| Farrah Fawcett: Recovery is 'Ongoing'
Farrah Fawcett is finally opening up about her cancer battle, giving only “Extra" a candid and emotional interview about her recovery. “I'm doing well," Farrah told “Extra" as she left a hospital in Santa Monica last night. “Never can say for sure. It's ongoing." The “Charlie's Angels" star received devastated news in May, when she learned her intestinal cancer had returned. Vowing to fight, Farrah flew to Germany for alternative treatment. Now Farrah is proving she's still got her sense of humor intact! “You know, it's filled with Germans," Farrah quipped when asked about her time there. In a rare and raw confession, Farrah then revealed the toll her treatments have taken on her. “Tiring, yes. I felt much better when I was sick!" she said.
Hammer is back - with a premiere on MySpace
MySpace, still the most popular social networking site in the world with 110m users despite the higher profile of late of rivals like Facebook and Bebo, is constantly looking for new ways to keep its users on the site for longer. Like its rivals, it predicts video content will be a key factor. Contact us | Print | Clip | Share | Email .
Top 10 Unusual Ecological Sources of Fuel
We live in an oil dominated world: who gets it holds the power. That's why the western world is struggling to find new fuels that would free it from an oil-and-gas based economy, which renders them vulnerable to the blackmail of some oil-and-gas rich countries, like many in Middle East, Russia or Venezuela, where human rights do not mean much. Not to mention the funds terrorism gets from oil trade... Nuclear energy is not a reliable option, as its wastes contaminate the environment for millennia; wind and sun energy are not enough, and by now, hydrogen fuel seems a remote option. Another issue: about 1.6 billion people (a quarter of the Earth's population) still does not benefit from electricity, and 2.4 billion people mainly use coal, dung or wood for cooking and heating. The smoke produced by these conventional fuels kills 2.5 million women and children, annually.
|