Top Celebrities and Sports Talent

May 30, 2008

Publish a Book

Filed under: Entertainment, News

Publish books

Nowadays, it’s so easy to publish a book. If you want to have your own book such as biology, report, magazine and more type of books. You can send your artwork and text to Book Publishers and choose your detail as page, color, size, quality and publish with in two days. Overall meaning of publishing is the process of production and dissemination of literature or information the activity of making information available for public view.

In some cases authors may be their own publishers and developers of content also provide media to deliver and display the content. By the way writing a book is something many would be self publishers has done only to realize quickly that the more difficult task is to get people to read it. Therefore, you know that How to Publish a Book. I think many people like you want to have your own book and want to be an author. Anyway, there are many types of book would be publish in rush or super rush time, such as annual book, memorial book for any occasion that needs rush printing. So, before order your book with Book Publishers, just check the original text and very careful proof the artwork.

Amanda Moore

Filed under: Models

Book Amanda Moore

Amanda Moore is a beautiful American supermodel.  Her career with modeling is an interesting one.  Interestingly enough, Moore was trying to get one of her friends in modeling when she took her friend to a local scouting event. 

It was actually Moore that the agents fell in love with.  The inquiries came in by the dozens and Moore eventually signed with NEXT Model Management.  Today, she models for IMG Models.

Moore has starred in campaigns for Carolina Herrera, D&G, Giorgio Armani, H&M, John Varvatos, Lanvin, Nicole Farhi, Oscar de la Renta, Plein Sud, Tommy Hilfiger, and Yves Saint Laurent, among others. She has also appeared in television commercials for Armani, Calvin Klein, and Mont Blanc.

You can find Moore gracing the cover of Italian Vogue as well as the Australian edition for Vogue.  She has signed ad campaigns with DKNY and Costume National and walked the runway for over 60 designers.

May 29, 2008

Rob Lowe

Filed under: Actors, Entertainment

Book Rob Lowe
Photo: jazztelia.com

Born to Charles Lowe and Barbara Hepler in Charlottesville Virginia and raised in Dayton Ohio and Los Angeles, Lowe became famous after appearing in a string of popular movies that included other members of the Brat Pack, the most notable being St. Elmo’s Fire.

Lowe and his brother and fellow actor Chad Lowe grew up on the Westside of Los Angeles and attended Santa Monica High School where one of their classmates was fellow Brat-Packer Emilio Estevez. Lowe’s sister in law is two time Academy Award winning actress Hilary Swank who is married to Chad, although in May 2006 the couple announced their intention to divorce. Today Lowe makes his home with his wife Sheryl Berkoff and children in Montecito California.

Lowe gained notoriety in 1988 after a video of him having sex with two women, one of whom was underage, became public. He had met the women at a bar, Club Rio, while in Atlanta attending the 1988 Democratic National Convention, and later claimed that he didn’t know one of them was underage, and that it was reasonable to assume that someone in a bar was of legal age. The video that was widely circulated was not the one with the underage girl and her lesbian hairdresser girlfriend but that of a threesome with a model called "Jennifer", a young friend called "Justin Morris" and the actor himself, shot in a hotel room in Paris. Lowe was sentenced to twenty hours of community service. He was later committed to a rehabilitation clinic for alcohol and sex addiction.

He is perhaps best known for playing Sam Seaborn in the television show The West Wing, a role which was his from 1999 - 2003. When the show premiered, Lowe’s character was to be much more important. But the extremely talented cast � including Allison Janney, Richard Schiff, Stockard Channing, Bradley Whitford, and Martin Sheen (who was only supposed to be a guest star) � soon made the show into the hottest ensemble drama on TV, and Sam Seaborn became possibly the character with the least screen time. Lowe left the show in a highly publicized exit during the fourth season. His exit was quickly followed by that of series creator and writer Aaron Sorkin, and director Thomas Schlamme - a move which saw the show’s style change greatly, to mixed reactions from fans.

After leaving, he was star and executive producer of a failed NBC drama, The Lyon’s Den (2003). In 2004, he tried again in a series entitled Dr. Vegas, but it also was quickly cancelled.

In 2005 he starred as Lieutenant Daniel Kaffee in a London West End production of Sorkin’s play A Few Good Men, the first time the two have worked together since The West Wing. Although Lowe had expressed unhappiness about his role on that show at the time of his departure, he has now repeatedly said that any animosity between them is over and that he was pleased to be working with Sorkin once more, whose talents as a writer he highly regards. Towards the end of The West Wing, Lowe returned to his role of Sam Seaborn, appearing in two of the final four episodes of the show.

Lowe was the first male spokesperson for the 2000 Lee National Denim Day fundraiser which raises millions of dollars for breast cancer research and education. His grandmother and great-grandmother both suffered from breast cancer.

Lowe is a founder of the Homeowner’s Defense Fund, a group in Montecito that opposes the building of new housing in California. The organization argues that new housing will degrade existing neighborhoods; the president of the Homeowner’s Defense Fund, Sally Jordan, characterized California State advocacy for new housing as `like Hitler’.[1] At the same time Lowe opposes new housing for others, he has sought to build a very large mansion for himself at 700 Picacho Lane in Montecito.[2] Lowe’s protest over the appearance of the address in the Santa Barbara News-Press precipitated a mass resignation of senior employees at that newspaper on July 6, 2006.

May 28, 2008

Pierce Brosnan

Filed under: Actors, Entertainment

Book Pierce Brosnan
Photo: Iceposter.com

He is best known for portraying James Bond in four films: GoldenEye, Tomorrow Never Dies, The World Is Not Enough, and Die Another Day. His fans credit him with reviving the James Bond film series after a six year hiatus caused by the major legal and financial issues of MGM, the distributor of the series.

Born an only child in the Republic of Ireland in Drogheda, County Louth, Brosnan lived in nearby Navan, County Meath. He was educated by the Irish Christian Brothers and would later condemn their brutality. Brosnan’s mother moved to London for work after his father abandoned the family; in 1964, at the age of thirteen, he joined her. His mother subsequently divorced his father and married a Scottish World War II veteran who was quickly embraced as a father figure by his young stepson. When he was 16 a circus agent saw him busking as a fire eater and hired him. He trained as an actor at the Drama Centre, London.

In the early-1980s, he became a television star in the United States with his leading role in the popular miniseries Manions of America, which he followed in 1982 by playing the title role in the high-rated NBC detective series Remington Steele. He was actually offered the job as James Bond before the Remington Steele series could be completed, but Brosnan was unable to break the contract with the producers. In 1992, Pierce shot a pilot for NBC called Running Wilde, playing a reporter for Auto World magazine whose stories cover his own wild auto adventures. Jennifer Love Hewitt played his daughter, but the series wasn’t picked up and the pilot never aired.

Brosnan’s appointment as Bond brought things full circle for the actor, who stated in interviews that the very first movie he ever saw was Goldfinger and that Sean Connery’s performance as Bond inspired him to enter show business.

Aware of the danger of being typecast as James Bond, Brosnan asked EON Productions, when accepting the role, to be allowed to work in other projects between Bond series films. The request was granted, and for every Bond series film, Brosnan appeared in at least two mainstream films, including several he had produced. For a time, rumour was that Brosnan’s Bond contract forbade him from wearing a dinner suit in any non-Bond film; that rumour was false. Brosnan played a wide range of roles in-between his Bond film appearances, ranging from a nerdy scientist in Tim Burton’s Mars Attacks! to Canadian conservationist Grey Owl in the biopic of the same name.

Brosnan was signed for a four-film deal and first appeared as agent 007 in 1995’s GoldenEye to much critical praise. GoldenEye more than doubled the gross of Dalton’s previous film in worldwide ticket box office sales. Pierce returned as Bond in 1997’s Tomorrow Never Dies and 1999’s The World Is Not Enough to virtually the same success. In 2002 Brosnan appeared for his fourth and final time as the super suave secret agent in Die Another Day, which, while controversial to fans as being one of the weakest entries in the series, shattered all previous Bond films in terms of worldwide box office gross and is currently the highest grossing Bond film of all time (although not with inflation counted.)

He is a fan of Doctor Who and Monty Python, he told Michael Parkinson in an interview that if you’re not a fan of those two shows you might as well deny your UK heritage.

May 26, 2008

Carolyn Murphy

Filed under: Models

Book Carolyn Murphy
Photo: carolyn-murphy.org

At the age of 16, she was spotted by Mary Lou Nash, owner and operator of Mary Lou’s Models. Nash saw Murphy’s potential and soon she was modeling in local ads and magazines throughout Florida and Alabama.

Her career kicked into high-gear when she bleached her hair platinum blonde for a photo shoot, ruining her hair and causing it to fall out. Because of this she had to get a short hair cut which made her popular with many top photographers and soon she was in major magazines such as Harper’s Bazaar and Vogue and was named VH1/Vogue’s "Model of the Year" at the 1998 Fashion Awards.

Carolyn Murphy is featured on the cover of the 2005 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue, as well as the 1999 cover of Vogue’s "Models of the Millennium." She has also posed for the 2002 Playboy calendar. She is currently the face of Est�e Lauder, replacing Elizabeth Hurley as the company’s primary female spokes model. She also started an acting career with the role of "Dubbie the Blonde" in Barry Levinson’s Liberty Heights in 1999.

She also The World’s 15 Top-Earning Models by Forbses.
 



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