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Tuesday 6 May 2014

Monica Lewinsky breaks long silence over her affair with Bill Clinton ....'I deeply regret what happened'

Speaking out: Monica Lewinsky has broken her silence over her affair with Bill Clinton

Monica Lewinsky has broken her long silence by saying she 'deeply regrets' her affair with Bill Clinton.

The former White House intern has written for the first time about the controversial affair for a magazine, which will be published this week.

During the Vanity Fair essay, called Shame and Survival, the 40-year-old says it's “time to burn the beret and bury the blue dress."

Her comments come at a bad time for the Clintons, as speculation increases that Hilary Clinton will run for president in 2016.

Perhaps tellingly, she writes how she wants to set the record straight, warning how the scandal could affect “other people’s futures.”

Lewinsky's affair with Clinton began in 1996 when she was 22. News of the scandal broke two years later and almost ruined Clinton's presidency after he was impeached by the US Senate.

In the essay, she writes: “I, myself, deeply regret what happened between me and President Clinton. Let me say it again: I. Myself. Deeply. Regret. What. Happened."

Despite remaining silent for years about the affair, she also denies that the Clintons bought her silence.

She describes how she has found it incredible difficult to get a job and admits that it was a "consensual relationship" between the pair.

She reveals that she is speaking out now so that she could perhaps help other people suffering from humiliation.

In speaking out now, Lewinsky says she wants to stop “tiptoeing around my past — and other people’s futures.”



#vanityfair
#mirror.co.uk
 

PHOTOS: The Sun is their biggest enemy.... Brazilian largest community suffering from horrible rare inherited skin disease that causes them to melt away...



Tucked into the tropical rolling hills of Brazil's midwest, this group of people face a daily struggle against the sun.

The city of Araras is home to what is thought to be the largest community suffering from a rare inherited skin disease known as xeroderma pigmentosum, or 'XP.'

Those with the disease are extremely sensitive to ultraviolet rays from sunlight and highly susceptible to skin cancers. It robs victims of the ability to repair the damage caused by the sun.

That's a particularly vexing burden in Araras, a tropical farming community where outdoor work is vital for survival.



Condition: Dr Sulamita Chaibub assists Djalma Antonio Jardim who has the rare inherited skin disease known as xeroderma pigmentosum, or 'XP' at the Hospital Geral de Goias in Goiania, Brazil




Struggle: The doctor takes a photo of the sufferer. For years no one could tell him what was wrong with him, with medical professionals suggesting he had a blood disorder





Burden: Mr Jardim said he first started developing the symptoms when he was just nine and had always worked outdoors


'I was always exposed to the sun - working, planting and harvesting rice and caring for the cows,' said Djalma Antonio Jardim, 38. 'As the years passed my condition got worse.'

Agriculture is no longer a real option for Mr Jardim. He survives on a small government pension and meager earnings from an ice cream parlor he runs.

XP shows early signs that it has taken hold of its victims.

Mr Jardim said he was just nine when a large number of freckles and small lumps started appearing on his face, the tell-tale signs that experts say signal XP is present in children and call for measures to protect them against the sun.



Reflection: Mr Jardim looks into a mirror at his home, revealing part of a mask that protects his face




Family: Alisson Wendel Machado Freire, 11, listens to his grandfather Jose Claudio Machado, 77, play the guitar inside their home in Araras, Goias state. Both of them suffer from the genetic condition


Mr Jardim has undergone more than 50 surgeries to remove skin tumors that have developed as a result of the disease

Such precaution wasn't taken for Jardim, who now wears a large straw hat in an effort to protect his face. But it's helped little. He has undergone more than 50 surgeries to remove skin tumors.

In an effort to camouflage how the disease has eaten away the skin on his lips, nose, cheeks and eyes, Mr Jardim wears a rudimentary orange-tinted mask, its stenciled-in right eyebrow not matching his bushy real one that remains.

Beyond skin damage and cancers, about one in five XP patients may also suffer from deafness, spastic muscles, poor coordination or developmental delays, according to the U.S.-based National Cancer Institute.

More than 20 people in this community of about 800 have XP. That's an incidence rate of about one in 40 people - far higher than the one in 1 million people in the United States who have it.




Couple: Joao Goncalves da Silva, 80, talks with his wife Geraldina Aleixo da Silva, 75, at their home in the Araras community in Brazil's Goias state. Both have XP




Respite: The 80-year-old takes off his hat n the kitchen of his home

Hiding his face: Jardim talks to a receptionist at the hospital before his appointment



Freckles: Deides Freire de Andrade, 44, waits for medical attention at the hospital



The pair sit in the corridor waiting for appointments wearing hats. Twenty out of the 800 residents in Araras have XP



Surgery: Jardim lies on an operating table ready for medical staff to perform a procedure



Recreation: Sufferers gather for a night of pool in the town. They are safer going out at night because of the harmful ultra-violet rays

For years, nobody could tell Jardim or the others what was afflicting them.

'The doctors I went to said I had a blood disorder. Others said I had a skin problem. But none said I had a genetic disease,' Mr Jardim said. 'It was only in 2010 that my disease was properly diagnosed.'

Experts say Araras has such a high incidence rate because the village was founded by only a few families and several were carriers of the disease, so it was passed to future generations as villagers intermarried.



 Youngster: Rafael Freire de Andrade, eight, rides his bike with a handmade roof to protect his skin from the sun



Outside: The boy cycles past a puddle with the shelter attached to his back. He also has to wear long sleeve shirts to protect his arms



After dark: Deides Ferreira de Andrade, 44, takes his motorcycle out at night, the only time he can safely expose his bare skin



Early morning: Alisson Wendel Machado Freire, 11, practices his horn instrument outside his home while the sun is rising


For instance, both of Jardim's parents were carriers of the defective gene that causes the disease, largely ensuring he would have it.

Gleice Francisca Machado, a village teacher whose 11-year-old son, Alison, has XP, has studied its history in the area and says she found cases of people having the disease going back 100 years. She has started an association that educates locals about XP and tries to get parents to take extra care for their children, even if they may not have outward signs of the illness themselves.

'The sun is our biggest enemy and those affected must change day for night in order live longer,' Machado said. 'Unfortunately, that is not possible.'



Jardim stands in the hospital waiting room and holds up a card with his appointment number on it




Risk: Lasaro Santos da Silva, 56, who suffers from the disease walks around his farm, despite the damage that can be caused by ultraviolet rays




Discussion: Residents who suffer from the genetic condition gather for a meeting in the city, surrounded by umbrellas used to protect them if they venture out in daylight




People who melt away: The group walk in a line under protection of the umbrellas


#dailymail.co.uk

PHOTOS: MET GALA 2014...Fashion Hits And Misses

Met Gala fashion 2014: Best and worst dressed
Kimye were delighted to be there – honest (Picture: Larry Busacca/Getty Images)

The Costume Institute’s Met Gala is the Oscars red carpet without the three hour awards show.....
It’s an excuse for Hollywood and fashion’s finest to get their glad rags on and pose on an unfeasibly long and glamorous staircase.
And with a dress code of ‘White Tie and Decorations’ for this year’s ball, in honour of the Met’s newest exhibition, ‘Charles James: Beyond Fashion’, we were looking forward to some top high society frocks and tails.
Here’s our pick of the best and worst dressed...

Best dressed


 
Suki Waterhouse is best dressed in Burberry (Picture: Larry Busacca/Getty Images)

Suki Waterhouse, date of ball co-chair Bradley Cooper (who wore Tom Ford), looked every inch the high society debutante in blush pink and cappuccino tulle frills by Burberry. The red lip was the perfect 50s flourish too.



Zoe Saldana is sophisticated yet still brings the glamour in Michael Kors (Picture: Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)

Zoe Saldana looked sleek and glamorous in monochrome Michael Kors, with a low V-neckline and gorgeous tiered puffball skirt.

It was all about the colour and florals for Emmy Rossum in her Carolina Herrera dress(Picture: Charles Sykes/Invision/AP)

Just fabulous colour and floral print from actress Emmy in this Carolina Herrera gown.

Kendall Jenner looks great at her first ever Met Ball in bespoke Topshop and back-combing (Picture: Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)
Kendall Jenner was the model ingenue in a very pale pink corseted fishtail bespoke dress by Topshop, no less. The back-combed hair gives this a subversive spin a la 90s film Heathers.

Benedict Cumberbatch is dashing in white tie (Picture: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images)
Benedict in a Ralph Lauren Purple label black tux tailcoat. How white tie should look. That is all.

Blake Lively is the glamorous Gucci girl with hubby Ryan Reynolds (Picture: Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)
Blake always does old-school glamour well and this pink sequinned Gucci dress worn with a 40s wave didn’t disappoint.


The power couples

Keep David but ditch the dark eye makeup Victoria (Picture: Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)
It was a case of classy and understated from Victoria, in her own cream design, and Becks in Ralph Lauren. We can’t help wishing Victoria would drop the dark eye makeup though.

A glowing Kim with her dashing fiancé (Picture: Larry Busacca/Getty Images)
Kim looked very pretty in her teal Lanvin dress which suited her colouring and Kanye rather suits tails too. It wouldn’t set the world alight but nice to see them prove their doubters wrong.

    Beyonce and Jay-Z were stylish but safe (Picture: Larry Busacca/Getty Images)
Queen Bey played it safe in this rather predictable sheer sequinned black Givenchy wrap dress that was more Grammys than Met Gala. We do like the face net though – and Jay-Z’s white tux.


Worst dressed


What was Katie Holmes thinking? (Picture: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images)
Sorry Katie but this is a bit of a disaster, from the custard yellow shade of the Marchesa dress, to the unattractive creasing and general pirate wench styling.

Lea Michele looks a little Alexis Carrington in her gold frock (Picture: Charles Sykes/Invision/AP)
Wearing Joseph Altuzarra, Lea looked a little Dynasty-gone-wrong in her glitzy gold dress with high split and that ageing up-do. Wrong dress, wrong event.

SJP’s dress was better from behind (Picture: Charles Sykes/Invision/AP)
 
Sarah Jessica Parker was a bit of a disappointment in Oscar de la Renta. Although we loved the train autographed by Oscar himself (SJP, your label’s showing), and the gloves, the dress was underwhelming from the front. And what was happening on her head? The croissant shaped do and floral headpiece were too fussy and made us think of Bette Midler for some reason.

Rita Ora looks as though she went crazy in the Disney Store (Picture: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images)
Rita looked a little like a drowned mermaid in her gold Donna Karan Atelier design. The wet look hair, strange strapping round the arm and blinged up bodice didn’t quite work. And don’t even get us started on the shoes.

Lupita Nyong’o has a rare fashion fail in this Prada dress (Picture: Charles Sykes/Invision/AP)
 
We really wanted to love Lupita’s chain mail Prada dress with nude bodysuit, but just couldn’t do it. Perhaps without the jewelled headband and matchy-matchy accessories this could have worked. But, proof that even the best can get it wrong.

We like Kristen’s Chanel dress for her but perhaps not for this dress code (Picture: Larry Busacca/Getty Images)
 
Kristen’s Chanel dress with sequin top and layered feather and sheer tulle is perfect for her but doesn’t quite fit the dress code. It would have worked better for last year’s punk theme. There’s no denying the exquisite detail though.
 

Monday 5 May 2014

It's official! Kim Kardashian and Kanye West ARE married



 


Reality star, Kim Kardashian reportedly tied the knot with her rapper beau Kanye West on Sunday in California ahead of the official ceremony in Paris later this month.

According to Life & Style magazine, the superstar couple received their wedding licence over the weekend before jetting off to New York City.

However, they may have to wait till France for a proper honeymoon with the new Mrs West likely to be busy at the annual Met Gala on Monday.

Not much is known about the top-secret ceremony, although we have our suspicions about how the first big day might have gone.

The pair are now expected to tie the knot in an official, lavish ceremony in Paris on May 24 in front of around 200 family and friends.



 #mirror.co.uk

#BringBackOurGirls: Boko Haram claims responsibility for girls' abduction


"Man claiming to be Boko Haram's leader says he'll sell the more than 200 girls his group abducted from Nigerian school."

Nigerian Islamist militant group Boko Haram says it carried out the abduction of hundreds of schoolgirls in April.
About 230 girls are still believed to be missing, prompting widespread criticism of the Nigerian government.
"I abducted your girls," Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau said in a video obtained by the AFP news agency.

#cnn
#bbc