Sunday, November 10, 2013

Venezuelan Crowned Miss Universe 2013

As she was crowned Miss Universe 2013, TV host of Venezuela to commemorate the victory of the seventh race of the South American countries, smiled on Saturday.

Gabriela Isla over with the full name Maria Gabriela de Jesus Morales Isla over defeated participants of 86 to win the crown of the diamond. Presenter who is at Venevision of Venezuela, wine was born in the United States, topped at the age of 25 Last year's winner, Olivia.

“I have a lot of emotions. I can’t describe all the things that I feel at this moment because I’m shaking,” she said.

Isler was announced in the Sunday $ 1 million worth special swimsuit.

Friday, November 8, 2013

CMA Awards 2013: Miranda Lambert shows off slimmed-down frame

The 29-year-old singer stunned on the red carpet at Wednesday's Country Music Awards and took home the trophy for Female Vocalist of the Year.


Miranda Lambert shows off her stunning weight loss from last year's CMAs. 

Miranda Lambert is slimmer and sexier than ever!
The 29-year-old country crooner wowed on the red carpet at the Country Music Awards in Nashville on Wednesday.
PHOTOS: CMA AWARDS 2013: TOP RED CARPET LOOKS AND SHOW MOMENTS
Lambert, who is married to fellow country singer Blake Shelton, showed off her slimmed-down frame in a Roberto Cavalli brilliant blue beaded gown.
"I have been working a lot!" the blond starlet told E! News about how she shed some pounds. "Working out and drinking juice and just running, running around."
Miranda Lambert accepts the award for Female Vocalist of the Year, her fourth, at the CMAs on Wednesday in Nashville, Tenn.

WADE PAYNE/WADE PAYNE/INVISION/AP

Miranda Lambert accepts the award for Female Vocalist of the Year, her fourth, at the CMAs on Wednesday in Nashville, Tenn.

PHOTOS: HOLLYWOOD'S WEIGHT BATTLES
"You know what, I fluctuate all the time in my weight  -it's really annoying-but I'm going to be 30 in like four days, so I'm like, 'I need to get ahead of this thing!' Because they say when you hit 30 it doesn't get easier," she continued.
"So I thought, 'Well, you know, if I get a little healthier before I turn 30, maybe I can get ahead of the game.'"
"My wife is so hot it's ridiculous," Shelton, 37, tweeted from the award show.
Lambert later took home the award for Female Vocalist of the Year for the fourth time in a row, while her husband won for male vocalist, also for the fourth time.


Largest Civil Disobedience In Walmart History Leads To More Than 50 Arrests


Surrounded by about 100 police officers in riot gear and a helicopter circling above, more than 50 Walmart workers and supporters were arrested in downtown Los Angeles Thursday night as they sat in the street protesting what they called the retailer's "poverty wages."
Organizers said it was the largest single act of civil disobedience in Walmart's 50-year history. The 54 arrestees, with about 500 protesting Walmart workers, clergy and supporters, demonstrated outside LA's Chinatown Walmart. Those who refused police orders to clear the street after their permit expired were arrested without incident. Those who fail to post $5,000 bail would be jailed overnight, Detective Gus Villanueva, a Los Angeles Police Department spokesman, told The Huffington Post.
Their primary demand to Walmart: pay every full-time worker at least $25,000 a year.
One of the protesting Walmart workers, Anthony Goytia, a 31-year-old father of two, said he believes he will make about $12,000 this year. It's a daily struggle, he said, "to make sure my family doesn't go hungry."
"The power went out at my house yesterday because I couldn't afford the bill," Goytia told HuffPost. "I had to run around and get two payday loans to pay for my rent from the first" of the month. "Yesterday we went to a food bank."
To make ends meet, Goytia said he sometimes participates in clinical trials and sells his blood plasma. He has been asking his managers for full-time employment for a year and a half. Instead, he said, they hire temporary workers, who can be fired at any time.
Goytia was one of several dozen Walmart workers in Southern California who went on strike Wednesday and Thursday, calling for an end to low wages, unpredictable part-time hours and retaliation for speaking out. They were joined by other employees on their days off and dozens more who rode buses from Northern California.
The strike, protest and arrests are the latest in a series of worker actions across the country coordinated by OUR Walmart, an advocacy organization with ties to the United Food and Commercial Workers Union. The strike and protest in Los Angeles this week are the first in what organizers said would be a series of protests leading into the holiday shopping season.
The protesters said Walmart can afford to pay every worker at least $25,000 a year -- pointing to Walmart's $17 billion profit from the latest year and the founding Walton family's fortune, which equals the wealth of the bottom 42 percent of American families.
Walmart CEO Bill Simon disclosed in a presentation recently that 475,000 Walmart workers are paid more than $25,000 a year. That leaves 525,000 to 825,000 Walmart workers earning less than $25,000. House Democrats seeking to boost the federal minimum wage from $7.25 to $10.10 per hour have criticized Walmart for its low wages.
Walmart invited HuffPost to speak to a couple associates working in the Chinatown store during the protest Thursday. In the presence of a consultant working for Walmart, two employees -- Do Nguyen, 29, and Aldo Hernandez, 55 -- said that they are treated well at Walmart. Nguyen, who has worked for Walmart for almost a year, said that asking for a minimum of $25,000 is "a national issue, not a Walmart issue."
Hernandez, who has worked for Walmart for almost five years, said he gets good health benefits through Walmart and doesn't struggle to support himself and his son. Both Nguyen and Hernandez declined to say how much they make.
Kory Lundberg, a spokesman for Walmart, said that the company has hundreds of thousands of associates who earn $25,000 or more and that others have the opportunity to do so.
"There are unparalleled opportunities at Walmart," Lundberg said. "We're going to be promoting 160,000 associates this year. That’s larger than the total workforce of most companies out there."
"Folks can come in as entry level or whatever level they're at and can work up as far as they're willing to go," Lundberg said. "That's one of the things we're proudest of."
After working full time at Walmart in Paramount, Calif., for 10 years, Martha Sellers, 55, makes $25,400 a year. In the last few years, she said, her managers have been cutting her weekly hours, sometimes to as few as 12 hours a week.
With that income, she said, she has to pay her rent in pieces. "If I pay all my rent at one time, then I have $12 to live on and put gas in my car until I get paid again," Sellers, who attended Thursday's protest, said.
"I have a very nice neighbor who lends me money. But then the next month, I'm short again," Sellers said. "I never get caught up."
LA's Chinatown Walmart, about one-fifth the size of the company's regular stores,opened in September despite thousands of Angelenos protesting it during the summer. It is the retailer's first store in central LA.
In October 2012, for the first time in Walmart's history, some workers went on a one-day strike, even though Walmart jobs have never been protected by a labor union. More than 70 LA Walmart workers from nine stores walked off the job, followed by over 80 Walmart workers walking off the job in a dozen other U.S. cities.
Last year, through online organizing, OUR Walmart coordinated strikes on Thanksgiving and Black Friday in 46 states and 100 stores. The actions put a spotlight on the world's largest retailer during one of the biggest shopping periods of the year. Walmart had its best Black Friday ever, according to the company.
Regarding associates being required to work earlier on Thanksgiving, Lundberg said, "Folks understand that when they come to work for Walmart, that we're a 24-hour store, and Thanksgiving is one of those days that we serve our customers."
Sellers went on strike on Black Friday last year and said she plans to do so again this year. "Walmart claims to be a family-oriented company," she said. "But where's the family time? They took away Easter too.
"Where is the American economy going if we're all working poverty wages?," Sellers said. "There will be no working class. We'll all be in a poverty class."

Thursday, November 7, 2013

So Far, So Good for Twitter



Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange called out orders for shares ofTwitter for the first time Thursday morning as one of Wall Street’s traditional rituals thrust the young company into the public markets.
On its inaugural day of trading, Twitter managed to avoid the missteps that marredFacebook’s initial public offering last year, though Twitter’s lofty stock market valuation added pressure on the company to turn a profit soon.
After being priced conservatively at $26 a share on Wednesday night, Twitter’s stock eventually began trading at $45.10 about 10:30 a.m. In its first hours on the market, the stock — trading under the ticker TWTR — rose as high as $50.09 a share before settling around $46 by midafternoon. Twitter’s shares closed at $44.90, 73 percent above its I.P.O. price but slightly below the opening figure.

“This is a giant poker game,” said Lawrence E. Leibowitz, chief operating officer of NYSE Euronext, as traders and bankers set the opening price in the minutes before Twitter’s stock began trading. “It will be a bit volatile, but it’s a very exciting deal.”Despite a smooth start to trading, Twitter is sure to face continued scrutiny as it works to justify a valuation of $31.7 billion to investors sensitive to the nuances of quarterly earnings reports.
Twitter executives entered the New York Stock Exchange building in Lower Manhattan on Thursday morning as a light rain fell, and the usual mix of tourists and financial workers mingled outside, some snapping photos of the giant Twitter banner draped over the neo-Classical-style building’s facade.
Inside, the floor of the exchange was unusually busy. An hour and a half before the opening bell, traders had staked out positions and a gaggle of reporters had assembled under the bell podium. Twitter’s bird logo was emblazoned on screens and posters throughout the exchange, and even plastered on the hardwood floors.
The first surprise of the morning came as Twitter’s entourage — led by the company’s chief executive, Dick Costolo; the chief financial officer, Mike Gupta; the co-founders Jack Dorsey, Evan Williams and Biz Stone; and the lead Goldman Sachsbanker on the offering, Anthony Noto — appeared not on the podium but on the trading floor below.
Ringing the bell in their place was an eclectic selection of Twitter users: the actorPatrick Stewart; Vivienne Harr, a 9-year-old girl who opened a lemonade stand to raise money to end child slavery; and Cheryl Fiandaca, the head of the Boston Police Department’s public information office.
In an interview after the bell-ringing, Mr. Stewart confessed he had been using Twitter for only a year and did not intend to buy the stock.
“I’m not a financial person at all and nobody should take my word as a good reason for investing in anything,” he said. “But it is a brilliant organization, and the impact it has worldwide is so extraordinary, and furthermore, it’s free.”
Even after other stocks on the Big Board began trading, however, Twitter shares were held back for more than an hour as the so-called price discovery process got underway.
The process, unique to the N.Y.S.E., allows an experienced market maker to gauge demand from both buyers and sellers, who shouted out tentative orders in a crush of traders in the middle of the exchange floor.
The aim was to zero in on a final opening price, reducing the sort of volatility that hampered Facebook’s debut on Nasdaq. Twitter’s designated market maker wasBarclays, and for more than an hour a representative from the bank set a number of price ranges, as low as $40 a share and as high as $47.
During this time, institutional investors who had placed orders with Twitter’s underwriters were being notified what allocations they received. Some were allocated fewer shares than they requested, while others received their full allocation. Those who did not receive the full amount placed new orders, driving the price up.
After more than an hour of price discovery, Twitter’s stock finally began trading.
Though somewhat arcane in the era of high-frequency trading, the N.Y.S.E.’s price-discovery process is one of the features that distinguishes it from crosstown rival Nasdaq, a purely electronic exchange.
“It’s great we have the human element to control it rather than the computer system at Nasdaq,” said Ryan O’Day of Rosenblatt Securities, one of the traders on the floor.
The offering was a significant victory for NYSE Euronext in its long-running competition with Nasdaq for premier stock listings. The N.Y.S.E. has regularly attracted more total listings than Nasdaq, but Nasdaq has been more popular and has long been identified with technology companies. Facebook, Google, Apple andMicrosoft all trade on Nasdaq.
But this year, for the first time, N.Y.S.E. has drawn a majority of technology listings, according to data from Thomson Reuters. After Thursday, the exchange was responsible for more than 70 percent of the money raised by technology companies.
Nasdaq has been losing influence in the start-up world in part because of a series of technology malfunctions. The most noteworthy was Facebook’s scrambled I.P.O., which turned a celebratory day sour and led to tens of millions of dollars in losses. More recently, in August, a computer problem shut down trading in all Nasdaq stocks. That happened soon before Twitter chose the N.Y.S.E. over Nasdaq.
The Big Board went to great lengths to ensure that it did not suffer a similar fate when the deluge of orders for Twitter came in. It held a trial I.P.O. on a Saturday morning in October and strenuously reviewed its systems.
Despite the long price-discovery process, traders on the floor applauded the smooth start to trading.
“The auctioning process really worked here today,” said Mark Otto, managing director for the broker J. Streicher & Company. “They took their time to make sure that the price was right. They gave all participants the opportunity to really react to the ranges that were sent out.”
Mr. Noto, the Goldman banker who led the I.P.O., expressed relief once trading was underway with a tweet that read simply “Phew!”
But some stock analysts were already cautioning that Twitter was overpriced. Soon after the stock began trading, Brian W. Wieser of Pivotal Research, who had a price target of $30 on Twitter before the shares began trading, downgraded the stock to sell.
“With a price that pushes into the high 30s and beyond, Twitter is simply too expensive,” he wrote in a client note. To justify the opening price of $45.10, Mr. Wieser said Twitter would have to report more than $6 billion in annual sales by 2018, compared with the roughly $600 million expected this year.
NYSE Euronext executives said that as long as shares did not fall below the price of the first trade, the day would be viewed as a success. “Everyone will be really happy as long as it closes above the open,” Mr. Leibowitz said. By that small measure, the I.P.O. did not succeed, with shares closing just below the price of the first trade.
But by raising billions of dollars for the company and pulling off a relatively smooth first day of trading, Twitter, its bankers and its exchange have little to complain about.
After the stock had been trading for some time, Twitter’s team assembled outside the N.Y.S.E., braving a pelting rain to have their picture taken in front of the exchange.
“It’s a proud day for the company,” Mr. Costolo said. “But we have a lot of work ahead of us.”
Nathaniel Popper and Vindu Goel contributed reporting.

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