Oufah Media on Facebook

MULTI LANGUAGE

Search This Blog

Friday, 3 August 2012

Gabby Douglas Wins Gold, So What’s the Debate?



At the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, 20-year-old Dominique Dawes became the first African-American to win an individual Olympic medal in artistic gymnastics and the first Black person of any gender or nationality to win an Olympic gold medal in gymnastics. A remarkable feat that has etched her name not only in the tablet of Olympic history but also the book of African-American firsts.
Gabby Douglas was only six months old when Dawes made history. Little did her parents know then that their baby would also make history by the time she was able to drive. 16-year-old Douglas has gone from an “average-good gymnast,” according to national team coordinator Martha Karolyi, to accomplishing yet another African-American first: the first African-American to win the all-around title in gymnastics. As only the second female African-American U.S. gymnast to ever make the team, Douglas took what Dawes did before her and one upped it as she snared the gold medal – her second thus far – at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London.
She’s been showered with accolades and congratulations from the most esteemed figures in the country for being only the fourth American to ever win the gold in that event. Her face was on the front of every website from ESPN to CNN and everything in between.
You would think that people within her own community would share in the praise for the teenager that has not only made her people, but also her country proud. But here we are discussing… her hair?
On the front page of Yahoo! shortly after her victory, the first image you may have set your eyes on was Douglas with a smile stretched across her face. However, the headline didn’t read “Gabby Douglas Wins Olympic Gold.” Instead, the headline read “Gabby Douglas’ Hair Sparks Raging Debate.”
What?
The focus of the conversation is Douglas’ hair and the negative backlash she has received on social media. A number of tweets were reeled in where the high school girl is getting slammed for her hair not being done on national television. Surprisingly, most of the negative comments are coming from African-American women. And apparently, the timing was right for an article on African-Americans being critical of another African- American to appear on the front page, right when Douglas should be praised for her stellar accomplishment.
This is irresponsible on so many levels.
To think that a major website (Yahoo!) would trivialize Douglas and her accomplishment with a lead story about her hair is deplorable. We see numerous nonsensical stories on various mediums on a daily basis. But this simply did not have to be on the front page at this particular time, nor did it need the headline it was saddled with. Especially when you consider what Douglas has just achieved not only for her community, but her country. Granted, the article was in defense of Douglas and her hair but the sensationalism sprawled across the homepage had already done its damage.
Is Douglas’ hair really sparking a “raging debate?” Are that many people offended that a gymnast – who flips and sweats for a living – may have sweated out her perm in an effort to win a gold medal? Is it really important to have this discussion right here and now?
But not nearly as ridiculous as those who actually took part in the slander. It wasn’t as if Yahoo pulled the story out of thin air. Tweets and Facebook posts coming from African-American women suggesting that the young gymnast needed to “represent” and get her “gel and a brush” are clearly in the wrong.  Did we forget that Douglas is in a world athletic competition? Ms. Douglas isn’t runway modeling or playing the love interest in a movie where her job is to look stunning. Her job is to win an Olympic gold medal in an event where it is expected that she sweat.
A tweet stated that “she has to represent.” I’m sorry, I suppose that being only the second African American woman to make the national team isn’t doing enough to represent. You know, because if she has her hair done and loses, it’s a better reflection of the African-American community than if she sweats it out and wins. The obsession with hair is problematic and undermines what we, as a community, value. If we spent less time criticizing one another and put that energy into those who are trailblazing, we won’t have to worry about Yahoo! generating a story that focuses on African-Americans being critical of other African-Americans on the grandest world stage of them all.
We live under the microscope where every misstep is magnified and under the constant fire from mainstream media that is often critical of our culture. Rather than belittle those who are trailblazing for future generations, we should do our best to support, defend and encourage young women like Gabby Douglas.
If we don’t, who will?

Jamaica's songstress Ikaya joins Portugal owns Richie Campbell for major festival

IKAYA & RICHIE CAMPBELL - ADDICTION!

The two had met back in Jamaica earlier this year when Richie Campbell visited the Island to work on his Album back in January, They collaborate on the song "Addiction" that due to release later this month.  For more on the artiste check the link below



                                    Richie Campbell & Ikaya @ Rehearsal with the 911 Band

                                           http://www.facebook.com/oufahmedia?ref=hl#
                                        http://www.facebook.com/RichieCampbellOfficial

                                                    http://www.facebook.com/ikaya1soul

Monday, 23 July 2012

EXCLUSIVE: Iran in "open war" with Israel



Iran is in an "open war" with Israel, President Shimon Peres said Monday, as he pointed the finger at Iran and Hezbollah for last week's bombing in Bulgaria that killed five Israelis.
In an exclusive interview with CNN, Peres said Israel would act to prevent further attacks.
Peres said Israel had "enough" hard intelligence to link the Bulgaria attack to Iran and its proxy Hezbollah and believes more attacks are being planned as part of what he called an "open war against Israel."
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said that Iran and the Lebanon-based Hezbollah movement were responsible for a number of attacks and attempted attacks against Israeli targets in Thailand, Georgia, India, Greece, Cyprus and other countries.
Asked whether the Bulgaria bombing and the other attempted attacks were revenge for the assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists, which Iran blames on Israel, Peres said that Israel has never claimed responsibility for the killings. But he noted that Israel has a right to prevent killing of its citizens.
"We don't have an initiative of terror," Peres said. "We don't do it. But self-defense is the right and the must of every people."
He said Israel's policy was one of "prevention," rather than "retaliation."
"If you have enough information about a certain person which is a ticking clock that can explode a bomb that can endanger civilian life, clearly you have to prevent him from doing so," Peres said, citing reports that the United States has killed as many as 3,000 people in drone strikes aimed at terrorist enclaves.
With neighboring Syria in a spiral of violence, Peres said Israel will be forced to seize Syria's chemical weapons if there is a risk President Bashar al-Assad would use them against Israel or that the arsenal could fall into terrorist hands.
Over the weekend, Defense Minister Ehud Barak said he ordered the military to prepare contingency plans to attack Syria's chemical weapons arsenals, should the need arise.
"The use of chemical weapons is internationally forbidden... and what do you do when somebody violates the law? You fight against it," Peres said.
"You stop them. We shall not remain indifferent and tell them, 'Do what you want.'"
When asked how far Israel would go to secure Syria's chemical arsenal, Peres simply said: "Until it will stop being a danger."
With Israel facing a potential influx of refugees, Peres said although no Syrians have tried to enter the country, Israel would not help any refugees who want to cross the border and would use force against any armed individuals.
"If they will come by force, we shall stop them by force," Peres said. "If they shall come in without force, we shall stop them the way any country defended her border with civilian means."
Peres spoke a day after Israel marked the 40th anniversary of the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, Germany, where 11 Israeli athletes and coaches were killed.
While he wouldn't go into details, Peres said Israel was taking precautions to ensure Israeli athletes would not be targeted at the London Olympic Games, which start later this week. He argued, however, that if Israeli intelligence services been at Munich, they would probably have been able to prevent the attack.

Colorado theater shooting suspect James Holmes appears dazed in court


Holmes appears with defense attorney Tamara Brady in court, July 23, 2012. (AP/Pool)
CENTENNIAL, Colo.—James Holmes, the suspect in the Colorado theater massacre, appeared in a Colorado courtroom on Monday, three days after one of the deadliest shooting sprees in modern American history.
Arapahoe County District Court Judge William B. Sylvester advised Holmes of his Miranda rights, and that there was probable cause to continue to hold him without bond on suspicion of first-degree murder.
Holmes, who was transported from a holding cell to the courtroom via an underground tunnel, appeared dazed. His brow furrowed. His head bobbed. His eyes opened and closed often. His hair was dyed red. His hands and feet were shackled. He did not speak.
Seated in a jury box next to Tamara Brady, a public defender, Holmes never looked in the direction of a gallery that included about two dozen victims and their advocates. Two sheriff's deputies stood watch nearby.
The preliminary hearing lasted about 11 minutes. Holmes' next court appearance is July 30, when he is expected to be charged.
[COMPLETE COVERAGE: Colorado theater shooting]
A decision on whether to seek the death penalty could be weeks or months away, District Attorney Carol Chambers told reporters as she entered the courthouse.
"It will be a conversation we have with the victims before we make that decision," Chambers said.
Holmes could also face additional counts of aggravated assault and weapons violations stemming from the mass shooting that killed 12 and injured 58 people at an Aurora, Colo., screening of "Dark Knight Rises."
Holmes, clad in full body armor, surrendered to officers in a parking lot behind the cinema. He did not resist arrest, but investigators have since described the former PhD student at the Univ. of Colorado-Denver medical school as uncooperative.
Authorities and news reports have portrayed the native Californian as smart and shy, but no motive for the shooting spree has surfaced.
Federal investigators were dispatched to assist local authorities with the investigation, but officials have indicated justice will be sought in a state courtroom.
Colorado has a death penalty, but only one inmate has been executed since 1977. Three inmates are currently on death row, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.
"If James Holmes isn't executed," former Denver prosecutor Craig Silverman told Reuters, "Colorado may as well throw away its death penalty law."
Despite the fact that Holmes was arrested with weapons on him—and his apartment found "booby-trapped"—Chambers said investigators are still diligently pursuing more evidence.
"I would say there's no such thing as a slam dunk case," she said during a press conference outside the courthouse. "It is a case where we are still looking at the enormous amount of evidence."
The district attorney, who admitted she was seeing the defendant for the first time, was asked if Holmes might have been on medication at the hearing.
"We have no information about that," Chambers said.
All 110 seats in the courtroom were full for the hearing, with some 80 or so occupied by victims, their families or counsellors recruited from local police departments to help those grieving. A few of the victims, some of the wearing dark sunglasses, embraced in long hugs before taking their seats.
Jessica Watts was in the court to represent her cousin, Jon Blunk, who was fatally shot in the theater after pushing his girlfriend out of harm's way.
Watts said she held back her emotions when the alleged killer was ushered in.
"I tried not to have a reaction because I wanted the focus to be about Johnny," she said. "There's so many emotions that I have for him."
[Yahoo News senior media reporter Dylan Stableford contributed to this report.]

Wednesday, 11 July 2012

L.A LAKERS - Jerry Buss - Hospitalize

0710_jerry_buss_03
Famed L.A. Lakers owner Jerry Buss was rushed to an L.A. hospital last night, where he was treated for severe dehydration -- Buss family sources tell TMZ.

According to sources, 78-year-old Buss fell ill at his home around 9pm and someone inside the house called 911. The L.A. City Fire Department responded and paramedics rushed Jerry to a local L.A. hospital.

Jerry is still being treated, but a rep for the Lakers says, "He is recovering and is expected to be released soon."

Buss was most recently hospitalized in December for blood clots in his legs due to excessive travel.

Thursday, 5 July 2012

Irie FM's DJ Mighty Mike found dead







Veteran DJ Mighty Mike of roots rocking radio Irie FM, was found dead at his home in Ocho Rios, St. Ann earlier today. Following the news of his death, his friends, colleagues and members of the entertainment fraternity took to the social networking site Twitter to express their condolences. The cause of Mighty Mike's death is unknown at this time, as the Police are now conducting investigations. Mighty Mike was scheduled to work this evening at his normal time slot of 6-10pm.

Alborosie , Ikaya and The Shengen Clan, Kicks off their 7 weeks European Tour Today July 5th 2012.


                                           Alborosie & The Shengen Clan arrived in
                                           Frankfurt Germany

REBIRTH OF REGGAE TOUR 2012 / EUROPEAN RUN!! 

06.07.12 NEUVE-EGLISE (FR) / Festival Decibulles
07.07.12 ST DENIS DE GASTINES (FR) / Festival au Foin de la Rue
08.07.12 KOLN (GER) / Summerjam
12.07.12 CHIASSO (ITA) / Palaghiaccio
13.07.12 TABOR (CZ) / Mighty Sounds festival
14.07.12 BOLOGNA (ITA) / Villa Angeletti
15.07.12 ROMA (ITA) / Villa Ada
18.07.12 TORINO (ITA) / Gruvillage
19.07.12 SEGRATE (ITA) / Circolo Magnolia
20.07.12 SIX FOURS LES PLAGES (FR) / Festival les Voix du Gaou
22.07.12 BUCAREST (RO) / Arenele Romane
24.07.12 PAU (FR) / Festival Emmaus
03.08.12 LANGRES (FR) / Festival du chien à plumes
04.08.12 GEEL (B) / Reggae Geel Festival
05.08.12 PAUILLAC (FR) / Reggae Sunska
07.08.12 CAGLIARI (ITA) / Lungomare Sant'Elia
08.08.12 ALGHERO (ITA) / Anfiteatro Maria Pia
10.08.12 LIMOUX (FR) / Les Bulles Sonores
11.08.12 LANDERNEAU (FR) / Du bruit dans Landerneau
12.08.12 WINCHESTER (UK) / Boomtown Festival
13.08.12 SCICLI (ITA) / Sicily Music Village
14.08.12 SALENTO (ITA) / Gusto Dopa Al Sole
16.08.12 BRUXELLES (B) / Brussels Summer Festival
17.08.12 BENICASSIM (SP) / Rototom Sunsplash Festival
18.08.12 GAVLE (SW) / Furuvik Reggae Festival
19.08.12 (NL) / Lowlands Festival
24.08.12 RAVENNA (ITA) / Pala de Andre
25.08.12 TRELINS (FR) / Foreztival

Tuesday, 3 July 2012

Caffeine may reduce risk of skin cancer: report



Could caffeinated drinks like Red Bull help prevent skin cancer? (Holly Ramer/AP)Drinking more than two cups of coffee per day, or any other combination of caffeinated beverages, may lower your chances of developing skin cancer, a new reports says. The results included other caffeinated products such as soda, tea and chocolate.
The report in the journal Cancer Research found that caffeine potentially reduced the risk of developing basal cell carcinoma, a common form of skin cancer though generally considered less serious than melanoma.
"Our data indicate that the more caffeinated coffee you consume, the lower your risk of developing basal cell carcinoma," said Jiali Han, Ph.D., associate professor at Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School in Boston and Harvard School of Public Health.
In their report, researchers analyzed statistical data from more than 112,000 people who had participated in the most recent Nurses' Health Study. More than 238,000 individuals have participated in the organization's studies, which began in 1976. Cancer prevention is a primary focus. The research for this study indicated that the more a person consumed caffeine, the less likely he or she was to develop basal cell carcinoma.
However, that doesn't mean Han and the other researchers are suggesting people start drinking unlimited amounts of their favorite lattes.
"I would not recommend increasing your coffee intake based on these data alone," Han said.
"However, our results add basal cell carcinoma to a list of conditions for which risk is decreased with increasing coffee consumption. This list includes conditions with serious negative health consequences such as type 2 diabetes and Parkinson's disease."
Although caffeine can be addictive, its properties have been directly linked to a number of other health benefits, including improved mental and physical performance. Some studies have also linked caffeine consumption to lowering the risk of liver cirrhosis.
In related news, medical doctors in New Zealand recently linked a woman's death to her excessive consumption of Coca-Cola. And  in February, it was reported that the inventor of the 5-Hour Energy drink is a Buddhist monk.

Monday, 2 July 2012

London 2012 Olympics: Usain Bolt now knows that Yohan Blake is the 'Beast' who means business over 100m



He was doing his best to still sound like the humble apprentice to Usain Bolt’s sorcerer but after defeating the sprinting wizard twice in just three days at the Jamaican Olympic trials in Kingston, it does not wash any more. The 'Beast’ that is Yohan Blake is now in pole position for gold at London 2012.

Usain Bolt now knows that Yohan Blake is the 'Beast' who means business
Top class: Yohan Blake (left) beats Usain Bolt in Jamaica's 100 metres trial Photo: REUTERS
After handing Bolt his first defeat at 200 metres for five years, just 48 hours after hammering him over 100m, Blake seemed to know his place, insisting modestly that his training partner had not been 100 per cent right and thanking Bolt for his encouragement during practice.
Yet while he was playing the role of surprised understudy away from the track, on it he was demonstrating to the sports world one simple fact: that if Bolt is anything less than fit, flying and off to electric starts, then his bid to become the first man to successfully defend both 100m and 200m titles at an Olympics will be buried by the driven figure he sees improving every day at training on the University of West Indies track in Kingston.
Last weekend Bolt did not look quite right, and questions about his race fitness were also bound to be raised as he needed medical treatment on the track after the finish on Sunday.
It was a sight guaranteed to encourage not only Blake.
The weekend’s sensations in Kingston will have the vultures circling, ready to feed off the growing suspicion that Bolt, after his injury-riddled 2010 and false start in the 2011 world 100m final, is still not quite in his extra-terrestrial 2009 shape when he set his world records of 9.58sec for 100m and 19.19sec for 200m in Berlin.
From the US, Justin Gatlin and Tyson Gay, in the 100m, and Wallace Spearmon, who won their 200m trial in a wind-assisted 19.82sec on Sunday, are ready to swoop after their triumphant trials so that the sprints really are beginning to look the highlights of the entire Olympic shebang.
Yet surely nobody can be gnawing away at Bolt’s psyche quite like Blake, the 22 year-old identified by the champion some three years ago as the boy who would one day challenge him for his crown, the kid he nicknamed the “Beast” because of his workaholic appetite for training.
Blake won the world 100m title last year but it felt as if it was by default as Bolt false-started and was disqualified.
Perhaps now we know why he beat the gun; he knew he needed the sharpest start to prevail.
Yet these defeats felt more significant. Bolt’s first defeats at the Jamaican championships since his breakthrough Olympic year in 2008 will have hurt him, for all that he tried to dismiss them fairly airily afterwards.
First, he was not just defeated in a completed 100m race for the first time in two years; he was actually given a proper hiding, 9.75sec to 9.86sec.
Yet if Bolt could brush that aside as a poor day at the office – like the one he had suffered in Ostrava when stumbling to victory earlier in the summer – it did not feel as shocking as losing his record in the half-lap event which he considers he owns.
The shocking sight was to see Blake, in the less accommodating lane three, roaring past a grimacing Bolt, outside him in five, off the turn, a scene which almost merited a double take.
Bolt clocked 19.83sec to Blake’s 19.80sec, so that Blake now owns the fastest times at both events this year.
Afterwards, Bolt was trying to put a brave face on the losses, shrugging that he had run an “awful turn” because he had been concentrating more on 100m recently and that “three weeks should be enough time to get back into shape”.
Yet, more pertinent was his revelation that “I think I am a bit weak”.
This is not the time for weakness, especially when the steely Blake is getting quicker by the race.
Having spent time with the lad from Montego Bay earlier this year and learning how he gets up during the night to train – “When you’re sleepin’, I’m workin’, toilin’ through the night. It’s what great men do” – you cannot help but be struck by his sheer intensity.
“Congratulations, good run, you won. You’re the better man on the day,” he was told by Bolt afterwards, to which Blake responded with thanks because the master sprinter, he reckoned, had always been generous enough to offer him support.
Glen Mills, the pair’s coach, told me earlier this year that he did not believe either of his protégés gained an advantage through training with the other but the suspicion remains that Bolt may have been too accommodating. Has he helped create the beast which could now devour him?

Anderson Cooper: ‘The fact is, I’m gay’



Cooper (AP)
Anderson Cooper has confirmed what most people in the media world and New York already knew: He is gay.
"The fact is, I'm gay," Cooper wrote in an email to Daily Beast blogger Andrew Sullivan. "Always have been, always will be, and I couldn't be any more happy, comfortable with myself, and proud."
Sullivan, who is gay and is a longtime friend of Cooper's, had asked the CNN anchor for his reaction to a recent Entertainment Weekly story—"The New Art of Coming Out"—which was, in part, about the importance of gay celebrities coming out of the closet to combat America's bullying epidemic.
"Andrew, as you know, the issue you raise is one that I've thought about for years," Cooper responded. "Even though my job puts me in the public eye, I have tried to maintain some level of privacy in my life. Part of that has been for purely personal reasons. I think most people want some privacy for themselves and the people they are close to."
"But I've also wanted to retain some privacy for professional reasons," Cooper continued. "Since I started as a reporter in war zones 20 years ago, I've often found myself in some very dangerous places. For my safety and the safety of those I work with, I try to blend in as much as possible, and prefer to stick to my job of telling other people's stories, and not my own. I have found that sometimes the less an interview subject knows about me, the better I can safely and effectively do my job as a journalist. I've always believed that who a reporter votes for, what religion they are, who they love, should not be something they have to discuss publicly."
Cooper said he did not come out in his 2006 memoir, "Dispatches from the Edge," because the book was meant to be about war and not about his personal life. But his thinking has since changed:
Recently, however, I've begun to consider whether the unintended outcomes of maintaining my privacy outweigh personal and professional principle. It's become clear to me that by remaining silent on certain aspects of my personal life for so long, I have given some the mistaken impression that I am trying to hide something—something that makes me uncomfortable, ashamed or even afraid. This is distressing because it is simply not true.
While it's the first time Cooper has been on the record about his sexuality, it's been an open secret in the media and gay communities for years. In 2007, for example, Out magazine put Cooper on its list of the 50 most powerful gays. In 2011, Cooper gave a winking nod to his homosexuality during a panel discussion with writers from The Onion.
And last month, Cooper was among the celebrities featured in a New York Observer cover story on "the glass closet."
"In a perfect world, I don't think it's anyone else's business, but I do think there is value in standing up and being counted," Cooper—who says he's always been open with family and friends—added in his email. "Visibility is important, more important than preserving my reporter's shield of privacy."
Gay groups quickly applauded Cooper's courage.
"Our members share his sentiment that as journalists, not activists, we have a significant role to play as advocates for fair and accurate coverage of the LGBT community in the mainstream media," David Steinberg, president of the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association, said in a statement to Yahoo News. "We have worked hard to ensure that all journalists are comfortable being out in the newsroom and having it not be perceived as detrimental to their ability to do their job."
Cooper's announcement "helps us move 'what shouldn't matter' closer to 'what doesn't matter,'" actor Michael McKean tweeted.
"Anderson Cooper wasn't in the closet," Tina Dupuy wrote on Twitter. "He was in the none-of-your-business."
Not everyone, though, celebrated the manner of Cooper's announcement. Gawker Media chief Nick Denton, who is openly gay, tweeted: "Anderson Cooper: you seek 'visibility' and [yet] bury your coming-out announcement."
"Anderson Cooper would have come out of the closet sooner but being on CNN prevented him from accurately breaking a news story," joked Comedy Central's Indecision Twitter feed.
While Cooper is certainly the most prominent news personality to announce he's gay, he isn't the first—even at CNN. Last year, weekend and daytime anchor Don Lemon came out of the closet in a memoir titled "Transparent."