Archive for the ‘gossip’ Category

In Italy, a Mamma Accused of Doting Too Much

mollycoddle 1016 In Italy, a Mamma Accused of Doting Too Much

In the idealized picture of the American heartland, baseball, mom and apple pie feature prominently. The Italian version? Soccer, spaghetti and, yes, la mamma. But in recent years, the folkloric image of the doting Italian mother has been joined in the national consciousness by something a tad less idyllic: the mammone, or mama’s boy, the hyper-coddled son (daughters are statistically less susceptible) who grows up so attached to his home, and to his mamma in particular, that he never really becomes independent or a self-sufficient man.

The stereotype is not far off. A disproportionate number of Italian men enter their 30s — and in some cases their 40s — still completely reliant on their mothers to do their cleaning, cook their meals, iron their clothes and keep a roof over their heads. According to a survey published last year in Psychology Today, a full 37% of men from the ages of 30 to 34 still live with their mothers in Italy.
Still, the worst that these Italian mothers can usually be accused of is doting too much and not forcing their sons to grow up and do their own laundry. Now, but, in an extreme case that has made headlines across the nation, a court has been questioned to consider whether a mother’s like for her son — and that of his grandparents too — was so intense, it could be considered a form of child abuse.
The case centers on the overprotective mother and grandparents of a 12-year-ancient boy known only as Luca in the northern city of Ferrara. Prosecutors say the three built a wall of protection so high around the boy, it stunted his development. The boy’s mother and grandfather have already been convicted of child abuse and are appealing the verdict. The grandmother appeared before a criminal tribunal earlier this month to face a similar charge. All three defendants have denied any wrongdoing, and the child has remained in the mother’s custody while the case is being adjudicated.

According to the evidence presented by prosecutors, Luca was not allowed to play with other children, go to church, participate in sports or leave the house before or after school. The boy’s teachers said he was sent to school with his snacks already cut into bite-size parts for him. Investigators say the teachers noticed that he was both physically and psychologically stunted from such around-the-clock doting. "He didn’t know how to run. He had the motor skills of a 3-year-ancient child," Andrew Marzola, the lawyer representing the boy, told the Milan newspaper Corriere della Sera.
Considering the eternal debate in Italy over the country’s supposedly overly sheltered mammone, the case has garnered widespread publicity. But the boy’s plight doesn’t exactly fit in with the national stereotype of an overprotective mother and her son — it’s far messier than that. The parents divorced soon after the boy’s birth and the father claimed that he wasn’t permitted to see his son for nine years. Concerned about the child’s welfare, he finally contacted social services and prosecutors opened an investigation into the mother and grandparents.

Of course, parents who hover over their children, watching every go they make, are not limited to Italy. Modern society is producing ever more overinformed, overanxious and overprotective parents, blamed for causing or exacerbating all sorts of problems in their children, from learning disabilities to teenage anorexia. "If you don’t let your child learn the world, it can do real harm," says Henriette Felici-Bach, a child psychologist in Paris. "In these cases, the parent must be cured as well. If a mother is acting this way, it is because she is not well, she fears something that does not exist."
Felici-Bach specializes in what’s known as ethno-clinical psychology, which focuses on the effects of cultural origins on human development. She says there are very clear differences in the approaches to child-rearing from one country to the next. "In Germany, children are educated from early on to [do] a task on their own from beginning to end. In southern [European] countries, children are dependent on what people tell them to do. Southern societies have preserved an independent way of raising children, resisting the modern educational practices that encourage independence at an early age."
And Italy in particular? "It can be extreme," she says of a child’s attachment to casa and mamma. This extra-close relationship between Italian mothers and their children is thought to have its origins in the economic and political history of the country. For centuries, the Italian peninsula was a poverty-stricken place with weak governments, meaning that the family was the only source of protection and economic support for people. More recently, psychologists and economists believe the mammone problem is rooted in the economic precariousness of a debt-ridden nation that has been in gradual decline since its post–World War II boom. Religious values are still strong too. Until the 1960s, the Roman Catholic Church explicitly encouraged a family structure based around a working father and a stay-at-home mother.

According to Italian economists Enrico Moretti and Marco Manacorda, who have studied the phenomenon, the issue also comes down to culture. They’ve found that some Italian parents will really pay their grown children not to go out. "Italians, unlike parents from most other countries," Moretti says, "like living with their grown children." Felici-Bach’s experience with her Italian husband, though, is slightly different. Born and raised in Rome, he left home for excellent at 20. But, as it turns out, John Felici has an English mother.

In Italy, an Overprotective Mom Accused of Child Abuse – TIME

Star Jones’ tacky polish

star jones 102009 Star Jones tacky polish

angel-ball-star-jones.jpg

angel ball star jones Star Jones tacky polish

The winning pictures in the Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2009 contest

All these pictures are winners in The Veolia Environnement Wildlife Photographer Of The Year 2009 competition, organised by the Natural History Museum and BBC Wildlife Magazine.
The best 100 images in the competition will go on show from October 23 at the Natural History Museum in London – the venue for last night’s awards ceremony.
This year is apparently a bumper year with 43,135 entries from 94 countries – up 33 per cent on 2008.

article 1222063 06E8E3EA000005DC 426 964x630 The winning pictures in the Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2009 contest At first it looks like a pencil drawing. In fact, this impressive black cloud contains thousands of starlings, swerving and diving in panic as they avoid a marauding peregrine falcon. Photographer Danny Green used a slow-shutter speed to emphasise the swooping movement of the birds’ flight. The effect is extraordinary and shows Nature is the greatest artist of all

article 1222063 06E8DAC6000005DC 446 470x423 The winning pictures in the Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2009 contest
Enlargearticle 0 06E8E402000005DC 4 470x423 The winning pictures in the Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2009 contest
It took two freezing days for 16-year-ancient Fergus Gill to capture this remarkable picture (left) of yellowhammers fighting over a sheaf of oats and (right) a red ant sips from a raindrop, delicately balanced on a flowering common mallow petal, oblivious to Andras Meszaros and his powerful zoom lens

article 1222063 06E8E306000005DC 909 964x631 The winning pictures in the Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2009 contest Cats are highly territorial, but the one that photographer Igor Spilenok found standing up to a fox three times its size is courageous – even a small foolhardy

article 1222063 06E8DA74000005DC 667 964x852 The winning pictures in the Wildlife Photographer of the Year 2009 contest This wolf looks more like a spring-heeled horse as it leaps over a wooden fence with its two front paws clutched under its head in this remarkable action shot

The competition manager, Gemma Webster, said: "While the UK and the U.S. remain our major source of entrants, the greatest growth in entries is happening in China and Russia.
‘This year we had the first-ever entries from photographers in Bangladesh, Guatemala, Macedonia, Oman, Qatar, Tunisia and Bahrain, and we’ve had our first category winners from Estonia, Zambia and the Czech Republic.’

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1222063/Mother-natures-masterpiece-revealed-winning-pictures-Wildlife-Photographer-Year-2009-contest.html#ixzz0UcfrEtPC

Prudence the porker thinks she’s a dog

A sickly piglet who was saved from death by an animal rescue charity has befriended six dogs who helped raise her.
The real-life Babe the pig, who was born a runt, was due to be shot by owners until staff at the rescue centre took pity on her and adopted her.
The five-week-ancient piglet, called Prudence, made unlikely friends with a pack of six puppies at the centre and became one of the gang – even chasing sticks and curling up to doze with them.

Enlarge article 1221920 06E751CA000005DC 460 634x425 Prudence the porker thinks shes a dog
Paws for thought: Prudence with one of her new doggy friends

Rosie Catford, owner of Wildlives, which normally takes in sick and injured wild animals, said: ‘She was sick so we had to keep her near to the house during the day so we could keep an eye on her.
‘Before long she had become friendly with Henry the puppy.
‘When she first came in four weeks ago she was smaller than him, now she’s twice the size.
‘She likes to play with the dogs when she’s not foraging for acorns and hazelnuts. She jumps around and chases sticks just like they do. It looks quite ridiculous but it seems so natural to her.
‘And when they are worn out they all cuddle together and sleep in the meadow. It’s lovely to see.’
The unlikely friendship has echoes of Dick King-Smith’s novel The Sheep-Pig which became a hit go in 1995.

Enlarge article 1221920 06E751CF000005DC 309 306x430 Prudence the porker thinks shes a dog article 1221920 06E751C4000005DC 502 306x430 Prudence the porker thinks shes a dog
Prudence like nothing better than a game of fetch the stick, left. The porker plays with one of her canine chums

The charming tale follows Babe the pig’s quest to become a champion sheep dog for his owner Farmer Hoggett.
Prudence is a cross between a large white and a Duroc pig and is expected to live for up to 10 years.
Despite normally treating wild animals the playful porcine has become a favourite at the rescue centre in Thorrington, Essex, and will not be re-homed.
Mrs Catford said: ‘The volunteers felt so sorry for the piglet – I couldn’t really say no.
‘It was in a terrible state. It was the runt of the litter and it had terrible skin problems. A volunteer and I gave her a medicated bath. Well, the noise was incredible.
‘The volunteer is a Red Cap in the army and has been out to Afghanistan and Iraq. She said bathing the piglet was more noisy than the bombs going off there.
‘She was going to be shot and if not shot then slaughtered. But she’s here for excellent now. We literally saved her bacon.’

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1221920/We-saved-bacon-Real-life-Babe-pig-befriends-dogs-helped-raise-animal-rescue-centre.html#ixzz0UcfHHISA

Didn’t you know- Choice Kills!

choicekills Didnt you know  Choice Kills!

This is just, wow. I have no words. Ok, that’s a lie. I have one word: Bullsh*t. Make that two words: Hilarious bullsh*t.
This website aims to "expose choice as the killer it is".
How, you question?
Why, by selling T-shirts and bumper stickers with pictures of babies being stabbed by machetes, of course!
But don’t worry, that’s not the only technique this campaign is using to convince the world of how incorrect it is to give women autonomy over their own bodies. They’ve also made a mascot- That’s right folks. Meet Judy, the talking embryo. All she wants is to "get out of here alive." Unfortunately, a machete (the abortionist’s tool of choice, don’t ya know) enters and puts an end to that dream. The fate of the woman whose cartoon stomach has apparently just been stabbed with a machete is left unclear.
There are a billion things incorrect with this picture- the absence of recognition of a woman’s personhood being one of them- but the most egregious in my mind is the cheesiness. I mean, as Chloe points out, can we at least have a small creativity? Some alliteration or something? Can I get an Emilia the Embryo?

Additionally, the "testimonies" from the models are hilariously fake, as evidenced by the tiny disclaimer after the fake comments and pics:

"*typical comments from typical young women but not necessarily these models"

Vomit. Next time you’re going to launch a campaign against women’s autonomy, maybe you should consult some real women first.

Didn’t Ya Know- Choice Kills! – Feministing

Vivienne Westwood Wallpaper

Vivienne Westwood, the grande dame of anarchic fashion, has designed a wallpaper collection for Cole & Son. Its 12 patterns are based on prints and weaves from Westwood’s fashion collections. Shown here on the cape is Dogtooth, which the designer drew by hand (and, on the cape’s lining, the quintessentially Westwood Tartan). On the dress and hat is Cut-Out Lace. Each comes in various colourways and costs £55 per 10m x 52cm roll (020-8442 8844; cole-and-son.com).

p interiors westwo 1486685i Vivienne Westwood Wallpaper
wall Vivienne Westwood Wallpaper
wall2 Vivienne Westwood Wallpaper
wall3 Vivienne Westwood Wallpaper
wall4 Vivienne Westwood Wallpaper

Milla Jovovich Ads For Donna Karan