Posts Tagged ‘facebook’
Nick.com/victorious Game Spot after Victorious Season 1 Episode 9
I’m sorry, but the post or page you’re looking for could not be found. It could be because of our recent re-design. here are a couple of options that might help you:
- Use the search box in the upper right corner.
- Try scrolling through the monthly archives to the right.
- Try scrolling through the categories to the right.
- Visit my contact page, and tell me what you’re looking for.
You can also take a look through my most recent 20 posts. perhaps you’ll find what you’re looking for there.
- Nick.com/victorious Game Spot after Victorious Season 1 Episode 9
- Google Realtime Search: Explore the Net in Real Time
- Samsung Galaxy Tablet Trailer
- Bank of America Online Banking Sign in Issues
- New iPod Touch: new Design September 1?
- Google Call Phone: Google Voice iPhone App a Hit
- Myxer: Myxer.com for Your Mobile Entertainment
- Garmin Recall 2010: Nuvi GPS Systems Recalled
- Facebook is Worth $33.7 Billion
- YouTube now More popular than Yahoo
- Digg Up With new Design
- CenturyLink Qwest Merger Approved
- RueLaLa and Gilt Groupe Pick Up Steam
- Facebook Hitlist Fear:Columbia Facebook Hit-list Murders- Three Teens Dead
- BieberFever.com/Movie: Join Justin Bieber 3-D Movie
- Dell U.S. Smartphone: the Dell Aero Smartphone
- Windows Phone 7 SDK Release Date
- MyUCF Portal: University of Central Florida 6th Annual UCF Latin American Cultural Festival of Orlando
- Foodsafety.gov: Salmonella and Egg Safety Information Site
- Apple Jailbreakers now a Target:Apple Jailbreak Killer Patent
<a href="http://tech.spreadit.org/nick-comvictorious-game-spot-after-victorious-season-1-episode-9/tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://tech.spreadit.org/nick-comvictorious-game-spot-after-victorious-season-1-episode-9/Sat, 28 Aug 2010 04:32:20 GMT 00:00″>Nick.com/victorious Game Spot after Victorious Season 1 Episode 9
How do people make money from websites like myspace and facebook?
May sound like a dumb question. I was just wondering how do you make money from websites. Is it bandwith or the amount times that someone visits the site ? Who pays you ?
How do people make money from websites like myspace and facebook?
John France: Facebook Bigamy » Right Celebrity
John France, Lynn France’s husband, is surely no angel. for the millions of Facebook users out there, the social networking site is a wonderful way to reconnect with friends and keep in touch with loved ones who live far away. But for married John France, it was his way of meeting another woman who eventually became his second wife. But while many may think France is guilty of living a double life, he claims that is far from the truth. Read what John has to say about his scandalous life of alleged infidelity and see photos here.
John France is making headlines with his life of bigamy unveiled via social networking site Facebook. But this isn’t your common cheating scandal. so how did his estranged wife Lynn France find out about her husband’s other wife and why is this case so unusual?
Lynn married John back in 2005 in what was a wedding that could have been taken right out of a fairytale. The couple married on Italy’s Amalfi coast and the happy duo went on to have two sweet little boys that they raised in Cleveland, Ohio. However after three years of what seemed to be wedded bliss, Lynn suspected things weren’t quite right with her husband. After John told his wife that he was leaving on a trip to China, she realized that he was not telling the truth after she discovered he left his passport at home. so, instead of phoning her husband to ask him what he was up to, she did her own research and in the midst of it all she came across a website on her home computer that showed proof of John’s alleged infidelity. He was leaving Lynn for his new woman Amanda.
While the shock of John’s alleged cheating tugged at her heart strings, it was after she looked Amanda up on Facebook that she broke down. not only did Amanda have photos of a bridal shower uploaded, but also pictures of a wedding (held in Florida) that showed John lovingly looking into his second bride’s eyes.
After the confrontation (which would have made for a devastating scene straight out of Cheaters), John attempted a reconciliation with Lynn which ended in John taking the couple’s two sons to Florida with him. since John took the boys, Lynn has not seen her boys
However John defended his innocence by citing his marriage to Lynn as illegal. He explains, “This goes back years and years; it’s not new news. I hired an Italian attorney to go and confirm the marriage was illegal. The attorney came back with affidavits stating that it was invalid. we discussed this a number of times. At first she believed it, and then she keeps on flip-flopping. OK? This goes back at least two years.”
While Lynn could probably care less about John and his new bride, it is her children she wants back in her life. and now, a nasty child custody battle ensues. see what John and Amanda say about the cheating allegations in the video below.
What do you think of John France and the Facebook bigamy scandal? About what about his new wife Amanda France?
Tags: John France
Happy Hour with a Housewife: Giveaway: Customized Parasol
Okay folks, I’m super excited about this giveaway right here… pretty much because I would have LOVED to have one on my wedding day! Today I’m giving away a custom parasol from Weddings by Kristin! She’s one of my good blogging buddies and today she is offering one of her fantastic parasols from her Etsy shop!
Here is what you will win…
(1) Custom Parasol – You will get to choose the color of the parasol with the saying of your choice in the font and color of your choice.
Here are a few she does but the possibilities are endless…
Here it is in action, this is actually Kristin on her wedding day to use for thank You cards!
Great for wedding photo ops!
How about for your flower girls walking down the aisle?
You could even use it for your Save the Date in your engagement pictures, it could say “Love” or your new last name, get creative!
So here’s the way to enter:
-Tell me how you would use your custom parasol.
For additional entries:
-Follow me on Twitter (@MeSooLaLa) and Kristin (@HappilyAfterAll)
-Tweet about this giveaway with a link to this post and mentioning @MeSooLaLa so I know you tweeted.
-Blog about this giveaway (don’t forget to send me the link!)
-Add Kristin’s Etsy shop to your favorites on Etsy!
-”Like” Kristin’s Facebook page to stay uptodate on her FABULOUS products!
-”Like” Happy Hour with a Housewife’s Facebook page!
Don’t forget to tell me each one that you did and leave me a way to contact you!
Money talks in California politics
Meanwhile, the Democratic primary for attorney general features a field of seasoned elected officials such as San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris, Los Angeles District Attorney Rocky Delgadillo, three state legislators – and a political novice, Chris Kelly, whom they all worry about for one important reason. Kelly, Facebook’s chief privacy officer, has shown a readiness to invest his personal fortune in the race that could easily swamp the resources of the five politicians, who have been raising donations within the legally allowed four-figure increments.
“Sadly, some of those examples – especially in the governor’s race – are more the norm than an anomaly in California,” said Derek Cressman, regional director for Common cause. “But Whitman has taken it to new heights this year.”
In 1976, the U.S. Supreme Court asserted that wealthy candidates could not be prevented from spending as much as they wanted on their own campaigns, as a matter of free speech. A succession of high court rulings further complicated the efforts of reformers to restrain money in politics, including a 1981 ruling in a Berkeley case, brought by opponents of rent control, that struck down a $250 limit on contributions for and against ballot measures. then, in perhaps its biggest blow to campaign finance law, the Supreme Court recently ruled, 5-4, that corporations can spend freely on advertising for or against a candidate.
Californians already know the futility of trying to limit direct contributions to campaigns when corporations, labor unions and interest groups can spend unlimited amounts on so-called independent advertising. In some of the most hotly contested legislative races of recent years, “independent campaigns” by special interests with a big stake in Sacramento – corporations, unions, trial attorneys – actually outspent the campaigns of the candidates they were assisting.
Such may be the case in this year’s governor’s race, with organized labor and Democrats raising money for an independent campaign (“Level the Playing Field 2010″) to help Jerry Brown offset Whitman’s wealth.
The problem with these independent expenditures – aside from their open defiance of the concept that the influence of any particular interest should be limited – is their inherent lack of accountability. if the Brown campaign runs an ad that is misleading or distasteful, he must answer for it. recent history has shown that these independent ads are among the most negative, least accurate of a campaign – and they tend to arrive late, leaving the targeted candidate little or no chance to respond.
There is no plausible hope of curtailing wealthy candidates or independent campaigns with the current composition of the U.S. Supreme Court. But some gaps and loopholes in California election law can and should be closed. Examples include:
Double dipping. With the blessing of the Fair Political Practices Commission, which found nothing in current law to stop him, Mayor Gavin Newsom, is able to tap each of his biggest donors for more than $32,000 in this election cycle – almost four times the limit that his opponent for lieutenant governor, Los Angeles Councilwoman Janice Hahn, can receive from any single contributor. How? As a candidate for governor, Newsom was able to receive donations of up to $25,900. The maximum in the lieutenant governor’s race is $6,500. The Newsom campaign argues that the two elections are separate – even though he certainly will enjoy a residual benefit from the money he raised and spent in the governor’s race.
“It’s clearly against the spirit of the limitation law – that law has to be changed,” said Bob Stern, director of the Center for Governmental Studies in Los Angeles. “It’s completely unfair.”