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  • 25
    Aug
    2012
    6:00am, EDT

    'I feel loved': USA's 'Nordic Thunder' wins world air guitar champs

    Lehtikuva / Reuters

    Theun "Tremelo Theun" de Jong of Netherlands performs during the 2012 Air Guitar World Championshps in Oulu August 24, 2012.

    By Reuters

    OULU, Finland -- American Justin Howard, alias Nordic Thunder, was crowned world champion air guitar player late on Friday in the northern Finnish city of Oulu, narrowly ahead of his compatriot Matt Burns, or Airistotle. 


    Howard, looking like a Viking warrior in his leather tunic, gave an energetic performance that including sliding across the stage bare legged, and won the title with a score of 34.6 points, just ahead of Burns who got 34.4 points.

    Martti Kainulainen / AFP - Getty Images

    Matt "Airistotle" Burns of USA gives a performance that won him second place.

    "I feel amazing, I feel loved, I feel like crying and laughing and hugging," said Howard after winning both the title and the prize of a handmade electric guitar.

    Howard was U.S. champion air guitarist last year, and took silver in the 2011 world championship.

    The air guitar world championships have been played in Oulu since 1996.

    Lehtikuva / Reuters

    And the winner is ... Justin Howard, alias Nordic Thunder.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • 'Crushing political dissent'? Gambia to execute every prisoner on death row
    • Much at stake for US as tensions rise in China Seas
    • Chinese hail trash picker who saved 30 babies
    • Tropical Storm Isaac threatens Haiti, Dominican Republic
    • Israeli protesters warn against war as government appears to prep Iran strikes
    • Still hobbled by quake, Haiti awaits Isaac
    • German state raids buildings in crackdown on neo-Nazi groups

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook



    117 comments

    Lighten up people, with all the bad news we read about nowadays this is a good story. Weird, but hey, good for them.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: europe, finland, featured, air-guitar, nordic-thunder
  • 24
    Aug
    2012
    5:09am, EDT

    Oops! $8,600 Rembrandt etching lost in the mail

    By Reuters

    OSLO -- A Norwegian art gallery lost a Rembrandt etching worth up to $8,600 in the mail after trying to save money on courier and insurance costs, the gallery's chief said Thursday. 

    The Soli Brug Gallery in Greaaker, about 50 miles south of Oslo, purchased a copy of Rembrandt's "Lieven Willemsz, van Coppenol, Writing-Master" made in around 1658, from a British dealer -- only to have it lost in the Norwegian postal system. 


    "Using a courier or special insurance is quite expensive so we have used regular mail until now," Ole Derje, the gallery's chairman said. "It is worth around 40,000 to 50,000 crowns ($6,900-$8,600) and the postal service is offering us compensation of 500-1,000 crowns." 


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Derje said his gallery, which is displaying works by Dürer, Rembrandt, Goya, Munch and Dali, received notice to pick up the package but when he went to collect it, it was nowhere to be found. 

    Derje declined to name the seller, citing confidentiality concerns. 

    "We are sorry that this has happened; we have advised him to use a more appropriate form of mail when sending items that are worth as much as this with the appropriate insurance connected," said Hilde Ebeltoft-Skaugrud, a spokesman for the postal service. 

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Tropical Storm Isaac threatens Haiti, Dominican Republic
    • Still hobbled by quake, Haiti awaits Isaac
    • German state raids buildings in crackdown on neo-Nazi groups
    • US, Pakistan should 'divorce,' ex-ambassador to Washington says
    • Video: Terror triggers Mali exodus
    • Lebanon militia stands by Syria's Assad despite bloody crackdown
    • Step aside hippos! Wildebeests are on the move

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


     


    41 comments

    An item this valuable and trying to save money on shipping? Where is the common sense? Hope it is eventually found.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: art, norway, europe, lost, mail, rembrandt, gallery, featured, etching
  • 1
    Feb
    2012
    11:31am, EST

    Amy Winehouse death verdict could be unlawful

    Frantzesco Kangaris/EPA

    Amy Winehouse was found dead in her home in Camden, north London, on July 23.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Story updated 1:15 p.m. ET: The local authority, Camden Council, said it was confident Reid "had made an error in good faith" when he appointed his wife, but said the matter was being investigated by Britain's Office for Judicial Complaints.

    Story published 11:30 a.m. ET: The coroner who oversaw the inquest into the death of singer Amy Winehouse has resigned after her qualifications were questioned, officials in Britain said on Wednesday.

    Suzanne Greenaway ruled in October that the 27-year-old soul singer had died from accidental alcohol poisoning.


    However, she resigned after authorities learned she had not been a registered U.K. lawyer for five years as required. It means the verdict in Winehouse's case and 11 others carried out by Greenaway could be subject to a High Court challenge.

    Winehouse's relatives said they were still absorbing the implications of the news.

    Greenaway had been appointed an assistant deputy coroner in London by her husband, Coroner Andrew Reid. She had practiced law for a decade in her native Australia.

    Reid said Wednesday he was "confident that all of the inquests handled were done so correctly" — but offered to hold inquests over again if the families of the deceased wanted it. Greenaway had been in the job since 2009.

    Winehouse's family said it had not yet decided what to do.

    In a statement, the family said it was "taking advice on the implications of this and will decide if any further discussion with the authorities is needed."

    The Sun newspaper, which broke the story, said the dozens of verdicts given by Greenaway would only be overturned if they were challenged in Britain's High Court.

    A security guard found Winehouse dead in bed on July 23 at her home in the Camden district of north London. The singer, known for her distinctive beehive hairdos and multiple Grammy-winning album "Back to Black," had battled drug and alcohol addiction for years.

    The inquest heard evidence from a pathologist, Winehouse's doctor, the security guard who found her and a detective who described seeing three empty vodka bottles in her bedroom. It appears unlikely that a second inquest would produce a different conclusion about how she died. 
     
    The full statement issued by Reid on Wednesday was reported in north London newspaper, the Camden New Journal. It read: "I appointed my wife as an assistant deputy coroner as I believed at the time that her experience as a solicitor and barrister in Australia satisfied the requirements of the post. In November of last year it became apparent that I had made an error in the appointment process and I accepted her resignation.

    "While I am confident that all of the inquests handled were done so correctly, I apologise if this matter causes distress to the families and friends of the deceased. I will be writing to the families affected to personally apologise and offer for their cases to reheard if requested."

    Although the singer was adored by fans worldwide for her unique voice and style, praise for her singing was often eclipsed by lurid headlines about her destructive relationships and erratic behavior. Winehouse herself turned to her tumultuous life and personal demons for material, resulting in hit songs such as "Rehab" and "Love Is a Losing Game."

    Msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson in London and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    77 comments

    Unless I'm mistaken, she's dead from an alcohol over-dose...period! WHy drag on the obvious...stupid people!

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    Explore related topics: entertainment, europe, music, celebrity, london, uk, amy-winehouse
  • 20
    Dec
    2011
    7:05am, EST

    CNN star Piers Morgan refuses to discuss McCartney voicemail source

    Talk-show host and former Daily Mirror and News of the World editor, Piers Morgan, has denied knowledge of phone hacking during his time at the newspapers. ITN's Nina Nannar reports on England's High Court proceedings.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Published at 12:15 p.m. ET: LONDON -- CNN star interviewer Piers Morgan refused Tuesday to disclose details about the most damning link between himself and Britain's phone hacking scandal: His acknowledgment that he once listened to a phone message left by former Beatle Paul McCartney for his then-wife Heather Mills.

    In a 2006 article in the Daily Mail tabloid, Morgan said he was played a phone message left by the former Beatle on Mills' answering machine, describing it in detail and noting that McCartney "even sang 'We Can Work It Out' into the answerphone." Mills has said there's no way Morgan could have obtained the message honestly.


    On Tuesday, Morgan stubbornly refused to answer almost any questions about how he came to hear the message, saying that doing so would compromise a source. "I'm not going to start any trail that leads to the identification of a source," he said.

    Asked by inquiry chief Lord Justice Brian Leveson whether he could supply any information to back the assertion that he had heard the recording legally, Morgan said he couldn't.

    Updated at 12:10 a.m. ET: Morgan denies that during his editorship the Daily Mirror newspaper "suppressed" information that cell phones could be hacked in 1998 so that they could use it to spy on celebrities. "Absolute nonsense," he says. 

    Updated at 11:50 a.m. ET: Morgan denies any knowledge of paying police officers for information. "I've never been aware of any evidence of that, no," he says.

    Updated at 11:30 a.m. ET: "It doesn't necessarily follow that someone listening to someone else is unethical," Morgan says. "It depends on the circumstances in which you are listening to it."

    Updated at 11:28 a.m. ET: When asked to discuss the source of a voice mail message of former Beatle Paul McCartney to his then-wife Heather Mills, Piers Morgan refuses.

    He also defends the newspaper when it is asserted that the Daily Mirror was among the top offenders of the practice of phone hacking, saying,"You also well know that not a single person has made a formal complaint against a Daily Mirror journalist, so why would you say that?"

    Updated at 11:06 a.m. ET: Piers Morgan says the Press Complaints Commission code of practice was displayed prominently in the newsroom at the Daily Mirror, where he was former editor, and says it "informed every editorial decision I made."

    When asked whether an editor should have responsibility for his journalists, Morgan says, "The average editor is probably aware of about 5 percent of what journalists are up to at any given time."

    Updated at 10:42 a.m. ET: Piers Morgan begins testifying at Britain's Leveson Inquiry into media ethics via videolink from the United States.

    • For more details visit breakingnews.com

    LONDON -- Former News of the World editor and CNN interviewer Piers Morgan will appear by videolink from the United States on Tuesday at a judge-led investigation into the ethics and practices of Britain's scandal-tarred press.

    He is expected to be grilled about comments he has made about widespread phone hacking at tabloid newspapers.

    Media mogul Rupert Murdoch's News Corp shut down the News of the World in July after a public outcry over the phone-hacking practices by British journalists at the newspaper.

    Morgan's appearance, along with a number of other witnesses Tuesday, has been widely anticipated and critics have been picking through old interviews and Morgan's autobiography "The Insider," in which the 46-year-old Morgan makes clear he knew of phone hacking as long ago as 2001.

    • Story: Messages deleted by tabloid journalists? Not so fast...

    In an interview for GQ magazine before the public scandal over the practice, Morgan said he couldn't get too upset over hacking because "loads of newspaper journalists were doing it."

    And, in an earlier interview for BBC radio unearthed by one of his critics, Morgan appeared to go further, saying it was difficult to condemn private eyes hired to hack into people's phones "because obviously you were running the results of their work."

    Dave Hogan / Getty Images, file

    Former Daily Mirror and News of the World editor Piers Morgan and Rebekah Brooks (then Rebekah Wade), editor of the Sun newspaper, at the book launch party for Piers Morgan's memoirs, entitled "The Insider," on March 9, 2005 in London.

    Morgan maintains that he has never participated in phone hacking or knowingly run a story based on an illegally intercepted message.

    "I have never hacked a phone, told anyone to hack a phone, nor to my knowledge published any story obtained from the hacking of a phone," he said in a statement in August.

    • Official website of the Leveson Inquiry into media ethics

    Actors Hugh Grant and Sienna Miller, "Harry Potter" author J.K. Rowling and singer Charlotte Church are among those who have given evidence about press abuse, while executives and lawyers for Murdoch's News Corp have defended the newspaper.

    From newspaper man to TV star
    Morgan shot to national prominence when he was picked by Murdoch to run the News of the World at age 28. Under his tenure, the tabloid exposed Grant's liaison with Hollywood prostitute Divine Brown and Princess Diana's late-night phone calls to married art dealer Oliver Hoare.

    It wasn't all down to good reporting: Morgan has acknowledged that bribes were paid to informants on rival titles.

    • Story: Tabloid paid moles at rival papers for scoops?

    In 1995, Morgan left the News of the World for the Daily Mirror. His time there was marked by scoops and controversy, including an insider trading scandal.

    Among the newspapers to report it was The Independent, which said he allegedly bought 20,000 pounds ($31,000) worth of shares in a technology company the day before it was tipped in the newspaper's investment column. While two other journalists at the Daily Mirror were jailed, Morgan was not charged and kept his job.

    However, his editorship at the Daily Mirror ended in 2004 when he ran a faked photograph purporting to show a British soldier urinating on an Iraqi detainee.

    Morgan won a second life as a TV personality, eventually signing on as a judge of "America's Got Talent" and taking Larry King's old spot at CNN. So far, he's prospered. Ratings for "Piers Morgan Tonight" have been up 9 percent on last year's figures — good if not spectacular — and he appears to be reaching a younger audience.

    CNN spokeswoman Barbara Levin said the network was "extremely pleased" with how Morgan's program was performing and the company has so far stood by its star even as the phone-hacking scandal threatens to draw him in.

    'Despicable human being'
    "So heartwarming that everyone in U.K.'s missing me so much they want me to come home," Morgan joked earlier this year amid demands he return to give evidence to the Leveson Inquiry.

    Morgan's denial that he has had nothing to do with phone hacking is hard to square with a 2006 article in which he said he'd been played a phone message that former Beatle Paul McCartney left for his now ex-wife Heather Mills in the wake of one of their fights.

    • Story: Emails warned James Murdoch of phone hacking by tabloid

    "It was heartbreaking," Morgan wrote of the tape, saying that McCartney "sounded lonely, miserable and desperate, and even sang 'We Can Work It Out' into the answerphone."

    How did Morgan come to hear the tape? He's refused to say, but Mills told the BBC in August that "there was absolutely no honest way" he could have obtained the recording. McCartney echoed her sentiment, saying he'd apparently been hacked.

    Morgan's autobiography also abounds with tantalizing references to questionably obtained material: There's "a dodgy transcript of a phone conversation" and a celebrity's stolen laptop.

    And when actress Kate Winslet demanded to know how Morgan got her cell phone number, which she had only just changed, Morgan shrugged it off.

    "Look, Kate," he joked, "You don't get to be the editor of the Mirror without being a fairly despicable human being."

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Will younger Kim's aunt and uncle be North Korea puppet masters?
    • Mourning in North Korea, worries in South after Kim Jong Il's death
    • Who's in charge? Mixed signals from Egypt's rulers
    • Troops move out of Iraq ... then next stop is home
    • Manning and WikiLeaks: New push for whistleblower protections

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    139 comments

    From Murdoch (Fox News) to CNN. Left or Right reporters are all the same. Full of crap..

    Show more
    Explore related topics: europe, news-corp, cnn, featured, news-of-the-world, media-ethics, piers-morgan, phone-hacking, leveson-inquiry

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