Thursday, April 30, 2009

Adam Lambert in the Bottom Two????

American Idol Results: Adam Lands In Bottom 3, Pigs Fly, Hades Freezes Over, Etc.
Posted Wed Apr 29, 2009 7:24pm PDT by Lyndsey Parker in Reality Rocks
As tonight's American Idol results show kicked off, sourpuss Simon Cowell summed up last night's Rat Pack-themed episode in a most un-Simon-like manner: "Everybody was good."
Yes, such across-the-board praise was very uncharacteristic of him, but Simon is usually right, and he was right in this case for sure. Everyone was good last night. (Especially Adam Lambert. Duh. But--SPOILER ALERT!--more on Adam later.) All five contestants had excellent material to work with on Rat Pack Night--there's a reason songs like "My Funny Valentine" and "Someone To Watch Over Me" have stood the test of time, after all--and they all crooned their classic tunes extremely well. Even Danny Gokey impressed me, and my regular readers know that when it comes to Danny, I'm not usually too easily impressed!
So there was no obvious clunker last night, no standout cringe-inducing performance that had "elimination" written all over it. Therefore, whoever went home tonight, it would be a "shocker" of sorts.
But I had no idea how shocking tonight's results show would truly be.
So Ryan Seacrest started tonight's elimination process by setting Allison Iraheta and Danny Gokey to one side, and Kris Allen and Matt Giraud to the other. This left season-long frontrunner and my personal favorite Idol contestant of ALL eight seasons, Adam Lambert, standing all by his awesome lonesome in the middle, being put in that unfair and uncomfortable position of having to choose which two he thought he deserved to stand with.
Being awesome, Adam naturally chose to join last night's two awesome-est singers, Allison and Danny. Duh!
Except...he was wrong.
People, I hope you're sitting down as you read this next sentence: Adam Lambert, along with Matt and Kris, WAS IN THE BOTTOM THREE TONIGHT.
No, dearest readers, that was not a typo. Today was not Opposite Day. The producers of Punk'd had not invaded the American Idol set. For some reason that will forever remain as mysterious as the origins of Stonehenge or the evolutionary order of the chicken and egg, viewers were apparently not feelin' Adam's "Feeling Good" performance last night, and they put Adam in the bottom.
At this point, I was feeling pretty frickin' BAD. My face was as red as that staircase Adam descended while delivering what surely should have been a TOP THREE performance last night. I made a vow right then and there if Adam got cut, I was going to boycott Idol. For reals.
Maybe it was just the Feeling Good Curse. See, back in season 6, semi-finalists Leslie Hunt and A.J. Tabaldo both sang the Nina Simone signature song in the same week--and both went home. But if there was anyone who could break such a curse, I absolutely assumed it would be Adam.
But then...Kris was sent back to safety. Meaning the bottom two were...Matt and ADAM.
I seriously felt like I was going to have a cardiac arrest. I was hyperventilating. Breathing into a paper sack. Clutching at my chest like Redd Foxx. Quivering like I had some sort of rare palsy. "It's just a show, just a show, just a show," I told myself over and over, hugging my knees and shivering and rocking from side to side like a mental patient. "If Adam Lambert gets cut, it won't be the end of the world..."
But it WOULD be the end of Idol, at least for me. It would be the biggest, most heartbreaking shocker in Idol history--worse than Chris Daughtry, Constantine Maroulis, Michael Johns, and Tamyra Gray's eliminations combined.
So the time-killing filler performances by Taylor Hicks and Jamie Foxx seemed to go on for, like, 18 hours, everything running in agonizing underwater slo-mo while I awaited Adam's fate. And then, finally, Ryan Seacrest delivered the news...
Adam was safe. The Feeling Good Curse was broken. Meanwhile, Matt, the last of the wild cards, was cut--and no Judges' Save could save him now.
Phew. But that was close. Waaaay too close. What is wrong with America, putting a league-of-his-own talent like Adam in the bottom two? Results shows like this make me want to move to Canada.
America, DO NOT LET THIS HAPPEN NEXT WEEK. Yahoo! Music's workers' comp plan might not cover the ensuing heart attack I will surely suffer if Adam comes this close to elimination again.
Luckily, next week is Rock 'N' Roll Week (with special guest Slash!), so Adam definitely will have the edge...but tonight proved that no one is ever safe. No spot in the finale is ever guaranteed, not even for Adam. So rock the vote next week, Lambert fans!
Parker out.

Thank you Lyndsey!!! I could not have expressed it better myself. Yes, I know there are more important things going on in the world. Swine flu, Businesses going bankrupt, yada,yada. I say all the more reason why our entertainment should not be stressful!! We need that weekly respite from the real world to chill out. Well Adam fans certainly didn't chill out last night. If Idol did that for shock value they certainly achieved their goal and I for one am not going to be voting for anyone but Adam in the future.. For more information that we ladies in NH & MA want to read about whether it's local resource information, articles on health, home, seniors or fashion etc. visit us at www.applaudwomen.com.

Great New Style Invention - The Nail Polish Pendant


Guest Beauty Blogger Wednesdays - The Nail Polish Pendant
Posted Apr 29th 2009 at 4:00PM by Laura Kenney



This week's Guest Beauty Blogger, All Lacquered Up, dishes on her newest discovery - nail polish pendants!


I'm always looking for creative uses for my beauty products. I love discovering new ways to utilize my overwhelming beauty arsenal and Total Beauty found a slew of innovative ways to turn beauty closet staples into multitaskers.

Well, have I got a new one for you. Like infomercial legend, Mike Levy and his crazy sweaters, I have found THE discovery for us nail polish fanatics.

The nail polish pendant! How many times have we described a polish as being jewel-like or having a jewel tone? And I know I can't be the only one who has tried to coordinate polish with my favorite gemstones. I mean, haven't you ever wished your favorite shade was jewelry? Wish no more! My genius pal Tracey from Ginger Kitty Designs has found a way to make that dream a reality. That's right, we're talking nail polish AS jewelry.

Twitter followers will recall my little freak a few weeks ago over a package I received in the mail. Wonder no more for this is what sent me into a frenzy. Tracey shipped her first batch of nail polish pendants, just in time for my cruise and needless to say, they're stunning.

What exactly are these nail polish pendants? Well, Tracey discovered a way to encapsulate nail polish in a pendant. It's sealed with a resin to give a glass like finish, making the polish appear like some rare, unique stone. Being the green queen that I am, Tracey turned two of my fave emerald shades into jewels using Barielle Date Night and Sinful San Francisco. Images really don't do them justice as they are beyond fantabulous in person. I showed them off at work before leaving and everyone was raving.
OK so are you totally dying for a nail polish pendant of your very own?. Well then head on over to Tracey's Etsy shop, Ginger Kitty Designs where she has a listing of pendant polish choices or you can discuss creating your own custom design.

All this amazingness for only $35. Can you even handle it?

What an awesome idea. For more ideas for women in NH & MA go to our website at www.applaudwomen.com. Do you have a beauty or fashion idea you would like to share? Email us at applaud@comcast.net

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Forgetting to Put On Sunscreen? How About a Sunscreen Pill


April 28, 2009
Beauty Beat. Your Daily Dose of Sunscreen...In a Pill
We all know how harmful the sun can be to our skin over time. But, how many of us actually remember to wear our sunscreen daily? Well then, how about sunblock in a pill?

Some of the leading sunscreens in the world have the following characteristics: A stable broad-spectrum protection, strong anti-oxidants and a gentle formulation along with an appealing smell and feel. “With the innovation of holistic skincare such as Glisodin Skin Nutrients Advanced Skin Brightening Formula, you can now enhance the strength of the topical sunscreens and not have to worry about reapplying after a dip in the pool or at the beach after take this dietary supplement,” – says Paula Simpson, certified celebrity nutritionist.

This product was designed to balance out skin tone by providing a protective layer that acts as a barrier against the sun’s UV rays because of its premium ingredients including:

• Cartotenoids that have photoprotective and anti-inflammatory properties to help protect the skin and reduce inflammation caused by UVR exposure
• Citrus Bioflavonoids to promote even skin tone by inhibiting tyrosinase activity or the enzyme that promotes hyperpigmentation
• Borage Seed Oil to soothe irritated skin while supporting skin’s structural integrity


“Many sunscreens on the market are not formulated to address all the skin care issues that result from being out in the sun like Glisodin Skin Nutrients Advanced Skin Brightening Formula can as this product not only protects your skin from the sun’s UVA rays; it also evens out pigmentation as well. – Dr. Ginsburg, certified dermapathologist.

Applaud Women does not endorse or recommend any product. We just thought this was a cool idea and wanted to share it. For great articles and information relevant to women in NH & MA check out our website at www.applaudwomen.com

The Latest on the Susan Boyle Story

Per a Recent Interview with Britain's Got Talent

Susan responds to quit rumours28 Apr 09

As it continues its relentless ascent into the stratosphere, the Susan Boyle rollercoaster has hit some unexpected obstacles this week, as claims she will sensationally QUIT Britain’s Got Talent are splashed all over the press.

Giving her first interview since the rumours hit the papers, Susan talks openly to the Got Talent website about what’s being said on her behalf and how she feels about the future…

BGT: Hi Susan, how are you feeling today?

SB: I’m feeling very well, bright as a button in fact!

BGT: There have been reports in the papers that you are “exhausted” and on the verge of a “breakdown”, are there any truth to these?

SB: None whatsoever. I’m not stressed and I’m certainly not on the verge of a breakdown! I’ve never felt more positive, it’s all nonsense.

BGT: In today’s papers the Daily Star has reported that you want to quit the show – is this true?

SB: No! There is absolutely no truth in that either, there is no way I am quitting the show. The only way I’d leave the show is if Simon Cowell kicked me out!

BGT: Your fans have no need to worry then?

SB: They don’t need to worry about me quitting that’s for sure! All I can say to everybody is some of the stories about me in the papers are just untrue… I’m not going anywhere; I just want to concentrate on my singing.

BGT: So how are you feeling about what lies ahead… confident?

SB: I can only concentrate on the song I’d like to sing if I make it through to the next round. I wouldn’t say confident, I’m nervous in fact… but nerves can be a good thing because they make you do your best on the big night.

BGT: Are there any messages you would like to give your supporters?

SB: Well I’d like to say all the best to everybody on Britain’s Got Talent, and to everyone who has supported me so far I’d like to say thank you – it is very much appreciated. All I can promise is to do my best and confirm to everyone that I’m not leaving the show… I can’t say fairer than that can I?!

We at Applaud Women are wishing Susan the best and applaud her talent. For more interesting articles relevant to women and great resource info for NH & MA women visit our website at www.applaudwomen.com

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Much ado about a 'do: Competition sees hair as art


Model Amaris Brown smiles in Manchester, N.H., Thursday, April 23, 2009, after winning the International Fantasy Hair Competition with a hair style called "Proud Peacock" designed by Kevin Carter of The Artistry of Hair from Farmington Hills, Mich.

To find more articles and information of interest to women in NH and MA go to our website at www.applaudwomen.com




Posted on www.kansascity.com
The Associated Press

Jim Cole
Model Amaris Brown smiles in Manchester, N.H., Thursday, April 23, 2009, after winning the International Fantasy Hair Competition with a hair style called "Proud Peacock" designed by Kevin Carter of The Artistry of Hair from Farmington Hills, Mich.

Once the province of shopping mall mavens, gum-snappin' waitresses and Amy Winehouse, bouffant was in and big hair was beautiful, if only for one night.
The ladies - and one gent - of the International Fantasy Hair Competition proudly wore their hair hats high in the name of art and a good cause.
The competition attracted stylists and their models from around the country with prizes ranging from $1,000 to $7,500. All proceeds from Thursday night's hair-art show at the Verizon Wireless Arena went to the New Hampshire Food Bank.
In the final minutes before the show began, stone-faced stylists put the finishing touches on their chicken-wired and pomaded masterpieces. What emerged from the piles of discarded Styrofoam clods and noxious clouds of hairspray were divas with heads decked out in pink lilies, forests of furry trees, and coifs of cotton candy.
Top honors went to model Amaris Brown of Detroit and stylist Kevin Carter of the Detroit suburb Farmington Hills for "Proud Peacock," a big spray of feathers with hair shaped into what looked like the bird itself.
But the real secret to being a big bouffant beauty?
"Pain. Lots and lots of pain," said 5-foot-1 Melody Longobardi, 26, an account manager and one-night model from the Hyannis, Mass., area who sported a 3-foot cherry tree on her head. "It's all about posture and pain."
Longobardi was standing at a 45-degree angle, the hairy cherry tree on her head giving her a gravity-induced, yet graceful, backbend.
Stylist Dru Sisson, 25, said she chose the cherry tree to symbolize the strength and beauty of womanhood. Of course, she said, her previous models were mannequins, with plastic necks, who didn't need to walk.
Longobardi said she had a strategy to keep the tree aloft: "Keep your bum out and your head straight."
Sisson chimed in that women need to walk like that to be ergonomically correct anyway, not just when they wear foliage.
But that approach would have been the undoing of Melissa Minuti, who was tightly wrapped in a slinky slip of inky black hair.
"She hasn't been able to sit for five hours," stylist Jamie Rogers, 24, of Weare, N.H., said as she added a last dash of hairspray to Minuti's backside. "The idea came to me in a dream. I saw someone in a hair suit in my dream. It was like an epiphany. I just woke up and thought hair suit, that's what I need to do," Rogers said.
Minuti, 23, of Manchester, didn't look amused.
"It's a little itchy," she said.
Some people might dream of having the freedom in real life to walk tall with a bun of birds, or windmills of feather-duster frills. But Boston paralegal Kelly Norton, sporting a gigantic puffball of tufted hair clumps and chain mail, said she was seriously considering wearing the hairstyle to work the next day.
"Actually I might have to," said Norton, 28. "I think it's welded to my head."

AND THE OTHER WINNTERS ARE:


Model Danialle Esjunin smiles in Manchester, N.H., Thursday, April 23, 2009 after taking second place in the International Fantasy Hair Competition with a design called "Indian Fertility Goddess Parvati" designed of Colleen Jamieson of Alden James Salon of Nashua, N.H



AND


Model Rachel Bishop shows off a hair design in Manchester, N.H., Thursday, April 23, 2009, during the International Fantasy Hair Competition called "Prosperia," designed by Christine Sheldon of Salon Thairapy of Hookset, N.H.
Model Rachel Bishop shows off a hair design in Manchester, N.H., Thursday, April 23, 2009, during the International Fantasy Hair Competition called "Prosperia," designed by Christine Sheldon of Salon Thairapy of Hookset, N.H

Swine flu creates controversy on Twitter – Latest from CNN

The swine flu outbreak is spawning debate about how people get information during health emergencies -- especially at a time when news sources are becoming less centralized.

Buzz about swine flu on Twitter is stirring conversations about how people get health news.

Some observers say Twitter -- a micro-blogging site where users post 140-character messages -- has become a hotbed of unnecessary hype and misinformation about the outbreak, which is thought to have claimed more than 100 lives in Mexico.
"This is a good example of why [Twitter is] headed in that wrong direction, because it's just propagating fear amongst people as opposed to seeking actual solutions or key information," said Brennon Slattery, a contributing writer for PC World. "The swine flu thing came really at the crux of a media revolution."
Twitter's popularity has exploded in recent months, and Slattery said it's a new development that a wide number of people would turn to the site in search of information during an emergency.
Others take a softer approach to the buzz on Twitter.
Writing for CNET, a CNN partner site, Larry Magid advises online readers to take medical advice with a grain of salt.
Don't Miss
WHO raises pandemic alert level
Watch videos on swine flu outbreak
The Internet is "a great way to get general information, prevention tips and information on how to handle a known condition, but be cautious when using it to try to diagnose yourself," he writes.
Several dozen cases of swine flu worldwide have been confirmed by the World Health Organization and hundreds more are feared. Read more about the situation
That information needs to be put in context by journalists, especially given the fact that so many deaths from the common flu occur each year and go underreported by the news media, said Al Tompkins, who teaches broadcast and online news at the Poynter Institute, a school for journalists. Follow CNN's Chief Medical Correspondent Sanjay Gupta on Twitter
About 36,000 people die from flu-related symptoms each year in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The fast pace of new swine flu cases and their relevance to global public health policy makes the situation newsworthy, Tompkins said.
Tompkins said there is a tendency for television stations to hype health emergencies to boost their ratings, but so far coverage of the swine flu outbreak has been responsible. Coverage of the story is just ramping up, though, he said.
Health Library
MayoClinic.com: Influenza (flu)
Of the swine flu news on Twitter, Tompkins said, "Bad news always travels faster than good news. I'm sure that was true in smoke signal days."
Unofficial swine flu information on Twitter may lead people to unwise decisions, said Evgeny Morozov, a fellow at the Open Society Institute and a blogger on ForeignPolicy.com.
For example, some Twitter users told their followers to stop eating pork, he said. Health officials have not advised that precaution. Read about how the virus is transmitted
Morozov said there's incentive for Twitter users to post whatever is on their mind because it helps them grow their online audiences.
But in an emergency, that tendency means people write about their own fears of symptoms and widespread deaths, which can create an uninformed hysteria, he said.
The debate about swine flu on Twitter is not one-sided, however. And the site is not the only place online where people are talking about the outbreak.
Some Twitter users have expressed concern that the swine flu story is being hyped. Several media outlets, including the BBC and CNN's iReport.com, give readers and viewers a chance to express their own views about the outbreak.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also maintains its own Twitter account where official government information is given straight to the public.
And on Monday, President Obama seemed to try to calm national fears by saying the outbreak is "cause for concern and requires a heightened state of alert" but is not a "cause for alarm," CNN reported.
Twitter traffic about swine flu has been strong. According to Nielsen Online, swine flu has worked its way into about 2 percent of all notes posted on the site on Monday. You can follow that Twitter conversation here.
Chatter about swine flu is also loud elsewhere online. About 10 times more people are writing online about swine flu than wrote about the salmonella and peanut butter scares from this winter, Nielsen says.
On Google, an interactive map lets Internet users see where outbreak deaths have been confirmed and where they are suspected. See a CNN map
Slattery, the PC World writer, said he generally was excited about Twitter until recently. Now he finds the site to be "an incredibly unreliable source of information."
Tompkins said people who post information on social media sites should think about the credibility of their sources before they pass something on.

That's the "online equivalent of washing your hands," he said.
"Before you pass it on, wash your hands a little."
For more information that is relevant to local women, great health articles etc. Visit us at www.applaudwomen.com
If you have some information you would like to share please email me directly to applaud@comcast.net

Friday, April 24, 2009

New Women's Imaging Technique Allows For A More Accurate Diagnosis Of Breast Cancer

From ScienceNews
ScienceDaily (Apr. 23, 2009) — Breast elastography allows physicians to give a more accurate diagnosis of breast cancer, according to a study performed at Singapore General Hospital in Singapore. Breast elastography is a new technique which looks at the mechanical properties of tissues (relative stiffness) as opposed to conventional ultrasound which looks at the backscatter of transmitted ultrasound waves through tissues.

Ninety-nine women with 110 sonographically visible lesions were evaluated with ultrasound, elastography and combined ultrasound and elastography. 26 lesions were malignant and 84 were benign on histology. “All breast cancers (100%) in the study were diagnosed correctly by elastography alone compared to 88.5% by conventional ultrasound,” said Llewellyn Sim, MD, lead author of the study. “The use of breast elastography alone or combined with ultrasound provides a more accurate diagnosis of breast cancer,” said Dr. Sim.
“Breast elastography improves the sonographic diagnosis of breast cancer. It also potentially reduces unnecessary work-up i.e. biopsies of benign breast lesions and patient anxiety,” he said.
“Breast radiologists will see elastography in a different light when they realize that it has come of age and outperforms conventional breast ultrasound. With the sterling results and knowledge gained from my study, I am more confident in using elastography to assist me in obtaining a more accurate diagnosis of breast lesions detected with ultrasound in my daily clinical practice,” said Dr. Sim.
This study will be presented at the 2009 ARRS Annual Meeting in Boston, MA, on Wednesday, April 29.
For local resource information for women in NH and MA and our online publication which inspires, informs and applauds local women visit our website at http"//applaudwomen.com

New Hampshire Receives Economic Recovery Funding to Reduce Diesel Emissions, Create Jobs

The following was released today by the EPA Office of Public Affairs
Release date: 04/24/2009
Contact Information: EPA Office of Public Affairs, (617) 918-1010
(Boston, Mass. – April 24, 2009) – In a move that stands to create jobs, boost local economies, reduce diesel emissions and protect human health and the environment for the people in New Hampshire, EPA has awarded $1.73 million to the N.H. Dept. of Environmental Services (NH DES). The funding can be used to support clean diesel projects and loan programs to address the nation’s existing fleet of over 11 million diesel engines.
“This is part of the nationwide clean energy transition that is clearing the air and creating millions of jobs across America,” said EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson. “Communities using innovative measures to cut harmful diesel emissions are cutting costs, creating jobs, and keeping people healthy.”
“This Recovery Act funding will provide a great boost to Clean Air investments in New Hampshire,” said Ira Leighton, acting regional administrator for EPA’s New England office. “This money will help the state to bolster its economy, protect public health and create green jobs that improve air quality.”
The funds provided by the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act (ARRA) of 2009 will go to the state's air resources program. This program will retrofit, replace, upgrade and repower a variety of public and privately owned fleets, including school buses, transit buses, medium and heavy duty trucks, marine engines, locomotives, construction equipment and cargo handling equipment operating throughout the state.
In addition to helping to create and retain jobs, the clean diesel projects would reduce premature deaths, asthma attacks and other respiratory ailments, lost work days, and many other health impacts every year.
Under ARRA’s State clean diesel funding program, $88.2 million is divided equally through a noncompetitive allocation process, meaning that all 50 states and the District of Columbia will receive $1.73 million.
States, local governments, non-profits and tribal agencies can also compete for a portion of $206 million under ARRA’s National clean diesel funding program.
President Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 on February 17, 2009 and has directed that the Recovery Act be implemented with unprecedented transparency and accountability. To that end, the American people can see how every dollar is being invested at Recovery.gov.
For information about local resources and articles for women in New Hampshire and Massachusetts visit our website at http://applaudwomen.com

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Walnuts Said to Reduce Risk of Breast Cancer

According to a study reported on usnews.com. eating walnuts could reduce the risk of breast cancer. Read the full story below:
Study in mice finds fewer, smaller tumors in those that ate the nuts
Posted April 21, 2009


TUESDAY, April 21 (HealthDay News) -- Walnuts contain compounds that may help prevent breast cancer, suggest findings from a study involving mice specially created to develop tumors.
One group of mice was fed a daily diet that included what would be equivalent to 2 ounces of walnuts in humans, while another group of mice ate a regular diet. The mice that ate the diet with walnuts had a much lower incidence of breast tumors, fewer glands with a tumor and smaller-sized tumors.
"These laboratory mice typically have 100 percent tumor incidence at five months; walnut consumption delayed those tumors by at least three weeks," study author Elaine Hardman, an associate professor of medicine at Marshall University School of Medicine, said in a news release from the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR).
Molecular analysis revealed that increased consumption of omega-3 fatty acids, antioxidants and phytosterols found in walnuts contributed to tumor resistance in the mice. The findings were to be presented Tuesday at the AACR's annual meeting in Denver.
"With dietary interventions, you see multiple mechanisms when working with the whole food," Hardman said. "It is clear that walnuts contribute to a healthy diet that can reduce breast cancer."
Though the study was done with mice, she suggested that it's still a good idea for people to eat more walnuts.
"Walnuts are better than cookies, french fries or potato chips when you need a snack," Hardman said. "We know that a healthy diet overall prevents all manner of chronic diseases."
The study was funded with matching grants from the American Institute for Cancer Research and the California Walnut Commission.
If there is something you would like us to blog about or you have health news please email us at applaud@comcast.net. Check out the article about the importance of good sleep habits in our new issue of Applaud Women at http://applaudwomen.com.

Susan Boyle A True Cinderella Story

This is a fantastic story and thank goodness for Britain's Got Talent to give us all the opportunity to enjoy this remarkable singing phenomenon. In researching Susan Boyle's story, apparently she has been trying to create a career for herself but had remained undiscovered. This is incredible to me after hearing her voice. Yes, her appearance is rough around the edges and needs some work but her voice should have lead her in the direction it's now going, years ago.
Seeing women come into their own and being celebrated has been the heart of Applaud for many years. It is so gratifying to see this woman and many others, both local and international achieving their potential. For more on Susan's story read below and continue to watch it unfold. For more inspiring womens' stories check out the new issue of Applaud Women and read about local and international women. http://www.applaudwomen.com.
Here's Susan's stories plus some updated info. To hear her rendition of Killing Me Softly click this link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mRr9KxO_nRc.

We here at Applaud Women, applaud Susan. Do you know of someone locally who is waiting to be discovered for her artistic or business talent. If so, please email me at applaud@comcast.net.

Have a wonderful day!

Susan Caldwell



From Wikipedia
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Susan Boyle (born 1961)[2] is a Scottish[3] amateur singer and church volunteer who came to public attention on 11 April 2009,[4] when she appeared as a contestant on the third series of Britain's Got Talent.[5] Boyle found fame when she sang "I Dreamed a Dream" from Les Misérables in the competition's first round.[6]

Before she sang, both the audience and the judges appeared to express scepticism based on her unpolished appearance, and apparent awkwardness. In contrast, her vocal performance was so well received that she has been dubbed "The Woman Who Shut Up Simon Cowell".[7] She received a standing ovation from the live audience, garnering yes-votes from Cowell and Amanda Holden, and the "biggest yes I have ever given anybody" from Piers Morgan.[8] The audition was recorded in January 2009 at the Clyde Auditorium in Glasgow, Scotland.[9]

The juxtaposition of the reception to her voice with the audience's first impression of her triggered global interest. Articles about her appeared in newspapers all over the world, while the numbers who watched videos of her audition set an online record.[10] By 20 April 2009, viral videos of her audition, subsequent interviews of her, and her 1999 rendition of "Cry Me a River" had been viewed over 100 million times on the Internet.[11] Cowell is reported to be setting up a contract with Boyle with his Syco Music company label, a subsidiary of Sony Music.[12]

Biography

Personal life

Boyle was born in Blackburn, West Lothian, Scotland[1] to Patrick Boyle, a storeman at the British LeylandBathgate, and Bridget Boyle, a shorthand typist;[2] her parents were Irish immigrants.[13] The youngest in a family of four brothers and six sisters, of whom only six survive,[14] Boyle was born when her mother was 47.[15][16] The Sunday Times writes that it was a difficult birth, during which Boyle was briefly deprived of oxygen. She was diagnosed as having learning difficulties, which led to bullying.[1][17] She was labelled "Susie Simple" at school but learned to overcome those who derided her.[18] factory in

After leaving school with few qualifications,[15] she was employed for the only time in her life as a trainee cook in the kitchen of West Lothian College for six months,[18] and took part in government training schemes.[2] She would visit the theatre from time to time to listen to professional singers,[2] and performed at a number of local venues.[3] She took singing lessons from a voice coach, Fred O'Neil.[15] In 1995, she auditioned for Michael Barrymore's My Kind of People,[3] which was looking for contestants at the Braehead Shopping Centre in Glasgow, but she said she was too nervous to make a good impression.[2] The Guardian reports that she attended Edinburgh Acting School, and has taken part in the Edinburgh Fringe.[3] In 1999 she recorded "Cry Me a River" for a charity CD funded by the local council to commemorate the Millennium.[19][1] O'Neil has said Boyle abandoned an audition for The X Factor because she believed people were being chosen for their looks, and that she almost abandoned her plan to enter Britain's Got Talent. O'Neil told The Scotsman: "I remember a phone call late last year when she said she was too old and that it was a young person's game". O'Neil persuaded her to go to the audition.[20]

Boyle's father died in the 1990s, and her siblings had left home, leaving Boyle to look after her ageing mother, who died in 2007 at the age of 91.[16] Boyle still lives in the family home, a four-bedroom council house, with her ten-year-old cat, Pebbles.[15] Boyle's devotion to caring for her mother was such that she did not have any time for herself.[16] One neighbour reported that Boyle struggled to cope with the loss of her mother, stating that she "wouldn't come out for three or four days or answer the door or phone".[16] Her mother had always encouraged her to enter local singing competitions, which she won several times, and tried to persuade her daughter to enter Britain's Got Talent, urging her to take the risk of singing in front of an audience larger than her parish church.[6]Britain's Got Talent and seek a musical career as her way of paying a tribute to her mother.[15] Her performance on the show was the first time she had sung since then.[21][1][22] Boyle has said she did not feel ready to do it until after her mother's death, saying that it was that event which propelled her to go on

At the time of her Britain's Got Talent audition, Boyle was unemployed, yet active as a volunteer with Our Lady of Lourdes, a Roman Catholic church in Blackburn.[23][17] She has never married; and during an interview just before she sang on the talent show, she said she had also "never been kissed" but later added "Oh, I was just joking around. It was just banter and it has been blown way out of proportion".[24][1]

Early recordings

Boyle recorded a version of "Cry Me a River" for a compilation charity CD entitled "Music for a Millennium Celebration, Sounds of West Lothian", which was produced in 1999 at a school in Whitburn, West Lothian.[25][26] A reviewer for the West Lothian Herald & Post wrote at the time, "... the true show-stopper for me is Susan Boyle's heartbreaking rendition of "Cry Me a River", which has been on repeat in my CD player ever since I got this CD..."[27] This recording was released onto the web in the week after April 11, 2009, and gained immediate acclaim, with the New York Post writing that this showed that Boyle was not a "one trick pony" and that the rarity of the CD imprint, with only 1,000 produced, would make them valuable collector's items.[28]Hello! magazine stating that the recording was a further illustration of the level of Boyle's talent, which "cements her status" as a singing star.[29] Other media reaction was similarly positive, with

In 1999, Boyle used "all her savings" to pay for a professionally cut demo tape, which she later sent to record companies, radio talent competitions, local and national TV and which has now been released on the Internet. It consisted of "Cry Me a River" and her version of "Killing Me Softly with His Song". Boyle gave away a few copies to her close friends.[30]

Britain's Got Talent and aftermath

Television performance

In August 2008, when Boyle became aware that Britain's Got Talent would be holding auditions, she applied and was accepted for the audition, which took place in Glasgow in January 2009. Boyle performed a rendition of "I Dreamed a Dream" from Les Misérables in the first round of the third series of Britain's Got Talent, which aired on April 11 and was watched by an average of 10.3 million viewers.[31] This performance was widely reported, and millions of people viewed a video of her singing on YouTube.[31] The strength of this reaction reportedly shocked and amazed Boyle, who later says she was "gobsmacked".[32]

Boyle is well aware that the audience on Britain's Got Talent was initially hostile to her because of her appearance, but she has refused to change her image:

I know what they were thinking, but why should it matter as long as I can sing? It’s not a beauty contest.

—Susan Boyle, The Sunday Times[15]

News media

Many British newspapers carried articles on Boyle's performance and subsequent Internet coverage. The SunPaul Potts.[33] International news outlets also carried stories on her, including among others, India's The Times of India[34], Germany's Der Spiegel,[35] China's Xinhua News Agency,[36] Brazil's Zero Hora,[37]Ynet,[38] and the Arab World's Al-Arabiya.[39] writer Colin Robertson gave her the nickname "Paula Potts" in reference to the contest's Series one winner, the opera singer Israel's

In the U.S., ABC News coverage suggested that Boyle may be "Britain's newest pop sensation", and the network's Entertainment section ran the headline The Woman Who Shut Up Simon Cowell.[40] Several commentators have drawn parallels between Boyle's performance and that of Paul Potts, another unexpected singing talent who also rose to fame on Britain's Got Talent, with Forbes magazine predicting that Boyle could follow in Potts' footsteps and enjoy a long, successful and profitable career.[41]

TV shows

Following her performance on Britain's Got Talent, Boyle was a guest on STV's The Five Thirty Show.[42]CBS's Early Show,[19] ABC's Good Morning America,[43] and NBC's Today, and via a telephone interview on FOX's America's Newsroom.[44] In an interview, Simon Cowell said Boyle had received an invitation to appear on The Oprah Winfrey Show and predicted that if she did appear "there's every chance Susan Boyle will have the number one album in America".[43] She was interviewed via satellite on

She also appeared via satellite on CNN's Larry King Live opposite Piers Morgan, who apologized to Boyle for not giving her "anything like the respect" she deserved when she walked out on the stage before singing.[45] Boyle went on to perform an a cappella verse of "My Heart Will Go On" on King's show about which Morgan remarked, "That was just absolutely stunning. To sing that with no musical backing is unbelievable." He previously invited Boyle to have dinner with him in London, and she accepted.[46]

Boyle was parodied in the South Park episode, Fatbeard, when Ike Broflovski writes that he's sick of hearing everyone talking about her anymore in his farewell letter to his parents.[47]

Social media

Writing in The Guardian, Leigh Holmwood said that web technology such as YouTube and social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter have been critical in facilitating Boyle's rapid rise to fame.[3] The most popular YouTube video submission of her audition garnered nearly 2.5 million views in the first 72 hours.[48] On the day following the performance, the YouTube video was the most popular article on Digg.[49] The same video was also popular on Reddit, with enough clout to top the site's front page.[50] Within a week, the audition performance had been viewed more than 66 million times, setting an online record, while on Wikipedia her biographical article attracted nearly half a million page views.[10] A 100 million video views on 20 different websites was reached within nine days.[11] The Los Angeles Times wrote that her popularity on YouTube may in part be due to the broad range of emotion packed into a short timeframe, noting that this makes it "perfect for the Internet, where short clips rule."[51]

Susan Boyle's fame also spread by links posted on the Twitter website, including praise from celebrity couple Ashton Kutcher and Demi Moore.[52][53][54] When told about this, Boyle was said not to have ever heard of Kutcher,[55] but was familiar with the name "Demi Moore". Boyle knew little about her either but thanked them both for their support.[56] When Boyle first appeared on Britain's Got Talent, she said that she aspires to become a musical theatre singer "as successful as" Elaine Paige.[57] Since the appearance, Paige has expressed an interest in singing a duet with Boyle,[57] and has called her "a role model for everyone who has a dream".[58]Hugh Jackman has also wanted to do a duet with Susan Boyle writing on his Twitter, "Where is Susan Boyle? I am ready for a duet."[59] Actor

Social and critical analysis

Boyle's sudden fame has drawn much commentary on why this story was so widely reported and what it implies, while others drew moral lessons from people's reactions to her performance.[60] For instance, writing in The Herald, Collette Douglas-Home described Boyle's story as a modern parable and a rebuke to people's tendency to judge others based on their physical appearance.[61] Similarly, Lisa Schwarzbaum, in an article in Entertainment Weekly, said that Boyle's performance was particularly moving as it was a victory for talent and artistry in a culture obsessed with physical attractiveness and presentation.[62] Commenting on the audience's reactions before she started singing, Boyle said:

Modern society is too quick to judge people on their appearances. [...] There is not much you can do about it; it is the way they think; it is the way they are. But maybe this could teach them a lesson, or set an example.

—Susan Boyle, The Washington Post[6]

After Boyle's performance, Holden said:

I am so thrilled because I know that everybody was against you. I honestly think that we were all being very cynical, and I think that's the biggest wake-up call ever. And I just want to say that it was a complete privilege listening to that.

Amanda Holden, Britain's Got Talent[63]

Cameron Mackintosh, the producer of the Les Misérables musical, also praised the performance, stating:

Just like the judges and audience, I was gob-smacked by the emotional powerhouse performance of Susan Boyle's show-stopping rendition of "I Dreamed a Dream". Vocally, it is one of the best versions of the song I've ever heard—touching, thrilling and uplifting. I do hope she gets to sing it for the Queen.

—Cameron Mackintosh[31]

Echoing Amanda Holden's comments, Jeanne McManus wrote in The Washington Post that, in talent showsBritain's Got Talent, one of the main sources of drama is the collision between performers' sometimes exaggerated sense of self-worth and the opinions and reactions of their audience.[64] In Boyle's case, McManus believed that her initial demeanour and homely appearance caused the judges and audience to be "waiting for her to squawk like a duck".[64] Indeed, New York's Daily News said that it was this stark contrast between the audience's low expectations and the quality of her singing that made Boyle's performance such an engaging piece of television.[65] This article also noted that the idea of an underdog being ridiculed or humiliated but then enjoying an unexpected triumph is a common trope in literature and that this is why, when this theme made its unscripted appearance in reality television, it created an enduring and powerful effect.[65] such as

On the other hand, although this audience reaction was unscripted, it may have been anticipated. Writing in The Huffington Post, Mark Blankenship noted that the producers of the show would have been aware of the potential of this story arc, stating that the programme seemed to deliberately present Boyle in a manner that would enhance this initial reaction.[66] He does note, however, that "as fabricated as it is, her on-camera arc is undeniably moving".[66] The fact that Boyle is in her forties has also been cited as contributing to this strong emotional impact. In another Huffington Post article, Letty Cottin Pogrebin wrote that people may have been "weeping for the years of wasted talent", since most of Boyle's life has been spent in obscurity and those wasted years can never be recovered.[67] All the same, Pogrebin still classed Boyle's performance as a triumph for what she called "women of a certain age", as she saw it as representing a victory over a youth culture that often dismisses middle-aged women.[67]

Tanya Gold wrote in The Guardian that the difference between Boyle's hostile reception and the more neutral response to Paul Potts in his first audition reflected society's expectation that women be both good-looking and talented, with no such expectation existing for men.[68] In a similar vein, Mary Elizabeth Williams wrote on Salon.com that Boyle's performance reminded people that "not all fortysomething women are sleek, Botoxed beauties," going on to say that Boyle's sudden fame came from her ability to remind her audience that, like them, she is a normal, flawed and vulnerable person, familiar with disappointment and mockery, but who nevertheless has the determination to fight for her dream.[69]

Several media sources have commented that Boyle's success seemed to have particular resonance in the United States of America. Writing in The Scotsman, Craig Brown quoted a U.S. entertainment correspondent who compared Boyle's story to the American Dream, in that it represented talent overcoming adversity and poverty.[70] The Associated Press described this as Boyle's "hardscrabble story", dwelling on her modest lifestyle and what they saw as urban deprivation in her home town.[22] Similarly, The Independent New York correspondent David Usborne wrote that America is a country that will always respond to "the fairy tale where the apparently unprepossessing suddenly becomes pretty, from Piers Morgan, one of the show's judges, also commented on the unusual power this story seemed to have in the US, noting that "Americans can be very moved by this sort of thing", and likening Boyle's rise to fame from poverty and obscurity to that of the fictional boxer.
And, here's the latest from her fan website:

Susan left home yesterday sporting a new look, she was wearing a funky leather jacket and a print-pattern dress after a trip to the hairdressers.Susan said: "I will need to sort out my dress sense and my weight. It wasn't until I saw myself on TV that I realised how frumpy I was."
"It's not a big thing - it doesn't worry me too much - but I will be doing a bit more exercise to help me sort it out."
"When there is this much attention on you, you have to plan what you wear every day and look your best.
"I just want to look nice, and smart."

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Health Benefits of Breast Feeding for Moms

Per CNN within the last hour - Studies are now showing that Breast Feeding can not only benefit the new baby but can also benefit the new Mom. Read below:

Breast-feeding may protect mom's heart after menopause

  • Story Highlights
  • Study: Breast-feeding may protect mom's heart health after menopause
  • Fewer women who breastfed for more than a year had diabetes, hypertension later
  • Study has weaknesses, say experts, but breastfeeding message is still important
  • Next Article in Health »
By Denise Mann
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Health

When Lana Phillip, now 45, decided to breast-feed her baby, she never imagined she would continue for three whole years.

Breast-feeding produces a surge in oxytocin, the so-called love hormone, which may help protect the heart.

Breast-feeding produces a surge in oxytocin, the so-called love hormone, which may help protect the heart.

"I was living in Jamaica at the time where we say 'breast is best,' but I continued for so long mainly because my daughter wouldn't take anything else," she recalls. Sure, she knew that breast-fed babies tended to be healthier, but she didn't know that she also might be doing her own heart a favor -- an added bonus, as Phillip has a strong family history of heart disease and diabetes.

Women who breast-feed for longer than one year seem to be 10 to 15 percent less likely to develop high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease after menopause than women who don't breast-feed, according to a study in the May issue of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

"At my last physical, I had no signs of any heart problems," says Phillip, who has been living in Brooklyn, New York, since 2000.

The U.S. surgeon general currently recommends that babies be fed exclusively with breast milk for the first six months of life, but "the longer women nurse their babies, the better for both of their health," says lead study author Eleanor Bimla Schwarz, M.D., an assistant professor of medicine, epidemiology, obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences at the University of Pittsburgh Center for Research on Health Care in Pennsylvania. Health.com: Diet tips for nursing mothers

In the study, the researchers looked at 139,681 women with an average age of 63 who had at least one child. Those who had a lifetime history of more than 12 months of breast-feeding had a lower risk of high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, and heart disease than women who also had at least one child, but did not breast-feed. What's more, the longer they breast-fed, the greater the apparent benefit to their hearts -- even after the researchers adjusted for factors that could affect heart disease risk, such as obesity.

Among women who breast-feed for more than one year, the researchers estimate that 38.6 percent will develop high blood pressure, 12.3 percent high cholesterol and 9.1 percent cardiovascular disease. In comparison, 42.1 percent of women who don't breast-feed may develop high blood pressure, 14.8 percent high cholesterol, and 9.9 percent cardiovascular disease. Health.com: Quiz: What's your cholesterol IQ?

According to Schwarz, these new findings should help tip the scale for women who are considering breast-feeding as well as encourage those who already are breast-feeding to do so for longer periods of time. "Heart disease is the leading killer of U.S. women," she says. "To prevent heart disease, I recommend that all my patients exercise regularly, watch their diet, avoid cigarettes, and breast-feed their babies," she says.

"All of these health behaviors are hard for some people, so my message is always 'do the best you can; the more you can do, the better for you'" she adds. "And when we're talking about breast-feeding, of course women get double credit, because breast-feeding is good for mom and good for the baby."

Donnica Moore, M.D., president of the Sapphire Women's Health Group in Far Hills, New Jersey and an author of "Women's Health for Life," advocates breast-feeding for infants, but points out that one year is a long time.

"We know that breast-feeding has numerous benefits for the baby, and this study is one more piece of information that suggests it also has benefits for the mother," she says. Health.com: Breast cancer during pregnancy: What you need to know

However, the study does have its weaknesses, she points out. For starters, the women were about 63 years old, which means they breast-fed a long time ago. A women's memory may not be all that accurate 30-plus years later, says Moore. In addition, the study was not specifically designed to look at breast-feeding and heart disease risk; these results were part of a secondary analysis from another study.

That said, "it's interesting that women who breast-fed more than 12 months showed risk reduction for heart disease, but that may say more about the health choices made by women who are going to breast-feed for that long," says Moore. These women may simply lead healthier lives, she adds. Those who choose to breast-feed tend to be better educated and have a higher socioeconomic status than women who do not -- factors that can also affect the risk of heart disease. (The researchers did take these factors into account.)

However, hormones may also be at play. Breast-feeding produces a surge in oxytocin, the so-called love hormone, which may help protect the heart. Health.com: 6 Rules for a healthy postpartum slim-down

Some women and infants do have trouble with breast-feeding. "Breast-feeding is like riding a bike: It can be tricky at first, and almost everyone needs a little bit of help getting started, but it's really important to learn how to do it," Schwarz says. "Don't hesitate to ask for help, and don't doubt your body's abilities to continue to provide for your baby the way it did throughout pregnancy."

Calling the findings "dramatic and persuasive," Edward R. Newton, M.D., a professor and chair of obstetrics and gynecology at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina, stresses that "it is imperative that health care providers and our society support and educate women concerning the maternal benefits of prolonged breast-feeding as well as the documented benefits of breast-feeding for the children." Newton wrote an editorial that accompanied the new study.
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