Monday, 8 September 2008

Weight-loss camps invite families to come along

PAUL SMITHS, N.Y. ? It took Kelsey Galer quadruplet weeks at a weight-loss camp to lose 9 pounds. It took her dad barely three days to start acting like a "dork."

"He wears his pedometer around all the time," aforesaid Galer. "He's just rattling into it with the family shop he went to."


Her weight-loss camp and others ar inviting mummy, dad and siblings to share the camp receive so they can help oneself campers stay motivated when they return home where unhealthy temptations and habits lurk.


For her father, Michael Galer, and 16-year-old sis, Kyla, that meant a three-day family workshop at the conclusion of Kelsey's stay at Wellspring Camp for loretta Young women in New York's Adirondack Mountains.


They got an induction into the 18-year-old's new, fitter lifestyle. Her father found himself doing aerobics and using a stability globe for yoga during the family session. Her sister cheered as Kelsey climbed to the top of a eminent pine corner and flew down a zip-line.


Back home in Canton, Mass., the whole home has been reaping the benefits: her father lost 8 pounds, and like a shot Kyla joins her at the gym. Within years, they were planning healthier grocery lists.


Wellspring is one of several weight-loss camps that add some family participation to the standard menu of exercise and healthy diets. Wellspring's camp in Pinehurst, N.C., and the Pritikin program in Aventura, Fla., offer programs that include family members for the entire camp session.


But all that attention comes at a damage: Roughly $5,000 to $9,000, depending on the camp and duration of stay.


At the Adirondack camp, visiting family members join campers in the mornings for a long walk and at every meal. The rest of the prison term, parents take care classes on cooking, exercise and how to tell on for level-headed food. Siblings can tag along with campers to watch the daily activities.


"That had a big impression on her," Kelsey Galer said of her sister's visit to camp. "She just got a taste of my new modus vivendi. We had spent a lot of time together (before camp), but it was ne'er time like that � being active and eating healthy."


The results of a three-year Wellspring survey of campers suggests that family unit support is beneficial, according to Daniel Kirschenbaum, Wellspring clinical theatre director. The campers who reported having strong family support or secondhand the post-camp program did better at maintaining or continuing to lose weight than those without firm support.


At the Wellspring camp in Pinehurst, N.C., around 60 miles southwest of Raleigh, parents join children between the ages of 5 and 14 for sessions that include sports, personal grooming and a spa.


Therapy is part of both programs to help people realize why they overeat and how to manage strain. Parents teach how to motivate their children to be healthy instead of discouraging them or accentuation bad eubstance image.


Dr. Chris Bolling, world Health Organization heads the weight loss program at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, said fat is a family affair.


"You have to poser good behaviour," he said. "We know this for all sorts of behavior in kids. You don't tell kids to do one affair and then do something else ... kids, very promptly, pick up on it when their parents aren't practicing what they're preaching."


The Pritikin Program near Miami offers a family camp that promotes exercise and a diet emphasizing fruits, vegetables, whole grains, seafood, nonfat dairy farm foods, and limited lean meat. Children also convey cooking classes and go on field trips to learn around things like finding salubrious options at the mall.


Priscilla Marquard has taken her triplets � 12-year-olds Caroline, Alex and Audrey � to the Pritikin crime syndicate camp each summer for the past three years. The girls have always been a healthy free weight, but she saw it as an opportunity to reinforce healthy habits as a family.


"You can actually put them in a room full of unhealthy food, somehow they're sledding to find a way to eat healthy," said Marquard, of Orlando


Her girl Audrey concurs: "I loved Oreos, and now I can't even look at that stuff."


Kelsey Galer had tried to lose system of weights before by exercising only without a good deal success. The 5-foot stripling started camp at 170 pounds and lost about 9 pounds in a month. About three weeks after going camp, she had dropped 12 more pounds. She has followed up with the camp, logging her food intake, exercise and weight on-line. She crapper also pass on out to counselors if she necessarily additional help or motivation.


She said the support has helped her stay on track and get ready for college in the fall.


"It would have been a lot harder. I probably would have had a actually hard time sticking to the diet and staying motivated," she said. "It's really safe to know that other people want you to succeed. "




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Wednesday, 20 August 2008

LiveDaily Song of the Day: 3OH!3 - 'Punkbitch'

Today's Song of the Day is by 3OH!3 [ ]. The featured cut is "Punkbitch," which appears on the duo's recent July release, "Want."



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Sunday, 10 August 2008

U.S. Preventive Medicine Supports Testing Older Men For Prostate Cancer

�U.S. Preventive Medicine,
(http://www.USPreventiveMedicine.com), the drawing card in disease prevention,
said today that routine screening and testing of men age 75 and older for
prostate cancer canful still be appropriate and that doing so hindquarters help old
men live a yearner and healthy life.



The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force this week recommended that
doctors stop routine prostate cancer screening of men elderly than 75, citing
grounds that the benefits of treatment based on routine screening of this
historic period group are small to none and that there is more evidence of harm than
benefit.



"While there crapper be reduced use of prostate screening in the oldest
workforce, due to the oftentimes slow increase of prostate cancer, that does not mean it
is unfitting to try out for prostate cancer, peculiarly in differently
healthy elder men world Health Organization are vigorous and appear to be in good health," aforementioned
Dr. Boyd Lyles, Chief Medical Officer at U.S. Preventive Medicine and a
leading authorization on preventive medicine. "Without question, the healthier
a person is at that age the more benefit can be gained by continuing to be
active with signal detection and prevention efforts."



Dr. Lyles points out that there are various discussion options for
prostate crab, including sleepless waiting, with periodic PSA testing, to
several types of radiation and surgery.



"I am a firm supporter of periodic PSA and digital exam testing,
along with a discussion of all treatment options with the older patient if
cancer is establish, so that an informed decision around treatment options can
be made," aforesaid Dr. Lyles.

About U.S. Preventive Medicine



U.S. Preventive Medicine(R), a privately-owned health management
company with clients nationwide and the United Kingdom, is focused entirely
on disease bar. The Company offers employers, government agencies
and consumers proprietary products that better health and productivity
patch reducing healthcare costs. Company products include the
first-of-its-kind health welfare, The Prevention Plan(TM), a personalized
health management and wellness programme delivered on-line and telephonically;
and The Prevention Plan CM(TM), a chronic care management program
customized for individuals with existing aesculapian issues. Other services are
available through the Center for Preventive Medicine(R) and The Preventive
Network(TM), which offer high technology, early detection screening programs with
affiliated physician groups, hospitals and health systems.
http://www.USPreventiveMedicine.com and http://www.ThePreventionPlan.com


U.S. Preventive Medicine
http://www.ThePreventionPlan.com


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Tuesday, 1 July 2008

Digital dearth in Europe

Proponents realize there may be no d-cinema 'big bang'





AMSTERDAM -- The time warp that is digital cinema figured prominently Monday in opening-day seminars at Cinema Expo.


In the U.S., the rollout of d-cinema systems in multiplexes nationwide is sufficiently progressed -- at almost 5,000 movie-quality screens -- that exhibitors already are eyeing the additional implementation of 3-D hardware. Pacific-Asian exhibition is even further around the digital bend, with an installed base of about 6,500 screens.


Yet in Europe, which has fewer than 1,000 digital screens at present, d-cinema is largely a theoretical discussion.


Money woes and other impediments figured in a session billed as "D-cinema in Europe -- Stalled?" But a speaker recounted overhearing a telling comment in the hotel bar the night before.


"Stalled?" a bemused conventioneer asked. "I didn't know it had started."


Of course, the d-cinema rollout is more progressed in some European markets, with the U.K., Belgium, France and Russia getting better traction than elsewhere. Installation outfits XDC and Arts Alliance Media have helped roll out systems for about 400 and 326 screens, respectively, keeping the region's digital pulse pumping if not racing.


Exhibitors here appear relatively sanguine about the situation. That's partly because independent films represent a higher portion of the product mix, and indies haven't been keen to distribute films digitally as the major studios nor to help exhibs fund installations.


"In Europe, there will be no big bang for digital cinema," said Dutch Distributors Assn. director Michael Lambrechtsen, who seemed more upset over Holland's weekend soccer loss to Russia. "This is economically and physically impractical."


D-cinema proponents in the U.S. might say the technology's rollout there has hardly been a "big bang" event either. But the stateside use of "virtual print fees" as a means of securing studio funding for digital theater installations has gotten much quicker traction than in Europe, where the spreading sense is that exhibitors might have to carry a much greater portion of the financial burden themselves.


"Individual (circuits) will progress faster or slower depending on their economic strength," Lambrechtsen said.


Inertia on d-cinema is so palpable on the continent that another speaker felt the need to remind people the digital trend is inevitable.


"It's a clear imperative that the movie business is going in the digital direction," European Digital Cinema Forum chief Dave Monk said. "Not going there is just not a practical option."


A pantheon of top d-cinema vendors are on board at Cinema Expo to help show European exhibitors how it's all done. Such companies as DLP, Soy Electronics, Imax, Dolby and Christie Digital also are involved in several movie screenings set for digital presentation at the confab.


Those include Paramount's "Tropic Thunder," set for a screening Thursday night. Screenings set for later in the week include Sony's "Pineapple Express," Warner Bros.' "The Dark Knight" and Disney's "Wall-E," among others.


Meanwhile, one potentially helpful development in the d-cinema rollout emerged Monday, when Belgium-based installations facilitator XDC said it's signed up the final two majors to virtual print fee arrangements. The pacts with Sony and Universal follow similar XDC deals with Disney, Warner Bros., Paramount and Fox.


XDC now must convince individual circuits throughout Europe to tap into VPFs, through which studios would help defray costs of exhibitors' d-cinema installations costs. But execs said the arrangements theoretically could cover up to 8,000 new digital installations throughout the region.


Cinema Expo continues through Thursday at the RAI convention center.



Leo Cendrowicz in Brussels contributed to this report.



See Also

Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Band make Biz boss all cuddly

CHEEKY up-and-coming band BO PEPPER know how to get Bizarre fame — by giving
it a mention in their video.

The new single, No One But Yourself To Blame, is out on iTunes on Monday and
the video is a cracker.

The group, fronted by stunning singer DOLLY PEPPER, are soon off to LA
to work with producer GREG WELLS.

To see the cuddly toy version of me in action click on the player below.




Click here to buy music and videos from Bo Pepper

Wednesday, 11 June 2008

Michael Buble

Michael Buble   
Artist: Michael Buble

   Genre(s): 
Vocal
   Pop
   Easy Listening
   Jazz
   Other
   Rock: Pop-Rock
   



Discography:


Everything Pt.1   
 Everything Pt.1

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 2


Everything CDS Promo   
 Everything CDS Promo

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 1


Everything   
 Everything

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 2


Call Me Irresponsible (Special Edition) cd2   
 Call Me Irresponsible (Special Edition) cd2

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 8


Call Me Irresponsible (Special Edition) cd1   
 Call Me Irresponsible (Special Edition) cd1

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 13


Call Me Irresponsible   
 Call Me Irresponsible

   Year: 2007   
Tracks: 14


With Love   
 With Love

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 8


It's Time   
 It's Time

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 15


Michael Buble (Christmas Edition   
 Michael Buble (Christmas Edition

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 19


Let It Snow   
 Let It Snow

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 5


Dream   
 Dream

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 13


Babalu   
 Babalu

   Year: 2001   
Tracks: 13


Starbucks Present   
 Starbucks Present

   Year:    
Tracks: 20


Michael Buble   
 Michael Buble

   Year:    
Tracks: 13


Come Fly With Me   
 Come Fly With Me

   Year:    
Tracks: 8


Caught In The Act   
 Caught In The Act

   Year:    
Tracks: 8




 





Chris Martin - admirer of band Westlife

Friday, 6 June 2008

Brangelina to marry 'any day now'

Hollywood couple Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt will reportedly marry any day now.