Senin, 02 September 2013

Kate Bosworth and Michael Polish Wed




"Kate Bosworth is wearing her white before Labor Day! The Blue Crush star married director Michael Polish in an outdoor ceremony in Phillipsburg, Montana on Saturday, Aug. 31, People reports.

Bosworth, 30, and Polish, 42, met on the set of Big Sur in 2011 shortly after the actress called it quits with True Blood heartthrob Alexander Skarsgard. "I never dated my husband-to-be," Bosworth told InStyle UK in their September issue. "He said to me after just a few weeks before we were even together, 'I'm going to marry you.' He just knew."

RELATED PICS: Must-See Star Sightings

Prior to the weekend nuptials, the actress described her wedding as "not the norm and whisky will be involved." This is the second marriage for Polish, who has a teenage daughter with makeup artist Jo Strettell, whom he divorced in 2004."





Britain's new chief rabbi takes office




"Ephraim Mirvis took office as the new chief rabbi of the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth at a ceremony in London on Sunday.

Prince Charles joined Jewish and other faith leaders for the ceremony at St John's Wood Synagogue in north London.

Prime Minister David Cameron did not attend the ceremony but wrote on Twitter: "A warm welcome to @ChiefRabbi Mirvis and my thanks to Lord Sacks for the special contribution he made to our country as #ChiefRabbi."

South African-born Mirvis, the former chief rabbi of Ireland, takes over from Lord Jonathan Sacks who is retiring after 22 years in the post.

Mirvis, 56, has said uniting members of different branches of Judaism -- from liberals to the ultra-orthodox community -- will be one of his top priorities.

"Within our own ranks we need to build on that which unites us and not to concentrate so much on that which separates us," he said in an interview with the BBC.

"I will do my utmost to ensure that we will indeed achieve that unity."

The 2011 Census for England and Wales showed that 363,000 people identified themselves as of the Jewish faith, a rise of 3,000 over the last decade.

Around two thirds of the British Jewish community live in London. Outside the capital other major centres include Manchester, Leeds, Glasgow, Liverpool and Gateshead.

Officially, the role of chief rabbi is to represent the United Synagogue, the main wing of orthodox Judaism in Britain. But the chief rabbi is traditionally seen as a national representative for all of Britain's 260,000 Jews.

Mirvis is currently rabbi at Finchley Synagogue in north London. He was chosen to replace Sacks after a two-year search.

He worked as a rabbi in Dublin before becoming Ireland's chief rabbi in 1985, a post he held until 1992.

Stephen Pack, Honorary President of the United Synagogue who oversaw the selection process, said Mirvis "understands what makes British Jewry tick, its enormous strengths and its peculiarities and sensitivities".

"Wherever he has gone, he has won friends and admirers," Pack wrote in the Jewish Chronicle newspaper.

Pack also paid tribute to Sacks, who he said had "carried out the role with intellectual brilliance and in swashbuckling style" for more than two decades."





Britain's new chief rabbi takes office




"Ephraim Mirvis took office as the new chief rabbi of the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth at a ceremony in London on Sunday.

Prince Charles joined Jewish and other faith leaders for the ceremony at St John's Wood Synagogue in north London.

Prime Minister David Cameron did not attend the ceremony but wrote on Twitter: "A warm welcome to @ChiefRabbi Mirvis and my thanks to Lord Sacks for the special contribution he made to our country as #ChiefRabbi."

South African-born Mirvis, the former chief rabbi of Ireland, takes over from Lord Jonathan Sacks who is retiring after 22 years in the post.

Mirvis, 56, has said uniting members of different branches of Judaism -- from liberals to the ultra-orthodox community -- will be one of his top priorities.

"Within our own ranks we need to build on that which unites us and not to concentrate so much on that which separates us," he said in an interview with the BBC.

"I will do my utmost to ensure that we will indeed achieve that unity."

The 2011 Census for England and Wales showed that 363,000 people identified themselves as of the Jewish faith, a rise of 3,000 over the last decade.

Around two thirds of the British Jewish community live in London. Outside the capital other major centres include Manchester, Leeds, Glasgow, Liverpool and Gateshead.

Officially, the role of chief rabbi is to represent the United Synagogue, the main wing of orthodox Judaism in Britain. But the chief rabbi is traditionally seen as a national representative for all of Britain's 260,000 Jews.

Mirvis is currently rabbi at Finchley Synagogue in north London. He was chosen to replace Sacks after a two-year search.

He worked as a rabbi in Dublin before becoming Ireland's chief rabbi in 1985, a post he held until 1992.

Stephen Pack, Honorary President of the United Synagogue who oversaw the selection process, said Mirvis "understands what makes British Jewry tick, its enormous strengths and its peculiarities and sensitivities".

"Wherever he has gone, he has won friends and admirers," Pack wrote in the Jewish Chronicle newspaper.

Pack also paid tribute to Sacks, who he said had "carried out the role with intellectual brilliance and in swashbuckling style" for more than two decades."





Healthy Boost: Natural Energy Drinks Worth Trying




"Now that the cat is out of the bag on Monster Energy Drinks and 5-Hour Energy's link to FDA death reports, everyone wants to know what energy drinks they can safely sip on. Good thing the market is now full of naturally caffeinated alternatives to the products in the energy drink aisle.

RELATED: Cannabis Energy Drink On the Market

The Daily Meal has found other options to get your dose of energy - plus real vitamins and nutrients. Not only are they packed with natural sources of caffeine, like green tea leaf extract and green coffee bean extract, they contain vitamins A, B, B6, B12 (particularly known to boost energy), C, and a multitude of other antioxidants, polyphenols, and minerals, too.

RELATED: Is Water As Effective as Energy Drinks?

More important, though, is what's missing from this lineup of drinks: synthetic caffeine and other frowned-upon ingredients.

We think these make good alternatives for those looking to avoid the midday crash, and help sneak in some true health benefits at the same time.

RELATED: Chew More to Gain More Energy

EBOOST

The EBOOST dietary supplements have a long list of vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants on their ingredient lists - and as a bonus, it's easy to understand what the ingredients are. Take the EBOOST Acai Pomegranate dietary supplement: made with real acai fruit, green tea leaf extract, pomegranate fruit extract, mango, resveratrol from red grapes, Stevia leaf extract, and agave. And each supplement has about 110 to 150 milligrams of caffeine. Not to say you should do everything that Jillian Michaels and Oprah Winfrey tell you to do, but we think if they like it - it's a pretty solid choice.

RELATED: 5-Hour Energy Drinks Now Cited in 13 Deaths

Frava

Combine "fruit" and "java" and what do you get? Frava, a natural fruit juice that uses green coffee bean extract for its punch of caffeine. With flavors like Pomegranate Acai (a powerful kick of antioxidants) and Peach Mango (with a powerful kick of vitamin C), you're getting the true benefits of juice with about two coffee mugs worth of caffeine. (One drawbacks of the drink: the use of sucralose and acesulfame potassium, two artificial sweeteners that some frown upon.)

RELATED: 2 Easy Juice Recipes to Get You Through the Week

Scheckter's OrganicEnergy Drink

It's being hailed as the world's first 100 percent natural energy drink that uses all organic, vegetarian, and fair-trade ingredients. The drink, founded by former race car driver Toby Scheckter, is free of synthetic caffeine, artificial sweeteners, colors, and flavors, and toxic chemicals. And its ingredients read like a garden: organic raw Brazilian coffee seed, organic ginseng, organic gingko biloba, and organic guarana, among others. The drink delivers a 135-milligram dose of caffeine.

Click here to see more Energy Drinks Worth Trying

-Marcy Franklin, The Daily Meal "





Healthy Boost: Natural Energy Drinks Worth Trying




"Now that the cat is out of the bag on Monster Energy Drinks and 5-Hour Energy's link to FDA death reports, everyone wants to know what energy drinks they can safely sip on. Good thing the market is now full of naturally caffeinated alternatives to the products in the energy drink aisle.

RELATED: Cannabis Energy Drink On the Market

The Daily Meal has found other options to get your dose of energy - plus real vitamins and nutrients. Not only are they packed with natural sources of caffeine, like green tea leaf extract and green coffee bean extract, they contain vitamins A, B, B6, B12 (particularly known to boost energy), C, and a multitude of other antioxidants, polyphenols, and minerals, too.

RELATED: Is Water As Effective as Energy Drinks?

More important, though, is what's missing from this lineup of drinks: synthetic caffeine and other frowned-upon ingredients.

We think these make good alternatives for those looking to avoid the midday crash, and help sneak in some true health benefits at the same time.

RELATED: Chew More to Gain More Energy

EBOOST

The EBOOST dietary supplements have a long list of vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants on their ingredient lists - and as a bonus, it's easy to understand what the ingredients are. Take the EBOOST Acai Pomegranate dietary supplement: made with real acai fruit, green tea leaf extract, pomegranate fruit extract, mango, resveratrol from red grapes, Stevia leaf extract, and agave. And each supplement has about 110 to 150 milligrams of caffeine. Not to say you should do everything that Jillian Michaels and Oprah Winfrey tell you to do, but we think if they like it - it's a pretty solid choice.

RELATED: 5-Hour Energy Drinks Now Cited in 13 Deaths

Frava

Combine "fruit" and "java" and what do you get? Frava, a natural fruit juice that uses green coffee bean extract for its punch of caffeine. With flavors like Pomegranate Acai (a powerful kick of antioxidants) and Peach Mango (with a powerful kick of vitamin C), you're getting the true benefits of juice with about two coffee mugs worth of caffeine. (One drawbacks of the drink: the use of sucralose and acesulfame potassium, two artificial sweeteners that some frown upon.)

RELATED: 2 Easy Juice Recipes to Get You Through the Week

Scheckter's OrganicEnergy Drink

It's being hailed as the world's first 100 percent natural energy drink that uses all organic, vegetarian, and fair-trade ingredients. The drink, founded by former race car driver Toby Scheckter, is free of synthetic caffeine, artificial sweeteners, colors, and flavors, and toxic chemicals. And its ingredients read like a garden: organic raw Brazilian coffee seed, organic ginseng, organic gingko biloba, and organic guarana, among others. The drink delivers a 135-milligram dose of caffeine.

Click here to see more Energy Drinks Worth Trying

-Marcy Franklin, The Daily Meal "





Kate Bosworth Marries Michael Polish in Intimate Ranch Wedding




"The long-awaited moment has arrived! Kate Bosworth and fiance Michael Polish officially exchanged vows and became husband and wife in an intimate ceremony in Philipsburg, Montana on Saturday, Aug. 31, multiple sources confirm to Us Weekly.

Bosworth, 30, and film director Polish, 42, said "I do" in front of about 50-75 of their closest family and friends at The Ranch at Rock Creek, sources tell Us. The ceremony took place on a mountain top, with the new bride arriving in a stage coach being pulled by two horses. The Win a Date With Tad Hamilton! actress wore a traditional strapless dress with a full train and had her hair up and pulled away from her face.

Guests of the newlweds were given Polaroid cameras, and were asked to post photos on a board in the main lodge that said, "Love is..."

The couple, who met on the set of 2011 film Big Sur, knew from the get-go that their relationship would be a lasting one, Bosworth told the September issue of InStyle UK.

"I never even dated my husband-to-be," she told the magazine. "He said to me after just a few weeks, before we were even together, 'I'm going to marry you.' He just knew."

Polish proposed to Bosworth in August 2012 during a trip to South Korea after the pair first made their public debut as an item at a Coldplay concert just one year earlier.

Before meeting her now-husband, Bosworth dated Alexander Skarsgard and Orlando Bloom.

This article originally appeared on Usmagazine.com: Kate Bosworth Marries Michael Polish in Intimate Ranch Wedding"





Minggu, 01 September 2013

Kate Middleton Makes First Post-Baby Appearance: How Does She Look?




"The Duchess of Cambridge is back and ready for action!

Kate Middleton looked fresh and fit as she accompanied her husband, Prince William, to her first event five weeks after giving birth to baby George. The couple attended the Ring O'Fire Ultra Marathon in Anglesey, Wales, to kick off the annual 135-mile coastal race, which takes place over three days.

The Duchess of Cambridge's appearance was very spur of the moment, as the new mom was not originally scheduled to make any public appearances until the Tusk Conservation Awards on September 12.

Still, Middleton looked stunningly cool and casual … and not at all mom-ish! She rocked some totally chic, snug black skinny jeans by Paige Denim, a polka-dot top from Zara, and an olive green Ralph Lauren blazer while mingling with the crowd at the event. She finished the look with LK Bennett wedges and relaxed waves in her hair.

So where was Prince George while mom and dad went on this outing?

"He's sleeping at the moment," Middleton said. The little one isn't expected to be seen again until his christening."