Monday, August 31, 2009

Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's "Today" show in New York

Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's

Singer Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's "Today" show in New York, August 28, 2009. [Agencies]


Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's


Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's

Singer Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's "Today" show in New York, August 28, 2009. [Agencies]


Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's

Singer Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's "Today" show in New York, August 28, 2009. [Agencies]



Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's

Singer Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's "Today" show in New York, August 28, 2009. [Agencies]



Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's

Singer Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's 'Today' show in New York, August 28, 2009. [Agencies]



Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's

Singer Miley Cyrus performs on NBC's "Today" show in New York August 28, 2009. [Agencies]




taken from : China Daily


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Friday, August 28, 2009

U.S. stars pushing America to dance to Europe's beat

U.S. stars pushing America to dance to Europe's beat

French DJ David Guetta poses for a portrait in New York August 24, 2009.[Agencies]

Electronic dance music with heavy bass, unknown vocalists and mixed by club disc jockeys regularly tops pop charts in Europe but in America such music has been an underground genre with little mainstream success.

While disc jockeys such as Moby, Fatboy Slim and Paul Oakenfold have had a string of mainstream hits in Britain, their success as artists in the United States has been limited to the dance chart, with rare appearances in the Billboard Hot 100 chart which ranks the most popular songs of all genres.

But French DJ David Guetta predicts that will change, saying U.S. hip-hop and pop stars featured on his new album "One Love", which was released this week, so embraced the genre that they could boost its mainstream appeal in the United States.

"It's my fourth album so I was looking for a new sound and a lot of people here in the hip-hop industry and in R&B are feeling a bit like they are going in circles and using the same recipe," Guetta told Reuters in an interview.

"If all those big American acts are interested in this kind of sound I think it means it's going to be really big in America in the next year," said Guetta, who also helped produce the Black Eyed Peas current No. 1 U.S. hit "I Gotta Feeling."

"There is a real American brand embracing it," he said.

Guetta's new album features stars such as Kelly Rowland, will.i.am from the Black Eyed Peas, Akon and Ne-Yo and has already produced No. 1 hit singles in Britain, Australia, France and other European countries, and two singles that made it into the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 76.

"Guetta knows what he's doing here. Bring America to the club? Nah. He'll bring the club to America," wrote Los Angeles music critic Mikael Wood.

Experts are split on why such dance music has failed to set the charts alight in the United States. Some say club music has been unable to compete with live music in the United States and others note American audiences find it hard to identify with an artist who mixes music but doesn't sing.

'DISGUISING' DANCE MUSIC

In the United States dance music is classified as electronic and accounts for 1 percent of sales, according to The NPD Group, while in Britain dance music makes up 8 percent of sales, according to British music industry group BPI.

"In America it's always difficult for 'dance' music to be popular in the mainstream," said Keith Caulfield, a music analyst with Billboard. "Songs that are dance orientated have always been popular, it's just that dance often has to be disguised in different kinds of ways for it to break through."

"When I look at our current Hot 100 chart there's a lot of songs that strike me as a dance song, but dance has taken different forms in order to reach the masses," he said. U.S. singer "Lady Gaga has been so successful and to American ears she is pop dance music."



He said DJs are more likely to have mainstream U.S. success teaming with well-known artists from other genres, which essentially "disguises" the dance music.

Music expert and author John Swenson said dance music has always been popular in various forms in the United States for the past few decades "when technology first enabled DJs to be the real stars of popular music."

"At a time when live music is becoming less and less relevant in New York City clubs I guess you can say it's more popular than ever," he said. "The real reason club music took over outside of the United States is that the live musicians weren't good enough to match it."

Organizers of what claims to be New York's first electronic music festival, to be held on Randall's Island in the East River off Manhattan on September 5 and 6, said they had seen a growth in the popularity of dance music in the past few years.

"We have been inspired over the years by what happens in Europe each summer," said Mike Bindra and Laura De Palma, organizers of the Electric Zoo festival. "The realization of this goal is another step forward for electronic music here."

taken from : China Daily


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Istanbul Fashion Days

Istanbul Fashion Days

A model presents a creation by Turkish designer Idil Tarzi during a fashion show at the Istanbul Fashion Days August 27, 2009.[Agencies]



Istanbul Fashion Days

A model presents a creation by Turkish designer Idil Tarzi during a fashion show at the Istanbul Fashion Days August 27, 2009.[Agencies]




Istanbul Fashion Days

A model presents a creation by Turkish designer Idil Tarzi during a fashion show at the Istanbul Fashion Days August 27, 2009.[Agencies]



Istanbul Fashion Days

Turkish model Tugce Kazaz presents a creation by Sunset during a swimsuit fashion show at the Istanbul Fashion Days in Istanbul August 27, 2009.[Agencies]




Istanbul Fashion Days

Models presents creations by Sunset during a swimsuits fashion show at the Istanbul Fashion Days in Istanbul August 27, 2009.[Agencies]



taken from : China Daily


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Just a Minute With: Tim Gunn of "Project Runway"

Just a Minute With: Tim Gunn of

Host Heidi Klum (R) kisses guest judge Tim Gunn during the taping of the season finale of Project Runway during New York Fashion Week September 12, 2008.[Agencies]

Tim Gunn, fashion guru and urbane mentor to the budding designers on TV's "Project Runway", was forced to swap his impeccable tailored look for something more casual when the fashion reality show moved from New York to laid-back Los Angeles this season.

So with the show finally underway on U.S. TV again after a legal hiatus of almost a year, look out for Gunn dressed in -- flip-flops?!

Gunn, 56, the polite voice of reason and constructive advice for the competing designers, talked to Reuters about the return of the show -- and how free-wheeling LA changed some of his own ideas.

Q: How did you feel about the show's move from New York to Los Angeles and the city's very different approach to fashion.

A: "Los Angeles is a more casual place. Executives dress more casually. Having lunch at the Four Seasons Hotel, you see studio executives wearing a suit and an open shirt but no tie. I would go to the workroom with the designers every day at the beginning wearing a suit. But finally I thought, I've got to get with it. There is an episode (where) you'll find me in flip flops. You won't find that in New York, but you'll find it in LA. And when the show returns to LA, I'm packing the flip flops!"

Q: Do more experienced designers on the show have an advantage over the younger ones?

A: Not necessarily. In my experience, the more experience one has, the more second guessing or over-thinking one does versus the younger and less experienced contestants who have an ease and agility on how they attack a problem .... It all begins and ends when we go fabric shopping. Derailment, generally speaking, has to do with materials that are not appropriate or that they are not familiar with and then the whole thing goes awry ... If you've never worked with silk charmeuse -- are you crazy? Drop it!."

Q: How much input do you get in decisions the judges make about who wins a "Project Runway" challenge and who goes home?

A; "None. I know nothing about who wins and who loses until I hear it coming out of Heidi's mouth. It can be very frustrating for me because I am an advocate for the designers. What confounds me is some of the things the designers say to the judges. And during their deliberations, how off the mark the judges can occasionally be about a certain designer's work. It's all I can do to bite my tongue and keep from running up there and saying 'wait a minute!'."

Q: How do you keep your temper and good humor? There is only one known occasion when you lost it on the show.

A: "Yes, that was with Kenley (in season 5). My patience was simply exhausted and I was just tired of her rudeness ... In the course of 29 years of teaching, you develop a lot of resources to deal with students you'd like to smack. There is one moment in season 6, backstage at New York Fashion Week at Bryant Park, when I said 'I am about to lose it'. I was beyond despair. We had nano seconds before the runway show was starting, and there were still models who didn't have any clothes on."

Q: Are we going to see more of your other TV venture "Tim Gunn's Guide to Style"?

A: "We're talking about a way of repackaging and re-pitching it to Lifetime Television. It is a sincere honor for me to work with these fashion-challenged women who declare they need help. They do the heavy lifting and they are the ones who have the epiphany about who they can be, as opposed to a make-over show when an individual becomes my dress-up doll.

"What do they learn from that? Don't run to the trend. My key to getting fashion right has to do with silhouette, proportion and fit. It's not about individual items or colors and textures. It's really about that harmony of silhouette, proportion and fit on your particular body, and I believe anybody can look good."



taken from : China Daily


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Elle can't counter London gloom as US employees flee

Elle can't counter London gloom as US employees fleeAndrew Wesbecher,Elle Macpherson,London,gloom,

LONDON: Andrew Wesbecher moved to London from New York in 2006 to sell software to banks and hedge funds. This month he joined the exodus of American expatriates fleeing high taxes and the city's shrinking financial industry.

"I'm the last guy to leave that I know," said Wesbecher, 29, who worked for Tibco Software Inc and lived in Notting Hill, the London neighborhood that's home to billionaire Richard Branson and model Elle Macpherson. "We are all packing up."

Elle can't counter London gloom as US employees flee

Many US expats in the UK are leaving areas such as Notting Hill, home of supermodel Elle Macpherson.[Agencies]

Many US expats in the UK are leaving areas such as Notting Hill, home of supermodel Elle Macpherson. Bloomberg News

The number of US citizens in Britain fell 3.8 percent to 126,000 in the 12 months through September, according to the Office for National Statistics. The trend probably continued this year, with the Confederation of British Industry estimating the UK financial industry will lose about 45,000 jobs in the first nine months of 2009, or 4.3 percent of the total.

Americans are heading home as Britain plans a 50 percent tax rate for those who earn more than 150,000 pounds ($248,000) a year and employers cut benefits for workers living abroad, reducing the allure of London. That comes a year after the UK said foreigners who have lived in the country for more than seven years must pay 30,000 pounds annually or give up the special status that shields overseas income from British taxes.

"Expats feel the tone has changed; it's less welcoming," said Mark Tilden, a consultant at CRA International Inc who wrote a report for the City of London last year on the impact of taxation on corporate relocation decisions. "London's ability to attract talent has gone down."

'We are fed up'

The worst recession since World War II has left UK residents facing tax increases and spending cuts after Britain's monthly budget deficit ballooned to a record 8 billion pounds in July. In addition, some employers are reducing benefits such as tax equalization, school tuition for children and cost-of-living allowances that supplement expatriate salaries.

Schools catering to international students report a drop in enrollment for the first time in seven years, and relocation companies say they are moving fewer people to Britain.

Janet Sherbow lives in London's Chelsea district with her husband, Nikos Mourkogiannis, the former chief executive officer at the European arm of Cambridge, Massachusetts-based management consulting firm Monitor Co. The family plans to move to Greece after their daughter finishes high school next year.

"We are fed up with all the stealth taxes, the non-doms levy, and now the 50 percent tax rate," Sherbow said. "Six American families have moved from my street in the last six months."

Quality of life

Forty-one percent of employers plan to review expatriate programs, according to a study by KPMG International. KPMG surveyed about 100 companies, 60 percent based in the US, and found that 22 percent had recalled overseas workers or turned them into local employees in the past 12 months.

Huddling under an umbrella during a July downpour, Wesbecher said he was no longer willing to put up with the frustrations of life in London after his commissions dropped and Palo Alto, California-based Tibco eliminated his expatriate benefits, cutting his take-home pay by 75 percent.

Elle can't counter London gloom as US employees flee

"This is what passes for summer in London," he said, sipping an iced latte in the city's main financial district. "The quality of life is a lot harder. Things are more expensive and the houses are smaller. Even public transport is cramped. A New York subway car is like real estate in comparison."

The economic picture is also gloomier in Britain. The UK economy shrank 5.6 percent in the year through June, compared with 3.9 percent in the US. London's financial industry lost 29,371 jobs, or 8.3 percent of the total, last year, according to the Centre for Economic and Business Research. Financial companies in New York cut 20,200 jobs, or 4.3 percent, data from the state Labor Department show.

'Highly competitive'

"The UK remains a highly competitive center for finance and investment and has excellent infrastructure for businesses," the Treasury said in an e-mailed response to questions.

The American School in England, based outside London in Thorpe, Surrey, expects enrollment to fall 4 percent this year, the first drop since the Sept 11 terror attacks, said Karen House, interim admissions director. The school charges about 29,000 pounds a year for boarders, and 70 percent of its 750 students are American.

ACS International Schools, which has 2,500 students on three campuses in the London area, will see a "small decline" in student numbers, said marketing manager Mark London. Fees for boarding students run about 33,000 pounds a year.


"Overall, this year we won't be at capacity," London said. "The majority of our families are expat families who are working in London or the UK on an assignment. Undoubtedly, major companies will be cutting back on those."

'Anything to make money'

Transfers to Britain from the US fell 25 percent in the past year, according to Primacy Relocation LLC, a Memphis, Tennessee-based company that moves more than 50,000 people a year for corporate clients around the world. Repatriations were almost unchanged, suggesting the net American population is declining, said CEO Matt Spinolo.

There are signs of recovery, said Sharon Gulden, co-founder of Basingstoke, England-based Phoenix ARC Corporate Relocation. US to UK traffic has increased to about 10 percent of its peak after dropping to "almost zero" 18 months ago, she said.

"It's just starting," Gulden said. "Green shoots of recovery, as they say."

Wesbecher isn't convinced that the boom times will return.

"The ethos of the ambitious, high-earning American is 'I will do anything to make money, even if it means moving my family'," he said. "When the performance bonuses go away, the value of being in this country goes away."




taken from : China Daily


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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Britney Spears and her two sons to enjoy time

Britney Spears and her two sons to enjoy time

Britney Spears and kids, Sean Preston and Jayden James, go for a pedicab ride in Central Park, New York City.[CFP]



Britney Spears and her two sons to enjoy time
Britney wore a nice white summer dress and enjoyed some nice tender moments with her two little boys as they rode in a Pedicab and were given a tour of the park just a few hours before she is set to take the stage for her sold out show at Madison Square Garden.[CFP]


Britney Spears and her two sons to enjoy time

Britney Spears and kids, Sean Preston and Jayden James, go for a pedicab ride in Central Park, New York City.



Britney Spears and her two sons to enjoy time

Britney Spears and kids, Sean Preston and Jayden James, go for a pedicab ride in Central Park, New York City.



Britney Spears and her two sons to enjoy time

Britney Spears and kids, Sean Preston and Jayden James, go for a pedicab ride in Central Park, New York City.



Britney Spears and her two sons to enjoy time

Britney Spears and kids, Sean Preston and Jayden James, go for a pedicab ride in Central Park, New York City.



taken from : China Daily


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Monday, August 24, 2009

Lily Allen,Taylor Swift perform at V Festival

Lily Allen,Taylor Swift perform at V Festival
Lily Allen performs at Day 2 of the V Festival at Weston Park on August 23, 2009 in Stafford, England. [CFP]


Lily Allen,Taylor Swift perform at V Festival
Taylor Swift performs at Day 2 of the V Festival at Weston Park on August 23, 2009 in Stafford, England. [CFP]

Lily Allen,Taylor Swift perform at V Festival
Lily Allen performs at Day 2 of the V Festival at Weston Park on August 23, 2009 in Stafford, England. [Agencies]

Lily Allen,Taylor Swift perform at V Festival
Lily Allen performs at Day 2 of the V Festival at Weston Park on August 23, 2009 in Stafford, England. [Agencies]

Lily Allen,Taylor Swift perform at V Festival
Taylor Swift performs at Day 2 of the V Festival at Weston Park on August 23, 2009 in Stafford, England. [Agencies]







taken from : China Daily


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Sandy Lau crowned Miss Hong Kong 2009

Sandy Lau crowned Miss Hong Kong 2009

Sandy Lau poses after winning the crown during Miss Hong Kong 2009 pageant, in Hong Kong, China, Aug. 22, 2009. [Photo: Xinhua]


Sandy Lau crowned Miss Hong Kong 2009

Sandy Lau is crowned after winning the crown during Miss Hong Kong 2009 pageant, in Hong Kong, China, Aug. 22, 2009. [Photo: Xinhua]


Sandy Lau crowned Miss Hong Kong 2009
Sandy Lau (C) poses for a photo with first runner up Germaine Li (R) and second runner up Mizuni Hung during the Miss Hong Kong 2009 pageant in Hong Kong, China, Aug. 22, 2009. [Photo: Xinhua]

Sandy Lau crowned Miss Hong Kong 2009

Sandy Lau (C) poses for a photo with first runner up Germaine Li (R) and second runner up Mizuni Hung during the Miss Hong Kong 2009 pageant in Hong Kong, China, Aug. 22, 2009. [Photo: Xinhua]

Sandy Lau crowned Miss Hong Kong 2009

Sandy Lau (C) poses for a photo with first runner up Germaine Li (R) and second runner up Mizuni Hung during the Miss Hong Kong 2009 pageant in Hong Kong, China, Aug. 22, 2009. [Photo: Xinhua]

Sandy Lau crowned Miss Hong Kong 2009

Competitors display swimsuits during the final of Miss Hong Kong 2009, in Hong Kong, south China, Aug. 22, 2009. Sandy Lau took the crown of the pageant. [Photo: Xinhua]

Sandy Lau crowned Miss Hong Kong 2009

Competitor Sandy Lau displays a swimsuit during the final of Miss Hong Kong 2009, in Hong Kong, south China, Aug. 22, 2009. Sandy Lau took the crown of the pageant. [Photo: Xinhua]

Sandy Lau crowned Miss Hong Kong 2009

Candy Yuen (L) is titled with Miss Photogenic during the Miss Hong Kong 2009 pageant in Hong Kong, south China, Aug. 22, 2009. [Photo: Xinhua]

Sandy Lau crowned Miss Hong Kong 2009

Carly Wong (front) is titled with Miss International Goodwill during the Miss Hong Kong 2009 pageant, in Hong Kong, south China, Aug. 22, 2009. [Photo: Xinhua]





























taken from : China Daily


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Attention drug emergencies soar for U.S. kids: report

Calls to poison control centers for U.S. teenagers who have overdosed on attention deficit drugs rose 76 percent over eight years, researchers reported on Monday.

This is nearly the same as the 80 percent rise in prescriptions for such drugs, Dr. Jennifer Setlik and colleagues at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center reported.

They took data from the American Association of Poison Control Centers for 1998 to 2005 for all cases of ADHD drug misuse involving 13- to 19-year-olds.

In 1988, these call centers only logged about 317 calls, but by 2005 they were getting 581 calls a year, they reported in the journal Pediatrics.

"Clearly, we are seeing a rising problem with the abuse of these medications," Setlik said in a statement.

"The findings suggest that more teens are abusing and misusing stimulant ADHD medications because they have access to those medications, not because a higher percentage of those treated have turned to abusing their medication."

Millions of people take ADHD drugs including Novartis AG's Ritalin, known generically as methylphenidate, and Shire Plc's Adderall and Vyvanse. Annual U.S. sales totaled about $4.8 billion in 2008, according to data from IMS Health.

Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder is marked by restlessness, impulsiveness, inattention and distractibility that can interfere with a child's ability to pay attention in school and maintain social relationships. Amphetamines or methylphenidate drugs can calm and focus the brain.

Prescriptions of amphetamines rose 133 percent from 1998 to 2003, and abuse of these drugs rose, too, the researchers found. "We're seeing a disproportionate rise in the calls related to amphetamines," said Dr. G. Randall Bond, director of the Drug and Poison Information Center at the hospital.

"One thing we don't know for sure is whether the increased calls for help are the result of simply more abuse or the escalating severity of consequences."

ADHD affects between 8 percent and 12 percent of children and 4 percent of adults worldwide.

The National Institute on Drug Abuse has been investigating reports suggesting that more than 7 million people in the United States have abused methylphenidate to get high or to improve academic performance.



taken from : China Daily


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Miss Universe gala

Miss Universe gala

Miss Venezuela Stefania Fernandez (L) is named Miss Universe 2009 while 2008 Miss Universe Dayana Mendoza of Venezuela places the crown on her head during the annual pageant at Atlantis on Paradise Island in the Bahamas August 23, 2009.[Agencies]



Miss Universe gala

Miss Venezuela Stefania Fernandez smiles onstage after winning the Miss Universe 2009 annual pageant at Atlantis on Paradise Island in the Bahamas August 23, 2009.[Agencies]



Miss Universe gala

Miss Venezuela, Stefania Fernandez smiles on stage after winning the Miss Universe 2009 annual pageant in the Bahamas [Agencies]


Miss Universe gala

Winner of Miss Universe 2009, Miss Venezuela Fernandez, poses during the swimsuit competition at the annual pageant held at Atlantis on Paradise Island [Agencies]

Miss Universe gala

Miss Venezuela Fernandez celebrates onstage with other contestants after being crowned Miss Universe 2009 at Atlantis on Paradise Island [Agencies]


Miss Universe gala

Miss Puerto Rico Mayra Matos Perez (L), Miss Venezuela Stefania Fernandez (C) and Miss Kosovo Gona Dragusha, three of the final five contestants, smile onstage at the Miss Universe 2009 annual pageant at Atlantis on Paradise Island in the Bahamas August 23, 2009. [Agencies]

Miss Universe gala

Finalists (L-R) Miss Dominican Republic Ada Aimee de la Cruz, Miss Australia Rachael Finch, Miss Puerto Rico Mayra Matos Perez, Miss Venezuela Stefania Fernandez and Miss Kosovo Gona Dragusha wait for the winner to be announced at the Miss Universe 2009 annual pageant at Atlantis on Paradise Island in the Bahamas August 23, 2009. [Agencies]

Miss Universe gala

Contestants take part in the swimsuit competition during the Miss Universe 2009 annual pageant held at Atlantis on Paradise Island in the Bahamas [Agencies]

Miss Universe gala

Heidi Montag, reality TV star and model, performs a song during the Miss Universe 2009 annual pageant held at Atlantis on Paradise Island in the Bahamas August 23, 2009. [Agencies]




taken from : China Daily


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Friday, August 21, 2009

Lindsay Lohan and Diane Kruger and other celebs at screening of "Inglourious Basterds"

Lindsay Lohan and Diane Kruger and other celebs at screening of
Actress Lindsay Lohan attends the Cinema Society and Hugo Boss screening of "Inglourious Basterds" at the SVA Theater on August 17, 2009 in New York City. [CFP]

Lindsay Lohan and Diane Kruger and other celebs at screening of
Actress Diane Kruger attends The Cinema Society & Hugo Boss screening of "Inglourious Basterds" at SVA Theater on August 17, 2009 in New York City. [CFP]

Lindsay Lohan and Diane Kruger and other celebs at screening of
Actress Lindsay Lohan attends the Cinema Society and Hugo Boss screening of "Inglourious Basterds" at the SVA Theater on August 17, 2009 in New York City. [Agencies]

Lindsay Lohan and Diane Kruger and other celebs at screening of
Actress Lindsay Lohan attends the Cinema Society and Hugo Boss screening of "Inglourious Basterds" at the SVA Theater on August 17, 2009 in New York City. [Agencies]




taken from : China Daily


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Thursday, August 20, 2009

Sienna Miller and other celebs arrive for a screening of film "The September Issue" in NY

Sienna Miller and other celebs arrive for a screening of film

Actress Sienna Miller arrives for a screening of the film "The September Issue" in New York August 19, 2009. [Agencies]


Sienna Miller and other celebs arrive for a screening of film

Editor of Vogue Anna Wintour arrives with actress Sienna Miller (L) for a screening of the film "The September Issue" in New York August 19, 2009. [Agencies]

Sienna Miller and other celebs arrive for a screening of film

Editor of Vogue, Anna Wintour, arrives with actress Sienna Miller (L) for a screening of the film "The September Issue" in New York August 19, 2009. [Agencies]

Sienna Miller and other celebs arrive for a screening of film

Actress Sienna Miller talks to the media as she arrives for a screening of the film "The September Issue" in New York August 19, 2009. [Agencies]

Sienna Miller and other celebs arrive for a screening of film

Actress Renee Zellweger arrives for a screening of the film "The September Issue" in New York August 19, 2009. [Agencies]

Sienna Miller and other celebs arrive for a screening of film

Entertainer Cassie arrives for a screening of the film "The September Issue" in New York August 19, 2009. [Agencies]

Sienna Miller and other celebs arrive for a screening of film

Entertainer Cassie arrives for a screening of the film "The September Issue" in New York August 19, 2009. [Agencies]

Sienna Miller and other celebs arrive for a screening of film

Editor of Vogue, Anna Wintour, arrives for a screening of the film "The September Issue" in New York August 19, 2009. [Agencies]

Sienna Miller and other celebs arrive for a screening of film

Actress Sienna Miller arrives for a screening of the film "The September Issue" in New York August 19, 2009. [Agencies]

Sienna Miller and other celebs arrive for a screening of film

Rapper Sean Diddy Combs arrives for a screening of the film "The September Issue" in New York August 19, 2009. [Agencies]

Sienna Miller and other celebs arrive for a screening of film

Editor of Vogue, Anna Wintour (C) and actress Sienna Miller (3rd L) arrive for a screening of the film "The September Issue" in New York August 19, 2009. [Agencies]

Sienna Miller and other celebs arrive for a screening of film

Editor of Vogue, Anna Wintour, arrives for a screening of the film "The September Issue" in New York August 19, 2009. [Agencies]


taken from : China Daily


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