Sunday, May 31, 2009

Bolt heading for Manchester

Usain Bolt will take part in the Bupa Great City Games 150 metres street sprint on Sunday.

His coach Glen Mills has confirmed the Olympic sprint star will appear there.

Bolt's participation was in doubt when he was involved in a road traffic accident on April 29 and underwent minor surgery to have some thorns removed from his left foot.

The 22-year-old, who won gold in the 100m, 200m and 4x100m relay at the Beijing Games last summer, returned to light training last Friday and after progressing well over the weekend was set to undergo a track session tonight.

"He will run in spikes for the first time this evening but looks OK and will be fine for Manchester," confirmed Mills from their Kingston base.

IAAF Golden League - Zurich

The innovative 150m race will see him race against top British sprinters Marlon Devonish and Simeon Williamson in Manchester's city centre.

Bolt, a keen Manchester United fan, is looking forward to meeting the team at their training ground and has promised to give Cristiano Ronaldo a sprinting lesson in return for a signed shirt.

He is also due to be presented on the Old Trafford pitch during the half-time interval at Saturday's match against Arsenal.

Bolt will also attend the Manchester United Players Awards on Sunday night where he will present the fans' player of the year prize.

Federer squeezes through in Paris

Second seed Roger Federer recovered from going a set down to beat home favourite Paul-Henri Mathieu.

The 13-time grand slam champion posted a 4-6 6-1 6-4 6-4 victory on Philippe Chatrier court and will next play Tommy Haas for a place in the quarter-finals


2009 French Open - Day Seven

Everything turned out well for the world number two but initially he took his worrying form from his second-round clash with Jose Acasuso into today's match.

Against Acasuso, Federer faced set points in the first three sets, eventually coming good to win in four.

Here, he was broken in the match's seventh game to go 4-3 down before producing an unreturnable serve to save a set point in the ninth game.

Mathieu, the 32nd seed, was not to be undone and he took his second set point with an ace down the middle on a second serve.

Federer, bidding to claim his first Roland Garros title, was more like himself in a 25-minute second set and he broke twice to level things up.

He squandered five break points in the seventh game of the third set but grabbed the key advantage when he broke to love in game nine to go 5-4 up.

He took the set the very next game at the second time of asking when Mathieu sent a forehand wide.

The pair exchanged early breaks at the start of the fourth set but Federer was not to be stopped, earning another to run out the winner in two hours and 46 minutes.

America Gets It Wrong: Kris Allen Wins 'Idol'

Hello, readers...I can't believe I'm actually typing these words--in capslock format, yet--but here goes...

KRIS ALLEN IS THE NEW AMERICAN IDOL.

Now, my regular readers know I am extremely crushed--CRUSHED!--by this news. I might have been rooting for Bo Bice in season 4 and Blake Lewis in season 6, but their respective defeats were much easier for me to take (and much more expected) than this shocking setback.


Adam Lambert was my unabashed early favorite the instant I saw aviral video of him glamming and hamming it up in a Hollywood rock band wearing vaccum-packed pleather pants and some sort of bizarre man-corset. Back then, I jadedly assumed he wouldn't even make the top 13, because his theatrical antics--along with those much-discussed Interweb JPEGs of him floating around--would likely alienate much of America. But soon it seemed like none of that "scandalous" stuff mattered much to the viewing public, and Adam subsequently kept getting voted through based on his TALENT.

I started to believe that there was a subtle cultural shift going on in this country. I mean, if a black, Democratic president could be elected in 2008, then surely a black-nail-polished, androgynous Idol could win in 2009, right? Yes he could!

Well, that did not happen. In perhaps the biggest upset inAmIdol history, the competition's darkest dark horse, the little contestant that could, the tortoise to Adam's hare--Kris Allen--took home the Idol title tonight.

But you know, maybe it wasn't such an "upset" after all. Maybe it was foolish of me to think that a copiously mascara'd, leather-sheathed, rock-operatic free spirit from Southern California could actually beat out a clean-cut, happily married church worship leader from Arkansas who kind of looks like Joey from Friends.

Then again...maybe Adam's defeat had NOTHING to do with any sort of liberal/conservative, guyliner/guy-next-door cultural divide after all. Maybe it was just all the over-the-top weekly hype surrounding Adam that created an unfortunate but inevitable backlash--especially the judges' blatant favoritism, which even I will admit was a bit much and would have bothered me a lot if I hadn't so wholeheartedly agreed with the judges or personally found Adam so uniquely deserving of such fawning. But perhaps Lambertmania turned off a lot of other voters, or made voters assume that Adam didn't "need" this victory as much as underdog Kris did.

Whatever the reason, I don't want Allen fans to think I have anything against Kris. I believe Kris is talented and authentic, and I'mglad he made it to the finale instead of any number of other contestants (like Danny Gokey, Lil Rounds, Scott MacIntyre, Anoop Desai--but NOT Allison Iraheta, whom I adored). I think Kris was a worthy opponent for Adam. I justdon't think he deserved to WIN.

I honestly think America (or, more specifically, America's Danny Gokey fans, who possibly defected to Kris's side after Gokey left and effectively bridged that million-vote gap between Adam and Kris) got it very wrong here.

I will just take solace in the fact that a) Adam Lambert will get a record deal anyway; b) not winning may allow Adam to have more creative control over his debut album, and thus he'll release more genuinely freak-flag-flying material; c) Adam won't have to release that insipid "No Boundaries" as his first single; and d) Adam will probably outsell Kris in the long run.

Feel free to post your comments about the season 8 winner now, and let me know if you think Adam was robbed or if the right singer prevailed tonight.

Miley Cyrus, Don't Let This Happen To You

Miley Cyrus needs to chill out. Just 16 years old, she's already acting like she's a stuck-up, erratic diva. She's pouting about not being granted access to Radiohead at the Grammys (best thing Radiohead ever did). She thinks she's got enough to say to write a memoir (a teenager writing an autobiography? WHAT?). Plus, she's dating "Nashville Star" flunky Justin Gaston, who is 20 years old (isn't that illegal, even in Nashville?). 

Miley needs to step back and remember the scores of stories from superstars who let success go to their heads. These are the singers who became divas and started thinking the world revolved around them and that they could do whatever they wished without recrimination. 

But every diva gets ditched sooner or later, and you're no exception, Miley.  So remember humility, or do I need to remind you that your dad is the dude who recorded "Achy Breaky Heart"? By the way, the flipside of that single is a song called "I'm So Miserable." A coincidence? I don't think so.

Why Susan Boyle Lost 'Britain's Got Talent'

First Adam Lambert, now Susan Boyle. Both have become victims of the megahype machine. It seems the British population is no more tolerant of having a talent show contestant rammed down its collective throat than the American viewership is.

Before you read on, here is the final Britain's Got Talentperformance that earned Susan second place:

Yes, you read that correctly: SECOND PLACE. This weekend, Susan Boyle--the dowdy, "never been kissed" 48-year-old Scottish singer who'd been Britain's Got Talent's frontrunner and biggest media darling since she first startled Simon Cowell with her performance ofLes Miserables' "I Dreamed A Dream"--shockingly lost on BGT. Even more surprisingly, she didn't even lose to the show's other two frontrunning vocalists, 10-year-old singing ballerina Hollie Steel and 12-year-old soul sensation Shaheen Jafargholi, but to a dance troupe called Diversity that had received far less attention (at least on thisside of the pond).

Perhaps so much insta-hype is never a good thing for any talent competition voted on by the public, in any country. In America, ubiquitous Lambertmania--the fawning judges' praise, the premature pre-finaleEntertainment Weekly cover story, that Katy Perry "Adam Lambert" cape--may have turned off AmIdol voters who felt their free will was being snatched away and they were being told whom to like and whom to vote for. Or at the very least, Idol viewers just might have suffered Lambert fatigue before the American Idol season was even over. And in the case of Susan Boyle and Britain's Got Talent, the situation was even worse, especially given the sensationalistic nature of the U.K.'s notorious tabloids.

Pretty much all of Britain's eyes--and soon after, thanks to the Interweb, the world's eyes--were focused on Susan from the moment she opened her mouth and shocked everyone by proving that (gasp!) a somewhat unattractive person could actually have vocal talent. Apparently such a novel concept--in this age of impeccably air-brushed but only marginally talented pop stars--blew the minds of Brits and Yanks alike. But Susan also touched an international nerve with her Cinderella story, because at the heart of all these talent shows--from American Idol to X Factor, from America's Got Talent to Britain's Got Talent--is the inspirational idea thatanyone can be a star. The ugly-duckling fairytale of overcoming lowered expectations, and then proving all naysayers wrong, is indeed universal.

But it was all too much, too soon. The BGT semi-finals hadn't even started, and yet even people without satellite dishes who had no access to the actual show (other than via grainy YouTube clips) already had nothing but Boyle on the brain. The tabloids and blogs lurched into overdrive: Had shereally never been kissed? Was she going to undergo a makeover? What did she look like as a young girl? What did her newly hired bodyguard look like? Heck, what did her cat Pebbles look like? Almost immediately, Boylemania reached its Boyling point, and within a couple weeks the fickle public was sick of hearing about her and had moved on to other watercooler topics--like Shaheen Jafargholi, or the Octo-Mom, or the swine flu, or Jon & Kate, or even Adam Lambert. And yet, Britain's Got Talent was still far from over.

The backlash was inevitable, especially considering that--unlike thick-skinned seasoned showbiz pro Lambert, who seemed to handle his media blitz with ease--a small-town shut-in like Susan was hardly well-equipped to deal with such scrutiny. As the countdown to theBGT finale neared, the seemingly sweet-natured Scot, unaccustomed to living her life in the public eye, began to undergo an unfortunate public meltdown that seemed likely to hurt her chances of pulling off her once-expected landslide victory. She nervously hit some pitchy notes during the BGT semi-finals, and then reportedly freaked out at London's Wembley Plaza Hotel in front of 150 shocked viewing-party guests after watching BGT judge Piers Morgan rave about Shaheen Jafargholi. Rumors soon swirled that Susan might succumb to the pressure and quit the show altogether.

Piers then angrily defended Susan on his blog, ordering Susan's detractors to leave her alone. "She has been in tears many times during the last few days...she's had to read stories and columns, and listen to radio and TV phone-ins, calling her arrogant, insincere, spoiled, fake, mad, and so on," he wrote. "Susan Boyle has never experienced anything like this and is like a frightened rabbit in headlights...Anybody who has gone through that transformation is going to be feeling the most unbelievable pressure. You could see the nerves almost crippling her on the semi-final show and I just think it's time that everyone slightly backed off."

But of course, in this media age of instant celebrity, no one EVER backs off. So even more and more pressure landed on Susan's rounded shoulders, and British bookmaker William Hill subsequently lowered its odds for Susan to win after the reports of her expletive-riddled behavior came to light. The Susan Boyle rags-to-riches-to-rags saga seemed especially accelerated in this case. This was certainly a different kind of stardom than she might have dreamed of when she was a young girl, performing in little local talent shows that were not broadcast to the entire planet.

However, to her credit, on the BGT finale night Susan surprisingly rose to the occasion like a Lambert-esque pro. By all accounts her reprise performance of "I Dreamed A Dream" was a stunner (again, see video above), as she sang with unexpected confidence in a shimmering evening gown and appeared, according to the AP, "more polished and animated than in previous performances." And even when she lost out to Diversity, she handled herself well, sweetly curtsying to the audience and giving her trademark hip shake rather than suffering the amateurish breakdown some cynics and bookmakers may have expected.

So perhaps, despite dreaming a dream and losing, Susan has already grown a thicker skin. Perhaps this will serve her well and she will indeed have a legitimate career ahead of her, and not just become another 15-minute YouTube footnote. But while she and Adam Lambert may seemingly have little in common musically, there is one lesson that both Brits and Americans can take from these contestants' respective defeats: When it comes to televised talent competitions, viewers don't always believe the hype.

The Sims 3: Will it live up to the hype?



It dwarfs Warcraft, frags Halo and steals Grand Theft Auto's thunder. At over 100 million total copies sold,The Sims is the best-selling PC franchise ever.

Sims 3

A new beginning, or more of the same?

But with genes like that, a new entry has enormous pressure to keep the ball rolling -- which is exactly what The Sims 3 hopes to do when it storms store shelves next week. So, can the game really live up to its enormous hype? We took a nearly-finished copy for a test drive (literally, thanks to its wide selection of vehicles), and found out.

New for this version, the game's Create-A-Sim mode lets you customize the appearance of your Sim in a way that will probably be familiar to players of EA Sports titles, but with the addition of quirky personality traits. Want to create a kleptomaniac, child-hating, neurotic couch potato, and move him into a neighborhood full of rich families? Of course you do, and now you can.

But The Sims 3 also offers your creations a selection of larger life goals: simple, everyday dreams. Dreams like becoming the head of an international crime syndicate, or a master chef, or the leader of the free world. The ability to produce ever more unlikely Sims is a real draw for Sims fans, and it's looking like The Sims 3 will continue to feed this desire. Plus, we'd bet our monitors that the range of life goals and personality traits will increase dramatically thanks to the inevitable deluge of Sims 3 game expansions.

Once you're done dreaming up your Sim, you'll see game's most noticeable improvement: a fully dynamic town. This means that when one of your Sims wanders outside your house to go to work, visit the library, go shopping, or drop in on a neighbor, life doesn't stop for the others. And it all happens with none of the loading pauses that plagued fans of Sims past.

In fact, you can browse around the whole town, taking in sights like the park, the run-down criminal hideout, or the flashy, futuristic science lab up in the hills. Your town comes prepopulated with Sims, and there's a healthy selection of vehicles, from cheap jalopies to status-symbol sports cars, to help you get about to meet them. The new system genuinely works, too; you feel like a part of the town's ecosystem, and even exploring its various destinations will take hours. It's yet another logical avenue on which EA will undoubtedly expand.

One consequence of the new town system is that instead of just disappearing off to work for a day, your Sims now have workplaces that appear as regular buildings on the map. You don't get to see inside them, but you can still influence the way your Sim spends his or her work day. You can opt to suck up to the boss, for example, and hopefully gain a promotion, or pick up a side job to make a little extra cash. You can even coast through the work day stress-free, but don't expect to catch the boss's eye that way.

Thanks to imaginative efforts like this, The Sims 3's movie creation and editing tools are also getting plenty of press. They weren't functional in our pre-release version, but judging from the footage that's already out there, we'll be seeing an avalanche of fan-produced soap operas and sitcoms appearing on video-sharing sites within days of release.

So will it live up to the hype? Reactions from critics won't be in until early next week, but all indications are that EA's onto another best-seller, and our impressions certainly don't disagree. It's looking like the Sims are once again in safe hands.

The Royal Wii


Buzz up!

The Nintendo Wii has positioned itself as the gaming console for everybody. As it turns out, that includes the Queen of England. Well, sort of. It's not like Her Royal Highness went down to Wal-Mart and bought one with her summer job savings. Rather, she was given a special version by gaming company THQ.

The Royal Wii

Wii are definitely amused.

What makes the Queen's "Royal Wii" different? It's gold-plated, sucka! None of that lame white plastic forBuckingham Palace — the Queen needs her bling! Gaming blog Joystiq reports that the gaming company is hopeful that the PR stunt "will amuse Queen Elizabeth."

Meanwhile, Geek.com writes that the gift is actually meant to build awareness for the upcoming game, Big Family Games. An ulterior motive? What?!? As the geeks put it, "for a game that is meant to include the whole family from kids to grandparents what better family to send it to than The Royal Family in England."

According to Game Revolution, Big Family Games is a collection of mini-games, including "golf, tennis, ladder golf, lawn darts, horseshoes, bocce," and more. So far, search interest is rather scant. However, should the Queen declare her love for the gift, expect the title to get a right honorable boost in the Buzz. Silly as that sounds, it's not out of the realm of possibility -- according to insiders, she was "addicted" to playing Prince William's Wii last Christmas. Now she'll have one of her own.

Kimora Lee Simmons, Djimon Hounsou Welcome a Boy

Story photo: Kimora Lee Simmons, Djimon Hounsou Welcome a Boy
Mark Von Holden/WireImage
Us Magazine
Kimora Lee Simmons
 and actor Djimon Hounsou have welcomed their first child together.

Simmons took to her 
Twitter page to confirm the news. She wrote, "It's a boy! Thanks to everyone out there for all your well wishes! More to come. Thank God. And God Bless! Kimora + Djimon Love & Light, KLS"

No baby name was announced.
a
Simmons, 34, has two daughters, Ming Lee, 9, and Aoki Lee, 7, with hip-hop mogul 
Russell Simmons, whom she divorced in 2008 after nearly 10 years of marriage.

See more stars who are expecting

"I have a lot of hang-ups in life with men. I'm not very trusting," she told
Harper's Bazaar last year. "After my breakup, I thought, 'I don't need anything.'"

Check out the biggest celeb baby bumps of all time

But after meeting Hounsou in February 2007, she said, "I have someone who has the heart, the soul, and the hotness."

Added Hounsou , "My first impression has always been the same, that she's a very beautiful lady, very capable and intelligent and smart with great family values. She's the least high-maintenance lady I've ever dated."

Check out Hollywood's most romantic couples

Asked if she wanted more kids, Simmons previously told Us, "I would love to. I practice everyday."

Boyle faces the music, takes 2nd in reality show

Story photo: Boyle faces the music, takes 2nd in reality showLocals gather at Blackburn, Scotland, community center to watch Susan Boyle on TV during the final of 'Britain's Got Talent' on Saturday May 30, 2009. (AP Photo/PA, David Cheskin)Associated Press

LONDON - She may not have won, but unlikely singing star Susan Boyle showed she could face the music.

The 48-year-old church volunteer defied naysayers who doubted her place in "Britain's Got Talent" and gave a polished performance that earned her second place in the finals Saturday night, behind a dance troupe called "Diversity."

It was unlikely to be the end of Boyle's showbiz dream, however, as she told Boyle told broadcaster ITV she hoped to release an album and would "play it by ear" in her new music career.

Boyle, with her show-stopping voice and frumpy appearance, became an Internet phenomenon after she auditioned for the television talent show.

For the finals, she returned to the song that made her a YouTube sensation, "I Dreamed a Dream" from the musical "Les Miserables." She wore a glamorous but modest sparkly floor-length dress, and her once-grey frizzy hair was a soft brown halo.

"A lot of people said you shouldn't even be in this competition, that you weren't equipped to deal with it,"Judge Simon Cowell told Boyle after her performance. "You had the guts to come back here and face your critics, and you beat them."

The past week had been tumultuous for Boyle. She lost her cool during a confrontation with two reporters, and the police intervened. Another contest judge said Boyle had contemplated pulling out of the program to soothe her frazzled nerves.

Millions voted by telephone after Saturday's live show, which Boyle had long been expected to win.

Her hometown of Blackburn, Scotland — a working-class village about 10 miles (16 kilometers) west of Edinburgh — rallied round her, stringing up signs declaring their support. Her defeat was greeted with shouts of "no" and gasps of disbelief at the Happy Valley Hotel, where neighbors and friends had gathered to watch the program.

"She lost because people didn't bother voting for her because they thought she was going to win it," lamented 21-year-old Gordon Mackenzie. "I didn't vote for her because I thought everyone else would."

Boyle was up against a host of everyman acts determined to find stardom on reality television, including a 12-year-old whose voice was compared to Michael Jackson's, an 11-year-old body-popping dancer and a grandfather-grandaughter singing duo.

Winning group "Diversity" are a 10-person dance troupe who range in age from 12- to 25-years-old. Their act won praise throughout the competition, but they weren't seen as front-runners. Their victory earned them 100,000 pounds ($159,000), and the right to perform for Queen Elizabeth II at the Royal Variety Showin December.

Boyle's entree into the limelight has become reality-show history, after being viewed millions of times — the fifth-most watched clip ever on YouTube.

She introduced herself on camera as someone who lived alone with her cat, Pebbles, and had never been kissed. Those details, combined with her matronly appearance, had sent the studio audience into titters.

But then she began to sing. And as Boyle hit a high note, Cowell's eyebrows rose along with her voice.

Victoria Beckham takes quake lessons

London, May 31 (IANS) Former Spice girl Victoria Beckham has been so shaken by the recent tremors in Los Angeles that she is taking lessons with her family in a simulator to learn how to deal with earthquake.

Victoria and her husband-cum-soccer star David Beckham's mansion is on the Newport-Inglewood Fault, a 47-mile rock fracture caused by shifts in the earth's crust. The singer is now making her family take precautionary lessons to escape a future calamity, reports dailymail.co.uk.

'Victoria and the boys had a lesson in a simulator when she moved to Los Angeles, but she didn't realise the tremors would be so regular... She's now asked David to come back from Italy and take another class with her. She's definitely having second thoughts about staying there long-term,' said a source close to the singer-turned-fashion designer.


Thoranai - Movie Review



Thoranai - Movie Review
behindwoods

Thoranai has a very simple story, the kind that used to be very popular in Hindi cinema during the 70s, the tale of long lost brothers reuniting. However, the basic plot that has been made into a movie many times does not automatically mean that Thoranai is not worth a watch. The makers have their intentions in the right place; to make a full length entertainer with minimum fuss. Also, the fact that this theme had been cast aside for quite a few years makes its comeback a bit interesting. The real question is whether Saba Ayyappan has managed to weave a good commercial mix around this simple premise or not.

Geetha has two sons. Influenced in the wrong way, the elder of the two does something inappropriate that really angers his mother. In a fit of rage she inflicts physical punishment on him. Hurt both physically and mentally, the boy runs away from home. Years later, his younger brother (Vishal) decides to come to the city in search of him, to take him back home. But, the city is not friendly to him. He runs into trouble with the local dons of the place (Prakash Raj and Kishore). But he is not the sort of man to lie down and take all the sticks that are being thrown at him and he hits back. In addition to being at loggerheads with him, the two local dons are fighting against each other for primacy in the area. Unwittingly, Vishal gets caught up in this race to get the better of the other. He is literally caught between the devil and the deep sea. But, there is a big surprise/shock waiting for him in this tussle. He accidentally discovers what he had originally set out for. Into this setting enters Lal, as an honest policeman. How Vishal puts it across the dons, how he finds out his brother (who is his brother?) and persuades him to come back home forms the story.

In the midst of the dons and the brothers, the director has made space for a romance track and a comedy track too. The comic scenes, handled by Santhanam, Paravai Muniamma and Mayilsaamy should be able to impress sections of the audience. But it is tough to appeal across the board to all people. Certain scenes evoke laughter, like the spoof on the yesteryear duet featuring Santhanam and Muniamma. There had been a lot of talk about how Vishal was going to try his hand at comedy in Thoranai. But, barring the scene where he dresses up as Lord Rama and performs a gag to escape from a tight situation, there is nothing else. Even that scene does not have the desired impact. But, it is the romance that fails to leave any impression whatsoever. The chemistry between Vishal and Shriya is totally non-happening. The movie for a large part keeps oscillating between the main plot and the side tracks, frequently interspersed by songs which prevent the central theme from gaining momentum. That is the major drawback of the Thoranai. That apart, the key scene where Vishal identifies his brother could have been better. Also, the means of identification is fetched straight from the annals of cinema (birthmarks, family songs and other similar things). Vishal is his usual self in Thoranai. The script doesn’t give him the scope to exhibit his skills in comedy. The dons, Prakash Raj and Kishore have walked through their roles with ease. Prakash Raj especially has done similar roles a huge number of times, so there is nothing new on offer. Apart from the main comic stars, there is also M.S. Bhaskar who appears as Prakash Raj’s sidekick and induces a few laughs. Shriya unfortunately is there just for the songs and the glamour. This statement is a bit clichéd but the actress has done nothing else since the days of Sivaji.

Technically, Thoranai is a decent fare. Priyan’s camera has captured a few good visuals, especially in a couple of songs ‘Pattuchcha’ and ‘Vaa Chellam’, the locations are scenic. Music by Mani Sharma is middling. The fights have come out well, as in most Vishal films. Overall, Thoranai is a film that has been made with the right intentions; to entertain. Quite apparently there has been a conscious effort to incorporate all regular commercial elements to appease the masses. Debut director Saba Ayyappan (also in charge of story and screenplay) has not made full use of a great opportunity. Thoranai does entertain, but a tighter script and better execution could have yielded far better results.

Meira Kumar | Girja Vyas | Meira Kumar and Girja Vyas in Race of Lok Sabha Speaker

Meira Kumar | Girja Vyas | Meira Kumar and Girja Vyas in Race of Lok Sabha Speaker 


Meira Kumar | Girja Vyas | Meira Kumar and Girja Vyas in Race of Lok Sabha Speaker

Will we have first Female Speaker in Lok Sabha.

Earlier Pratibha Patil became First Female President…

Jai Ho… Women Empowerment

Tags: Girja Vyas, Girja Vyas in Race of Lok Sabha Speaker, Girja Vyas to become Lok Sabha Speaker, Lok Sabha Speaker, Meira Kumar, Meira Kumar in Race of Lok Sabha Speaker, Meira Kumar to become Lok Sabha Speaker, Race of Lok Sabha Speaker, Women Empowerment 

Africa - Land of Rising Athletics Stars

runners1They have come and gone with records that are still to be broken, much has been gained by the many impoverished African states that have produced some of the best runners in the world. Why then does the continent produce some of the best runners if they have more pressing issues to address such as war, famine and many more in the war-torn continent? The people are more on the lean side of humanity with more muscle pound per pound compared to people from other nations. Africans have evolved into some of the best runners in the world not only to show off their raw and pure talent at sports but to show off the prowess of their nation and the continent whom they represent. They want to hear their fellow athletes on the top instead of the dismal news of conflict here and there which makes them proud of being who they are.
Compared to other athletes, these people train under the most extreme environments that would cause many of our own people to quit long before they have ever gotten warmed up. The extreme temperature may have cooked out the fat in their body leaving tough and powerful tissue that is well suited for the sport. More power to you people as you carry your countries into the 
record booksbecoming heroes of your people and the world.