Thursday 21 June 2012

Katy Perry Opens Up About Russell Brand Divorce - MTV UK

Katy Perry Opens Up About Russell Brand Divorce - MTV UK

K-Pez claims the breakdown of their marriage was 'overwhelming'...

Katy Perry has broken her silence on her divorce from Russell Brand.

Speaking to The Hollywood Reporter ahead of the release of her new 3D concert movie Part Of Me, the 27-year old reveals the difficulty she faced as a result of her 14-month marriage to Brand coming to an end.

K-Pez tells the publication: "There were times when what was going on in my personal life was so overwhelming that I had to bend over to let those tears fall straight out of my eyes and not my false lashes just as I'm about to go up on that ramp and sing Teenage Dream.

“I had to smack myself across the face and say, ‘These problems are my problems, they are not my audience’s problems, learn to separate that.’”

She went on to state that it's impossible for anyone else to know what went on inside her brief union to the British comedian, claiming: "Nobody knows what really happened except the two people who are in it."

Part of her vision for the movie was to document her relationship with Russell as it crumbled just as her career was launching into the stratosphere with a record-breaking string of hit singles from Teenage Dream.

That kind of honesty was in keeping with her heart-on-sleeve method of writing songs, with Perry explaining: "Honesty has always worked for me ... so if it ain't broke, why f***ing fix it?"

After putting up $2 million of her own money to make Part Of Me a reality, Perry and her team are expecting the movie to have an opening to rival Justin Bieber's Never Say Never, which earned over $30 million first weekend.

First, though, she had to convince her nervous business manager that it was worth dropping the cash to film her November 2011 concert at Los Angeles' Staples Centre in 3D.

"I was like, 'Please trust me,'" Katy says she told him. "That's kind of been the mantra I've said to everyone my whole life: 'Trust me, I have a vision.'"

In the same interview, the Wide Awake singer also revealed plans to start her own record label, stating: "When it does come to fruition, I'm going to try and avoid the things that take away any fighting chance for an artist to have financial success,"

"As people are coming to me with opportunities, I'm thinking, 'How would I want to be treated?'"

CHECK OUT 101 OF KATY PERRY'S FAMOUS LOOKS HERE!

SEE SEXY PICS OF KATY PERRY HERE!

Watch MTV News on the hour every hour on MTV - Sky Channel 126 and Virgin Channel 311


Source: www.mtv.co.uk

Katy Perry Breaks Silence On Divorce - MTV

Katy Perry has been mum on the details of her divorce
 from Russell Brand. But in a new cover story in the Hollywood Reporter Perry gives a peek into the difficulty she faced in the split, as well as her plans to launch her own record label.

"There were times when what was going on in my personal life was so overwhelming that I had to bend over to let those tears fall straight out of my eyes and not my false lashes just as I'm about to go up on that ramp and sing 'Teenage Dream,'" she said. Speaking in advance of the release of her 3D concert documentary, "Katy Perry: Part of Me,"
 the 27-year-old pop singer said it's impossible for anyone else to know what went on inside her brief marriage to the British comedian. "Nobody knows what really happened except the two people who are in it."

Part of her vision for the movie was to document her relationship with Brand as it crumbled just as her career was launching into the stratosphere with a record-breaking string of hit singles from Teenage Dream. That kind of honesty was in keeping with her heart-on-sleeve method of writing songs and she said, "Honesty has always worked for me ... so if it ain't broke, why f---ing fix it?"

After putting up $2 million of her own money to make "Part of Me" a reality, Perry and her team are expecting the movie to have an opening to rival Justin Bieber's "Never Say Never" $30 million first weekend. First, though, she had to convince her nervous business manager that it was worth dropping the cash to film her November 2011 concert at Los Angeles' Staples Center in 3D. "I was like, 'Please trust me,'" she said she told him. "That's kind of been the mantra I've said to everyone my whole life: 'Trust me, I have a vision.'"

That same vision came into play in the recently released video for "Wide Awake," which Perry wrote for the film and which ends with a shot of her triumphantly ascending to the stage during her smash California Dreams Tour. Regardless of how the movie does, the relentlessly driven Perry has other business ventures in mind, including launching her own record imprint. Her as-yet-unnamed label will help give struggling artists a hand up in the same way that some music industry folks took a chance on Perry early on. "When it does come to fruition, I'm going to try and avoid the things that take away any fighting chance for an artist to have financial success," she said. "As people are coming to me with opportunities, I'm thinking, 'How would I want to be treated?'"

Check out everything we've got on "Katy Perry: Part of Me."


Source: www.mtv.com

Kent lose out to Essex in thrilling style - Kent News

Last over drama sees Spitfires lose by three runs

Kent looked on course for victory over rivals Essex in the t20 until a collapse of wickets led to a thrilling run chase in the final overs.

Essex hit 158 for 6 in their 20 overs, which wasn’t an unreachable target.

And Jimmy Adams’s side looked on course for victory until the 17th over, when they were 118 for three, but Greg Smith took five wickets in two overs as Kent could only add another 37 runs, falling just four short of victory in the final over.

A six-run penalty against Essex for a slow over-rate moved Kent’s chase closer but with four needed to win off the final ball, Graham Napier bowled last man Mark Davies.

Kent were initially on the backfoot on 23 for two with David Masters taking the wickets of Rob Key, and Azhar Mahmood early on. Sam Billings and Brendan Nash shared a fourth-wicket stand of 54 in seven overs to steady the ship.

But then came Smith’s contribution, first he took Billings for 59, and Nash in successive deliveries. Then Geraint Jones went for one, and Sam Northeast, after two sixes, and Matt Coles were also dismissed.

With Kent needing four runs to win on the final ball Davies was bowled by Napier.

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    Source: www.kentnews.co.uk

    Former council boss receives £590,000 in one of the biggest local authority payoffs after twenty months in job - Daily Mail
    • Former chief exec had led major shake-up of the way the county council was run
    • Council has now dished out more than 600,000 to pay off last two chief execs
    • Authority has paid out 10.08m in 'exit packages' to staff made between 2011-2012

    By Andrew Levy

    |


    Big pay out: Former Kent County Council chief executive Katherine Kerswell who has received a 420,000 pay out from Kent County Council

    Big pay out: Former Kent County Council chief Katherine Kerswell got a 589,165 pay off from Kent County Council

    A council chief who lasted just 20 months in her job was given a 589,165 pay-off, the local authority has been forced to admit.

    Katherine Kerswell left Kent County Council in December.

    The council had refused to disclose details of the settlement, saying it was subject to a confidentiality agreement. But it was forced to declare the sum under new transparency rules on executive pay.

    Its Conservative administration insisted at the time that her departure was part of a cost-saving reorganisation. But there was also speculation she had fallen out with colleagues and councillors.

    It is thought to be one of the highest ever remuneration packages for a council manager, and is more than four times the Prime Minister’s 142,500 salary.

    The statement of accounts for 2011-12 revealed that Mrs  Kerswell, 49, received 139,806 of her 197,000 salary, 420,000 in redundancy payments and a 29,359 pension contribution.

    Robert Oxley, campaign manager of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said the council had shown ‘scant regard’ to value for taxpayers’ money.

    He added: ‘Councils may have a legal requirement to make a redundancy pay-out, but this is staggeringly excessive.

    ‘Councillors need to scrap the overly generous contracts that make these deals possible before any more money is blown on gargantuan redundancy pay-offs.’

    Expensive business: Kent County Council headquarters. A total of 10.08million has been paid in 'exit packages' to staff between 2011 and 2012

    Expensive business: Kent County Council headquarters. A total of 10.08million has been paid in 'exit packages' to staff between 2011 and 2012

    Mrs Kerswell had a 197,136 salary in her previous job as chief executive of Northamptonshire County Council. She had defended the pay deal by saying it was equal to only 29p for each person in the county.

    She was also lampooned at the time for her ‘Taste the Strawberry’ campaign – management speak that was meant to represent the overall ‘flavour’ of the council’s services and help it to improve its performance.

    She moved to Kent in March 2010 and oversaw a shake-up of the way the county council was run under its ‘Change To Keep Succeeding’ programme, which involved a cull of senior directors.

    Kent County Council, which needs to make savings of 97million this year, paid out 10.8million in so-called ‘exit packages’ to about 1,000 staff in 2011-12. This included 172,000 to the authority’s former finance director, Lynda McMullan, who left in September last year and now works for the National Audit Office.

    History: The council gave the chief executive who Ms Kerswell replaced a 200,000 pay off

    History: The council gave the chief executive who Ms Kerswell replaced a 200,000 pay off

    Council leader Paul Carter said: ‘Removing chief executive posts is what more and more councils should be doing.

    ‘Employment law and contractual obligations mean we have to pay significant redundancy costs, but it will save a fortune in the long run. Our council is now being guided by officers who have worked their way up and know what life is like from a Kent taxpayer’s perspective.’

    Last year it emerged that Phil Dolan, the former chief executive of South Somerset District Council, which has just 162,000 residents, had received a redundancy package of almost 570,000.

    The transparency rules which forced the council to reveal Mrs Kerswell’s pay were introduced by the Coalition government.

    Local Government Minister Grant Shapps last night criticised Mrs Kerswell’s pay deal as ‘deeply concerning’. He said: ‘I find dipping into the public purse to make such an eye-watering pay-off unacceptable.’

    Here's what other readers have said. Why not debate this issue live on our message boards.

    The comments below have not been moderated.

    Every local council authority anywhere in the world is just another name for ratepayer funded public trough, only available to the snouts of council pigs.

    What had she done to have been paid off is such a manner? Come on let's have the full story!

    This stinks - this greedy parasite is leeching off the rest of us, as a reward for her incompetence. I wonder where she'll turn up next. Can we please be told which elected officials were involved in this decision, so that we can sack them (without a payout) at the next election.

    i wonder how many day centers have closed due to lack of money ,how many library places closed due to lack of funds ect and this woman gets a golden pay off of just short of half a million pounds?time to stop these abusive contracts,why not have a roll on contract of a year and no pay offs for failure just reward another year for success,and due to the amount of wages they get they should organise their own pension,time for tax payers money going into public needs not council greeds.

    I meant to say. I had done 27 years.

    I may have missed it but how do you get such a huge redundancy payout after such a short time?. I got made redundant from a private sector company about a year ago. In addition to the government minimum I got 2 weeks for each year of service. It amounted to about 2 years salary. As it bearly got over £30k I didn't pay much tax on the payment. I trust these people are paying 40%.

    Councils need to be regulated more closely! You only need to type into youtube 'hell flat st albans' and see the 4 videos of the flat I am supposed to be living in. It's uninhabitable and they won't even help me with the cost of the hotel we are staying in. :(

    What a waste of space this woman has proven to be.........Only in the public services could such rubbish receive a reward for a complete and utter failure during her tenure. No wonder we as a country are both morally and financially bankrupt.

    BACK TO THE BOTTOMLESS PIT AGAIN!

    To make matters worse, many go on to other public sector posts immediately after pocketing obscene pay-outs.

    The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of MailOnline.

    We are no longer accepting comments on this article.


    Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

    Kent State must wait another day - Boston Herald

    OMAHA, Neb. — Opposing coaches in the College World Series have had nothing but positive things to say about Kent State.

    But the Golden Flashes refuse to let go of the chip on their shoulders that has carried them through an unprecedented run in the NCAA Tournament.

    Even on Tuesday, senior shortstop Jimmy Rider hoped South Carolina would still be upset about its 2-1 loss Monday to Arkansas and overlook KSU.

    "I hope they’re looking to get that Arkansas rematch," Rider said after practice at Bellevue East High School.

    Kent State (47-19) was scheduled to take on two-time defending champion (46-18) South Carolina in a College World Series elimination game Wednesday night at TD Ameritrade Park. Due to heavy rain, the game was postponed and rescheduled for noon on Thursday. If Kent State wins, the Flashes will play again at 9 p.m. against Arkansas.

    Kent State coach Scott Stricklin probably doesn’t want to correct the Golden Flashes’ perceived slight by college baseball’s superpowers. Of the teams KSU has faced in Omaha, Arkansas was making its seventh trip to the CWS, Florida its eighth and South Carolina its 11th.

    "It’s tough for that team to play against us," Kent State center fielder Evan Campbell said Tuesday, referring to South Carolina. "They’re used to playing the Floridas and the Arkansases, they’re not used to playing Kent State. We get really pumped up to play teams like that and they’re kinda like, ’Kent State?"’

    A Mid-American Conference team hadn’t reached the College World Series since Eastern Michigan in 1976.

    Since the NCAA Tournament began, Kent State has eliminated Kentucky (Southeastern Conference), Purdue (Big Ten) and Oregon (Pac-12), lost to Arkansas (SEC) and ousted Florida (SEC).

    Kent State’s next game will mark the Golden Flashes’ second consecutive game against an SEC foe and fifth in nine NCAA games, including two against Kentucky in the Gary, Ind., regional. KSU will have faced four of the top six seeds in the SEC Tournament รข€" the No. 2 Gamecocks, No. 3 Gators, No. 4 Wildcats and No. 6 Razorbacks. (LSU was No. 1.)

    "They’re a powerhouse conference," Campbell said Tuesday of the SEC. "People underestimate the MAC a little bit, we get overshadowed by the Big Ten and schools like that. It shows the caliber of players we have."

    Before Stricklin’s team left for a best-of-three super regional series in Eugene, Ore., he was playing up the "Nobody believes in us" angle. The Golden Flashes were coming off a 7-6, 21-inning victory over Kentucky, a 7-3 triumph over Purdue and a 3-2 victory over UK in the Gary regional.

    "Kentucky showed us nothing but respect, but they still kind of felt like big brother looking down at little brother," Stricklin said after a practice at Kent State earlier this month. "Even if it wasn’t there, our kids felt like that and wanted to make sure we’re not going to get pushed around.

    "Anyone who saw our games with Kentucky would tell you talent-wise it was the same. Both of those games could have gone either way. They played good; we played good."

    Stricklin got the same vibe against Purdue.

    "Purdue won the Big Ten by a large margin," Stricklin said that day at Kent State. "Everyone that saw that game, and it was on the Big Ten Network, saw that we were the better team. That was very satisfying, not only as a coaching staff, but for our players. We felt we were, but to go out there and do it and prove it, it felt really good."


    Source: www.bostonherald.com

    Kent Spitfires suffer narrow defeat to Essex Eagles in Friends Life t20 - Kent Online

    Rob Key bowled against Essex

    Rob Key bowled by David Masters for five                 Picture: Barry Goodwin

    Kent Spitfires suffered a dramatic three-run defeat against Essex in Friends Life t20 South at Chelmsford on Wednesday night.

    Mark Davies gave Kent a perfect start, accounting for Mark Pettini, however James Franklin (39) and Graham Napier (20) led the recovery before James Foster made a swashbuckling 51 off 27 balls - including four sixes and two fours.

    He eventually fell to Matt Coles in an over which saw the Kent man go for 24 runs, including eight off a single delivery when a no-ball was despatched for six.

    After piling on 53 runs in the final four overs, Essex posted 158-6, with Coles claiming 2-46 in his four overs.

    Former Kent bowler David Masters accounted for Rob Key (5) and Azhar Mahmood (0) in successive deliveries as Kent reached 61-2 at the halfway stage.

    However Sam Billings amassed a fine 59 off 55 balls, and shared a stand of 54 in seven overs with Brendan Nash (26) as Kent reached 118-3 at the start of the 17th over before proceeding to lose their last seven wickets for the addition of 37 runs.

    Medium-pacer Greg Smith was the tormentor in chief, claiming 5-17 including the scalps of Billings and Nash in consecutive balls.

    Sam Northeast clubbed two sixes to keep the visitors in touch and Kent were boosted by a six-run penalty against the hosts for a slow over rate.

    Kent needed 17 off the final over, and a six from Adam Ball gave them hope, however needing four from the final delivery, last-man Davies was bowled by Napier.

    It was just the second defeat of the season in all competitions for Jimmy Adams’ men, while it was the first t20 win of the year for Essex.

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    Source: www.kentonline.co.uk

    Wealthy lawyer parents who 'planted POT in car of PTA president in attempt to get her jailed after she locked their son out of tennis lesson' - Daily Mail

    By Emily Anne Epstein

    |

    A couple of California attorneys were arrested on Tuesday for allegedly planting a bag of drugs in the car of the president of their child's Parent Teacher's Association at the Plaza Vista Elementary School.

    Irvine police said that Kent Wycliffe Easter, 38, and Jill Bjorkholm Easter, 38, conspired to frame Kelli Peters by putting Vicodin, Percocet, marijuana and a used marijuana pipe behind the front seat of her car.

    The duo sought revenge on Mrs Peters because of a longstanding feud over their son, according to police, and resorted to extreme measures to get her fired - and imprisoned.

    Their feud is said to date back two years when Mr Kent filed a civil complaint after Ms Peters - then a school volunteer - for allegedly locking his son out of the school for 20 minutes during an after-school tennis lesson, according to the Los Angeles Times.

    Scroll down for video

    Charged: Irvine police said that Kent Wycliffe Easter, 38, right, and Jill Bjorkholm Easter, 38, left, conspired to frame Kelli Peters by putting Vicodin, Percocet, marijuana and a used marijuana pipe in her car

    Victim

    Victim: The duo sought revenge on Mrs Peters, pictured, because they believed the woman wasn't properly supervising their son, according to police, and resorted to extreme measures to get her fired - and imprisoned

    A tennis instructor found the boy 'crying and alone', according to the complaint. Mrs Peters allegedly said she locked the boy out because he took too long to line with other children.

    The feud then seems to have intensified after Mrs Easter was asked by the school board not to take the matter to police. 

    Mrs Easter then got a retraining order against Ms Peters, claiming that she was harassing her son and had even threatened to kill her. She claimed that Ms Peters 'will stop at nothing to silence my son' and had been calling him psychotic and unstable to other parents.

    'She is stalking me and attempting to intimidate me at my son's school and while I run errands in Irvine,' she alleged.

    Police said that on February 16, 2011, the Easters enacted a plan to get rid of Mrs Peters.

    Just after midnight, police claim Kent Easter sneaked over to the home of the Mrs Peters, who was identified by KTLA, and placed the drugs inside her unlocked vehicle in plain sight, where it would be easily visible from outside the vehicle.

    Later that day, Kent Easter assumed a fake name and phone number and reported to police that he was a 'concerned parent who had witnessed an erratic driver park at the elementary school,' officials said.

    He identified Mrs Peters by name, claimed he witnessed her shoving a bag of drugs into her car and even read out her license plate, police said.

    Kent and Jill Easter were allegedly in constant contact with one another throughout the escapade, texting and calling each other in between every move.

    'This was obviously something [the Easters] had sought out and planned with the intent of having her arrested,' Farrah Emami, a spokeswoman for the Orange County district attorney's office, said to the Los Angeles Times.

    Out

    Out: Police said that on February 16, 2011, the Easters enacted a plan to get rid of Mrs Peters, who was the Parent Teacher's Association president at the Plaza Vista Elementary School, pictured

    But when officers arrived at the parking lot and saw the bag of drugs, they asked Mrs Peters to search her vehicle. She complied, but was shocked at what they found.

    'I thought I was on a joke show, like someone was playing a joke on me,' Mrs Peters told KTLA.

    'I thought I was on a joke show, like someone was playing a joke on me.'
    Victim, Kelli Peters

    Regardless, she was detained for two hours while police conducted an investigation.

    They quickly determined that the woman was in a classroom during the time she was supposedly stuffing drugs in her car.

    After that, the focused in on the Easters, who had tried to sue Mrs Peters twice before, but the cases were dismissed.

    'They tried to make me look like the worst person you could be when you’re involved with a school,' Mrs Peters told KTLA. 'I just don't understand it.'

    Police said they obtained footage from a security camera near Kent Easter's work in Newport Beach while he was calling to report on Mrs Peter's 'erratic driving.'

    Accomplices? Kent and Jill Easter were allegedly in constant contact with one another throughout the escapade, texting and calling each other in between every move

    Party's Over

    Party's Over: Kent and Jill Easter were arrested on Tuesday and charged with conspiring to prompt a false arrest, false imprisonment, and conspiracy to falsely report a crime

    'I wouldn't have seen my daughter again,' Mrs Peters said, thanking the police for being so thorough.

    'Those are the nightmares that I had.'

    Kent and Jill Easter were arrested on Tuesday and charged with conspiring to prompt a false arrest, false imprisonment, and conspiracy to falsely report a crime.

    If convicted, they face a maximum sentence of three years in state prison. They were released on $20,000 bail each and neither returned the MailOnline's request for comment.

    Here's what other readers have said. Why not add your thoughts, or debate this issue live on our message boards.

    The comments below have been moderated in advance.

    sounds like the police handled the situation well.Mr and Mrs Perfect werent perfect after all.

    I wish someone would leave these items in my car for free

    When government lawyers do this, they get away with it.

    How do you spell disbarment?

    Maybe they should have put their son in a private school and ignored her??? Lot less humiliation and embarrassment

    With parents like that the kid probably needed to be left outside for twenty minutes to be taught a lesson. He was probably laggin' around being a smart alleck and she taught him a lesson.

    Somebody is going overboard with the Botox.

    Guilty lawyers and law-enforcers should automatically receive double the sentence for proving their contempt for the law.

    To Serea.... commenting on his looks.....handsome is as handsome does!!

    Always wipe your feet before LEAVING a lawyers office so you do not contaminate the street.

    The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of MailOnline.


    Source: www.dailymail.co.uk

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