consumers are feeling somewhat more confident with their financial situation," said Michael Fratantoni, the association's vice president of research and economics.

Total mortgage applications rose 2.1% from a week earlier on a seasonally adjusted basis. The Refinance Index dropped 1% from the previous week to its lowest since the end of June.

Refinance applications made up 78.6% of total applications, compared with 80.3% a week earlier.

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages rose to 4.5% from 4.46%.

Cambodian Stampede Blamed on Swaying Bridge

A swaying bridge loaded with thousands of people sparked mass panic and set off a raging stampede that killed more than 350 people in Cambodia's capital, according to a government investigation.

Crowds celebrating a water festival had flocked to an island for a free concert Monday and spilled onto a bridge to the mainland before the panic took hold. Bayon TV, which serves as a mouthpiece for the government, reported Wednesday that a committee found many people on the span were from the countryside and unaware it was normal for a suspension bridge to sway. In their fear it was collapsing, they tried to run off.

Information Minister Khieu Kanharith said Wednesday the official death toll was 351 dead with 395 injured.

Prime Minister Hun Sen described the stampede as the biggest tragedy since the communist Khmer Rouge's reign of terror, which killed an estimated 1.7 million people in the late 1970s. He declared a day of national mourning for Thursday.

As many as 2 million people are believed to have come to Phnom Penh for celebrations of a three-day holiday marking the end of the monsoon rain season. Tens of thousands were on an island in the capital's Bassac River.

Thousands of Cambodians on Wednesday lit candles and made offerings to appease the souls of those who perished.

"I asked their souls to rest in peace and not to be angry with those still alive in the capital, especially my family members and relatives," said Meng Houth, a 52-year-old woman who laid out food and burned incense and a candle in front of her home.

Witnesses had criticized authorities for causing congestion by blocking a second bridge across the river despite the huge crowds that gathered for the festival, and for a slow and confused emergency response. A huge crowd had come to celebrate the last night of the celebration.

The investigating committee, which included Cabinet ministers and city officials, said the panic was exacerbated by the trouble people had breathing because they were so closely packed together. It estimated 7,000-8,000 people were on the bridge, adding up to a load of 350-400 tons.

The report said the committee based its conclusions on investigations and the testimony of witnesses.

Before the stampede erupted, those present heard shouts the bridge was going to collapse, igniting the panic that also saw people jump off the sides into the water.

Toyota Australia designers tap into Asia

TOYOTA’S Australian design house is negotiating another regional design job as it continues to tap into the world number-one car-maker’s products in the burgeoning Asian market.

Melbourne-based Toyota Style Australia has been meeting with company representatives from Thailand and Malaysia about the still-secret design task, which would follow a similar job of regional importance undertaken in recent months by the local design team of more than 20.
From top: Toyota Etios hatch, Toyota Etios sedan, Toyota Aurion.

Toyota Motor Thailand is emerging as an increasingly important production hub for Toyota, with the Japanese giant set to expand the number of models and export destinations for the Thai operation.

Among these models is a new low-cost car, thought to be a version of the Indian-built Etios sub-compact that is about to go on sale in India in December before being introduced into production in Thailand, China and Brazil.

TSA manager Paul Beranger told GoAuto at the recent Sydney motor show that his team was keeping busy on regional design tasks.

“We have some people coming down from Malaysia and Thailand soon to discuss a project for them,” he said.

Back in December, Mr Beranger revealed that TSA was working on regional product on behalf of Toyota Japan that would not even be sold in Australia.

TSA is the smallest of three design centres run by multi-national car companies in Australia. The others – GM Holden’s centre in Port Melbourne and Ford’s operation in Cambellfield – have been working on projects of global importance, including GM’s Cruze hatch and Ford’s T6 Ranger.

Much of TSA’s work involves advising head office on Australian design requirements for models sold here, with some local enhancement for cars produced at Toyota Australia’s Altona factory.

TSA stylists made a major contribution to the current Toyota Aurion, with TSA’s lead designer Nick Hogios working at the ‘home room’ for that car in Toyota’s Japanese studios.

However, the new-generation Aurion is exclusively the province of Toyota Japan due to its importance to major markets such as China.

Unemployment rates improving in most states

Unemployment rates dropped in more than half of U.S. states in October from a year earlier, according to a government report released on Tuesday that showed improvement in the jobs market continues to vary across the United States.
Jobless rates dropped in 29 states and the District of Columbia from October 2009, rose in 16 states and were unchanged in a further five, the U.S. Labor Department said.
On a monthly basis, unemployment rates decreased in 19 states and the District of Columbia between September and October, increased in 14 states and remained the same in 17 states.
The Liscio Report, an economic newsletter that tracks states' economic conditions, said "it's encouraging to see some positive momentum in state detail".
The recession that began in 2007 and officially ended in 2009 divided the states' economic fortunes.
North Dakota and South Dakota had the lowest unemployment rates throughout the recession, mostly due to prosperous natural resource sectors.
Western states hit hard by the housing bust had some of the highest rates, with the automobile industry downturn also pushing Michigan's rate up.
That pattern remained in place during October.
North Dakota had the lowest unemployment rate at 3.8 percent, followed by South Dakota at 4.5 percent and Nebraska at 4.7 percent.
Nevada had the highest unemployment rate among states, at 14.2 percent, followed by Michigan at 12.8 percent and California at 12.4 percent, which matched the record high the Golden State reached in March. For 21 straight months, California's jobless rate has been above 10 percent.
The Michigan jobless rate, which was lower than the state's rate of 14.4 percent in October 2009, "continued the relatively stable trends seen throughout 2010," said Rick Waclawek, director of the state's labor market information office, in a statement.
The national unemployment rate was 9.6 percent in October. Analysts expect a government report next week to show the rate remained the same in November.
According to the Labor Department, 27 states posted jobless rates significantly lower than the U.S. rate, five states had "measurably higher rates," and 18 states and the District of Columbia "had rates that were not appreciably different from that of the nation."
Almost all states, 41, added jobs in October from September, the Labor Department said. Texas gained the most positions, 47,900 since September, followed by New York at 40,600 jobs, and California at 38,900.
Delaware lost the most jobs over the month, 3,000, followed by Missouri, which shed 2,900.

Nov 23, 2010

North Korea shells South in fiercest attack in decades

South Korea (Reuters) - North Korea fired scores of artillery shells at a South Korean island on Tuesday, killing two soldiers, in one of the heaviest attacks on its neighbor since the Korean War ended in 1953.
The barrage -- the South fired back and sent a fighter jet to the area -- was close to a disputed maritime border on the west of the divided peninsula and the scene of deadly clashes in the past. South Korea was conducting military drills in the area at the time but said it had not been firing at the North.
The attack came as the reclusive North, and its ally China, presses regional powers to return to negotiations on its nuclear weapons program and revelations at the weekend Pyongyang is fast developing another source of material to make atomic bombs.
It also follows moves by leader Kim Jong-il to make his youngest, but unproven, son his heir apparent, leading some analysts to question whether the bombardment might in part have been an attempt to burnish the ruling family's image with the military.
"Houses and mountains are on fire and people are evacuating. You can't see very well because of plumes of smoke," a witness on the island told YTN Television before the shelling, which lasted about an hour, ended.
YTN said at least 200 North Korean shells hit Yeonpyeong, which lies off the west coast of the divided peninsula near a disputed maritime border. Most landed on a military base there.
Photographs from Yeongyeong island, just 120 km (75 miles) west of Seoul, showed columns of smoke rising from buildings. Two soldiers were killed in the attack, 17 wounded. Three civilians were also hurt.
News of the attack rattled global markets, already unsettled by Ireland's debt woes and a shift to less risky assets.
Experts say North Korea's Kim has for decades played a carefully calibrated game of provocation to squeeze concessions from the international community and impress his own military. The risk is that the leadership transition has upset this balance and that events spin out of control.
South Korean President Lee Myung-bak, who has pursued a hard line with the North since taking office nearly three years ago, said a response had to be firm following the attack.
But he made no suggestion the South would retaliate further, suggesting Seoul was taking a measured response to prevent things getting out of hand.
The North has a huge array of artillery pointed at Seoul that could decimate an urban area home to around 25 million people and cause major damage to its trillion dollar economy.
The two Koreas are still technically at war -- the Korean War ended only with a truce -- and tension rose sharply early this year after Seoul accused the North of torpedoing one of its navy vessels, killing 46 sailors.
North Korea said its wealthy neighbor started the fight.
"Despite our repeated warnings, South Korea fired dozens of shells from 1 p.m. ... and we've taken strong military action immediately," its KCNA news agency said in a brief statement.
South Korea said it had been conducting military drills in the area beforehand but had fired west, not north.
The international community was quick to express alarm at the sudden rise in tension in a region that is home to three of the world's biggest economies -- China, Japan and South Korea.
A French diplomatic source said the U.N. Security Council would call an emergency meeting in a day or two over North Korea, against which it has imposed heavy economic sanctions for previous nuclear and missile tests.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov called the escalation in tensions a "colossal danger.
China was careful to avoid taking sides, calling on both Koreas to "do more to contribute to peace.
"China hopes that the relevant parties will do more to contribute to peace and stability in the region ... it is imperative now to resume the six-party talks," a spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, Hong Lei, told reporters.
Those talks on North Korea's nuclear weapons program -- involving the two Koreas, China, Japan, Russia and the United States -- have long been on ice.
But the North has recently been pushing to resume the talks, which previously it has used to win massive aid in return for promises to end its weapons program.
WON TUMBLES
News of the exchange of fire sent the won tumbling in offshore markets with the 1-month won down about four percent at one stage in NDF trading. U.S. 10-year Treasury futures rose and the Japanese yen fell.
The South Korean central bank, after an emergency meeting, said it planned to cooperate with the government to take measures to stabilize markets if necessary. Many traders expect South Korea's financial markets to fall further when trading opens on Wednesday.
The attack comes just as a U.S. envoy is in Beijing on a tour of the region and is expected to ask China to use its influence over North Korea.
Washington has branded the North a danger to the region and expressed concern Pyongyang would sell nuclear weapons technology to other states. It has said it was ready to return to talks but wants to see more commitment to denuclearization by the North beforehand.
The White House condemned the attack, telling the North to halt its "belligerent action" and saying it was committed to defend the South.
It has about 28,000 troops in South Korea, their combined forces facing an estimated one million North Korean soldiers who make up one of the world's biggest standing armies.
"UNBELIEVABLE"
"It's unbelievable," said Zhu Feng, professor of international relations at Peking University. "Today's news proves that North Korea, under unprovoked conditions, shot these South Korean islands. It's reckless provocation. They want to make a big bang and force the negotiations back into their favor. It's the oldest trick."
The North depends heavily on China for economic and diplomatic support and Kim Jong-il has visited China twice this year, in part to gain backing for the anointment of his son as heir.
Those ties have become a sore point with Washington after reports that North Korea appears to have made big steps toward enriching uranium, possibly using technology that passed through or even originated in China.
China has urged returning to the nuclear disarmament negotiations but has also fended off calls from Washington and its regional allies to use its vital food and energy aid to North Korea as a lever.

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