Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn explores. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn explores. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng

Thứ Sáu, 3 tháng 5, 2013

Documentary 'Aroused' explores what makes women turn to porn careers

  • aroused documentary 660.jpg

Ever wonder what makes young, pretty, "good" girls pursue careers in porn?

So did Deborah Anderson, that's why she made a documentary and fine-art photography book on the subject. "Aroused" opens in select theaters Thursday and is available for download on iTunes. The book is available on Amazon.

Many of the 16 adult-film actresses featured in "Aroused" attended the film's premiere Wednesday night at the Landmark Theatre and hung around afterward to autograph the coffee-table book.

Anderson was inspired to explore these women's stories after casting a porn star in a photo shoot for a magazine. She was struck by the woman's warm personality and her stories of harsh treatment from the public despite contributing to a widely consumed product of a billion-dollar industry.

Porn stars are not failed actresses. They enjoy their work and see off-duty sex as having nothing to do with their day jobs. All have had sexually-transmitted diseases. Most shared concern for how others view their profession and worried whether it could impede future job or romantic prospects.

Anderson said she hopes the book and film will spotlight the humanity of these women and the sensuality of their work.


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Thứ Sáu, 29 tháng 3, 2013

Marja Vongerichten explores her roots through Korean cooking

By ,

Kitchen Superstars

Published March 29, 2013

FoxNews.com

Marja Vongerichten may be married to Jean-Georges Vongerichten --a Michelin-star winning chef -- but her cooking is a little more down home.

Vongerichten was born in South Korea, then adopted and raised in northern Virginia – so she has a penchant for cooking soul food, and Seoul food.

“I actually call Korean food the soul food of Asia,” Vongerichten told FoxNews.com’s Kitchen Superstars. “It’s cheaper cuts of meat, it’s hard vegetables that you need to cook a long time. It’s very simple peasant food and ingredients, which is soul food for me.”

Vongerichten was adopted at age 3 and spent many years tracking down her birth mother.  When the two were reunited, they bonded by cooking Korean food together.

“When I first met my birth mother, who lives in Brooklyn, the first thing she did was cook for me,” Vongerichten told FoxNews.com’s Kitchen Superstars. “I had this flood of memories come back to my taste buds.”

Vongerichten also co-hosted PBS TV series “Kimchi Chronicles” with husband Jean-Georges,which followed Marja as she explored her Korean roots.  Part travelogue, part documentary she and Jean-Georges would travel to Asia where they would taste food of different regions and then come back to the U.S. and recreate them.  Her journeys was also chronicled in a cookbook to accompany the series.

“It kind of incorporates my story, being born in Korea, adopted and raised without Korean food for so long and then reconnecting with my birth mother,” Vongerichten said.

But even with a cookbook and food show in the bag, Marja still doesn’t see herself joining her husband running his global restaurant empire business, which includes Jean-Georges Steakhouse in Las Vegas, Portico in the new Le Meridien Atlanta and the Spice Market in London. 

“Anyone who’s married to a chef knows the kind of hours that it takes and it’s a really huge commitment,” Vongerichten said. “That’s the other woman in my life.”

Regardless, her culinary skills have impressed her chef husband. Though she says she didn’t cook for him for a “long time,” when she finally did cook she earned his stamp of approval.  He even put her Mac and Cheese recipe on the menu at  Mercer Kitchen in New York.

Going forward, Marja says she wants to continue exploring her Korean roots through food.

“There are lots of recipes I haven't tackled yet and I'm still learning as I go, but I have a general understanding of Korean flavors and I know what things taste like.”


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Chủ Nhật, 24 tháng 3, 2013

Weather Channel explores 'rogue planet' doomsday scenario

  • two-planets

    Artist's conception of the rogue planet Nibiru, or Planet X.gilderm | sxc.hu

What if a rogue planet swept through the solar system, altering Earth's orbit? Potentially, the death of all life on the planet, according to a new Weather Channel special.

"Forecasting the End," a new Weather Channel series, premieres March 21, exploring the possible results of a rogue planet fly-by. Rogue planets, or planets not linked to stars, may outnumber actual stars in the Milky Way galaxy. Myths about "Planet X" or "Nibiru" hold that a stealth rogue planet is headed this way (actually, it was supposed to hit on the Mayan apocalypse on Dec. 21, 2012).

'Life on Earth is very much dependent on the orbit we are in around the sun.'

- David Bennett, a University of Notre Dame astrophysicist

In fact, the likelihood of a rogue planet swinging by is slim. Astronomers have yet to find any evidence that any of the planets in our own solar system are captured rogues. And the average space between rogue planets and other bodies in our galaxy is quite expansive, Bad Astronomy blogger Phil Plait has calculated. In other words, a collision isn't likely.

The first episode of "Forecasting the End" focuses on what might happen in this very unlikely scenario. Potentially, scientists say, a planet passing by could alter the orbits of the planets in the solar system, making Earth's orbit more elliptical.

A more elliptical orbit would be bad news for life. Earth orbits in a relatively thin habitable zone around the sun, which allows for temperatures where water can be a solid, liquid or gas.

This more elliptical orbit might not push Earth out of this zone, but could bring the planet close enough to the sun to create short, extremely intense summers and then far enough away for very long winters. This would create a shorter growing period and mass food shortages, even human extinction.

"Life on Earth is very much dependent on the orbit we are in around the sun," said David Bennett, a University of Notre Dame astrophysicist.

To make the series, complete with simulations of the world-ending scenario, Weather Channel director Brea Tisdale and crew filmed real people "reacting" to disasters, which they added later using computer graphics. In one shot of a volcanic disaster, the crew sprinkled flour from above to look like ash.

"The actors have to pretend that something terrible is happening in the sky above them, when actually it's a really sunny, nice day," said director of photography Doug Cheney.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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