Subscribe for updates!

Latest Photos

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Search this blog..

Top Stories of the week

Our Link Partners

Link Exchange? Click Here

Sofia Vergara is the hottest woman ever, men say

Posted in : Sexiest Women

(added 2 days ago)

Sofia Vergara is the hottest woman ever, men sayHere's a news flash for you: Men like women with a little meat on their bones. Need proof? AskMen.com selected Colombian stunner Sofia Vergara as their top pick for the hottest woman of 2011.

"Vergara shows off the best cleavage on network TV, and we've never been more jealous of Ed O'Neill," AskMen.com wrote. "But despite her obvious assets, Vergara's also one very funny woman, lampooning stereotypes with her perfect timing. You don't have to pretend to laugh at her jokes, even if you do have to make a concerted effort to pay attention to them. And though you'd never think it to look at her, Vergara is mother to a 20-year-old."

Not bad for an actress who only gained household name status within the past couple of years. The Modern Family star said she was happy with the award — and we are too! She is definitely this generation's curvy ideal. I am so honored to be AskMen's most desired woman this year. A big thank you to all the men who desire me," she joked. The 40-year-old actress likes beating out younger stars like Kim Kardashian, Scarlett Johansson and Emma Stone for her sexiness.

"Of course I love it. I'm nearly 40 years old," she told the Irish Independent. "I always joke with my publicist and my manager that I'm competing for the best ass with Kim Kardashian and she is 15 years younger than me. She must be so upset thinking: 'Why am I being compared to that old woman?' I'm always in these sexiest lists and I'm 20 years older than the others. I love it."

Read the rest of this entry »

(added 2 days ago) / 7 views

Women's heart health problems reach 'epidemic' level

Posted in : Women Health Issues

(added 4 days ago)

The biggest killer of American women is not cancer. It's cardiovascular disease. Roughly every minute of every day, a woman dies from heart disease -- and the victims are getting younger, defying the myth that it's a disease of the very old.

Dr. Susan Bennett, a Washington cardiologist, says it's "an epidemic.""Since 1984, more American women have died of heart disease than American men."But Bennett says the death rate can and will come down if more women heed the warning signs, make necessary lifestyle changes and know when to call 911. The worst thing they can do, she says, is to say "it can't happen to me."

That's the point being driven home by heart attack survivors in the D.C. region. Throughout February, which is National Heart Month, survivors and supporters are stepping up efforts to draw attention to heart health among women.

Gail Harris-Barry, who suffered her first heart attack in 2006, says women have to learn to take charge of their own bodies. She says diet and exercise are vitally important, but so is knowing your complete family health history. In her case, there was a strong history of heart disease on her father's side. Most of the men in her family were dead before the age of 50.

"My dad had a quadruple bypass six months prior to my first episode -- in the same hospital."Harris-Barry was 43 at the time. Another survivor, Andrea Wongsam, was 35 and pregnant when her heart betrayed her.
 
"I had no clue that I was at risk for a heart attack," Wongsam says. Now she is on a campaign to educate young women about the need to be vigilant about their heart health. She says it has given her "the most self-satisfying twist to this whole personal tragedy of mine."

Read the rest of this entry »

(added 4 days ago) / 12 views

Working women not ready to share bank accounts with boyfriends

Posted in : Working Women

(added 6 days ago)

Washington, August 15: A report has revealed that almost half of single working women are more likely to say "Yes" to a marriage proposal than a joint bank account with their boyfriend.

According to a Friends Life report, 45 per cent of single women are reluctant to commit themselves to their partner financially - while 61 per cent believed that financial independence could benefit a relationship.
Women who are renting their homes are also more likely to want to get on to the property ladder than their male counterparts with 53 per cent saying they hoped to buy their own home within the next five years, compared to just a third of men.

"Women have fought hard for their financial independence and they are determined not to give it up, regardless of whether they are single or in a relationship," the Scotsman quoted Kim Clarke, head of HR at Friends Life, as saying.

Read the rest of this entry »

(added 6 days ago) / 12 views

Dangerous abortions on the rise—WHO

Posted in : Women Health Issues

(added 11 days ago)

Dangerous abortions on the rise—WHOA rising proportion of abortions worldwide are putting women’s health at risk, researchers say. The World Health Organisation study suggests global abortion rates are steady, at 28 per 1,000 women a year. However, the proportion of the total carried out without trained clinical help rose from 44 per cent in 1995 to 49 per cent in 2008. The Lancet, which carried the report, said the figures were “deeply disturbing.” Unsafe abortion is one of the main contributors to maternal death worldwide, and refers to procedures outside hospitals, clinics and surgeries, or without qualified medical supervision. Women are more vulnerable to dangerous infection or bleeding in these environments. In developing countries, particularly those with more restrictive abortion laws, most abortions are unsafe, with 97 per cent of abortions in Africa described this way. In comparison, 95 per cent of abortions in Latin America were deemed unsafe, falling to 40 per cent in Asia, 15 per cent in Oceania and nine per cent in Europe. To compile the figures—often a difficult task in countries where abortion is illegal—the researchers at the Guttmacher Foundation used surveys, official statistics and hospital records. They concluded that while the abortion rate had fallen since 1995, that drop had now levelled off, and overall, the rise in world population meant that there were 2.2 million more abortions in 2008 compared with 2003.
 
In the developed world, the proportion of pregnancies ending in abortion fell from 36 per cent in 1995 to 26 per cent in 2008. Countries with restrictive abortion laws did not have a corresponding decrease in abortion rate - in some cases, the reverse was true. Professor Beverly Winikoff, from Gynuity, a New York organisation which pushes for access to safer abortion, wrote in the Lancet: “Unsafe abortion is one of the five major contributors to maternal mortality, causing one in every seven or eight maternal deaths in 2008. “Yet, when abortion is provided with proper medical techniques and care, the risk of death is negligible and nearly 14 times lower than that of childbirth. “The data continue to confirm what we have known for decades—that women who wish to terminate unwanted pregnancies will seek abortion at any cost, even if it is illegal or involves risk to their own lives.” Dr Richard Horton, the Lancet’s editor, said: “These latest figures are deeply disturbing. The progress made in the 1990s is now in reverse.
“Condemning, stigmatising and criminalising abortion are cruel and failed strategies.”
 
Kate Hawkins, from the Sexuality and Development Programme at the Institute of Development Studies, said: “Whether it is legal or illegal, women will seek abortions and obtain abortions.“This study showed that in 2008, 86 per cent of abortions took place in developing countries and that nearly half of all abortions worldwide were unsafe in 2008. “That women continue to die in significant numbers because of unsafe abortion is a scandal and is an issue that the development sector should take seriously.” The UK Department for International Development part-funded the study, and International Development Secretary Andrew Mitchell MP said it was a “tragedy” that the number of “back-street” abortions was rising. “Women should be able to decide for themselves whether, when and how many children to have—but for many this is not a reality as they have no access to family planning. “Over the next four years, British aid will give 10 million women access to modern contraception, which will prevent millions of unintended pregnancies.”

Read the rest of this entry »

(added 11 days ago) / 19 views

Typing – it's complicated

Posted in : Women Skills

(added 12 days ago)

'Can you touch-type?" It's a simple question, but when I ask around, I am struck by how many women say they taught themselves in secret. Some former grammar-school girls over 35 have even told me that they were told not to learn at all – they were supposed to become executives with secretaries. The teaching of typing in schools remains haphazard. How did we end up with such an odd relationship with the instrument at the heart of most modern jobs and communication? Especially one that was a tool of female emancipation, offering women a respectable line of work in offices.

Typing – it's complicated

The modern typewriter's QWERTY keyboard was designed by an American, James Densmore, in around 1870. Laid out to prevent keys jamming and improve flow rate, it remains the standard today, seeing off its only serious rival - the 1930s Dvorak, which claimed to require even less finger action than the QWERTY. Women's expected accomplishment at piano playing at the time was directly linked to the typewriter's 10 finger flow, and late 19th-century advertising for the first mass-produced models featured women demonstrating that even females could operate them with ease.

Historian Anna Davin has written that when the British civil service took over operating telegraph and postal offices in the 1870s, the official in charge, Frank Scudamore, sought out women clerks for their typing speed and dexterity. But crucially, Scudamore said the wages: "which will draw male operators from but an inferior class of the community, will draw female operators from a superior class." Women would spell and type better, raise the tone of the office, then marry and leave without requiring pensions.

So the trap of the over-educated but low-status secretary was born. The BBC's typing pool may have been the entry point for some successful female broadcasters and executives such as Natasha Kaplinsky, but in Rona Jaffe's Mad Men-era novel, The Best of Everything, sexual predators prowl its perimeter. In the seminal 80s film, Working Girl, the secretaries bemoan their job title – "I prefer personal assistant" – but the only way they can get taken seriously is by pretending to be an executive.

Male executives, meanwhile, were keen not to be seen at a keyboard. In the 1980s, IBM researchers found them hostile to the "secretarial" word-processor image of PCs. The advent of spreadsheet software is thought to be what first made office PCs acceptable to them. Then, as we entered the digital age, men were suddenly glued to the keyboard. In the mid 1990s, British tech entrepreneur Ed Maklouf arrived at Stanford University, in Silicon Valley. "If I had any residual idea about the supposed femininity of touch-typing," he says, "it disappeared the moment I walked into a room full of coders, and saw them all attacking the keys as though they were in battle."

Like generations of women before me, I learned to type on a black, spider-like manual machine, in a typing school. The positions of the letters embedded themselves into my finger muscle memory, ready for a lifetime of typing scripts and news copy. But for many women before me, it was a skill not to express one's own thoughts, but to take down and shape those of a male boss.

Read the rest of this entry »

(added 12 days ago) / 17 views

Elin Nordegren

Posted in : Famous Women

(added 13 days ago)

A late-night car crash and an infamous golf swing created a major scandal revealing that Tiger Woods had an affair. As more women confess they’ve hooked up with the golfer, we wouldn’t blame Elin for taking another swing.

Elin Nordegren

It seems like they have it all— fame, tons of cash, and killer looks— but even totally hot famous chicks get screwed by their guys, in a bad way.

Read the rest of this entry »

(added 13 days ago) / 25 views

The naked truth about Hope Solo

Posted in : Famous Women

(added 15 days ago)

The naked truth about Hope SoloRecognition, and sometimes controversy, seem to follow Hope Solo like her shadow. The goalkeeper for the U.S. women’s soccer team has posed nude in ESPN the Magazine’s The Body Issue, appeared on television’s Dancing with the Stars, and stirred controversy with her blunt criticism of a coach’s decision to not play her in the semi-final of the 2007 FIFA Women’s World Cup.

Solo was mentioned in news reports after a man was shot and killed Tuesday night in the upscale Vancouver hotel where the U.S. team is staying while competing at the CONCACAF Olympic qualifying tournament.

“Saved by our instant yoga session,” Solo tweeted. “Was about to walk to Starbucks when all hell broke loose in the lobby of our hotel. Life is precious …” Solo said the shooting left the team “a bit scared,” but added that it wouldn’t affect their quest to qualify for this summer’s Olympic Games in London.

“We were aware of the situation,” the 30-year-old Seattle resident said Wednesday between sips of coffee. “I think it was handled incredibly well by the hotel and the police officers.”With her fresh good looks and outspoken personality, Solo has made the transition from sports star to celebrity. Critics may argue she is feeding her own ego, but Solo believes the publicity raises the profile of women’s soccer.

“It helps grow the game,” she said. “For the game to grow, it needs to get more mainstream media. I know Dancing with the Stars did just that.”What sometimes is forgotten in the glare of the bright lights is that Solo is an elite goalie who must play an important role if the Americans hope to repeat as Olympic gold medalists.

“Everything she has got success wise she deserves,” teammate Becky Sauerbrunn said. “I think she is the best [goalkeeper] in the world. As a teammate, she gets the best out of you and she does it in her own way.”

Forward Abby Wambach said Solo has helped raise the soccer team’s status in American pop culture. But that doesn’t mean Solo will receive any special treatment when it comes to trying to win games.

“We treat her like she is our teammate,” Wambach said. “She’s a superstar in our eyes only because she is our goaltender. Whatever people choose to do outside the lines of this game we are going to support, especially if it brings as much attention as she did to this game.”

Solo said her activities outside soccer won’t interfere with her play on the field.  “I don’t think anybody has ever questioned my focus because I am such a balls-to-the-wall kind of athlete, a very in-your-face athlete,” she said. “I’m very competitive, very driven.

“The great thing is I’m an athlete first and always have been. I get the attention because I am good at what I do. That is always going to be the focus. I have no problem with that.”Solo said she’s never been so nervous as when she performed on Dancing with the Stars. Getting naked for ESPN didn’t cause the same stress.

“It was honestly nothing,” she said. “They make you feel comfortable. I am proud of the woman athlete’s figure. It takes work to get that.”Solo is still bothered by her surgically reconstructed right shoulder, something she is learning to deal with.

“My shoulder will always be an issue,” she said. “I’m getting through it.”The U.S. women play their first game of the eight-team tournament Friday against the Dominican Republic. Canada plays its first game against Haiti Thursday night. The top two teams advance to the London Games.

Solo knows her high profile will result in closer scrutiny of her performance. “You either strive under pressure or you sink,” she said, shrugging. “Fortunately for me, all my life I have strived under pressure. The more pressure on me, I usually rise to the occasion.”

Read the rest of this entry »

(added 15 days ago) / 34 views

Princess Diana - FAMOUS WOMEN AND BEAUTY

Posted in : Famous Women

(added 16 days ago)

Princess Diana - FAMOUS WOMEN AND BEAUTYHer hairstyles were a true reflection of her personality. From shy, sweet and romantic Lady Di she would pass through series of transformations in her look, to become a modern princess, the Queen of Style for the generations of women.

While Diana’s clothes generated a lot of public attention, it was her hairstyles that had become the true expression of her style and her personality.

"She always wondered why people were so interested in her hair," said Richard Dalton, the hairstylist of Princess Diana. The Scottish-born stylist was Dianaa's hairdresser for ten years, acting as both her beauty and fashion consultant.

In the summer of 1990, Diana asked the advice of hairstylist Sam McKnight about updating her appearance. He suggested cutting her hair short.

The newly flattering style looked very sophisticated and modern. The new look reflected her way of life of a fashionable, professional working woman. Diana’s short, layered cut soon became her signature look: simple, sophisticated and glamorous.
 

Read the rest of this entry »

(added 16 days ago) / 26 views

Tigers Fall To No. 14 Texas A&M, 78-52

Posted in : Women Sports

(added 17 days ago)

Sydney Carter and Adaora Elonu each scored 16 points and No. 14 Texas A&M beat Missouri 78-52 on Wednesday night to give coach Gary Blair his 200th win with the Aggies. It is Texas A&M's eighth straight win over Missouri (10-6, 0-5 Big 12) and leaves the Tigers winless in Big 12 play.

Tigers Fall To No. 14 Texas A&M, 78-52

The Aggies were up by nine points early in the second half before going on an 8-0 run to extend the lead to 58-41 with about 10 minutes remaining. Missouri's Morgan Eye hit a 3-pointer before Texas A&M (12-4, 3-2) used a 14-2 spurt, keyed by 3s from Tyra White and Adrienne Pratcher, to push its advantage to 72-46 with about three minutes left.

Read the rest of this entry »

(added 17 days ago) / 22 views

Women's group fears upsurge of 'sexist' beer ads

Posted in : Sexiest Women

(added 18 days ago)

A women's group has struck out at a change in advertising codes it says will lead to more sexist beer commercials on television. The director of the Women's Health Action Trust said the Advertising Standards Authority had cut guidelines which prevented alcohol adverts from depicting "unduly masculine themes or portray unrealistic behaviour".

Women's group fears upsurge of 'sexist' beer ads

But the Advertising Standards Agency said a flood of alcohol advertisements which were derogatory towards women was very unlikely. Following a review late last year of the Code for Advertising Liquor, the ASA removed the requirement that alcohol advertisements "shall not depict unduly masculine themes or portray unrealistic behaviour".

Director of Women's Health Action Trust, Maree Pierce, said they were "stunned" the ASA would chose to weaken its rules at a time when New Zealand communities "have made such a strong call for more rigorous control of alcohol advertising and its content".

"Plenty of evidence has shown how beer advertising, both in New Zealand and abroad, draws heavily on stereotypical masculine themes and routinely portrays sexist, derogatory and degrading behaviour by men, towards women, as part of beer drinking culture and lifestyle.

"The Tui beer advertisements are a good example - these kinds of representations are a barrier to gender equality and perpetuate concerning attitudes about women. "That such attitudes are routinely portrayed to sell a product that we know is implicated in violence towards women, and that the ASA has now lowered the threshold around such advertising, is of huge concern."

However, Advertising Standards Agency chief executive Hilary Souter said she was confident the removal of the requirement would not result in a flood of sexist commercials. The requirement for alcohol advertisements not to depict "unduly masculine themes" was not a significant area of complaint and the language was quite dated.

"Because those words have been taken out, I don't think you'll see a significant change in advertising all of a sudden becoming more 'blokey'," Mrs Souter said. Any discrimination or degradation toward an individual or group was still covered by the Code for People in Advertising, she said.

But Ms Pierce said it was important that the "shall not depict unduly masculine" requirement was reinstated because it was mostly beer advertisements which idealised masculinity.

Read the rest of this entry »

(added 18 days ago) / 31 views