Saturday, April 29, 2006

MUSIC > Rolling Stones Guitarist Injured in Figi


SYDNEY, Australia - Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards was hospitalized for a mild concussion he suffered while vacationing in Fiji, reportedly after falling out of a palm tree.

Richards, 62, was injured earlier this week and flown to a New Zealand hospital for treatment, band spokeswoman Fran Curtis said in a statement Saturday.

"Following treatment locally and as a precautionary measure, he flew to a hospital accompanied by his wife, Patti, for observation," Curtis said.

The statement did not elaborate on Richards' condition or explain how he was injured.

But media reports in Australia and New Zealand said Richards hurt his head after falling out of a palm tree at an exclusive Fiji resort and remained hospitalized in Auckland.

A newspaper report Sunday said Richards was flown to Auckland's Ascot Hospital on Thursday after the accident. Hospital duty manager Steve Kirby would not comment on whether Richards was a patient there, citing the hospital's privacy policy.

The Fijilive.com news Web site reported that the accident was believed to have happened at Fiji's exclusive Wakaya Club resort.

Resort employee Salesi Finau told The Associated Press that Richards and his wife recently stayed at the resort for about a week but would not say when they left or comment on reports of Richards' accident.

The Rolling Stones played a concert in Wellington on April 18 as part of their "A Bigger Bang" world tour.

According to the band's Web site, the Stones' next scheduled concert is at the Olympic Stadium in Barcelona, Spain, followed by 34 more dates across Europe.

DIGITAL > Web portal puts Chelsea in different league


FT.COM: Chelsea football club moved to capitalise on the growth of internet financial services with the launch on Friday of a new web portal that would give its fans access to independent financial advice.

The move – the first by a football club – will see Chelsea launch a branded portal that will give its customers advice about savings and investments.

MUSIC > Naked Hip-Hop Ambition


LATIMES.COM: Aspiring rap stars flock to strip clubs in Atlanta — "the Motown of the South" — to build a buzz and catch the ear of industry star-makers.

ATLANTA — It was "Magic Monday" at the Magic City strip club, a windowless brick building near the downtown Greyhound station.

Inside, 57 exotic dancers with names like Isis and Peaches and NaNa were shaking it, as the song goes, like a saltshaker. The soundtrack was Southern hip-hop — all simple synthesizer lines, raunchy party chants and the gut-rattling bass kick of a Roland TR-808 drum machine.

Tax Holloway pressed close to the stage, sipping champagne and watching the women twist themselves into exaggerated affectations of lust. But Holloway wasn't really here for that.

The aspiring rap star knew that on Monday nights, Magic City was packed with Atlanta's hip-hop cognoscenti, and he wanted to see how they responded when his new song played over the sound system.

"I need to see the reaction of the people to know if it's really going to be my first single," Holloway said. "Or see whether I need to go back in the lab."

Holloway is 23, and he wants to be rap's next big thing. So he moved from Detroit to Atlanta, where a burgeoning music business has earned it the nickname "the Motown of the South."

In the rap world, Atlanta is also known as the Dirty South, and for good reason: Some of the industry's key business is conducted in strip clubs. Stars and star-makers come to the clubs to preen, party and listen for trends bubbling up from the streets. Young rappers like Holloway come to create a buzz for their music, and network with disc jockeys, music producers and stars.

"Strip clubs is just the place here," says Chris "Ludacris" Bridges, the Atlanta rapper and actor who appeared in the Oscar-winning movie "Crash." "It seems they get all the good music first."

The success of local artists like Ludacris, OutKast, T.I. and Young Jeezy, among many others, has spawned a network of record labels, development companies and studios, and they have become crucial to Georgia's billion-dollar music scene. Nationally, Atlanta's influence has arguably never been stronger: At one point in March, local rappers were featured on seven of the top 50 singles on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.

That success has brought a new sense of glamour to a city previously known as the home of buttoned-down blue chips like Delta Air Lines.

It has also attracted a Hollywood-like subculture of aspiring stars.

"Sometimes it seems like everybody in Atlanta's got a hip-hop record," said Tosha Love, music director for WVEE, Atlanta's top-rated radio station.

Two decades ago, strip clubs were among the few places that would play the nastiest Southern rap records. As Southern rap went mainstream, the connection between club deejays and musicians has only grown stronger.

And so, Monday through Wednesday nights — when Atlanta's professional class is most likely sleeping — undiscovered hopefuls descend on three of the city's best-known strip clubs, promoting their dreams and demo CDs in the presence of live nude girls.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Tax Holloway is tall and slim, and he carries himself with an easy elegance. The website of his fledgling record label describes him as having a "strong, silent pimp-like demeanor," and he cut a cool, unflappable figure amid the Magic City bacchanal. His attire was gangsta casual: backward ball cap, blue Dickies work jacket and matching work pants that pooled around a pair of white alligator-skin Nikes.

Around him were hundreds of patrons who had come to be part of Magic Monday. It is a storied weekly event: Rappers drop "Magic Monday" in lyrics as a shorthand for the kind of party most people only see in videos. At 2 a.m., five dancers shimmied on an H-shaped stage in the middle of the room, and the rest worked the floor, offering to work at closer quarters for the big tippers. Heads swayed and bobbed to a seamless string of regional hits, and the deejay goaded the mostly male, mostly black crowd to new heights of generosity:

"Where the paper at?" he barked. "Come on, let's do this for real!"

The vegetal tang of marijuana floated in the air. From time to time, patrons flung plumes of cash toward the rafters, letting the dollar bills flutter where they may — a ritual known as "making it rain." It began as a flashy way for big-timers to tip the dancers, but it has evolved into a thing unto itself — a raw display of wealth and power. In Atlanta, the presence of two or three major rap stars in one club can lead to a rainmaking competition, and leave thousands of dollars on the floor.

"What happens in here is not even about the girls anymore," said Herman Harris, 24, a Magic City manager who calls himself "the Hugh Hef of Hip-Hop."

Tonight, on an elevated platform to Holloway's right, Chaka Zulu, co-chief executive of Ludacris' Disturbing Tha Peace imprint, was hosting a party for a few dozen friends. They traded $100 bills for bricks of shrink-wrapped dollars, which they popped open and flung by the fistful. Below the gyrating dancers were more dancers, who crawled around and stuffed the cash into plastic grocery sacks.

Holloway threw a few bills from time to time, but they amounted to little more than a trickle. He was born Andre Padgett on Detroit's rough east side, the son of two autoworkers, and he has never known a world without hip-hop: He was 3 years old when LL Cool J released the hit single "Radio," and 4 when Eric B. & Rakim released the groundbreaking "Paid in Full."

By the time he was 15, Holloway was skipping class and running with the hard kids. He fell in with one of the neighborhood's most powerful drug dealers, Antonio "Wipeout" Caddell Jr., who featured Holloway on recordings by a group he was managing called the East Side Chedda Boyz. Their underground tapes and CDs sold well locally, and they got some airplay with a song called "I'm a Chedda Boy."

Major labels flirted with the group, but things fell apart after Caddell was killed outside a Detroit nightclub in September 2004. Holloway, who had been living in Atlanta part time, moved there permanently to start a solo career with the help of one of Caddell's friends, Don Adams, a former cocaine dealer who spent time in a federal penitentiary before establishing himself in Atlanta as a real estate broker.

Adams had cut a deal with the Magic City management to promote Holloway for a year. For an amount that Adams wouldn't disclose, the club would flash Holloway's name and "COMING SOON" on a digital wall projector, put up ads in the men's room, and play his songs. The goal was to attract a major label and secure a national distribution deal.

It was a novel way to circumvent the usual method of getting played at Magic City: sweet-talking or heavily tipping Magic Monday's musical gatekeeper, Fernando Barnes.

Barnes spins records as DJ Fernando, and to a certain kind of Atlantan he is a very important person. Musicians stop him at shopping malls, bars and restaurants, talking up their demos and pressing copies into his hands. He keeps the discs in a gym bag in his black Cadillac Escalade. It's Li'l this and Big that, a so-and-so of pseudonyms and acronyms and creatively misspelled nicknames. Much of it never makes it from the bag into the booth.

Musicians often have better luck if they approach him in the club with their CD and a gratuity. On Magic Monday, they will pay him as much as $200 to play a song once.

But Barnes has his limits. If a song kills the energy in a room, he won't play it again. It doesn't matter how much money he's offered. "With me it's a real touchy issue, because if your song is garbage, I don't care who you are," he said.

Sometime after midnight, Barnes put on headphones and listened to the first few seconds of the songs on Holloway's demo. He didn't like what he was hearing. Nothing sounded hot enough for Magic Monday.

"Come on — at least one song," yelled Harris, the club manager.

Barnes grimaced.

"At the end of the day, he's the deejay," Harris said, shaking his head. "I can't make him play a damn thing."

Holloway had been hoping that Barnes would play what he thought was his most radio-ready song, an upbeat number with an R&B chorus called "One Night Stand." Instead Barnes chose "Get It, Get It," a song about hustling after money in the drug trade.

When the song came on, Holloway's friends yelled out and tossed their dollars. The rapper rocked his shoulders a little, his face hard and dispassionate, his lips moving to the sound of his own voice:

"I'm so for real…. I got Colombians who ship cocaine…. Everyday my money double."

The dancers kept dancing and the heads kept bobbing. But for some of the veterans in the room, the song didn't have the spark of an instant anthem.

"It was all right," said Zulu, the record executive. "But the first time hearing it, it wasn't nothing interesting. He'd have to keep coming to the club to ensure that it was getting played."


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Tosha Love, the WVEE music director, was sitting at a cocktail table in the back of Strokers, a strip club tucked into a mini-mall in the Atlanta suburb of Clarkston. She was munching deep-fried bar food and making notes next to a list of unknown musical acts. There was L.A.B., a hard-core rap group from Syracuse, N.Y.; Escobanton, a dance-hall reggae act; and Group X, an R&B vocal group that had been coming here for weeks.

Tuesday at Strokers is "Looking for a Hit" night. The disc jockey plays one song by each of the first 10 unsigned artists who walk through the door, so long as they tip the dancers during their number. Then Love gives each artist a free critique. From time to time, she finds a trendsetting song at Strokers and adds it to her station's playlist alongside the music of more established rap and R&B performers.

Love said it can feel like an odd place to do business, given the backdrop of neon lights and naked flesh.

"You have to get used to the strippers walking around, but this industry is basically built on the street," she said. "You have to get back to the street to know what's hot, and in Atlanta a lot of times that means the strip clubs."

The deejay cued the demo by L.A.B. One of the rappers in the group, Benny Blanco, loped around the small stage with a friend, tossing bills at two women in nothing but heels.

Blanco's group had tried unsuccessfully to secure a record deal from major labels in New York. A big meeting with Def Jam records went nowhere. So Blanco drove to Atlanta with a few boxes of demos, hoping for a fresh start.

The song the deejay played was called "Bring it Back," and it lamented the rise of what Blanco saw as the commercial degradation of hip-hop. For Blanco, many of the worst offenders these days emanate from the South, especially the strip clubs, where songs like the recent No. 1 single "Laffy Taffy" ("Girl, shake that laffy taffy/that laffy taffy") start as custom-built exhortations for exotic dancers, and end up translating easily into shallow but popular party anthems.

It is a trend, he said, that leaves little room on the radio for his brand of hip-hop, which is heavy on social realism and the slamming, macho Northeastern sound that fans call the boom-bap.

"The labels … they want some real bubblegum right now," Blanco said. "You even go to the labels in New York, they want the down-South sound."

"Bring it Back" made no concessions to the Southern sound, and when Blanco huddled with Love at her cocktail table, she told him as much.

"You're not going to have a good time breaking down here," she said. "I've got major acts from New York that's not getting airplay down here. That's just the way the tide is changing in music."


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


The Body Tap, a two-story building on Atlanta's west side, doesn't bill itself as a strip club but as an adult entertainment megaplex, with a kitchen, two bars, and a hair salon with a manicurist.

For amateur musicians, the rates for a spin during Body Tap's "Richlife Wednesdays" start at about $50, payable to disc jockey Antoine Nolan, a former Auburn University football standout who works as DJ X-Rated. The rates go up as the night wears on and more big shots roll in.

Omar Cooper, a New Jersey native who raps as O-Coop, had paid Nolan to play his song "Get Money." There were rumors that some big stars would be in the club, and Cooper, 28, wanted them to hear what he was working on.

"Technically, I'm here on business," he said. "But I'm going to have fun doing it."

But Cooper — who also runs a barbershop — was home and in bed around 1:30 a.m. when the highest of high rollers made his entrance. There was a ripple of rumors, and then, suddenly, there was Sean "Puffy" Combs, formerly known as P. Diddy. He climbed up on the stripper stage, with an entourage in tow.

Through the confetti-like haze of dollar bills, he looked as if he'd just won an election. "P. Diddy in the building!" DJ X-Rated shouted over the mike.

The girls kept working, and the dollars kept flying. But now all eyes were on the fully clothed man in the dark glasses and the baseball hat, the rap impresario who could pluck a man out of his barbershop and deliver him to the jet set.

A synthetic bass drum pounded, a synthetic high hat skittered, and Diddy took delivery of his bricks of dollar bills.

MUSIC > Neil Young's 'Living With War' Shows He Doesn't Like It


NYTIMES.COM: Neil Young unleashes a digital broadside today. His new album, "Living With War" (Reprise), was recorded and mostly written three to four weeks ago and as of Friday can be heard in its entirety free on his Web site, http://www.neilyoung.com/, and on satellite radio networks.

Mr. Young half-jokingly describes "Living With War" as his "metal folk protest" album. It's his blunt statement about the Iraq war; "History was a cruel judge of overconfidence/back in the days of shock and awe," he sings, strumming an electric guitar and leading a power trio with a sound that harks back to Young albums like "Rust Never Sleeps" and "Ragged Glory."

Some songs add a trumpet or a 100-voice choir, hastily convened in Los Angeles for one 12-hour session. During the nine new songs he sympathizes with soldiers and war victims, insists "Don't need no more lies," longs for a leader to reunite America and prays for peace.

In a song whose title alone has already brought him the fury of right-wing blogs, he urges, "Let's Impeach the President." It ends with Mr. Young shouting, "Flip, flop," amid contradictory sound bites of President Bush. But Mr. Young insists the album is nonpartisan.

"If you impeach Bush, you're doing a huge favor for the Republicans," he argued, speaking by telephone from California. "They can run again with some pride."

Mr. Young is a Canadian citizen. But having lived in the United States since the 1960's, he sings as if he were an American. The title song of "Living With War" quotes "The Star-Spangled Banner," and the album ends with the choir singing "America the Beautiful."

The album's release is a high-tech, globe-spanning update of a topical song tradition that's much older than recordings: the broadside, a songwriter's rapid response to events of the day. "They had these songs that everybody knew the melodies to," Mr. Young said. "They'd just write new words, and the minstrels would be traveling around spreading the word. Music spreads like wildfire when you do it that way."

On Tuesday a higher-quality version will be for sale as a download from online music stores, and a CD will be in stores next week as soon as it can be manufactured and shipped. Eventually a DVD will be released with video of the recording sessions, which took place March 29 to April 6. Many of the songs on the album were first takes, recorded immediately after Mr. Young taught them to the band. On March 31 he wrote three songs: "Let's Impeach the President" before breakfast, "Looking for a Leader" after he recorded "Let's Impeach the President" and "Roger and Out" the same evening.

Mr. Young's Web site will have a more elaborate presentation, available free. It will include a page designed like a cable-news broadcast, complete with visuals (including recording-session scenes), ticker and logo: LWW (for "Living With War") rather than CNN. "Even if it turns out that we can't sell it with the news in it, we won't sell it, we'll just stream it," he said. "We don't have to sell it. We can still get it out there. This has nothing to do with money as far as I'm concerned."

Mr. Young wants the album heard as a whole. The online streams play through from beginning to end; until the CD is ready, the downloadable copies will be available only as a bundle of the full album. "That first impression is so important," he said. "Instead of just going to 'Let's Impeach the President,' people will have to absorb the whole thing. To understand the songs, you need to understand where the whole album's coming from. It protects my right as an artist to have the work presented the way I created it."

Mr. Young has always been impatient with the time lag between writing a song and getting it to the world. When four student protesters were shot dead at Kent State University in 1970, he wrote "Ohio," recorded it with Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young and released it two and a half weeks later by sending acetates — preliminary pressings — to radio stations. (He will be on tour this summer as a member of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young in what's billed as the Freedom of Speech Tour.)

After 9/11 Mr. Young wrote "Let's Roll," a song about the passengers who brought down a hijacked plane in Pennsylvania, and released it free online. "Now we have the Internet," he said. "It doesn't sound as good, but it's much faster, and it gets around the world. That's huge, that's as big as we get."

The songs on "Living With War" are straightforward and single-minded, setting aside the allusive, enigmatic quality of Mr. Young's rock classics. "These are all ideas we've heard before," he said. "There's nothing new in there. I just connected the dots."

The protest song, rocked-up slightly from its folky 1960's form, has been making a comeback during the Iraq war, from arena bands like Pearl Jam, the Rolling Stones and Green Day to indie-rockers like Bright Eyes and blues-rockers like Keb' Mo' and Robert Cray. Bruce Springsteen's latest album is a tribute to the protest-song mentor Pete Seeger, although it features old folk songs rather than Mr. Seeger's topical material.

"We are the silent majority now, and we haven't done a damn thing," Mr. Young said. "We've stood by and watched this happen. But there's more of us than there is of them, and we have to do something. When people start talking and see they can get away with it, it's going to happen everywhere. It's going to be a landslide, it's going to be a tidal wave. This is just the tip of it."

Mr. Young said that he made "Living With War" not with a plan, but on an impulse. "I don't know what actually did it," he said. "It happened really fast, faster than I think I've ever experienced. There was just a kind of a wave."

As in the 60's, protest songs risk self-righteousness and preaching only to the converted. Only the most generalized ones outlast the interest in whatever headlines inspired them. There's not a lot of mystery to the songs on "Living With War"; they make their points as forthrightly as possible. Yet in the Internet era information — not just songs but blogs, videos, photos, drawings, e-mail jottings — is in the paradoxical position of being published worldwide and perhaps archived forever, but also being impulsive and ephemeral. A song for the Internet doesn't have to be one for the ages. Like an old broadside, it just has to get around for its moment, for right now. "Living With War" — irate, passionate, tuneful, thoughtful and obstinate — is definitely worth a click.

MUSIC > Bowie ch-ch-changes


DAILYMAIL.CO.UK: From Ziggy Stardust to the Thin White Duke, David Bowie has always been rakishly thin.

But as he approaches his 60th birthday, it seems he is growing into yet another persona.

"Happily rounded rock star" would fit the bill nicely.

The singer, who had heart surgery two years ago, made a rare public appearance in New York at a party to mark the Tribeca Film Festival.

And with a hint of a double chin and a wide smile, he looked much healthier than in his hollow-cheeked days.

Healthier than in his hollow-cheeked days

He was accompanied by his wife Iman, who at 50, is still as striking as in her earliest days as a model.

Bowie, a workaholic, found himself forced to slow down after emergency heart surgery in July 2004 in the middle of a European tour.

After days of fighting off pain he asked doctors to check what he thought was a trapped nerve.

They discovered it was a blocked coronary artery and operated immediately.

Since then the singer - whose hits include Changes, Sorrow, Ashes to Ashes and Lets Dance - has been taking life a easier.

Planning a project for next year

"Up until his heart surgery he had been working like a lunatic," a source close to the singer said last night.

"As well as touring around the world he had released three albums in five years.

"After it happened he realised that he needed to slow down. And he has enjoyed learning to relax.

"He has been spending time with Iman and their daughter Alexandria who is now five and he has become quite happy playing the househusband.

"But he is planning to get back to work soon. He has got a project planned for the start of next year, when he turns 60, but he won't talk about what it is."

In his most recent interview Bowie said he had given up his lifelong smoking habit and felt better than ever.

"I feel fantastic at the moment," he said.

"After I had the heart attack I decided to take a year off and do nothing.

"I didn't do any work and just made sure I was looking after myself. I go to the gym, I don't drink and I'm feeling really good."

Bowie has also been discussing the possibility of appearing in Ricky Gervais's BBC2 comedy Extras.

Thursday, April 27, 2006

CARS > 1953 Muntz Jet


EBAY.COM: Earl "Madman Muntz" was an extremely successful used car salesman in California who became famous for his showmanship like promotion of cars and the electronics products produced and sold. He is widely credited for selling the first affordable TV sets to the US public. The Jet was Muntz's answer to the sports cars that were coming onto the scene in the early 1950's. Competing with the likes of the Kaiser Darrin, Hudson Italia, Chevrolet Corvette and the Nash Healey. Muntz went to the famous race car builder Frank Kurtis and bought the rights to produce Kurtis' road car. Muntz stretched the chassis a bit and make the car into a 4 seat sports car, initially powered by a Lincoln V-8, later cars were powered by Cadillac V-8's. The cars were well built and performance was respectable. Muntz is quoted as saying he lost over $1000.00 on each of the cars built as he "over built" them . This car was the subject of a ground up nut and bolt concours quality restoration and is truly one of the finest examples to exist. It is finished in metallic plum and has a plum and white leather interior. Powered by a Lincoln V-8 with automatic transmission, the car is equipped with twin spot lights and a removable Carson top. The car has extensive documentation on its restoration and on the history of the Muntz automobile. A rare opportunity to acquire one of Amercas first sports cars.

AVIATION > Video-shooting minihelicopter


NEWS.COM: The National Association of Broadcasters 2006 electronic-media conference, offering a showcase of the latest broadcasting technology, is taking place this week in Las Vegas.

Here are the PC-enabled controls for the CVG-A "autonomous" helicopter, which Coptervision rents to Hollywood production crews. The system allows an operator to set a flight plan with a computer. The small helicopter can safely fly below bridges, around trees and inside warehouses.

Production companies can rent the small helicopter--starting at $5,000--to film commercials, movies and music videos or to take still photographs. Van Nuys, Calif.-based Coptervision plans to begin selling its helicopters in the fall.

CARS > ROUSH Stage 3 F–150 follows hot on hooves of Stage 3 Mustang


We’ve been without an SVT Lightning for years now and may be without one for a few more, so news of the ROUSH Stage 3 F-150 has found a happy home in our ears. Like the Stage 3 Mustang mentioned below, the F-150 gets a ROUSHcharger system that increases power of the truck’s 5.4L V8 up to 445 hp and a nice round 500 ft-lbs. of torque. The truck gets the visuals included with the Stage 1 kit and the suspension upgrades that come with Stage 2. A set of 20-inch rims, carbon fiber hood scoop and dual side outlet exhausts give the ROUSH pickup an extra dose of bravado to back up the newfound power.

Follow the jump for ROUSH’s official press release and an additional highrez pic.

[Source: ROUSH]

ROUSH UNLEASHES MONSTER 445 HORSEPOWER STAGE 3 F-150; WOMEN AND CHILDREN FRIGHTENED NATIONWIDE

LIVONIA, Mich. (April 17, 2006) – There are trucks, and then there are trucks - and the new ROUSH Stage 3 version of the Ford F-150 certainly ranks among the highest predators on the truck food chain.

Now in production and available at dealers nationwide, the ROUSH Stage 3 F-150 flies down the road thanks to the 445 horsepower and 500 lb-ft of torque generated by the addition of a ROUSHcharger™ system. This is a substantial increase in power and performance over the 300 horsepower and 365 lb-ft of torque that is generated from the stock Ford factory 5.4L, 3-valve engine, and the entire truck, including the ROUSHcharger™ is covered by ROUSH’s industry-leading 3 year/36,000 mile warranty.

This vehicle was designed by the same engineers that have helped Jack Roush win 34 racing championships, including a pair at the elite NASCAR Nextel Cup level. The intercooled ROUSHcharger™ includes a custom calibration which optimizes engine performance and transmission shift points.

But the ROUSH Stage 3 F-150 is more than just engine. This package also includes the styling and body kit enhancements of the Stage 1 version, and the suspension upgrades that are incorporated into the Stage 2 version of the truck.

The tuned sport suspension system under the Stage 3 offers a balance between comfort and handling capability, without significant reduction in payload capacity. These engineered and tuned components include specially valved front and rear shock absorbers, increased rate rear leaf springs, front coil springs, and a large diameter solid front sway bar.

The ROUSH Stage 3 F-150 also comes with custom 20-inch rims and tires, both from the new line of ROUSH Performance wheels. Some of the exterior styling additions include a front chin spoiler, hood scoop with carbon fiber design insert, and the optional side skirts with dual side outlet exhaust tips, wheel flares and tailgate spoiler.

Other amenities include specially-designed instrument clusters, custom leather seats, billet aluminum grille and pedals, embroidered floor mats and much more. Of course, each ROUSH vehicle comes with an individual serial plate indicating that it was hand built by specially-trained ROUSH technicians at their Livonia, Mich., facility.

“There was no component on this truck that the ROUSH engineers overlooked. They went over the F-150 from top to bottom and changed any of the components that would help the performance or handling of the vehicle, all while keeping the rugged styling that ROUSH has become known for,” said Joe Thompson, general manager of ROUSH Performance Products.

Other options available for the ROUSH Stage 3 F-150 include dash trim kits, locking lug nuts, and striping packages. Still available are the Stage 1 and Stage 2 versions of the ROUSH F-150 for drivers wanting elements of the package, but not the complete ROUSHcharged truck.

CARS > ROUSH unleashes Stage 3 Mustang


Mustangs were all the rage at the New York Auto Show this year and the frenzy of Ford stallions continues with Roush’s announcement of its Stage 3 Mustang. Called “the best Mustang we have ever built,” by Jack Roush himself, the Stage 3 Stang features the GT’s 4.6L V8 with an intercooled ROUSHcharger system that includes a specially calibrated ECM. The ROUSH treatment nets an additional 115 horsepower over stock bumping the total number of ponies to 415 and torque now stands at 395 ft-lbs. The suspension and brakes have also been upgraded to handle the additional power and ROUSH has modified the exterior with a seven-piece body kit. The racing stripes are one of the car’s few options.

Follow the jump for ROUSH’s official press release that includes more details on its best attempt at a perfect pony car to date.

[Source: ROUSH]

THE ROUSH STAGE 3 MUSTANG PROVES THAT PONIES CAN REALLY FLY

LIVONIA, Mich. (April 24, 2006) – The famous old saying goes “when pigs fly,” but it might just have to be re-written as the new Stage 3 version of the ROUSH Mustang proves that, at least in this manifestation, ponies can really fly.

The ROUSH Stage 3 Mustang packs 415 horsepower with 385 lb-ft of torque under the hood, thanks to the addition of the ROUSHcharger™ system. This is the quickest, best-handling, and most stylish Mustang in the history of ROUSH Performance, a company with a long and rich heritage of Ford Mustang upgrades.

Or, as Jack Roush succinctly said, “This is the best Mustang we have ever built.”

The Stage 3, 4.6L, 3-valve V8 powertrain system includes the intercooled ROUSHcharger™ system with custom ROUSH-calibrated ECM and several other performance modifications. This upgrade is a vast improvement over the factory stock engine which is rated at 300 horsepower and 320 lb-ft of torque.

But this car is more than just being quick on the throttle as the more than 1G rating on the skidpad attests. The suspension upgrades include specially-engineered and tuned front struts, rear shocks, front and rear springs, front and rear sway bars and jounce bumpers. The front brakes are also upgraded with 14-inch front two-piece rotors and four-piston calipers. Each component was specifically engineered so that ride comfort was not compromised at the expense of the tremendous gains in performance.

Exterior styling is enhanced through the addition of a seven-piece body kit constructed from OEM-type materials which sees a front fascia, front chin spoiler, hood scoop, rocker panels, rear fascia valance and rear wing installed by ROUSH factory technicians.

Other amenities include lower valence fog lamps, custom 18-inch forged rims with high-performance tires, sport leather seat covers, embroidered floor mats, billet aluminum pedals including a new dead pedal, and the Stage 3 electro-luminescent white face gauge cluster. The car also has ROUSH badging throughout and a serialized engine bay plaque indicating the car was hand-built in the Livonia, Mich., facility.

“This new ROUSH Stage 3 Mustang will literally turn heads twice,” claimed Joe Thompson, general manager of ROUSH Performance Products. “The first time is when they see how much better this car looks, and the second comes as you put your foot in it, kick in the ROUSHcharger™, and blow by just about anything on the road.”

Optional components to further customize the car include racing stripes, interior dash trim kits, locking lug nuts, trunk tool kit, short throw shifter, billet aluminum shift knob, and more.

The ROUSH Stage 3 Mustang is available in both coupe and convertible versions, and more information can be found at Ford dealers nationwide or online at www.RoushPerformance.com. The Stage 1 and Stage 2 versions of the ROUSH Mustang are also available for those not wanting the full performance package that comes on the Stage 3 version. As with all ROUSH cars, the industry-leading 3 year/36,000 mile warranty remains intact and covers all components.

ART > A portrait of the millionaire as an artist


TELEGRAPH.CO.UK: Critics and snooty galleries turn their noses up at Jack Vettriano, and, while his popular paintings earn him a fortune, he does rankle at the snobbery of it all, finds Elizabeth Grice

Any anthology of contemporary insults would surely contain those lobbed at the self-taught painter Jack Vettriano. He has been called the Jeffrey Archer of the art world. A purveyor of "dim erotica". A dabbler in "badly conceived soft porn". A painter who "just colours in". Most cutting of all, the critic Duncan Macmillan delivered the patronising one-liner: "He's welcome to paint so long as nobody takes him seriously."

Launching another sell-out exhibition of his new work in London earlier this month, Vettriano, one of the few artist millionaires in existence, can afford to thumb his nose at all this.

His paintings fetch between £300,000 and £500,000 at auction and up to £130,000 from a gallery. His most popular piece of schmaltz, The Singing Butler, made £744,800 at Sotheby's two years ago. Three million posters of his dancers in evening dress on a wet beach are brightening the lives of what the art establishment regards as the undiscerning masses.

Read on
.

DIGITAL > Web Sites Set Up to Celebrate Life Recall Lives Lost


Like many other 23-year-olds, Deborah Lee Walker loved the beach, discovering bands, making new friends and keeping up with old ones, often through the social networking site MySpace.com, where she listed her heroes as "my family, and anyone serving in the military — thank you!"

So only hours after she died in an automobile accident near Valdosta, Ga., early on the morning of Feb. 27, her father, John Walker, logged onto her MySpace page with the intention of alerting her many friends to the news. To his surprise, there were already 20 to 30 comments on the page lamenting his daughter's death. Eight weeks later, the comments are still coming.

"Hey Lee! It's been a LONG time," a friend named Stacey wrote recently. "I know that you will be able to read this from Heaven, where I'm sure you are in charge of the parties. Please rest in peace and know that it will never be the same here without you!"

Just as the Web has changed long-established rituals of romance and socializing, personal Web pages on social networking sites that include MySpace.com, Xanga.com and Facebook.com are altering the rituals of mourning. Such sites have enrolled millions of users in recent years, especially the young, who use them to expand their personal connections and to tell the wider world about their lives.

Inevitably, some of these young people have died — prematurely, in accidents, suicides, murders and from medical problems — and as a result, many of their personal Web pages have suddenly changed from lighthearted daily dairies about bands or last night's parties into online shrines where grief is shared in real time.

The pages offer often wrenching views of young lives interrupted, and in the process have created a dilemma for bereaved parents, who find themselves torn between the comfort derived from having access to their children's private lives and staying in contact with their friends, and the unease of grieving in a public forum witnessed by anyone, including the ill-intentioned.

Read on.

ECONOMY > Japan's economy back after 'Lost Decade'


TOKYO -- A lone scoop of ice cream for $23. A penknife for $500. A cruise for $160,000. Make no mistake: Japan is back.

After 14 gloomy years, Japan is emerging from a spiral of recessions, malaise and deflation and is on pace for the longest period of growth since World War II. As in its heyday in the 1980s, the rise of the world's second-largest economy is sending ripples through Asia, Europe and the U.S.

But behind the good news is also a sobering portrait of a country altered by what it calls the Lost Decade.

Today's Japan is increasingly divided between the flush and the frustrated, winners and losers. Homeless men, shed by layoffs, live in shanties in the parks of glittering cities. High-school graduates, without training or long-term jobs, while away days in video arcades. Families with little savings struggle to pay soaring college tuitions.

The changes, blamed for rising rates of domestic abuse, suicide and truancy, have stirred intense debate in a nation that long prided itself on equality and stability.

"The economy has been strengthened," said sociologist Masahiro Yamada of Tokyo Gakugei University, "but those who have been sacrificed have no place to go and in the future they will be a drag on the economy."

Signs of recovery are unmistakable. Exhibit A is Tokyo's Omotesando shopping district, where Ferraris and Bentleys squeeze through cramped side streets lined by hip boutiques. Browsing $500 briefcases and shoes at the Porsche Design menswear store, a Toyota assistant manager, Junichiro Hara, said he recently splurged on a $1,000 Omega watch for his wife to celebrate the birth of their second child.

"My salary hasn't gone up yet, but my life is stable, so I'm happy," Hara said.

Indeed, consumer confidence is at a 15-year high as the country enters its fourth year of strong growth. Unemployment is the lowest since 1998, and companies are reporting record profits. Most important, economists say, this recovery is unlike several false starts in the past decade because it is driven by domestic demand, not simply exports or government spending.

This is the latest turn in Japan's economic drama. At its height in 1991, the real estate value of Japan was four times that of all property in the U.S. Even then, though, Japan's egalitarian ethic meant that more than 90 percent of its citizens told pollsters they were middle class.

Then the bubble burst in 1991, and stock and real estate markets tumbled. To recover, leaders jolted Japan's entrenched corporate culture, giving companies new freedom to replace "lifetime employment" with part-time and contract laborers. Welfare and poverty rolls have soared, even as the state has sought to trigger spending by cutting taxes for the rich.

"The top tax bracket has dropped from 70 percent to 37 percent," said Professor Ryuichiro Matsubara, an economist at the University of Tokyo.

The result is that Tiffany and Ralph Lauren boutiques are flourishing—and so are thousands of new 100-yen shops, the equivalent of American dollar stores. A recent poll by the Asahi newspaper found that 74 percent of the public sees a growing gap between rich and poor. Books with such titles as "Lower Class Society" and the "The Hope Gap" are as popular as business memoirs in the 1980s.

To many here, the strains run deeper than simply between haves and have nots; they worry that the bonds of a close-knit society are fraying. Some Japanese commentators point to attacks on the homeless or schoolhouse shootings as signs of moral decay left by years of frustration; others say the success of fantasy culture in video games and anime cartoons reflects a young generation eager to find refuge outside reality.

"In the past, there was a greater spirit of mutual assistance, but it has declined," said Tokyo social worker Kizaki Kasai. "Ordinary people today are having a hard time, so they don't have as much time for helping others."

Competition in society has intensified. Though companies are on the mend, they offer far fewer good jobs. Nippon Steel, Japan's largest steelmaker, has 20,000 workers today, down from 60,000 two decades ago. It expects a record profit this year of $2.84 billion, allowing it to revive its recruitment of white-collar workers. The company expects to hire 501 this year, up from just 140 five years ago, a spokesman said.

Though that is good news to student leaders such as 20-year-old Osamu Nishikawa of Tokyo University, he cautions that the effect is limited because many students will find only part-time or contract jobs, which pay, on average, 60 percent of the salary for full-time positions.

"Students are very worried," Nishikawa said. "Often, our parents were affected by corporate restructuring and so they can't send money for their children either."

Tuition at Japan's best schools has risen 15-fold in the past three decades, and sociologist Masao Watanabe of Hitotsubashi University says the system is producing a "disguised aristocracy."

Just as the winners of the new economy are unmistakable, so are the losers. Each Sunday night, a long, quiet line forms in Tokyo's answer to Central Park. In the shadow of five-star hotels and the warm glow of an Alfa Romeo dealership, a building contractor, a former prison guard, an engineer and about 500 others accept free bowls of rice from a nonprofit before drifting back into the city.

Among them, 57-year-old electrical engineer Susumu Oe looks like any salaryman with his khaki trench coat, tidy haircut and black satchel. After two years of living in the subway, only his frayed collar and some vanished teeth betray him.

"I read in the newspapers about the Japanese recovery," he said. "They talk about a cheaper workforce, but I want to tell these companies that humans will always do a better job than machines."

He was laid off two years ago from a job repairing television sets, he says, along with everyone else his age. He looked for work, while he slid down the scale of ever cheaper hotels and, finally, bathhouses. Now he makes his money as a human placeholder, earning $36 a day for lining up to buy new video games or baseball tickets for others to enjoy.

Yet, things are improving; Tokyo's homeless population dropped 25 percent to 4,500 people from 1999 to 2004. That has left the remainder in sturdy tents and shelters, like monuments to the hard years, in parks across Japan.

In a stand of pine and cherry-blossom trees in one Tokyo park, 55-year-old Toru Takemoto lives in a two-room shack made of wood and blue nylon tarp. He is well stocked with a hot plate, bed, wall clocks, a spice rack, stainless-steel pots and other amenities recovered from Tokyo's trash.

He was a contractor before landing on the street seven years ago. Like many on the margins here, he sees little in today's fast-changing economy that gives him the confidence to give up what he has.

"If I move into an apartment," he said, "then I will have to struggle to survive."

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

DESIGN > Celle Chairs Designed by Jerome Caruso


HERMANMILLER.COM: It's a work chair like no other. Only Celle (pronounced sell'-a) has Cellular Suspension, a patented system of cells and loops that flexes in concert with the body's movements for day-long comfort. Celle's suspension, along with its naturally balanced tilt and easy adjustability, gives ergonomic support for nearly all sizes and shapes worldwide. It's right for any work setting, and Celle's clean look blends with interiors and architecture. And Celle is 99 percent recyclable.

GADGETS > Elite Modeling's eML1 Elitephone


ENGADGET.COM: Ah, Elite Modeling, one-time home to such high-end faces as Tyra Banks, Claudia Schiffer, Gisele Bündchen, Cindy Crawford, and Engadget Mobile's all-time favorite Blackberry warrior, Naomi Campbell. Well, guess who made a phone for the Dutch. That's right, the Elite Modeling eML1 Elitephone doesn't only carry a killer byline ("A mobile for models by Elite Model Look!" -- no comment), it also features a "mini and sexy clamshell" (we can't tell if they mean the phone or its case), 6 Elite model wallpapers to remind you of your own bodily imperfections, VGA camera, 160 x 128 internal display, and GPRS data. But oh, the irony of such a modeling agency not only producing a cellphone -- which is just a crappy Korean device that's been knocking around for a coupla years (a Newgen, if we're not mistaken) -- but making that phone one of the chubbier, rounder devices on the market. In fact, if anything we would have expected Elite to badge the RAZR or one of the countless brand-name fashionphones, and let the chubby, homely handheld be the 1337phone instead.

SEX > A Long, Strange Trip to Orgasm


WIRED.COM: Three rare conditions coincided recently. I had time alone in the San Francisco apartment where I rent a room part time. I had my new sex gadgets and all of their parts with me, including lube and an extra wing nut. And I had an entire day free of deadlines, deliverables and dinner plans.

One of those sex gadgets was the Je Joue, the iPodesque sensual massager. Another was the Jack Hammer Johnson shipped to me by its inventor after I called it a ridiculous, expensive and gimmicky device while promising to "give it a whirl" if they sent me one.

I think he had it in the mail that very afternoon.

I hate assembling things and vowed years ago I would never again buy anything at Ikea, but even I am competent enough to put the JHJ together. As I secured the dildo in its holder, I wondered if I would take this much effort for a penetration toy if I weren't doing it for work.

Masturbation is rarely a big event for me. It's more like the 15-minute yoga practice I do a few mornings a week. I feel better for having done it, it lifts my mood and relaxes my muscles, but it's not overwhelming with sensation or a source of intense pleasure.

Women who are willing to talk about their solo explorations will tell you they've tried hairbrushes, shampoo bottles, vegetables, broom handles. My first improvised dildo was a super absorbency tampon still in its cardboard tube, when I was about 12.

Modern sex-tech is new only in its sophistication, not in its application.

Just about anything cucumber-shaped that's small enough and easy to clean has been put in a vagina. And yet, penetration by itself rarely induces orgasm for most women.

Even if you don't deliberately touch other areas of the vulva during sex with a partner, your labia and clitoris still receive friction from the joining of your bodies. Not to mention any emotional connection that might be feeding the flames!

Although most of the JHJ demonstration videos show a woman using the device by itself, I knew right away that would be pointless for me. I certainly wouldn't be open enough to insert it without some sort of foreplay. That gave me an idea -- why not combine all the goodies in my duffel bag and try to set up a whole simulated sexual experience, without the internet?

So I donned nipple huggers (NSFW), put the Je Joue, the Jack Hammer Johnson and lube within easy reach, and lay back on the floor with my feet on the wall. I figured that would give me some stability as I tried to manage everything at once.

I also tried to think of the experiment as a sensual ritual, something worth my time and focus, rather than a quickie orgasm.

Unfortunately, it's hard to feel sacred when you're trying to guide a dildo you can't see, attached to a pogo stick that keeps bonking you in the chin, into your vagina, all without dropping your vibrator or knocking yourself out.

Read on.

AVIATION > Flying On Cloud Nine


NEWS.COM: Contour Premium Aircraft Seating unveils a new perk for business class. The "Solar" seat can be a 6-foot 3-inch long bed with up to 31-inches of space at the shoulders. It also has a fully integrated in-flight entertainment system, in-seat power for portable entertainment devices and a massage feature. Air Canada will receive the first Solar seats this month.

DIGITAL > World's most 'e-ready' countries


NEWS.COM: IBM and the intelligence unit of British magazine The Economist released on Tuesday their annual "e-readiness rankings" of 68 countries. Here is the first half of the list, topped by Denmark, which scored 9 out of a possible 10 points, followed closely by the United States and Switzerland.

According to the study, Denmark takes good advantage of the Internet, both in connecting citizens securely over broadband and wireless networks and in using its near-ubiquitous hookups for Internet banking and government services such as tax returns.

"E-procurement (for public services) is saving Danish businesses 50 million euros ($62.1 million) and taxpayers as much as 150 million euros ($186.54 million) per year. The rest of Europe is expected to follow Denmark's lead," the study said.

SCIENCE > Robot legs could give Japan's elderly a lift


ENGADGET.COM: There are already a number of bipedal or bipedal-like bots, exoskeletons, suits, assists, and devices, but Atsuo Takanishi's team at Waseda University, in conjunction with Japanese robot superpower tmsuk, unveiled their new WL-16RIII walkbot. We know they'd be a huge boon to the handicapped, elderly, lazy, and anime-obsessed the world over, but seriously, could you imagine actually walking into a grocery store or a job interview with this thing? We can, and if they cruised into the Engadget offices we'd just be all, "You're hired."

GADGETS > Toshiba's Dynabook 2006 FIFA World Cup laptop


ENGADGET.COM: So you've got your FIFA World Cup Xbox 360 and HDTV read to go but, well, you’re still just not feelin’ that World Cup fever? How ‘bout trying on a new, limited edition Toshiba Dynabook 2006 FIFA Word Cup laptop? This pup starts with a Dynabook TX base (1.6GHz Core Duo, 15.4-inch WXGA LCD, 80GB disk, 512MB RAM, and Harman & Kardon speakers), lays on a healthy slathering of gold paint inscribed with the dates and countries of previous World Cup hosts/winners, loads-up a multitude of soccertastic themes, and then slaps on a serial plate just in case your silicon slab gets mixed-in with one of the other 600 units produced. Now the ol' mercury's rising, eh? Ok, maybe not. Still, they'll be shipping May 26 for right around $1700 -- just in time for some hard posing at the pub or heaving onto the pitch should the “Hand-of-God” make its return.

TELEVISION > Forsythe rules his 'Dynasty'


USATODAY.COM: A limousine turns into the courtyard of Northern California's Filoli Mansion. It is just before 8 a.m., and actress Linda Evans steps out of the car. A greeter hurries down the steps with an umbrella to shield her from the light rain and escorts the still-elegant 63-year-old inside the familiar 43-room, 36,000-square-foot brick manor seen in the opening credits of ABC's Dynasty from 1981 to 1989.

She is soon followed by a stream of limos carrying Carrington cargo.

John Forsythe, who played the popular prime-time soap's debonair Denver oilman Blake Carrington, is flying in from his ranch near Santa Barbara to visit the mansion, 30 miles south of San Francisco, for a one-hour CBS retrospective, Dynasty Reunion: Catfights and Caviar (May 2, 10 p.m. ET/PT).

And many of his fellow Carringtons are not sure what to expect.

Aside from close friend Evans, who played Forsythe's devoted secretary-turned-wife, Krystle, no one has seen the cast's 88-year-old patriarch for more than a decade.

"We haven't all been together for a really long time," says Evans, who looks like classic Krystle in a draped black-and-white-striped chinchilla wrap over a periwinkle-blue gown designed by Dynasty wardrobe wizard Nolan Miller.

Wearing a camel-colored sweater jacket, Forsythe has been sneaked into the mansion by his protective daughter, Brooke, and wife of four years, Nicole, and brought to a guarded room posted with a sign: "Quiet Room. Shhhh." This only ups the anticipation and creates concern about what state the star is in.

"I haven't seen John since 1992, and I'd heard stories that maybe he wasn't too well," says Joan Collins, still sexy at 72. She is seated in the ballroom, dressed in an over-the-top style reminiscent of Blake's evil ex-wife, Alexis Morell Carrington Colby Dexter Rowan, in a $12,000 white/silver gown draped in white fox.

"We're all waiting for him. He really was like a father to me," says Pamela Sue Martin, 53, who left Dynasty and acting when she felt her "glib" character - Blake and Alexis' bratty daughter, Fallon - had been reduced to "a victim."

"I asked John to walk me down the aisle when I got married in real life, but he said, 'I think maybe you should ask your real dad,' " Martin says. "I was just so attached to him."

Says Al Corley, 49, seated in the library where his character, Steven, engaged in so many ugly fights with his father, Blake, "I had heard John sometimes felt good and sometimes didn't, so you don't know what to expect." Corley quit the show after less than two seasons when he objected to producers caving in to network pressure to straighten out his gay character. "Seeing John was really the only reason I wanted to do this."

Gordon Thomson, 61, the former bad-seed son Adam, whose gray temples now make him look like Forsythe in his Dynasty prime, descends the grand staircase from the upper floor, where he chose to meditate during his lunch break.

"I am a year younger than John was when he began doing Dynasty," says the smoky-voiced Thomson, who was "dreading" this reunion because of the low pay he had been offered. But he worked out a deal and now says: "It's been so great to see everyone thriving. It is the last time, probably, most of us are going to see John."

But Collins already is making plans for the next reunion. She says Forsythe has accepted her invitation to attend a Los Angeles performance of Legends, the play she is producing with her fifth husband, 40-year-old stage manager Percy Gibson. (Cracks Thomson: "What better mate for Joan than a stage manager?")

The play, which opens in Toronto in September, reunites Collins and Evans (in her first play) as actresses who loathe each other. Though both have different demeanors, Collins and Evans share laughs between takes as they sip sparkling apple juice from champagne flutes. Dressed in snakeskin boots, Collins adjusts her wig in a mirror and asks, "Is my bra showing?" and "Can I ask someone to check if I have lipstick on my teeth?"

"I'll tell you, Joan," Evans assures.

Before they begin, Collins issues a stern warning: "Can I ask everyone behind the camera to be absolutely still?" Later, she scolds, "Even if someone puts their hand in their pocket, it distracts me."

As the women recall their characters' catfights - with pillows, mud and sequins - the Carrington children begin to emerge from hair and makeup. Missing from the reunion are Heather Locklear (Sammy Jo), John James (Jeff) and Diahann Carroll (Dominique), who were invited but declined.

In the ballroom, Martin is greeting her TV siblings. "You guys look exactly the same," she says. "It's like we're all in formaldehyde."

The last Carrington child to arrive is Catherine Oxenberg, 44, whose two-season run as Amanda was defined by the infamous 1985 Moldavian massacre cliffhanger, when the whole cast flew to another country for her wedding only to be gunned down by revolutionaries.

"We were all afraid it was going to be the end of the show because it was so over the top, but I think it's the show's best moment," she says.

Oxenberg says she owes a lot to Forsythe for offering personal guidance during a difficult time. "I was battling bulimia, and he had tried to do this little intervention on me," says the actress, who sought therapy after leaving the series when producers balked at raising her $7,500-a-week salary by $2,000. "John was very delicate, but I looked at him like any addict in denial. It broke my heart that I was never in a place to thank him."

It is early afternoon, and cast members - still minus Forsythe - have gathered around a table to reminisce, but they're finding it hard to fake spontaneous greetings after a get-together the night before at San Francisco's Fairmont Hotel.

"So we're supposed to pretend like we didn't have that cocktail party last night?" Martin asks.

"Or even lunch today?" Evans adds.

But before long, they are all gossiping about their differing salaries and why each left the series.

When Collins, who remained with Dynasty throughout its run, announces that she quit as well, her castmates look at her dumbfounded. "Well, I wasn't going to come back," she explains, "so they canceled the show."

While the cast continues reminiscing, Miller helps Forsythe into his tuxedo as producer Henry Winkler assists Forsythe with his lines. There has been a great effort to shield him from media camera crews. But the concern is unwarranted. Finally revealing himself to the cast, Forsythe appears, as Oxenberg notes, "a little more slouched" but with "the same quick wit and sparkle in his eye." And the cast's greeting of Forsythe is authentic, as everyone leaps from their seats to embrace him.

Greeting his grown "children," Forsythe playfully asks Collins, "Can we make more of them?" The one-liner puts everyone at ease.

"John looks great - witty, charming and fun as he always was," says an uncharacteristically emotional Collins. "I have to say I got a bit of a lump in my throat."

Adds Thomson: "He has good days and bad days, and this was a good day. It's sad to see the simple process of aging, but he did extraordinarily well."

Forsythe says he'll cherish the experience. "Chatting and sharing stories with the old Carrington clan was heartwarming," he says. "I miss them all so much." And poking fun at his age, he describes 88 as "great ... much better than 87!"

As the sun starts to set over Filoli, Martin alerts Forsythe that his champagne is, in fact, juice, prompting him to wince.

Still, he plays along as the Carringtons raise their glasses, saluting in unison: "Twenty-five years of Dynasty."

"I'll drink to that," Forsythe says, clinking glasses with Evans and Martin. Then, after the cameras stop rolling, he adds, "I'll drink to anything." But ever the black sheep Carrington, Collins feels left out. "Hey," she pouts, "no one clinked with me."

ADVERTISING > American Express M. Night Shyamalan (My Life, My Card) [YouTube]

ADVERTISING > Wes Anderson American Express Ad [YouTube]

INTERVIEWS > Lennox Lewis

Lennox Lewis was the greatest heavyweight of his generation - and, unlike Mike Tyson, whom he demolished in the ring, he got out with his reputation intact. In New York, he speaks exclusively to Thomas Hauser, America's leading boxing writer, about his toughest fights, the sport's decline, his new family - and his first big movie role.
'People know I was the last true champion'

Very few fighters end their careers at the right time. On a cold wintry day in January 2004, Lennox Lewis was asking himself, 'Is this the right time?'
His rise to prominence had an inspirational tone. Born to a single-parent mother in east London, in 1965, he had endured a difficult childhood that included a five-year separation from his mum, to whom he remains very close, while she built a new life for herself in Canada. Mother and son were reunited in Ontario when Lennox was 12. He went on to win, for Canada, a gold medal in the super-heavyweight division at the 1988 Seoul Olympics and, fighting under a British flag, to become undisputed heavyweight champion of the world. The high point of his career was an eight-round demolition of Mike Tyson on 8 June 2002. But since that fight, Lewis had entered the ring only once, beating Vitali Klitschko on cuts in June 2003. Klitschko had been ahead on points at the time of the stoppage.

Lewis and I sat together on that wintry day in January 2004. 'I want to ask you something,' Lennox said. 'If I retire now without fighting Klitschko again, do you think it will hurt my legacy?'

'No. Your legacy is secure. You beat Klitschko. He didn't get those cuts from the referee. Years from now, when people look at your record, all they'll see next to Vitali's name is "TKO 6". You'll be remembered for ever as the best heavyweight of your time and the man who broke the American stranglehold on the heavyweight division. And if you retire now, you'll be one of three heavyweight champions in history who retired while still champion and stayed retired.'

'Rocky Marciano was one. Who was the other?'

'Gene Tunney.'

'I'd beat Klitschko again if I fought him again,' Lennox said. 'But that's the drug of the sport. There's always someone to fight. It doesn't make sense to establish a legacy and then keep going and going until you fail.'

One month later, on 6 February 2004, Lewis retired from boxing. 'I am announcing the end of an important chapter of my life and the beginning of a new one,' he told a press conference in London. 'During the past 23 years, I have set a number of goals for myself and I'm proud to say that these goals have been achieved. Now I am ready to set new goals and start a new career for myself outside of the ring.'

As the years pass, that Lewis retired at the right time will become an important part of his legacy. Meanwhile, since that day in New York, he has traded the heavyweight championship for the dual role of husband and father.

Lennox's partner in life is Violet Chang, who was born in Jamaica but grew up in New York. 'V' is a college graduate and former beauty-pageant winner. She and Lennox met six years ago when Lewis was on holiday in Jamaica. They were married on 15 July 2005.

'The time was right,' Lennox says of their wedding. 'It was a great feeling. It made my family life complete. It was like, together, we can take on the world.'

The Lewises have homes in England, the US and Jamaica. Lennox guarded his privacy when he was an elite athlete, and that hasn't changed. Neighbours know him as a friendly presence but one who deflects attention from himself. Fatherhood is now the focus of his life.

Landon Lewis was born on 15 June 2004. 'Being a father is a joy every day,' Lennox says of his new status. 'Landon is happy, jovial and very affectionate. He gives hugs and kisses a lot and runs everywhere like there's a turbo in him. But Landon is at an age when he wants what he wants when he wants it, and he's not old enough to respond to logic. That means, every day, there's a new challenge.

'Landon is talking a lot now,' Lewis continues. 'He's saying, "Yo!" all the time, and his mother doesn't like it. She says it comes from me. I tell her it doesn't. I don't go around the house saying, "Yo!" So now we're trying to figure out where it came from. Another problem is that, because of who I am, whenever Landon goes out, people shadow-box with him. So now he's picked it up. He holds his hands up and throws punches and says, "Box! Box!" I've made a point not to do it with him. I want him to excel in a variety of sports when he's older. He can choose which ones, but I'd have mixed feelings about Landon boxing.

Marriage and fatherhood have brought renewed responsibility, Lewis notes. 'I grew up independent and doing my own thing,' he says. 'But with a wife and child, I can't do that any more because it's not just me now. I always have to think in terms of "us", not "me". And Landon will have a brother or sister before much longer.'

Lewis spends much of each day tending to domestic chores and caring for Landon. He still plays chess. 'And I play poker,' he volunteers. 'Not for big stakes. I might win or lose a hundred pounds. If I win, great. If I lose, that was the cost of the evening's entertainment.' He also provides commentary on occasion for HBO boxing telecasts in the United States. And, in his words, 'People are always bringing business ventures to me.'

Lewis's current professional passion is acting. During his ring career, he made cameo appearances in television shows including Fantasy Island and In The House. His first role in a major film was a brief scene playing himself in the 2001 remake of Ocean's Eleven. Last year, he took a major step forward when he landed a role in the feature film Johnny Was, which had its UK premiere at the Belfast Film Festival on 31 March. It's the fictional tale of Irishman Johnny Doyle, who decides to leave a life of violence behind and lie low in Brixton. But Doyle is soon enmeshed in events concerning a pirate radio-station owner, a West Indian drug lord and an IRA prison-escapee. Lewis plays Ras, the reggae-loving owner of the pirate radio station. 'I've known a lot of people who were like Ras,' he says, 'so that was a start for me in portraying his character. But I realise now that acting is much more complicated than I thought it was.'

How so?

'I was doing myself an injustice when I started acting because I was acting each part the way Lennox Lewis would, rather than the way the character would. I understand now that, to be a good actor, I have to become somebody else. I fight myself on that all the time. I'm taking acting lessons from several coaches. Whatever I do, I always want to get better.

'Acting is like boxing in that both jobs require training and discipline. And you have to be open to being taught. Acting coaches are like trainers, in that they try to make sure you do things correctly and get as much as possible out of you. There's different kinds of preparation for a fight, depending on who the opponent is, and there's different kinds of preparation for a role, depending on the character you're playing. The difference is, in acting, no one is trying to knock your head off.'

Fighters, of course, try to render each other unconscious. Everything that takes place in a boxing ring proceeds from that premise. Boxing is a Darwinian jungle in which skill counts more than personality and power often outweighs the strongest character. Still, Lewis says without equivocation, 'I enjoyed the time I was a fighter. I'm glad I had that experience. The last few times I was in training camp, I told myself, "I'd better take all this in now because there will only be a few more of these in my life."'

Lewis recalls five fights with particular fondness. The first was against former WBO champion Ray Mercer at Madison Square Garden in 1996. Mercer, an Olympic gold medallist, was a bull of a man with a straight-ahead, no-finesse brawling style. 'Sometimes it's not enough to just box,' Lennox says. 'Sometimes you have to fight.' Lewis-Mercer was one of those times. In the late rounds, Lennox went toe-to-toe in the trenches with Mercer and prevailed on a narrow decision. Then came two fights against Evander Holyfield for the undisputed heavyweight championship of the world. The first, on 13 March 1999, was declared a draw, to the outrage of the media, most of whom were sure that Lewis had won. Eight months later, Lewis and Holyfield met again; Lewis was awarded a unanimous decision.

'After that, I'd point to my rematch against Hasim Rahman [in 2001],' he offers. 'He won the first time we fought. That I'd lost to him the first time made knocking him out all the sweeter. One thing I learnt in boxing is that defeat, properly handled, makes a person stronger. You can't walk in the rain without getting wet, and you can't be in a boxing ring without getting hit. From the day I started boxing, I knew there could be only one winner for each fight and there was always a chance I could lose. Winning and losing are on the same page in my book, and you have to accept them both. Twice in my career, I slipped [Lewis's other defeat was a 1994 loss to Oliver McCall]. But both times, I came back and beat the man who beat me. I'm proud of that. It was important for me to avenge those losses.'

The final encounter on Lewis's list of his most meaningful fights is his destruction of Mike Tyson. That bout ended with Tyson lying on the canvas, blood streaming from his mouth and nose and from cuts above both eyes. 'I had to fight Tyson,' Lewis says. 'If I hadn't, no matter how much I accomplished, no matter how many other fights I won, there would have always been people who said, "Yes, Lennox was good but he never could have beaten Tyson."'

His voice becomes wistful. 'When I saw Tyson against Danny Williams and Kevin McBride, I was looking at a fighter who didn't want to fight any more. Mike fought those last two fights because he thought he had to, not because he wanted to. If you feel that way, you shouldn't fight.'

Did Tyson feel the same when he and Lennox met in the ring?

'At the time, I thought Mike wanted to fight me. The whole world wanted that fight, and we'd been building to it for such a long time. But looking back, no, I don't think Mike wanted to be in the ring that night.'

Emanuel Steward, who began working with Lewis after the fighter's loss to Oliver McCall and stayed with him through to the end of his career, agrees with that assessment. 'Mike definitely didn't want to be in the ring with Lennox. And I'll tell you something else: very few fighters in history could have beaten Lennox that night. I make my living by producing winners. That's what I do, so I know what I'm talking about. But the key in boxing isn't the sculptor; it's the marble. And Lennox was a fabulous fighter to work with. All great fighters have bumps in the road, and he had a few himself. But, in the end, he did what he had to do. He was a great fighter.'

When Lewis formally retired as an active fighter, he closed his public announcement with the words, 'Let the new era begin.' So far, however, it hasn't been much of an era.

At present, four men claim pieces of the heavyweight throne. Hasim Rahman succeeded Vitali Klitschko as the World Boxing Council champion, but he didn't win the title in the ring. He was the WBC's 'interim champion' by virtue of a desultory 12-round decision victory over Monte Barrett. The 'interim' was later removed by fiat of the organisation's executive board. Seven-foot, 23-stone Nikolay Valuev of Russia is the World Boxing Association standard-bearer. He won a suspicious majority decision over John Ruiz in Berlin last December to claim that honour. Their match-up was considered such a farce that it wasn't even shown on television in the United States. Chris Byrd, the International Boxing Federation champion, was once a stylish boxer. But Byrd never had power, and now his quickness is gone. Lamon Brewster captured the WBO crown with a freakish stoppage of Wladimir Klitschko and is considered by many to be a caretaker champion.

The situation was best summed up by former heavyweight great Joe Frazier, who said recently: 'I really couldn't tell you who the champ is right now. It puzzles me.'

Lewis says: 'There's a certain satisfaction when I look at the heavyweight division today. It feels good, knowing that people have come to understand that I was the last true heavyweight champion.' But in the next sentence, he adds: 'I feel bad for the sport.' Yet he declines to criticise the limitations of the present champions.

'The era of Lewis, Tyson and Holyfield is over,' Lewis says. 'We know that. But boxing is hard enough without other boxers coming down on you. It always surprises me when boxers speak ill of other boxers. We have reporters coming down on us. We have fans coming down on us. Boxers are a family. We know things about boxing that other people don't. We understand that, even when we win, we lose a little of ourselves every time we get in the ring. We don't need to come down on each other. We should protect each other. So I'll just say that it takes physical gifts, hard work, commitment and luck to get to the top in boxing. Each of the top heavyweights today has been successful in his way. Anyone who gets into a boxing ring deserves credit for his courage.'

Meanwhile, the world has come to understand that Lewis's retirement was for real. 'Boxing is a happy part of my past,' he says. 'But I don't miss it. It's a hard sport. Boxers are trained to exploit their opponents' weaknesses. It's survival of the fittest. We hit you on your wounds. One bad move and the game can be over. I got out at the right time for me.'

And so, at the age of 40, Lewis is on to new challenges. 'You can only do things for so long,' he says. 'Then you get too old or you grow out of them and you move on to another stage in life. Boxing was a big part of my life, but it was never what I defined myself by. I'm the same person now that I was when I was boxing. The only difference is that my goals have changed. Instead of trying to be the best fighter in the world, my goals now are to be the best father I can be, the best husband I can be, and to make a difference in the lives of some of the less fortunate people in the world.'

CARS > BMW owners get iPod as co-pilot


iPods are about to hitch a ride in more BMWs. The carmaker on Wednesday announced the debut of a new interface for iPod that will enable integration of the music player in the newest generation of beemers.

The interface will be available for owners of the new BMW 3 series sedans and sports wagons, as well as the 5, 6 and 7 series. It will also be available for the new M5 sedan and M6 coupe. With it, audiophile roadsters can plug their music collections directly into their car's sound system and access and sort their music library, shuffle songs, skip between tracks and adjust volume--all, BMW says, without any loss of sound quality or driving control (we hope). Artist, album and song title will appear in the display monitor.

The new interface is compatible with Sirius satellite radio, as well as the recently introduced HD Radio. It will be available for customers to purchase at BMW centers beginning in July, but pricing has not been determined. The original BMW iPod adapter, meanwhile, will continue to be available for 2002 and later BMW models: X3, X5, Z4 and previous-generation 3 series.

More and more car companies, including Audi, Volkswagen and Honda, have announced iPod features, with Apple Computer estimating that more than 5 million cars will ship with iPod support in the United States in 2006.

Tyler Brûlé > Try the one-third dinner rule and find a flat with no lift


An apartment full of Sprüngli Easter bunnies is a dangerous thing. My grandmother's Estonian "kringel" (traditional holiday saffron, cardamom and raisin bread) with lashings of salty butter, consumed over a five-day period, is an even more lethal combo for midriff and chin territory. Fortunately, I chose to celebrate the holiday in one of Europe's most "sportif" resorts and did my best to behave accordingly.

Fast Lane's mail bag gets all manner of odd inquiries. Recent reader requests have included a demand for a comprehensive shop listing for the chinos I mentioned some weeks ago (Incotex trousers are best sourced in Italy), drinking and dining tips for Tokyo (the yuzu cocktails at Bluestone in Aoyama and a multi-course steak dinner at Imahan) and my car of choice (I ride a bike or I'm driven). My most frequent query, however, is for a rundown of my daily sport regime. It's always flattering to receive letters asking "how do you stay in shape on the road" or "what's your secret for balancing travel and diet" - particularly when readers have nothing more to go on than a tiny head shot that was taken three years ago and may well betray the fact that I look like Humpty Dumpty from the neck down. The good news is I've managed to avoid ballooning to the proportions of that nursery rhyme character; the bad news is that sticking to a regime when you're on and off aircraft daily is no easy task.

I doubt my regime would ever find its way on to the Amazon best-seller list, land me on Oprah or be sanctioned by anyone remotely linked to the medical profession but it works for me (with a 1-1½kg margin for going temporarily off piste before getting my house back in order) and doesn't involve drugs, absurd dietary sacrifices or a suite full of exercise machines covered in dust.

Here are my 10 tools and tips for keeping toned:

1. The 35-minute morning run

Central Park or the Alster, snow or sun, gravel or grass, I kick-start my day with a 35-minute run four to five times a week. On good days I'm frisky enough to throw in a few one-minute sprints, on bad days I drag myself around Regent's Park. For reasons of security I leave my iPod at home and use my session to focus on the day, week and year ahead.

2. Asics trainers

I've tried Reebok, Nike and Adidas but over the past few years I have become a devotee of Asics running trainers. I wouldn't normally have much place for footwear that features large flashes of metallic silver with electric yellow trim but for the support and comfort of their top-of- the-range trainer I make an exception.

3. Howies' long-sleeve merino wool thermal tops

With a fingernail-size logo stitched on to the side seam, Welsh brand Howies's thermal top is one of the most discreet and functional athletic garments on the market. Ideal for chilly morning runs that don't require protective rainwear, they take up little space in the hold-all, dry quickly and don't retain odour like most synthetics. Order them in bulk.

4. When in America, eat a third of what's on your plate

Unless you're bulking up for sumo school, no one needs to consume the total contents of a contemporary American dinner plate.

5. When in Europe, eat half of what's on your plate

If your workday involves breakfast, lunch, post-work drinks and dinner meetings, draw an imaginary line down the middle of the plate and only eat from one side of the meridian. As for cocktails, drink whatever you like but give the nut bowl a swerve.

6. Ben

A year ago I started retaining the services of an ex-Royal Marine named Ben to push me that little bit faster and further around the park, force me to do loathsome resistance exercises and chat about the latest in advanced weapons guidance systems.

7. The trolley or the tray?

There's nothing worse than feeling stuffed at 36,000 feet, which is why I usually pass on the tray and opt for champagne for a starter, tomato juice for my main course and two glasses of merlot for dessert and slumber insurance.

8. Become a stairmaster

I didn't set out looking for a fourth-floor flat without a lift but two years on I'm convinced I have both a stronger heart and bum as a result of real estate choice.

9. A Polar watch for pace

One of the best inventions to come out of Finland since Alvar Aalto's stools for Artec, the Polar watch, complete with pedometer function, is the best device for monitoring performance and measuring achievements.

10. Korean bodyscrubs

Not for the modest or faint-hearted, a good Korean scrub not only peels off multiple layers of skin but an all-naked, public environment is also effective for serious self-assessment.

EUROVISION > Finland Squirms as Its Latest Export Steps Into Spotlight


HELSINKI, Finland — They have eight-foot retractable latex Satan wings, sing hits like "Chainsaw Buffet" and blow up slabs of smoking meat on stage. So members of the band Lordi expected a reaction when they beat a crooner of love ballads to represent Finland at the Eurovision song contest in Athens, the competition that was the springboard for Abba and Celine Dion.

But the heavy-metal monster band did not imagine a national identity crisis.

First, Finnish religious leaders warned that the Freddy Krueger look-alikes could inspire Satanic worship. Then critics called for President Tarja Halonen to use her constitutional powers to veto the band and nominate a traditional Finnish folk singer instead. Rumors even circulated that Lordi members were agents sent by President Vladimir V. Putin to destabilize Finland before a Russian coup — an explanation for their refusal to take off their freakish masks in public.

The fury also spread in Greece, winner of last year's Eurovision and therefore the host of this year's contest, where an anti-Lordi movement called Hellenes urged the Finnish government "to say 'no' to this evil group." One young Finn calling himself Suomi (Finland in Finnish) wrote to a newspaper Web log saying, "If Lordi wins Eurovision, I am leaving the country."

The lead singer, Lordi — a former film student who goes by his real name, Tomi Putaansuu, when not wielding a blood-spurting electric chain saw — is philosophical about the uproar.

The affair, Mr. Putaansuu says, has exposed the insecurity of a young country whose peculiar language is spoken by only six million people worldwide and whose sense of identity has been dented by being part of the Swedish kingdom and the Russian empire until gaining independence in 1917. Most Finns, he adds, would rather be known for Santa Claus than heavily made-up monster mutants.

"In Finland, we have no Eiffel Tower, few real famous artists, it is freezing cold and we suffer from low self-esteem," said Mr. Putaansuu, who, as Lordi, has horns protruding from his forehead and sports long black fingernails.

As he stuck out his tongue menacingly, his red demon eyes glaring, Lordi was surrounded by Kita, an alien-man-beast predator who plays flame-spitting drums inside a cage; Awa, a blood-splattered ghost who howls backup vocals; Ox, a zombie bull who plays bass; and Amen, a mummy in a rubber loincloth who plays guitar.

Dragging on a cigarette, Mr. Putaansuu added, "Finns nearly choked on their cereal when they realized we were the face Finland would be showing to the world."

Often derided as a showcase of kitsch, Eurovision is one of the most watched television programs in the world. It pits pop groups from all over Europe and the Middle East against one another, with the winner decided by popular vote by more than 600 million viewers.

It is not the first time the contest, which began in 1956, has spawned discontent. Last year's Ukrainian entry song was rewritten after being deemed too political by government officials in Kiev because it celebrated the Orange Revolution. When Dana International, an Israeli transsexual, won in 1998 with her hit song "Diva," rabbis accused her of flouting the values of the Jewish state.

But not everyone in this Nordic country of five million views the monster squad as un-Finnish. Some Finns say that Lordi is right at home and that the band's use of flaming dragon-encrusted swords and exploding baby dolls expresses the warrior spirit of the Vikings.

Alex Nieminen, a Finnish ad executive, says the band harks back to the Hakkapeliittas, the legendary Finnish cavalry unit that fought as part of the Swedish army in the 17th century. He argues that the slasher film imitators embody Finnish self-assertion after decades of isolation.

"Lordi represents a rebellion by Finns who are saying, 'Hey we are not all the Nokia-wielding people the government would like you to think we are,' " Mr. Nieminen said.

On the eve of the vote, fans in ghoulish monster outfits held Lordi parties from Helsinki to Lapland and sent text messages urging everyone from grandmothers to young metal heads to "Change the face of Finland!" Lordi won the right to go to Athens with its Kiss-inspired anthem "Hard Rock Hallelujah" and its lyrics, "Wings on my back/I got horns on my head/my fangs are sharp/and my eyes are red."

The Finns' fascination for Lordi may reflect their eternal hope after coming in last at Eurovision eight times. Some Finns rank that humiliation with their nation's appeasement of the Soviet Union or losing in hockey to Sweden.

Finns blame their losing streak on the fact that contestants have typically sung in their mother tongue, a famously difficult Uralic language where words with three umlauts are not uncommon.

" 'Finland, zero points' has become a source of deep embarrassment in the nation's psyche," Ilkka Mattila, the country's leading music critic, said. "So Lordi's success must be understood as a vote by people who feel we have nothing to lose."

Finns are so uncomfortable with themselves, says Alexander Stubb, a Finnish member of the European Parliament, that when they meet someone for the first time, they stare at their own feet. Then, after 10 years of friendship, they stare at the other person's feet. But there is little risk that anyone, Finnish or otherwise, will stare at Lordi's furry platform demon boots, he adds, noting that Lordi could embarrass Finland when it takes over the European Union presidency in July.

Timo Soini, leader of "Ordinary Finns," a traditionalist political party from rural Finland, says Lordi has attracted criticism because Finns are so thin-skinned about how others perceive them. "Finns are suspicious when they see someone new come to play in their sandbox," Mr. Soini said. "And that is particularly the case when that someone looks like a monster."

While other boys in Lapland were playing hockey, Mr. Putaansuu played with his Barbie doll and began experimenting with makeup. In film school he became obsessed with horror films and the heavy metal bands Kiss and Twisted Sister. Like his fellow metal heads, Mr. Putaansuu hoped that transgression would sell big. But he says it took 10 years to get a record deal because Finnish labels were so turned off by the band's appearance.

Under their masks, the band members are quintessential Finns. Awa, the ghost, is a soft-spoken blond who wears glasses and studied classical music. Even Mr. Putaansuu, who wears a black leather jacket when not sporting serpent lapels, says his music is closer to gospel than Satan. After all, one of the band's hit songs is "The Devil Is a Loser."

"Even if we lose the contest, we have already won," Mr. Putaansuu said. "Many Finns would rather have sent someone boring and acceptable than to be represented by freaks like us."

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

DIGITAL > For MySpace, Making Friends Was Easy. Big Profit Is Tougher.


NYTIMES.COM: ALMOST on a lark, Chris DeWolfe bought the Internet address MySpace.com in 2002, figuring that it might be useful someday. At first, he used the site to peddle a motorized contraption, made in China and called an E-scooter, for $99.

Selling products online comes naturally to him. Having jumped into the Internet business in the early days, Mr. DeWolfe had become a master of the aggressive forms of online marketing, including e-mail messages and pop-up advertising. After the Internet bubble burst, he even built a site that let people download computer cursors in the form of waving flags; the trick was that they also downloaded software that would monitor their Internet movements and show them pop-up ads.

Very quickly, however, Mr. DeWolfe's tactics for MySpace changed. He had noticed the popularity of Friendster, a rapidly growing Web site that let people communicate with their friends and meet the friends of their friends. What would happen, he wondered, if he combined this type of social networking with the sort of personal expression enabled by other sites for creating Web pages or online journals?

He convinced the executives of eUniverse, the company that had bought his own marketing firm, ResponseBase, to back his plan. As soon as the site was reintroduced, in the summer of 2003, Mr. DeWolfe saw it grow quickly with little marketing. And although his scrappy backer was hungry for cash, he resisted pressure to flood MySpace with advertising and to turn all of its members into money.

"Chris came from ResponseBase, and they knew all the direct marketing tactics to get money out of almost anything," said Brett C. Brewer, the former president of eUniverse, which was later renamed Intermix Media. "But I give him credit: from literally the first or second month, he realized MySpace could be something we really need to protect because user confidence in the site was paramount."

Now MySpace has a new owner — Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation, which bought MySpace and Intermix last year for $649 million — and the pressure on Mr. DeWolfe to find a way to make much more money from MySpace is far greater.

But the opportunity is greater, too. More than 70 million members have signed up — more than twice as many as MySpace had when Mr. Murdoch agreed to buy it — drawn by a simple format that lets users build their own profile pages and link to the pages of their friends. It has tapped into three passions of young people: expressing themselves, interacting with friends and consuming popular culture.

MySpace now displays more pages each month than any other Web site except Yahoo. More pages, of course, means more room for ads. And, in theory, those ads can be narrowly focused on each member's personal passions, which they conveniently display on their profiles. As an added bonus for advertisers, the music, photos and video clips that members place on their profiles constitutes a real-time barometer of what is hot.

FOR now, MySpace is charging bargain-basement rates to attract enough advertisers for the nearly one billion pages it displays each day. The company will have revenue of about $200 million this year, estimated Richard Greenfield of Pali Capital, a brokerage firm in New York. That is less than one-twentieth of Yahoo's revenue.

In buying MySpace, Mr. Murdoch also bought a tantalizing problem: how to tame a vast sea of fickle and unruly teenagers and college students just enough to notice advertising or to buy things, yet not make the site so commercial that he scares off his audience. At the same time, he must address the real and growing concerns of parents and teachers who see MySpace as a den of youthful excess and, potentially, as a lure for sexual predators.

Mr. Murdoch's initial strategy seems to be to do nothing to interfere with whatever alchemy attracted so many young people to MySpace in the first place. So he has embraced Mr. DeWolfe, 40, and Tom Anderson, 30, the company's president and co-founder, and their close-knit management team. And he is providing them with the cash to reinforce MySpace's shaky computer system and to hire armies of sales representatives to bring in more money from the banner ads and sponsored pages that MySpace sells.

Read on.