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Saturday, April 27, 2013

'Castle,' 'Bones,' 'The Good Wife,' 'NCIS': Find out what's next in the Spoiler Room

Spoiler-Room.jpg
Image Credit: Bob D’Amico/ABC; Eric Ogden/Fox; Justin Stephens/CBS
Happy finale season! We’re in the home stretch but before we all prepare for our post-TV season depression, let’s dig in to some scoop.
Have a question for next week? Send it to spoilerroom@ew.com or find me on Twitter@EWSandraG
‘CASTLE’: SHOULD CASTLE/BECKETT FANS BE WORRIED?
Aside from a few bumps along the way, this season of Castle has been filled with lots of joy for Castle and Beckett — the “honeymoon period,” as executive producer Andrew Marlow calls it. But will the May 13 finale bring an official end to this honeymoon?
“I think the finale’s goal is to ask some hard questions, and take a look at some reconceived notions and some assumptions that both characters may have that may or may not be accurate,” he elaborates.
Judging from the questions you fans sent in, though, I know there’s one question that’s been plaguing your minds: Should you be worried about Castle and Beckett’s relationship status. The answer? Well, it’s complicated: “I think whenever we go into a finale episode, of course, the fans should be worried about things,” Marlowe says. “But what we’re trying to do is find honest organic storytelling that’s more complicated than ‘should we be worried’ because I think ‘should we be worried’ implies a binary outcome — either X happens to Y happens and I think we’re trying to tell a lot more complicated story than that.”
I warned you. It’s complicated. Thankfully clarity is just around the corner, as are more teases from Marlow. Stay tuned.
‘BONES’: HOW BAD IS PELANT? WELL…
Think we’ve seen the worst from brilliant hacker Christopher Pelant (Andrew Leeds)? Think again.
In Monday’s season finale of Bones, the evil genius now has more tools at his disposal than ever before and will show just how much he can mess with the lives of our gang, “I think it’s emotional for everybody,” previews Emily Deschanel. “The victims — there may be multiple victims — have connections to the FBI and Booth and Booth…knows the victim well. So it’s a big deal.”
After stealing Hodgins’s fortune in a previous episode, we’ll find Pelant operatings from some very fancy new digs in Monday’s season ender and living with “no restrictions.” “He has unlimited capabilities at this point and that’s pretty terrifying when you think about a brilliant, evil person with all those resources,” she says.
But his most evil act of the episode? That one you won’t see coming. “It’s like the last few season finales where you really have to watch until the very last minute,” she teases.

Collected from :http://insidetv.ew.com
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Ascendant German Clubs Signal Shift in Continental Power

Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters
Robert Lewandowski, left, scoring one of his four goals in Borussia Dortmund’s 4-1 defeat of Real Madrid.
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Changes in the balance of power in Europe can take centuries, but when it comes to soccer, a revolution happened swiftly, in 180 minutes on the field. For the second consecutive day, a German club not only defeated but also thoroughly outplayed a Spanish one.
Goal
The Times's soccer blog has the world's game covered from all angles.
On Tuesday, Bayern Munich perhaps ended Barcelona’s reign as the world’s best team, with a 4-0 victory. On Wednesday, it was Borussia Dortmund — behind a brilliant four-goal performance by the Polish striker Robert Lewandowski — thatvanquished Real Madrid, 4-1.
The victories came in first-leg matches of the semifinals of the UEFA Champions League, the top club competition in the world. The return matches will be played next week in Spain, but unless Barcelona and Real Madrid, the two top teams in their domestic league, can conjure some magic, Dortmund and Munich are poised to play in the first all-German Continental final, in London’s Wembley Stadium on May 25.
There have been only three other single-nation finals: Real Madrid-Valencia in 2000, Milan-Juventus in 2003, and Manchester United-Chelsea in 2008.
Although the final is not yet set, the performance of the two German clubs is the culmination of a changing of the guard in Europe that began with the 2006 World Cup, which Germany hosted, and that has continued with prudent financial management of the clubs.
The teams play before diverse crowds in modern all-seater stadiums. Germany’s youth development system is second to none in the world.
Bayern Munich has won four European titles (1974, ’75, ’76 and 2001), and Dortmund one (1997). Real Madrid still has hope of winning a record 10th, and Barcelona is seeking its fifth — but those hopes are quickly fading.
 Collected from :http://www.nytimes.com
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Friday, April 26, 2013

AAPL: sweeter dividend, sour outlook

Apple (AAPL) will give shareholders $100 billion over the next two years by boosting its dividend 15 percent. Although AAPL beat earnings and revenue estimates for the quarter, it says revenue could fall this quarter. 

By Peter Svensson, AP Technology Writer / April 24, 2013
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A man leaves an Apple store with an iPhone and an iPad in his hands in central Beijing earlier this month. AAPL stock initially rose after the electronics manufacturer announced a higher dividend and a stock buyback program. But it pulled back after Apple suggested its revenue could fall this quarter, which would be the first time in many years.
Alexander F. Yuan/AP/File
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NEW YORK
Apple is opening the doors to its bank vault, saying it will distribute $100 billion in cash to its shareholders by the end of 2015. At the same time, the company said revenue for the current quarter could fall from the year before, which would be the first decline in many years.
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Apple CEO Tim Cook also suggested that the company won't release any new products until the fall, contrary to expectations that there would be a new iPhone andiPads out this summer.
Apple Inc. on Tuesday said it will expand its share buyback program to $60 billion — the largest buyback authorization in history. It is also raising its dividend by 15 percent from $2.65 to $3.05 per share. That equates to a dividend yield of 3 percent at current stock prices. The average yield for the 20 largest dividend-paying companies in the U.S. is 3.1 percent, according to Standard & Poor's.
Investors have been clamoring for Apple to give them access to its cash hoard, which ended March at an unprecedented $145 billion. Apple's tight grip on its cash, along with the lack of ground-breaking new products has been blamed for the steep decline in its stock price over the winter.
News of the cash bonanza coincided with the company's release of a poor quarterly outlook for the three-month period that ends in June.
Apple released its fiscal second quarter earnings after the stock market closed Tuesday. The company's stock initially rose 5 percent to $425 in extended trading, then retreated $2.63, or 0.7 percent, to $403.50 as the CEO talked about new products arriving in the fall.
The shares are still down 40 percent from a peak of $705.07 hit on Sept. 21, when the iPhone 5went on sale.
"The decline in Apple's stock price over the last couple of quarters has been very frustrating for all of us ... but we'll continue to do what we do best," CEO Tim Cook said on a conference call with analysts after the release of the results. But he reinforced that the company's job is not to boost its stock price in the short term.
"The most important objective for Apple will always be creating innovative products," he added.
Apple's results beat the consensus estimate of analysts who follow the company, though it posted its first profit decline in ten years.
Net income was $9.5 billion, or $10.09 per share, down 18 percent from $11.6 billion, or $12.30 per share, in the same period a year ago.
Revenue was $43.6 billion, up 11 percent from last year's $39.2 billion.
Analysts were expecting earnings of $9.97 per share on revenue of $42.3 billion, according toFactSet.
For the quarter that just started, Apple said it expects sales of $33.5 billion to $35.5 billion. In the same quarter last year, sales were $35 billion. Wall Street was expecting sales of $38 billion.
The June quarter is generally a weak one for Apple, since consumers tend to wait for the next iPhone, which the company usually releases in the fall. But a year-over-year decline is a signal that Apple is failing to capitalize on the continued growth of smartphone sales. Sales are tapering off in U.S. and other mature markets, and not many consumers in India and China can afford iPhones.
"Our fiscal 2012 results were incredibly strong and that's making comparisons very difficult this year," said Cook.
Apple shipped 37.4 million iPhones in the latest quarter, up 7 percent from a year ago. That confounded expectations that shipments might fall, but it was still a weak number compared to many previous quarters, when shipments doubled year over year. The average wholesale price of an iPhone also fell to $613 as Apple cut the price of its oldest model, the iPhone 4, to appeal to buyers in developing countries.
Apple started paying a dividend last summer and has been buying back a modest number of shares, enough to balance the dilution created by its employee stock option program but not to make a dent in its cash pile. The company says it's now expanding the buybacks, which started in October and are set to run till the end of 2015, from $10 billion to $60 billion. It's raising the quarterly dividend starting with the payment due May 16.
The company has faced continued pressure from Wall Street over the use of its cash, which earns less than 1 percent in interest. Investors reason that if the company has no better use for the money, it should be handing it over to shareholders. The company had said it was considering ways to use the money, and this year engaged in a public debate with a hedge fund manager who wanted it to institute a new class of shares to attract dividend-loving investors.
Paradoxically, cash-flush Apple will be borrowing money to support the buybacks and dividends. That's because two-thirds of its cash resides in overseas accounts. It doesn't bring the money into the U.S. because it prefers not to pay U.S. corporate income taxes on it. Instead, it will be using cash from U.S.-derived revenue and U.S. accounts, plus borrowed money.
Apple is effectively betting that the U.S. federal corporate tax rate of 35 percent — one of the highest in the world — will come down in the future, or that there will be a tax repatriation amnesty period, as there was in 2004.
When a company starts doling out its cash to shareholders, it's usually a sign that its growth is stalling and it's finding it hard to identify good ways to invest in its own business. But Apple is still growing fast by the standards of large companies, and its cash pile-up is a reflection of the extraordinary success of the iPhone.
Compared to its earnings, Apple's stock price is low. In buying Apple stock, investors are paying $9.20 for every dollar of Apple's annual net income. By comparison, they're willing to pay $24 for every dollar of Google's profit.
That suggests investors have concluded Apple will never again launch a revolutionary product like the iPhone or iPad. The commitment to bigger buybacks may reinforce that impression, said David Tan, a Georgetown University assistant professor of strategy who focuses on technology.
"How are we going to read into what this move says about Apple's long-term prospects?" Tan said. "Does this mean this is all that Apple has left to offer or is this just something temporary while we wait for the next big thing from the company?"
Investors have grown increasingly frustrated with Apple. The company has only been releasing updates to its existing line of mobile devices and computers since Cook became CEO 20 months ago instead of blazing technological trails as it did with the iPod's 2001 unveiling, the iPhone's 2007 debut and the iPad's introduction in 2010, said Lauren Balter, an analyst for Oracle Investment Research. At the same time, Samsung Electronics has been gaining market share with larger smartphone screens and other features while Google Inc. is creating a buzz with its own Nexus tablets. Google is also expanding into "wearable computing" with Internet-connected glasses that are expected to go on sale late this year or early next year.
"The market is tired of the same old thing at Apple," Balter said. "Investors are looking for innovation. The reality is that people are looking at other products now and they are looking at other cool features from competitors."
Apple is rumored to be working on a "smart" watch and a revolutionary TV set, but it hasn't confirmed that. On Tuesday's call, Cook sounded slightly more open to making an iPhone with a larger screen, saying merely that Apple would not ship a phone with a larger screen as long as that meant tradeoffs in other measures of screen quality, like brightness.
Cross Research analyst Shannon Cross said now that Apple has laid out plans for its cash hoard, investor focus will shift back to Apple's upcoming products.
"What I am hoping is now that we have gotten through this, people will start focusing a little bit more on the fundamentals," Cross said. "And I think the fundamentals this quarter showed that demand remains strong for their products. I don't think the Apple brand has been diminished at all, based on the numbers we have seen."


Collected from :http://www.csmonitor.com
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Will Smith and Son Talk Science of 'After Earth'


A new movie set for release in June shows Earth 1,000 years into the future. Will and Jaden Smith star in a movie directed by M. Night Shyamalan.

In the upcoming science fiction film "After Earth," our home planet goes through some serious changes over the next 1,000 years. So it's fitting that the film's stars, actor Will Smith and his son Jaden, would take some time to envision what the future of Earth might entail.
In a Google+ Hangout yesterday (April 23), the stars of "After Earth" joined SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, futurist Ray Kurzweil, Alexandra Cousteau and a group of students to discuss what the planet Earth might look like in the next millennium. The event, sponsored by Columbia Pictures, was billed as "After Earth Day" and came one day after the annual day to celebrate the Earth.

10 Signs Climate Change Is Already Happening

"It looks like great entertainment, but it raises some profound issues (about the future of the planet)," said Kurzweil, the director of engineering for Google and moderator of the discussion said of the movie. (See Photos of 'After Earth')
"After Earth" explores the relationship between a father and son — played by Will and Jaden Smith — after they crash-land on Earth 1,000 years into the future, after humans have deserted the planet to live in space. A "cataclysmic" event forced all humans to leave Earth, leaving the planet to be overrun by other, unfriendly species, according to a movie description released by Columbia Pictures. The film — directed and co-written by M. Night Shyamalan — launches into theaters in June.
"With this film it was such a perfect collision of art entertainment, education and a posing of fantastic questions," Will Smith said during hangout. "As an artist, this film does exactly what I always dreamed to be able to do with entertain and to also be able to pose interesting questions."
Smith went on to explain that shooting the movie helped him and his son start to understand how human activity influences the planet.
"I feel like I really saw some true beauty in the world after shooting in Costa Rica," said Jaden Smith. "After that experience, it really showed me how important it is to save the world."
Alexandra Cousteau, a filmmaker and granddaughter of Jacques-Yves Cousteau, also expressed her concern for the planet. She explained that the Earth today is in a vulnerable position, but by using technology and enthusiasm, a new generation can start to change the Earth for the better.
Elon Musk, the billionaire founder of the private spaceflight company SpaceX and chief of the Tesla electric car company, said he thinks that these issues could be motivation for humanity to start moving away from Earth and into space.

The Science and Fiction of 'Oblivion'

"I think we want to be a space-faring civilization," Musk said during the event. "Either we're a space-faring civilization or we're going to be bound to the Earth until some kind of extinction event (occurs)."
To Musk, the idea that humanity can leave the Earth to create a new human life elsewhere in the universe is "inspiring" and "exciting."
Other panelists were more interested in finding new and different ways to help combat the effects of global climate change.
"I have faith in our generation," one of the eighth graders said. "I think that we can help this earth. I'm sure we can (find a way to) not waste this planet and go to a different planet. I'm optimistic that we can save this planet and do the right things."

Craziest Environmental Ideas (That Could Work)

"After Earth" is set for release nationwide on June 7.
More from SPACE.com:
This article originally appeared on Space.com. Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Collected from :http://news.discovery.com
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Kate McKinnon: ‘SNL’ Star Does Hilarious Impersonation On ‘Ellen’

Thu, April 25, 2013 8:48am EDT by 3 Comments
Kate McKinnon Ellen Impression
Courtesy of Ellen

Worlds collided on April 24 when Kate, the best Ellen DeGeneres impersonator around, actually met Ellen — and it was amazingly funny. Watch the hilarious video below!

Kate McKinnon’s brightest moment as a cast member on Saturday Night Live has definitely been her impression of Ellen DeGeneres, so when Ellen had Kate on the show on April 24, we all knew something amazing was going to happen.

Kate McKinnon Breaks Out Her Ellen DeGeneres Impression

And we were not disappointed. Ellen, who clearly was not afraid of poking fun at herself, surprised Kate by giving her an identical outfit and begging her to put it on. Kate was totally game, changing out of her sexy dress (“I don’t dress like that too often anymore,” Ellen said) and going full Ellen.
The SNL star came out in the Ellen regalia, dancing (obviously) across the stage as the audience laughed and cheered. She then sat in Ellen’s chair and totally hammed it up. Her chair-squirming seemed to actually out-Ellen Ellen and made her step up her game as a funny talk show host.
“I’m vegan… I’m just kidding, I’m Ellen,” Kate said to huge applause.
Kate really nails Ellen’s quirky personality and her voice (and her penchant for dancing). Everyone must have been hoping that she would do her impersonation on Ellen, so it’s great that Ellen could be a good sport and embrace it all instead of fighting it. She’s obviously no diva, and Kate is just so darn good at the impression that it’s impossible to deny!
What do you think, HollywoodLifers? Watch the video below and tell us what your favorite part was!

Collected from : http://hollywoodlife.com
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Happy Administrative Professionals' Day! See Gwyneth Paltrow, Anne Hathaway and More Play Assistants

Anne Hathaway, The Devil Wears Prada, Onscreen AssistantsBarry Wetcher/Twentieth Century Fox
Hollywood stars to A-list assistants!
Some of our favorite celebs have taken up the iconic office role as personal assistants. Iron Man's Gwyneth Paltrow is the perfect gal with the fiery personality to deal with the demands of her overly confident boss Tony Stark. And we can't forget about fashion assistants Emily Blunt and Anne Hathaway, whose lives almost go up in smoke trying to please the highly critical Runway editor-in-chief Meryl Streep in the Devil Wears Prada.
In honor of Administrative Professionals' Day (shout-out to all of the hardworking assistants), check out our new photo gallery and see which other celebs you can find on the toes of their onscreen bosses!


Collected from :http://www.eonline.com
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Sara Gilbert engaged to Linda Perry, reveals singer's romantic proposal during picnic

‘The Talk’ co-host was moved by her girlfriend’s well thought out and extremely loving marriage proposal in the park that featured John Waite serenading Gilbert with the 1980s hit ‘Missing You’.




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	Actress Sara Gilbert (left) announced Monday she is engaged to musician Linda Perry after romantic surprise serenade during picnic in the park.

STEVE GRANITZ/WIREIMAGE

Actress Sara Gilbert (left) announced Monday she is engaged to musician Linda Perry after romantic surprise serenade during picnic in the park.

Sara Gilbert is engaged to marry girlfriend Linda Perry.
Revealing the news on Monday’s “The Talk," Gilbert, 38, described Perry’s romantic proposal during a picnic in the park.
“We go to a park, we have food and we’re eating it, it’s really sweet and there’s this guy sitting playing guitar, like a street musician,” she said. “He starts playing this song that we love … I’m like, ‘Oh, that’s so weird, this is so magical and amazing.’”
Little did Gilbert know that the romance was just beginning.
“So that ends, and she’s like, ‘Oh I’m gonna ask him to play this other song,’ but this other song is really obscure and this guy wouldn’t know it, but magically he knows it,” she continued. “And suddenly the people picnicking next to us pull out string instruments from under the blanket and walk over and they start playing ‘Love Song’ (by the Cure).”
Gilbert was shocked by what was happening with Perry, her girlfriend since last fall.
Perry then displayed four t-shirts with one word each, “Will. You. Marry. Me.” The fifth shirt she presented had a question mark and then she pulled out the ring.
To further add to the romantic gesture Perry told Gilbert to “turn around” and there stood their mothers and a couple of friends.
“So I think that’s it and it’s the most amazing proposal ever and then … this guy walks up and she’s like. ‘This is John Waite.’ And he starts playing ‘Missing You.’”
Who wouldn’t say yes to that?


Collected from : http://www.nydailynews.com

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