Thursday, 14 August 2014

What Products Can You Apply to Dry Hair?

What Products Can You Apply to Dry Hair?
Is oil the new hairspray? That’s the question that got us to this story in the first place. So what is the finishing cream du jour? The one product you can apply to dry hair that keeps everything in place, lends polish, and doesn’t weigh it down? Turns out, it’s still very much hairspray.
Kylee Heath, who tends to the heads of Diane Kruger, Sofia Vergara, and Jennifer Garner, always applies hairspray to styled hair (Oscar Blandi’s Lacca Hair Spray ($25) and Serge Normant’s Meta Luxe ($25) are her current favorites.) “Hair spray is always safe,” she says. “It polishes the hair and adds hold and shine.” But it’s not the only thing you can use. Check out Heath’s tips below.
Cream Products“A cream product isn’t my first go-to,” Heath says. “Although I use Kevin Murphy’s Easy Rider ($33) all the time. Just make sure it’s a finishing product; I only use ‘wet’ creams on curly, thick, damp hair.” Try L’Oreal Paris Sulfate-Free Finishing Crème ($6) or John Frieda’s Secret Weapon Touch-Up Crème ($6).
Mousse“If I want to freshen up day two hair, I will apply a mousse or volumizing spray to the roots, brush the product through, and blow dry,” says Heath. Kerastase Volumactive Mousse ($42) is her favorite. 
OilFor post-dry shine, reach for a dry oil like Garnier’s Triple Nutrition Miracle Oil ($6) or Oribe’s Gold Lust Nourishing Hair Oil ($36). “The trick with oils is to use a very small amount,” says Heath. “You work it into your hands and only apply from mid-shaft through the ends. I currently love the Oscar Blandi Jasmine Oil Serum ($35).” 
Dry ShampooWhen experimenting with any new product, it’s better to start with less and build up, once you know what your hair can handle. But if you start to look a little greasy, Heath says to spray a dry shampoo (she loves Klorane’s Dry Shampoo ($20) with oat milk) to absorb the extra oil. “Otherwise, change the style into a cool ponytail or updo to make it seem intentional.”

Czech climber earns ‘Crown of the Himalayas’

Radek Jaros climbs K2, becomes 15th in world to scale all 14 summits above 8,000 meters without oxygen, despite losing seven toes to frostbite in last climb
Radek Jaros earned the Crown of the Himalaya by making the summit of K2. Photo from Caters News Agency used by permission
Radek Jaros earned the Crown of the Himalayas by making the summit of K2. Photo from Caters News Agency used by permission
On his fifth attempt, Radek Jaros finally succeeded in scaling K2 to become the 15th person in the world to scale all 14 summits above 8,000 meters (26,247 feet) without using oxygen, thus earning him the Crown of the Himalayas.
What makes his “eight-thousanders” achievement all the more remarkable is that he did so after losing seven toes to frostbite in his previous climb, according to a report from Caters News Agency on Tuesday.
So while Jaros became the first from the Czech Republic to climb the 14 tallest mountains on Earth without using an oxygen mask, he most likely also became the first to climb K2—the second-tallest to Mount Everest at 28,251 feet—while missing seven toes.
Upon returning to base camp on K2, Radek Jaros was given Crown of Himalaya. Photo from Caters News Agency used by permission
Upon returning to base camp on K2, Radek Jaros was given pseudo Crown of Himalayas. Photo fromCaters News Agency used by permission
“I thought I’d burst into tears when I reached the top of K2, but the exhaustion was massive,” Jaros told Caters News Agency. “The weather was really nasty and when I got there I was all alone and the euphoria was weaker than the exhaustion.
“At that moment it didn’t occur to me exactly what I had achieved. I’m just glad it’s all over, and I’m sure it’s not something I’ll be trying again.”
He also said he wanted to “enjoy the experience” and climb without oxygen and without the aid of lifting carriers (to help him climb).
“I wanted to use my own strength and climbing skills to reach the top, and I’ve learned that where there’s a will there’s a way.”
Jaros, 50, reached the summit after 16 hours, followed by Jan Travnicek, according to the Prague Post. A third member of the climbing party remained in the tent at the fourth camp.
Jaros attempted K2 in 2001, 2003 and 2005, but the weather always ruined his chance at summiting. He tried again in 2007. This time, a crushed finger in base camp prevented him from continuing.
Radek Jaros nearing top of K2 where he earned his Crown of the Himalaya. Photo from Caters News Agency used by permission
Radek Jaros nearing top of K2 where he earned his Crown of the Himalayas. Photo from Caters News Agency used by permission
But before his successful climb of K2, it was the previous climb in 2012 that really did a number on Jaros.
After scaling Annapurna in Nepal, Jaros subsequently underwent 11 surgeries over more than a year, and ultimately lost seven toes to frostbite. He posted photos on his Facebook page in January. They are too graphic to show here, however.
Through it all, Jaros never lost sight of his goal to climb K2 and complete the Crown of Himalayas.
Camp II on K2 en route Radek Jaros' completion of the Crown of the Himalaya. Photo from Caters News Agency used by permission
Camp II on K2 en route Radek Jaros’ completion of the Crown of the Himalayas. Photo fromCaters News Agency used by permission
When he first started climbing, that was hardly his goal. He was just your average climber at first.
“I started by climbing the rocks at home in the Czech Highlands,” Jaros told Caters. “Sandstone cliffs followed then the Alps and the Himalayas, it was then I found my passion for big mountains.
“Before I knew it I had climbed 11 of the ‘eight-thousanders’ and a friend of mine suggested I try to climb all 14.”
So he did.
Upon returning home to Czechoslovakia on Friday, a crowd of 200 people awaited him at the airport to cheer and congratulate him. He was treated like a celebrity. Or, should we say, a rock star.
A look at Jaros’ eight-thousanders or Crown of Himalayas achievements:
1998 – Mount Everest (8,848 meters; 29,035 feet)
2002 – Kangchenjunga (8,586; 28,169)
2003 – Broad Peak (8,051; 26,414)
2004 – Cho Oyu (8,188; 26,906)
2004 – Shishapangma (8,027; 26,335)
2005 – Nanga Parbat (8,125; 26,660)
2008 – Dhaulagiri I (8,167; 26,795)
2008 – Makalu (8,485; 27,838)
2009 – Manaslu (8,163; 26,781)
2010 – Gasherbrum II (8,034; 26,358)
2010 – Gasherbrum I (8,080; 26,444)
2011 – Lhotse (8,516, 27,940)
2012 – Annapurna (8,091; 26,545)
2014 – K2 (8,611; 28,251)

The First Tweets of the 10 Most Followed People on Twitter

As a wise philosopher once said, every Twitter journey starts with a single Twitter step.
For these 10 folks — who are now the 10 most followed people on Twitter, with more than 420 million followers between them — those first Twitter steps proved especially fruitful.
Here are the first tweets of the 10 most followed tweeters in the world. (We have excluded the accounts of YouTube, Instagram, and Twitter itself, as those are companies, not people.) Read below to see how 10 of the world’s most famous tweeters — who are also, coincidentally, 10 of the world’s most famous people — started their Twitter careers.
10. Cristiano Ronaldo (@Cristiano; 28.9 million followers)
The First Tweets of the 10 Most Followed People on Twitter
The hunky Portuguese soccer player announced his Twitter presence with a bilingual tweet, punctuated with a rather ominous ellipsis …. What is going to happen on your Twitter page, Cristiano??? 
9. Ellen DeGeneres (@TheEllenShow; 30.3 million followers)
Tweet from Ellen Degeneres
Like Ronaldo, Ellen DeGeneres drew attention to the fact that her first tweet was, in fact, her first tweet. Her final question, “Is this anything?” is one that I ask myself each and every time I use Twitter.
8. Justin Timberlake (@jtimberlake; 33.7 million followers)
Tweet from Justin Timberlake
Of the top 10 most followed Twitter users, Timberlake’s first tweet received the fewest retweets and favorites. JT was promoting his record label’s first act, a Dutch pop singer named Esmee Denters. The song was a very minor hit in Europe; Timberlake would be responsible for much larger ones in the years following April 2009.
7. Rihanna (@Rihanna; 36.7 million followers)
Tweet from Rihanna
This tweet refers to the release date of the Rihanna album “Rated R,” which featured the single “Rude Boy” and which sold over a million copies. Rihanna would continue to misspell words on Twitter long after “ova.”
6. Britney Spears (@britneyspears; 38.4 million followers)
Tweet from Britney Spears' Twitter account
The only third-person tweet on this list. The @BritneySpears feed has since gotten more personal: It’s dominated by photos of her children and, alternatively, her forthcoming collection of lingerie.
5. Lady Gaga (@ladygaga; 41.7 million followers)
Tweet from Lady Gaga
Probably the most incoherent of the first tweets. The WMC is the Winter Music Conference, an annual Miami-based music festival, while Nervous Records specializes in “underground house music and hip-hop.”
4. Taylor Swift (@taylorswift13; 42.5 million followers)
Tweet from Taylor Swift
Oh, Taylor! And BY THE WAY, did you know that you can catch an exclusive Taylor Swift concert LIVE on Yahoo Screen on August 18?More information here!
(Disclosure: Yahoo Tech is owned by Yahoo, which also owns Yahoo Screen.)
3. Barack Obama (@BarackObama; 44.9 million followers)
Tweet from Barack Obama
Obama’s first tweet: a plea to help the then-senator end the war in Iraq.
2. Justin Bieber (@justinbieber; 53.4 million followers)
Tweet from Justin Bieber
Bieber’s first tweet is easily the most retweeted and the most favorited. I am guessing that JB spends a lot less time instructing fans to visit his Myspace page nowadays.
Oh, and for those who aren’t familiar, the music video for the song “One Time” has over 373 MILLION views on YouTube.
1. Katy Perry (@katyperry; 55.3 million followers)
Tweet from Katy Perry
Katy Perry surpassed Justin Bieber’s follower count in November 2013. Her first tweet, four years earlier, featured Germany, a chest cold, and sporadic capital letters and exclamation marks. Here’s hoping it is adapted into a feature-length film by Werner Herzog.
*
And there you have it! Now, if you’re looking to amass 50 million Twitter followers from scratch, and you are yet to send out your first tweet — maybe try something like the above?

Fly on the McPlane: McDonald's Opens 20-Seat Restaurant on Vintage Aircraft


Fly on the McPlane: McDonald's Opens 20-Seat Restaurant on Vintage Aircraft
Order a burger and take-off at this McDonald's in New Zealand. 
A grounded passenger plane in New Zealand has been converted into a McDonald's restaurant. The decommissioned aircraft is a Douglas DC-3 and was one of three used by New Zealand’s South Pacific Airlines from 1961 to 1966.

Now a place to eat burgers and fries, the aircraft has seating for 20, and was repainted silver and the Ronald McDonald red that we all know so well. The engine has been removed, so the plane no longer flies,  but diners can still enjoy the authentic cockpit. 
image
The McDonald's restaurant cockpit. 
Scratch the jet bridge—the only way to board this plane is to walk through the restaurant and use the stairs near the tail of the aircraft. The seat belts have been removed, but that’s no problem considering you won’t be encountering turbulence. 
image
Every seat is a window seat on this McDonald’s plane. (Photo: Hotspot Media.)
The real question is—how did the plane get there? In an interview with the Daily Mail, the restaurants owner, Eileen Byrne says, “The site was previously part of a car dealership, the Aeroplane Car Company, and the owner bought a disused DC-3 plane, which sat alongside the building. And when McDonald’s purchased the site in 1990, the aeroplane came with it.”
So the next time you land in New Zealand, fly on over to the golden arches and order yourself a Big Mac. You gotta admit, it’s definitely better than peanuts. 

Wednesday, 13 August 2014

The World's Highest-Paid Female Athletes 2014

Serena Williams reaches Montreal quarterfinals
Serena Williams reaches Montreal quarterfinals
Maria Sharapova, of Russia, serves to Carla Suarez Navarro, of Spain, during the round of sixteen at the Rogers Cup tennis tournament Thursday, Aug. 7, 2014 in Montreal. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Paul Chiasson)


Maria Sharapova andSerena Williams have been fierce rivals on the court over the past decade since they first squared off in Miami in 2004. Williams won their first meeting before Sharapova prevailed in their next two matches, including the 2004 Wimbledon final. Williams has reeled off 15 straight wins since then and holds a commanding 16-2 edge overall, but that Wimbledon win as a 17-year-old launched Sharapova into stardom as tennis’ “It” girl.
Williams has won almost double the career prize money and holds a 62-31 edge in career titles, but she can’t touch Sharapova when it comes to their respective sponsorship portfolios. Sharapova’s massive endorsement haul pushes her to the top of the world’s highest-paid female athletes for the 10th straight year with earnings of $24.4 million between June 2013 and June 2014.
Injuries plagued Sharapova in 2013 and she played only one match in the second half of the year, which put a dent in her prize money and exhibition fees. She banked $2.4 million in winnings after earning $6 million during the prior 12 months. Sharapova’s earnings also took a hit when Nike sold Cole Haan last year, as Sharapova received hefty royalties on her best-selling line of Cole Haan shoes when it was under the Nike umbrella. But she remains the top female endorser in sports with deals with Nike, Porsche, Samsung Electronics, Tag Heuer, Evian and Head.
Sharapova added a new partner this spring in Avon Products, which will use Sharapova as the face of its new fragrance for men and women: Avon Luck. The deal was announced in June, a week after Sharapova won the French Open for her fifth Grand Slam title. The Avon deal is worth more than $1 million annually.
Sharapova is also a budding entrepreneur. She launched a line of gummy candies, Sugarpova, in 2012. The brand sold 1.3 million bags of candy in the first year at $5-$6 a pop and was looking to double sales in year two. This spring, Sharapova took a stake, part cash and part sweat equity, in skincare company Supergoop, where she will push sunscreen and anti-aging products.
China’s Li Na is nipping at Sharapova's heels to be the top paid woman in sports after winning the Australian Open in January for her second career Grand Slam title. The win triggered a massive bonus from sponsor Nike, as well as bonuses from her other endorsement partners. Li earned $23.6 million, including $5.6 million from prize money, between June 2013 and June 2014. She became a marketing star in 2011 when she won the French Open to become the first Asian-born tennis player ever to win a Grand Slam singles event. Her biggest deals are with Nike, Mercedes, Samsung, Rolex and several brands in China.
Williams ranks No. 3 with earnings of $22 million. Williams out-earned Sharapova by almost 5 to 1 in prize money during our time period, and her $11 million in winnings is a record for any female athlete. But Sharapova’s off-court earnings were double what the world’s top-ranked player made. Serena has dominated her sport since turning pro in 1995. Her $56 million in career prize money is almost twice as much as No. 2 on the list, Sharapova. Williams maintains deals with Nike, Wilson, Gatorade and OPI. She also owns small stakes in Sleep Sheets and the Miami Dolphins.
Kim Yuna is the top-paid female athlete outside the world of tennis. The figure skating star banked an estimated $16.3 million and ranks fourth overall. She won a silver medal at the Sochi Olympics in February, although many felt she deserved the gold in ladies’ singles. The Olympics marked the end of Queen Yuna's competitive skating career. Her 2010 Olympic gold medal performance set a scoring record for the sport, and she never finished off the podium in a competition during her career. Kim launched a figure skating show, All That Skate, in 2010 and tickets for this year’s three-day event in May featuring Kim sold out in 30 minutes. Kim continues to be an endorsement star and is one of the biggest celebrities in South Korea. She added a deal with SK Telecom this year and has more than a dozen corporate partners.
The 10 highest-paid female athletes are a globetrotting bunch, representing eight different nationalities. They earned a collective $142 million, down 3 percent from last year, and the cutoff was $5.5 million. Up-and-coming stars from MMA (Ronda Rousey), golf (Michelle Wie) and tennis (Sloane Stephens) just missed the cut. Earnings figures include prize money, salary, licensing, appearances and endorsements. We don’t include investment income or deduct for taxes or agent fees. Tennis stars dominate the list with seven players because it is the one significant money-generating sport where men and women have attained near equality when it comes to prize money and sponsorship opportunities.
Here are the five highest-paid women athletes of 2014:
1. Maria Sharapova, $24.4 million
2. Li Na, $23.6 million
3. Serena Williams, $22 million
4. Kim Yuna, $16.3 million
5. Danica Patrick, $15 million

What's Red, Blush, and Gorgeous All Over? 'The Giver' Premiere in New York.

'The Giver' castmates

'The Giver' castmates

The (mostly) color coordinated cast pose together: Brenton Thwaites, Katie Holmes, Odeya Rush, Taylor Swift, and Cameron Monaghan.

Taylor Swift

Taylor Swift

Taylor Swift, 24, cut a gorgeous figure in a red and blush Monique Lhuillier dress finished with matching blush Casadei shoes. In the film, the singer puts her talents to good use, as evidenced by this exclusive clip.

Meryl Streep and Louisa Gummer

Meryl Streep and Louisa Gummer

Meryl Streep's incomparable body of work isn't the only impressive thing about her. The 65-year-old icon's family is quite the success story as well. Her eldest daughters, Mamie and Grace Gummer, have solid acting careers of their own, while her son Henry is a musician whose work has appeared in several movies. Her youngest, 23-year-old Louisa, who attended 'The Giver' premiere as her mom's striking date, is making her own mark as a model. Given her blue steel pose and Meryl-esque smile, we'd guess she's making a pretty good go of it.

Katie Holmes

Katie Holmes

Katie Holmes, 35, was every bit the prima ballerina in her flowing, pink gown by Zac Posen and finished off with her hair brushed back into a sleek bun. It was certainly good to see her at the premiere — this was her first big screen appearance since 'Jack & Jill' three years ago.

Susan Bridges and Jeff Bridges

Susan Bridges and Jeff Bridges

We can't imagine Monday was an easy night for Jeff Bridges, who counted Robin Williams among his friends and former co-stars. But thankfully, he had his supportive wife, Susan, by his side.

Odeya Rush and Brenton Thwaites

Odeya Rush and Brenton Thwaites

Odeya Rush, 17, chose a simple, yet elegant Georges Hobeika dress with small flowers about to bloom for her big red carpet moment. Of course, posing with a co-star like the handsome Brenton Thwaites, 25, who was decked out in Gucci, probably didn't hurt.

Cameron Monaghan

Cameron Monaghan

'Shameless' actor Cameron Monaghan, 20, may have missed the "wear red" memo Taylor Swift, Meryl Streep, and Odeya Rush seemed to have received and went for a clashing orange tie instead, but he still looked rather dapper in his navy blue suit. 

Emma Tremblay

Emma Tremblay

Little Emma Tremblay walked the carpet with big smile and loads of confidence in her age-appropriate white dress with a thin bow around her waist that matched the one around her co-star Odeya Rush's red number.

Lindsay Ellingson

Lindsay Ellingson

We're not quite sure why Victoria's Secret model Lindsay Ellingson was at the premiere, but she sure brought the sunshine in this saucy yellow and nude number.

Lois Lowry

Lois Lowry

The author of the novel 'The Giver' beamed with pride as she walked the red carpet and went inside to watch her creation come to life on the big screen.

Mystery over massive Alexander-era tomb unearthed in Greece

Archaeologists have unearthed a funeral mound dating from the time of Alexander the Great and believed to be the largest ever discovered in Greece, but are stumped about who was buried in it.
Prime Minister Antonis Samaras on Tuesday described the find as "unique" after he visited the site, which dates to the era following Alexander's death, at the ancient town of Amphipolis in northern Greece.
"It is certain that we stand before an exceptionally important find," Samaras said in a statement. "This is a monument with unique characteristics."
Hidden under a hill at the ancient town, the Hellenistic-era mound containing the tomb has a near-circular circumference of 497 metres (1,630 feet), Samaras said.
A five-metre marble lion, currently standing on a nearby road, originally topped the tomb, he said.
"The tomb is definitely dated to the period following the death of Alexander the Great (in 323 BC), but we cannot say who it belonged to," supervising archaeologist Katerina Peristeri told Mega channel.
Built on the banks of the river Strymon, some 60 kilometres (37 miles) from the modern city of Serres, Amphipolis was an important city of the ancient Macedonian kingdom under Alexander.
Alexander's Persian wife Roxanne and son Alexander were exiled to Amphipolis and murdered there on the orders of his successor King Cassander around 310 BCE.
There were no suggestions that the tomb could have belonged to Alexander himself, who died in Babylon in what is present-day Iraq, but experts believe it could have belonged to another member of the royal family.

Amazon's Biggest Fish Faces Threat of Extinction

Fishing for Brazil's Fossils
Fishing for Brazil's Fossils
Fishing for Brazil's Fossils
Fishing for Brazil's Fossils
Fishing for Brazil's Fossils
Fishing for Brazil's Fossils
Measuring 10 feet (3 meters) long and weighing in at more than 400 pounds (180 kilograms), it's hard to imagine that the arapaima, the largest fish in the Amazon River basin, could ever go missing. But these huge fish are quickly disappearing from Brazilian waterways, according to a new study.
A recent survey of fishing communities in the state of Amazonas, Brazil, found that the arapaima is already extinct in some parts of theAmazon basin. In other parts of the Amazon, its numbers are rapidly dwindling.
However, the researchers also uncovered some good news: In communities where arapaima fishing is regulated, the species is actually thriving, giving the researchers hope that conservation of the species is still possible. [Photos of the Largest Fish on Earth]
Commonly known as pirarucu, arapaima (Arapaima gigas) are the largest freshwater fish in South America. They're unique among fishes for their ability to breathe air — a feat made possible by a primitive lung, which they possess in conjunction with a gill system that allows them to breathe underwater. The fish developed this function because they typically live in oxygen-poor waterways, according to the Tennessee Aquarium, which is home to several arapaima.
But while this supplemental breathing technique helps the fish survive in its native habitat, it also makes the arapaima much easier to catch, according to the researchers.
"Arapaima spawn on the edges of floodplain forests and come to the surface to breathe every 5 to 15 minutes, when they are easily located and harpooned by fishers using homemade canoes," said Caroline Arantes, a doctoral student in wildlife and fisheries science at Texas A&M University in College Station, who helped conduct the study.
Fishy policies
Of the five known species of arapaima, three have not been observed in the wild in decades, according to study co-author Donald Stewart, a professor with the State University of New York at Syracuse's College of Environmental Science. Stewart said that all five species dominated fisheries in the Amazon just a century ago.
A commercially important species, arapaima are traditionally fished by local Amazonian communities, a practice that's largely unregulated, the researchers said. To find out how this lack of regulation might be affecting the giant fish, the researchers interviewed local fishers operating within a 650-square-mile (1,683 square kilometers) floodplain in northwestern Brazil.
In 19 percent of the 81 communities surveyed, the arapaima was found to be already extinct. And the giant fish's numbers are depleted, or approaching extinction, in 57 percent of the communities surveyed. In 17 percent of the communities, the fish were deemed "overexploited," according to the researchers.
"Fishers continue to harvest arapaima regardless of low population densities," said study leader Leandro Castello, an assistant professor of fisheries at Virginia Tech's College of Natural Resources and Environment, in Blacksburg.
But the blame for the arapaima's dwindling numbers doesn't just fall on local fishing communities. Policymakers in Brazil may also be responsible, the researchers suggest. Government officials in the region tend to follow a "bioeconomic" line of thinking, which may have doomed the arapaima, the researchers said. [Amazon Expedition: An Album]
"Bioeconomic thinking has predicted that scarcity would drive up fishing costs, which would increase price and help save depleted species," Castello said. "If that prediction were true, extinctions induced by fishing would not exist, but that is not what has happened."
Fishing down
What is happening in the Amazon River basin is in line with something Castello and his colleagues call the "fishing-down" theory. This idea helps explain how large, high-value, easy-to-catch fish — such as the arapaima — can be fished to extinction.
In communities where arapaima are scarce, local fishers stop hunting the fish in traditional ways, such as with a harpoon. However, this doesn't mean fishers aren't killing arapaima; they're simply killing them in a different way.
These fishers use gill nets to harvest smaller fish, including juvenile arapaima. While local fishers don't necessarily catch the smaller arapaima on purpose, by "fishing down" they still end up killing the fish and further depleting the arapaima population.
But there is a bright side to this sad fish tale, according to study co-author David McGrath, a researcher with the Earth Innovation Institute in San Francisco. In communities that have implemented fishing rules, such as imposing a minimum capture size for arapaima and restricting the use of gill nets, the density of arapaima is 100 times higher than in places where no such rules exist.
"These communities are preventing further arapaima extinctions," McGrath said. 
Unfortunately, only 27 percent of the communities surveyed have management rules in place for fishing arapaima. One community that does manage these fish, Ilha de São Miguel, banned the use of gill nets two decades ago. It now has the highest arapaima densities in the region, the researchers found.
But regulations like those implemented by the community of Ilha de São Miguel are not common in floodplain regions, Castello said. These areas, he explained, suffer from widespread illegal fishing, a fact that he worries could lead to fishing-induced extinctions for other Amazonian species.
Fixing the situation
Part of the problem, Castello said, is a lack of economic alternatives for the fishers who survive on the commercial trade of threatened fish species. But the researchers said their findings demonstrate that it's possible to save the arapaima from extinction without jeopardizing local food supplies.
"Fisheries productivity in Ilha de São Miguel is also the highest in the study area," Castello said. "Cast nets are allowed because they are much more selective, yet they yield abundant fishes for local consumption, so food security for the community is not compromised."
This bodes well for both fish and fishermen, said the researchers, who believe that spreading the fishing practices of Ilha de São Miguel to other areas of the Amazon could bring this unique species of fish back from the brink.

Audrey Hepburn's Granddaughter Channels the Late Style Icon

Emma Ferrer (Michael Avedon/Harpers Bazaar)

Sean Ferrer, the elder son of Audrey Hepburn, has noticed similarities between his late mother and his 20-year-old daughter, Emma Ferrer, even though the women never had the chance to meet.
"My mother was the same as she was on the screen: unassuming, humble, funny, emotional, strong, delicate," Ferrer tells Harper's Bazaar of his mother, who died of a cancer in 1993, more than a year before Emma was born. "Fortunately Emma has much better boundaries than either Mom or I ever had. But the genes are strong — and the comedic gene is alive and well. And I can't help but think that both had to quit professional ballet because they were too tall."
The long and lithe Emma channels the source of those famous genes on the cover of the subscriber version of this month's Harper's Bazaar. In her first modeling job, Audrey's granddaughter evokes the iconic image of the Oscar-winning actress by wearing chic ensembles in a simple, sophisticated color palette — all looks reminiscent of Audrey. (The photographer for the shoot was none other than Michael Avedon, grandson of famed photographer Richard Avedon, who regularly captured snapshots of Audrey in the '50s.)(Michael Avedon/Harpers Bazaar)View gallery
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Emma reveals in an accompanying interview that in addition to dressing like her grandmother, she's also been thinking about her more than usual.
"I've been questioning a lot lately what she means to me," Emma, a student at the Florence Academy of Art, tells the magazine. "I knew her image, of course, and that I happened to be, by pure chance, related to her. But as a child I couldn't really relate to Audrey Hepburn, the actress. To me, she was family. I can live with her through my father. His stories are all about his growing up.
"But honestly, I haven't seen all of her movies," Emma reveals. "When I watched Breakfast at Tiffany's, I enjoyed it the same way any young girl would. I've seen My Fair Lady and Roman Holiday, but I suppose my favorite is Funny Face."
The difference was that Emma had more than a poster of Audrey on her wall. She still has her grandmother's cashmere turtlenecks — "which I adore and wear all throughout the winter," she notes — and "a white antique stuffed teddy bear."
Although the photos turned out beautifully for the novice model, don't expect to see much more of her in the pages of magazines.
"I don't see myself entirely devoted to a life as a model," Emma explained in a Women's Wear Daily story about the Harper's photo shoot. "I think it would be an amazing accompaniment to what it is I want to do. I'm interested in being involved in the fashion world... but not completely."
In January, Emma plans to move to NYC, where she'll continue studying to be an artist.

Disastrous for its owner, L.A. midcentury masterpiece Silvertop is on the market for $7.5 million

Photos: Silvertop, Los Angeles masterpiece by John Lautner

It was a house so wondrous that it helped bankrupt its owner.
Kenneth Reiner, an inventor whose aircraft nuts and pin-curl clips made him rich, commissioned the estate known as Silvertop from architect John Lautner. Overlooking the Silver Lake Reservoir, it's now one of Los Angeles' best-known homes. "Its soaring, ultramodern roof planes make it appear about to zoom off to Mars, taking part of the hill with it," wrote the Saturday Evening Post in 1960. "Around one end spirals a steep, apparently unsupported ramp that looks too fragile to cling there another minute."
The Post deemed the unfinished building "the darnedest house ever seen around Southern California." A photo of the Reiner family was captioned: "Still waiting, after four years, to move into Silvertop."
With buttons everywhere, the house seemed to operate as if by magic. You touched one lighted button and a sink filled with warm water to wash. Moments later it emptied and rinsed itself. Reiner invented many of the gizmos himself.
The cantilevered driveway was so radical that the city didn't believe it would support a car. Reiner had to sue for permission to build it. "He admits he is a stubborn man," a 1957 Los Angeles Times article said.
A two-page Life magazine spread of Silvertop's then-radical infinity-edge pool, shot by Grey Villet.
A two-page Life magazine spread of Silvertop's then-radical infinity-edge pool, shot by Grey Villet.
And that pool! -- "spookily engineered so there seems to be no rim, just water to the edge," Life magazine wrote in 1962. A photo by Grey Villet showed Reiner's daughter Bonnie and a friend on the invisible edge. "Her sister, her hands poking out of the water, seems about to go over the side between them while another under-water friend waves. Many parents will not live in the hills because they are afraid for their children, but kids survive."
These days many folks would recognize an infinity-edge pool -- but Lautner's at Silvertop is thought to be perhaps the very first modern one. 
It's just one of the ways Silvertop was ahead of its time, so much so that it has stood in as the embodiment of Los Angeles, as in the 1980s film "Less Than Zero."
Silvertop embodied L.A. in the 1980s movie Less Than Zero. Click any image for a slideshow.
Silvertop embodied L.A. in the 1980s movie Less Than Zero. Click any image for a slideshow.
And yet Reiner never got to live in it.
The house was originally expected to cost $75,000, but Reiner, a dream client if ever there was one, put no limitations on Lautner. Absent any pressure to economize, costs soared to more than $1 million. Reiner and a business partner even formed a corporation to support Lautner's office, freeing up the architect to focus on Silvertop, according to Reiner's obituary in the Los Angeles Times. Eventually, though, the partner sued Reiner, who lost the house in bankruptcy.
In 1974, the house sold to another family, the Burchills. They finished off Silvertop with Lautner's help and lived there right up to the present day.
Forty years later, it's on the market again. "They had great fun, and that is why they stayed so long," Mary Burchill Maxson said of her parents. But now her father has died, and her mother is in her 90s and wants to be closer to her children in Northern California, she told the Wall Street Journal.
Silvertop is listed at $7.5 million with Crosby Doe Associates. Offers are to be reviewed in about two weeks, on Aug. 25.
And see a Wall Street Journal report about the house (after the "Burn Notice" star's sale) here:

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