Bethenny Frankel Separates From Husband of 2 Years

After two years of marriage, TV personality Bethenny Frankel and husband Jason Hoppy are separating.

"'It brings me great sadness to say that Jason and I are separating. This was an extremely difficult decision that as a woman and a mother, I have to accept as the best choice for our family. We have love and respect for one another and will continue to amicably co-parent our daughter who is and will always remain our first priority. This is an immensely painful and heartbreaking time for us," the former Real Housewives of New York City star's rep said in a statement.

Frankel, 42, also tweeted: "I am heartbroken. I am sad. We will work through this as a family."

In 2010, the couple were married and had their daughter, Bryn. Frankel and Hoppy's relationship was then documented in two reality TV shows, Bethenny Getting Married? and Bethenny Ever After...

Read More..

Chill Factor








Most popular songs

1. Locked Out of Heaven, Bruno Mars

2. Gangnam Style, PSY

3. I Knew You Were Trouble, Taylor Swift

4. Ho Hey, The Lumineers

5. Scream and Shout, Will.I.Am

6. Diamonds, Rihanna

7. Beauty and a Beat, Justin Bieber

8. Die Young, Kesha

9. Thrift Shop, Macklemore, Ryan Lewis

10. Home, Phillip Phillips

TiVo favorites

1. NFL: 49ers vs. Patriots

2. 60 Minutes

3. The Big Bang Theory

Top video downloads

1. Eagle and toddler

2. Fruit ninja in real life

3. Top 10 scare pranks 2012

Google trends

1. Bruno Mars

2. Calvin Johnson

3. Ryan Freel

NY Post hot topics





Ki Price/Invision/AP



Rihanna




AP



Tory Burch





1. Tory Burch legal blitz

2. Ad guru on sale of estate

3. Groping in Times Square

4. Victoria Soto’s class picture

5. NJ town puts armed guard in schools










Read More..

Time’s up for holiday shopping procrastinators




















Last minute shoppers like Josette Tyne are in luck this year.

With a long weekend before Christmas, retailers want to make it easier for procrastinators to finish their gift buying. Macy’s for the first time is keeping all its stores open around the clock from Friday until Sunday at midnight. Toys “R” Us and Walmart Supercenters will be open non-stop until Christmas Eve.

Even those retailers skipping the all nighter still have added extended hours often as late as 11 pm or midnight. Coupled with a flurry of last minute promotions, they hope to lure shoppers, many of whom have been largely sitting on the sidelines since Black Friday.





Tyne, 33, just starting her shopping this week at Aventura Mall, armed with a list of about two dozen people and the presents they wanted. The list would have been longer if the Fort Lauderdale resident hadn’t limited it to the kids in her family.

“I’ll probably be shopping every day from now till Sunday,” said Tyne, as she wheeled the youngest of her three boys around H&M in a stroller before heading on to Game Stop, Urban Outfitters and BCBG. “Whatever catches my eye. Luckily the kids usually like everything I get. I’m the awesome Auntie.”

A Consumer Reports Poll released earlier this week found that with just five shopping days left until Christmas, a whopping 68 percent of shoppers — a projected 132 million Americans — have yet to finish their holiday shopping.

With an early Thanksgiving leaving an extra week until Christmas and a long weekend before Tuesday’s holiday, shoppers have felt little need to rush. They also haven’t found December deals to be quite as compelling as the November sales.

Based on disappointing sales trends earlier this month, ShopperTrak said Wednesday it was cutting its holiday sales forecast. The company, which counts foot traffic and its own proprietary sales numbers from 40,000 retail outlets across the country, now expects a 2.5 percent sales increase to $257.7 billion, down from the 3.3 percent growth it initially predicted. The National Retail Federation is sticking with its prediction of a 4.1 percent sales increase.

Online sales trends are more encouraging, up 13 percent to $35 billion from Nov. 1 through Dec. 16, according to comScore, an online research firm. But that pace is below the forecast of 17 percent for the season.

“It’s coming down to the wire,” said David Bassuk, managing director and co-head of the retail practice at AlixPartners, a global consulting firm. “It’s going to require retailers to be more aggressive with their promotions than they were hoping heading into the weekend.”

While the economy is certainly in a better position than it was during the recession, many consumers still feel uneasy this year about their financial future. Some are worried about the U.S. job market and others fear the stalemate between Congress and the White House over federal “fiscal cliff’’ that could lead to tax increases and less disposable income for shoppers.

That was the case for Latonya Jones, on the hunt for bargains at Aventura Mall, coupon-loaded iPad in hand.

“I wasn’t going to buy anything this year, because I wanted to save money,” said Jones, 39, of Miami Gardens, who was shopping with her daughter Richelle, 12, this week in Macy’s. “But then I changed my mind.”





Read More..

A Florida mom’s lonely fight for her disabled son




















Tereza Pereira had cared for her woefully disabled son at home for most of his life. But she was in her 50s now, working two jobs to stay afloat, and state health administrators had repeatedly refused to pay for enough in-home nursing care to keep Bryan safe.

Pereira wanted her teenage son to live at a place called Baby House, a small group home for medically fragile children and young adults, with a long track record of treating children like Bryan as family. His care would have cost the state $300 per day there.

State health and disability administrators had a different plan: For $200 more each day, Bryan would live in a nursing home.





“I don’t want my son in this place,” Pereira wrote to disability administrators of the Florida Club Care nursing home in Miami Gardens. “If something happened with my son, [if] he died,” she wrote, “I will feel that this place killed” him.

Two years later, that is just how Pereira feels.

Disability administrators insisted that Bryan move in to the nursing home. And there he died, a year later, on July 29, 2010.

“The best place for Bryan was with me,” Pereira said. “I wanted my son to leave this world in peace — not the way he passed away.”

Bryan Louzada was one of five medically complex children to die at Florida nursing homes in the last six months of 2010 — and among 130 such children who have died in those homes since January 2006, records show. Though medically fragile children who live with their parents, or in a community setting, also die, state records show they die in far lower numbers.

State health administrators insist that the choices of parents like Tereza Pereira are the guiding force behind their decisions on where sick children live. But interviews and records show Pereira had fought for half Bryan’s life to find a home-like setting for him. And at every turn state health and disability chiefs steered him toward an institution or nursing home.

It is the dirty little secret of Florida’s health and social service system: Though institutional care can be dramatically more expensive than in-home care, state agencies push children toward institutions.

Here’s why: Medicaid, the state and federal insurance program for needy and disabled people, has become the insurer of last resort for virtually all children with catastrophic disabilities. Under federal law, a nursing home or facility bed is an entitlement, and that means Florida health administrators must provide such a bed to any family that asks. Sometimes-far-less-costly in-home nursing services are not an entitlement. Because they can, Florida lawmakers cap spending for such care, resulting in a waiting list of 25,000 for home- and community-based services.

Federal health polices “lead to irrational outcomes,” said Jim DeBeaugrine, who was director of the state Agency for Persons with Disabilities under former Gov. Charlie Crist. “People go into higher-cost facilities than what they need, and, quite frankly, what is best for them.”

“It’s referred to as the ‘institutional bias,’ and that’s what the system has, because that’s where the dollars have to go,” DeBeaugrine added. “It’s nonsensical.”

The irrational outcome in Bryan’s case was that a sickly teen was forced to live in a nursing home that is considered one of the state’s worst — Golden Glades, formerly known as Florida Club Care, is on the state “nursing home watch list” of homes that did not meet even minimum standards of care during a recent inspection.





Read More..

Staten Island man killed in early-morning house fire

A Staten Island man was killed when an early-morning fire swept through his home, police and relatives said.

Jameek Champagne, 23, died in the third-floor attic of the home on Osgood Avenue in Clifton. His brother and grandfather escaped the blaze uninjured.

A neighbor reported the blaze after seeing flames erupt from the house at about 5:40 a.m. He banged on the door in a frantic effort to awaken its residents.

The fire was extinguished about an hour after it started, according to an FDNY spokesman. Fire marshals are investigating what caused it.

About ten cars full of grief-stricken relatives and friends came to the scene to mourn Champagne. His devastated girlfriend said that the two had a newborn girl and a 1-year-old boy.




G.N.Miller/New York Post



The Staten Island house after it was damaged by the fire



“We’re just trying to find out how this happened,” Champagne's uncle said, weeping.

Read More..

Time’s up for holiday shopping procrastinators




















Last minute shoppers like Josette Tyne are in luck this year.

With a long weekend before Christmas, retailers want to make it easier for procrastinators to finish their gift buying. Macy’s for the first time is keeping all its stores open around the clock from Friday until Sunday at midnight. Toys “R” Us and Walmart Supercenters will be open non-stop until Christmas Eve.

Even those retailers skipping the all nighter still have added extended hours often as late as 11 pm or midnight. Coupled with a flurry of last minute promotions, they hope to lure shoppers, many of whom have been largely sitting on the sidelines since Black Friday.





Tyne, 33, just starting her shopping this week at Aventura Mall, armed with a list of about two dozen people and the presents they wanted. The list would have been longer if the Fort Lauderdale resident hadn’t limited it to the kids in her family.

“I’ll probably be shopping every day from now till Sunday,” said Tyne, as she wheeled the youngest of her three boys around H&M in a stroller before heading on to Game Stop, Urban Outfitters and BCBG. “Whatever catches my eye. Luckily the kids usually like everything I get. I’m the awesome Auntie.”

A Consumer Reports Poll released earlier this week found that with just five shopping days left until Christmas, a whopping 68 percent of shoppers — a projected 132 million Americans — have yet to finish their holiday shopping.

With an early Thanksgiving leaving an extra week until Christmas and a long weekend before Tuesday’s holiday, shoppers have felt little need to rush. They also haven’t found December deals to be quite as compelling as the November sales.

Based on disappointing sales trends earlier this month, ShopperTrak said Wednesday it was cutting its holiday sales forecast. The company, which counts foot traffic and its own proprietary sales numbers from 40,000 retail outlets across the country, now expects a 2.5 percent sales increase to $257.7 billion, down from the 3.3 percent growth it initially predicted. The National Retail Federation is sticking with its prediction of a 4.1 percent sales increase.

Online sales trends are more encouraging, up 13 percent to $35 billion from Nov. 1 through Dec. 16, according to comScore, an online research firm. But that pace is below the forecast of 17 percent for the season.

“It’s coming down to the wire,” said David Bassuk, managing director and co-head of the retail practice at AlixPartners, a global consulting firm. “It’s going to require retailers to be more aggressive with their promotions than they were hoping heading into the weekend.”

While the economy is certainly in a better position than it was during the recession, many consumers still feel uneasy this year about their financial future. Some are worried about the U.S. job market and others fear the stalemate between Congress and the White House over federal “fiscal cliff’’ that could lead to tax increases and less disposable income for shoppers.

That was the case for Latonya Jones, on the hunt for bargains at Aventura Mall, coupon-loaded iPad in hand.

“I wasn’t going to buy anything this year, because I wanted to save money,” said Jones, 39, of Miami Gardens, who was shopping with her daughter Richelle, 12, this week in Macy’s. “But then I changed my mind.”





Read More..

Great-grandmother leads annual Miami-Dade, Monroe toy drive




















Beginning in August, Bunchy Gertner puts aside her social life, her needs and even her great-grandchildren to head over to the “North Pole,” the place where she stores, wraps and distributes thousands of toys destined for foster care children in Miami-Dade and Monroe counties.

“This is top banana,” said Gertner referring to the nonstop volunteer work she has done for the past 16 years. “Every kid will get a gift and — even if it’s just for a moment — they will know that someone cares.”

It’s Gertner who dedicates her time to planning and execution of the toy drive that will distribute 3,400 gifts to the children under Our Kids, a non-profit agency that provides foster care and related services in Miami and the Florida Keys.





“She focuses solely on the toy drive and lives to match the right toy with the right child,” said Fran Alegra, Our Kids CEO. “I don’t have staff that would be able to dedicate the time that she gives to this.”

Over the years, 78-year-old Gertner has not only given every foster child a gift, but she has made sure that everyone receives a good quality, age appropriate present.

“I think I have 3,400 children,” said Gertner. “Thank God I didn’t give birth to all of them and they’ve all left the house. But I feel like they’re all mine.”

Gertner has even made it her mission to look after the children who are aging out of foster care and are considered independent living. For these teens, she prepared a gift that includes a comforter, sheets, pillow cases, hand towels, bath towels, glass wear, pillows, dishes, pots and pans.

“They have no money when they leave foster care,” said Gertner. “I give them what a mom and dad would give a child who was going off to college or going off on their own.”

In order to raise money and collect presents, Gertner has relied on about 50 sponsors, who are responsible for collecting gifts. She distributes the first names of children with their age, gender and ethnicity to provide each child with an appropriate gift.

“I became a beggar. I got down on my hands and knees and begged everyone that I met,” said Gertner. “I write letters, I make phone calls and ask if they would want to help or if they know anyone who would want to do it.”

Once she receives the gifts from the sponsors, they are taken to her North Pole, which this year is an empty store donated by Gulfstream Park.

There, she sorts the presents that come with a specific child’s name by agency and begins wrapping the gifts that she receives with no specific name.

“I couldn’t do it alone,’’ said Gertner, who refers to her helpers as elves. “If it weren’t for the people helping me wrap and the sponsors, I wouldn’t have a toy drive.’’

On any given 10-hour work day, the volunteers, which range in numbers from a handful to two dozen, show up to wrap and sing holiday songs.

“This is better than staying at home in bed all day,” said Rivly Breus, a student at Florida Atlantic University. With a little experience under her belt from wrapping at Macy’s, Breus decided to Google a way she could volunteer her talents.

“It was hard for me growing up so it’s good to be able to shine a light on others,” Breus said.

Some come with no experience, like Gonzo Gonzalez, who often has to patch the spaces where he didn’t use sufficient paper.

“I didn’t have it easy growing up, but at least I had my parents,” said Gonzalez, who wrapped about 30 footballs on a recent Sunday. “It’s good to be able to give back. The kids who don’t have parents are not expecting anything.”

Although, Gertner does not give the presents directly to the children for privacy reasons, she is satisfied with knowing that there is a child at the end of every present. She said she will continue to do it until she can’t anymore.

“I know in my heart that what I do is enough,” said Gertner. “When I go to bed I know that I have fulfilled my mission and done my job well.”





Read More..

Instagram diverts attention from botched policy change with another new filter









Title Post: Instagram diverts attention from botched policy change with another new filter
Rating:
100%

based on 99998 ratings.
5 user reviews.
Author: Fluser SeoLink
Thanks for visiting the blog, If any criticism and suggestions please leave a comment




Read More..

Who Were Hollywood's Winners & Losers in 2012?

Some Hollywood celebs soared to new heights in 2012, while others sank to embarrassing lows. We've compile our own list of last year's winners and losers.

One of 2012's biggest winners -- Britney Spears. The pop princess star earned about $58 million according to Forbes magazine,  mainly from her platinum album Femme Fatale and her decision to join FOX's music competition show The X Factor.

RELATED: The 12 Most Amazing News Stories of 2012

Topping our losers list was another pop star -- Madonna! Her rude rants at a smoker during a performance got a big thumbs-down from us. Hidden under a hooded jacket at an outdoor arena in Chile, Madge went on her rant and then threatened to cancel the show if the smoking fan did not comply.

Another winner was the year's female heroine on the rise -- Jennifer Lawrence! The Hunger Games star also appeared in the Oscar-buzzed Silver Lining's Playbook, in which the 22-year-old actress also proves her comedy acting chops.

RELATED: 2012's 12 Most Amazing Couples 

On the losing side, Lindsay Lohan. The Liz & Dick star encountered money woes -- from back taxes to reported big loans -- putting Lindsay in danger of tumbling off her own "fiscal cliff."

Another big winner -- British boy band sensation One Direction! Jonas Brothers who? This new Direction infection moved across the pond to take over pop radio and win over the United States with two #1 albums in just eight months!

Watch the video for more on who was up and who was down in 2012!

RELATED: 2012's Top 12 Amazing Gowns

Read More..

Watch and remember some of the memorable stories of 2012









2012 is on its last hoorah as the New Year approaches.

To commemorate the changing of the guards, The New York Post took a look back at some of the most memorable moments we caught on video.

Actress Lindsay Lohan kept Page Six busy this year as she became a a frequent visitor of the NYPD. On one occasion, she allegedly clipped a pedestrian with her SUV on her way to a club. A couple of months later, a woman claimed the actress punched her at a Manhattan lounge.

But, it wasn’t all bad news for Lohan. She gained a sister when her father, Michael, officially discovered he was the father of 17-year-old Ashley Horn.




Lilo wasn’t the only celebrity allegedly behaving badly in New York. Witnesses say Hip-Hop stars Chris Brown and Drake were involved in a bottle-throwing melee at the club W.I.P. that led to some injuries.

In more somber news, Superstorm Sandy destroyed thousands of homes in the Northeast and killed dozens of people.

It was also a feel-good sports year in New York. The Giants won the Super Bowl, New Yorkers helped represent Team USA at the Olympics and, in a short NBA season, Linsanity rushed through the city. Then, just as fast, Jeremy Lin blew out of town.

The year also saw, the end of Twinkies, a man with the tallest Mohawk in history, the end of MTV’s Jersey Shore, nude body paint arrests, fights over a anti-Jihad subway poster and more.

Goodbye 2012. Hello 2013.










Read More..