Top 2 Roller Coasters

Kingda Ka (World's Tallest roller coaster) and Formula Rossa (World's Fastest Roller Coaster) of 2011!

Young Domination

1 year Old kid signed for Venlo Football club!

TOP 5 HAUNTED HOTELS

Be aware of these haunted hotels in USA

Selena Gomez Dating a Kid!

Disney Channel star Selena Gomez has a new boyfriend who needs no introduction, a Canadian rock star, Justin Bieber

Fifa got a bug!

Now you can play Fifa 10 online mode for free. Yes its true, there is a bug in EA games Fifa 10 (PC).

The Home at the Top of a Volcano

This curvaceous home with 360 degree views, on a Southern Calif. volcano, is yours
for $750,000  

It's not every day one stumbles across a UFO, never mind one you can live in, and certainly never mind one plopped firmly atop a volcano—er, volcanic cinder cone, to be precise. But lo' and behold this curious desert
 dwelling located between Vegas and Los angeles in Newberry Springs, Calif. popped up on our radar screen.
Originally commissioned by aircraft-mechanics genius Vard Wallace as a personal retreat, the home was designed by prolific and versatile Southern California architect Harold Bissner, Jr. and completed in 1968. The inspiration? San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, a nuclear plant in northwestern San diego county.
This home design was inspired by a nuclear power plant

The property now belongs to local semi-celebrity Huell Howser, who has hosted California's Gold, a travel show on the Los Angeles radio station KCET, for the past 20 years. Howser listed the property in September 2009, at which point Curbed LA described it as a "secret hideout where you watch your dastardly plans unfold on flat screens and cackle at your minions."
Still lingering on the market for its initial ask of $750K, the two-bedroom, two-bathroom main house features a dome formed from concrete and bent-fir beams and grounded by glass walls; inside, a conversation pit keeps things centered around a fireplace.

No word whether the 60s modern furniture comes with the house

There's also a one-bedroom guest house, a lake, 60 acres of untarnished land, a three-car carport, a rooftop observation deck on top of that dome (360-degree views of the desert, anyone?) and, of course, the best part: brokerbabble that references a "stark, strong almost lunar landscape."
Fun times! Anyway, despite the fact that it's had zero luck selling—with nary a price chop, either—over the last two years, Howser's clearly holding out for that one special architecture geek who wants a serious story to tell. Or perhaps just some rich kid who wants to live in a spaceship.



'Potter' author wanted character dead

J.K. Rowling’s Confession Moves the Web

J.K. Rowling

J.K.Rowling has a confession: The Harry Potter series author wanted Ron Weasley dead. And not at the very end, either. She wanted him killed off halfway through the wizard tales.

Ron Weasley

The writer admitted as much to none other than Daniel Radcliffe, the star of the Harry Potter movies. The actor interviewed the scribe as part of a special feature to the DVD out Nov. 11, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: part 2", which leaked early on the Web, the Guardian reported.
In the short, Radcliffe tells Rowling that he was sure one of the three main characters "had to buy it." That's when the scribe of the beloved books owns up that Harry's best friend almost didn't make it.
She says, "Funnily enough, I planned from the start that none of them would die. Then midway through, which I think is a reflection of the fact that I wasn't in a very happy place, I started thinking I might polish one of them off. Out of sheer spite." Thankfully for fans of Weasley, including his love interest, Hermione, J.K. Rowling never followed through with the thought.
You can see the clip of the conversation here:


Others seemed just as relievedThank God she didn't. He was the only best character in the movie. For her part, Rowling seemed to be glad to have her dark-thoughts out in the open. She added, "It's a real relief to be able to talk about it all."

'Twilight' star Kristen Stewart Likes Sharukh khan!

I would love to work with SRK: 'Twilight' star Kristen Stewart


Kristen Stewart


Hollywood's fascination with Bollywood stars continues. The latest to join the list is "Twilight" actress Kristen Stewart, who is a huge fan of superstar Shah Rukh Khan.

She calls him an "epitome of romance" and says she would love to work with him. 

Sharukh khan

"Well, I am a big fan of Shah Rukh Khan who is an epitome of romance in Bollywood, " Stewart said in an e-mail interaction. 

She said if given a chance, he would be the one with whom she would love to do the second part of her movie "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn".

"I have also seen the promos of his latest movie 'Ra.One' which are very impressive and I just loved his look in the movie. I'll definitely watch the movie also. He is truly an inspiration to me, " she added.

Ra. One

"And not just Hollywood but I would love to work with him in Bollywood movies too and for that I am also looking forward to learning Hindi, " said the 21-year-old actress who rose to fame with her role as Bella Swan in the vampire saga "Twilight".

World's Oldest Light Bulb

It may not glow brightly, but it sure glows consistently for 110 years.

Oldest Light bulb

A light bulb hanging in the Livermore-Pleasanton Fire Department has been burning steadily for exactly 110 years, according the Centennial Bulb website. Since the "Centennial Bulb" was first turned on, the stock market crashed and was reborn, the nuclear age began, two World Wars were fought, cars and planes were developed … and through it all the bulb kept burning.
How exactly it stays lit remains something of a mystery, Lynn Owens, who is in charge of the light bulb centennial committee, told Time magazine.

"Nobody knows how it's possible. It's a 60-watt bulb and it's only turned on for about four watts, but nobody knows why it keeps burning ... We've had scientists from all over the country look at this light bulb," Owens said.

On June 18, the bulb celebrates its 110th year of illumination - a fact documented extensively by  Guinness World Records. But even beyond its staggering powers of endurance, it's hardly an ordinary bulb.


In a 2010 interview with the Daily Mail, bulb protector Steve Bunn ascribed the light's success to good old fashioned engineering.

"They certainly don't make them like this anymore, it's a real sign of how some things were better made in the past," he said.


According to Guinness book of world records, the "centennial Light" has been active since 1901.



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