Edward Snowden: what we know about the source behind the NSA files leak

His parents are divorced, he donated to Ron Paul, and his girlfriend has recently been contacted by NSA investigators

NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden: 'I don't want to live
in a society that does these sort of things'

Edward Snowden never wanted to be in the spotlight. But his life will now be pored over and debated by a public curious to know the background – and motivations – of one of the explosive whistleblowers in modern US history.

So far, little has emerged about Snowden that has not already been supplied voluntarily by him.

When he identified himself as source of leaks to the Guardian on Sunday, Snowden spoke openly about his upbringing, education and work for the CIA and NSA, via defence contractors Booz Allen Hamilton and Dell.

He was also candid about his reasons for coming forward. "My sole motive is to inform the public as to that which is done in their name and that which is done against them," he said. "I can't in good conscience allow the US government to destroy privacy, internet freedom and basic liberties for people around the world with this massive surveillance machine they're secretly building."

The 29-year-old, who will turn 30 next week, said he was "willing to sacrifice" a stable and successful life in order to leak the top-secret documents he feels shed light on the expansion of government surveillance.

His future is anyone's guess. He reportedly checked out of the Hong Kong hotel he was staying in at 12.30pm on Monday. A media pack has already descended on Hong Kong, desperate to track him down. In the longer term, Snowdon has said he plans to seek sanctuary, possibly in Iceland. New details about his past – the Edward Snowden before he was made famous – are hard to come by.

Unsurprisingly, given he was a passionate believer in privacy with knowledge of internet security, Snowden left little trace online. A full 24 hours after he came out of the shadows, there were only the barest details about his family. There were no interviews with high school associates, no new photographs, and no status updates from his Facebook or Twitter accounts, if indeed Snowden had any.

Snowden was born on 21 June 1983, raised in Wilmington, North Carolina, and later moved to Ellicott City, Maryland. His mother, Elizabeth Snowden, 52, still lives in the modest condominium the family once shared. She is known locally as Wendy and works as a chief deputy clerk in the federal courthouse in nearby Baltimore. CNN showed pictures of her outside her home on Monday, but she did not talk to waiting reporters.

The whistleblower's father, Lonnie Snowden, 52 – reportedly a former US coast guard officer who has since remarried and now lives in Pennsylvania – told ABC News he was still digesting the news but was concerned for his son.

The concern cuts both ways; in his interview with the Guardian, Edward Snowden said he was most worried about how his family would be treated. "The only thing I fear is the harmful effects on my family, who I won't be able to help any more," he said. "That's what keeps me up at night."

Public records offered some clues about Snowden's background. Campaign finance data indicated Snowden made two donations, each worth $250, to the campaign of Ron Paul, the staunch libertarian Republican.

It chimes with a picture that emerged of a man with strong political views; although Snowden said he believed in Obama's promises in 2008, he said he voted for a third party.

Other parts of Snowden's account – such as his claim to have tried to join elite special forces – were confirmed by official sources.

"His records indicate he enlisted in the army reserve as a special forces recruit (18X) on 7 May 2004 but was discharged 28 September 2004," said the US army's chief civilian spokesman, George Wright. "He did not complete any training or receive any awards."

Some details emerged on Monday about Snowden's girlfriend, with whom he shared, in his words, a "a very comfortable life" in Hawaii, until his disappearance less than three weeks ago. The TV show Inside Edition identified her as member of an acrobatic troupe based in Hawaii.

For the public, Snowden's relationship with her may turn out to be one of the more intriguing questions about his backstory. It is not known how long they were together or how they met.

The couple lived in a house blue house with a neat lawn in Eleu Street in Waipahu. Snowden said he was earning around $200,000. "We occasionally saw him as he was coming or going, or checking mail, or getting the garbage," a neighbour, Carolyn Tijing, told local station KITV. Others described Snowden as private.

They appear to have moved out of the property on 1 May. Century 21 real estate agent Kerri Jo Heim told the Associated Press the owner of the house wanted the couple out so that the home could be sold.

Snowden's girlfriend may have realised this was anything but an ordinary disappearance around the middle of last week, when she received her first visit from NSA officials, accompanied by police.

That inquiry may have been a matter of routine; protocol would have required the NSA to investigate any unexpected absence by a contracted employee working on top-secret security matters. It is not known whether at that stage Snowden had been identified as a possible suspect involved in leaking classified information.

Other members of Snowden's family were also contacted by the NSA last
week. Snowden's father told CNN that she had returned to the US
mainland to be with her family.

When he left Hawaii, Snowden told his girlfriend that he had to be away for a few weeks, though he was deliberately vague about the reason. "That is not an uncommon occurrence for someone who has spent the last decade working in the intelligence world," Snowden told the Guardian.

By then, he must have known that he knew he was never going back.

Source: Guardian.Co.Uk   By:Paul Lewis and Karen McVeigh

Maurice Sendak ‘Everything is the same. Nothing changes.’

The famous children’s book author and illustrator Maurice Sendak would have been 85 today. Google has celebrated his birthday with one of their more ambitious doodles to date. But PBS has also paid tribute to the author, producing an animation to accompany a piece of his 2009 interview with Newsweek plucked from the cutting-room floor.

Maurice Sendak ‘Everything is the same. Nothing changes.’

The interviewers are Andrew Romano and Ramin Setoodeh, and the video is part of the PBS Digital Studios series “Blank on Blank,” in this episode the blanks represent Sendak on “being a kid.” Previous episodes feature interviews with Jim Morrison on “Why fat is beautiful,”James Brown on “Conviction, Respect & Reagan” and David Foster Wallace on Ambition. The video was produced by David Gerlach with animations by Patrick Smith.


“I’ve always had a deep respect for children and how they solve complex problems by themselves,” says Sendak, “they want to survive. They want to survive.”
“Let’s tell the truth,” he says later on in the recording, “let’s talk about the kid who doesn’t make it sensationally well — who struggles and fights, but really doesn’t know what he’s fighting against or for. And I don’t think that changes. We’re all adults in this room sitting and talking about does that end it? No. It doesn’t end. I still think the same way I thought as a child. I still worry. I’m still frightened. Everything is the same. Nothing changes.”

Source: washingtonpost.com  by: Emi Kolawole

Holden a minute, is that Amanda flashing her side-boob?

AMANDA Holden adds her name to the side-boob brigade at the Britain’s Got Talent wrap party.


 AMANDA Holden adds her name to the side-boob


The talent show judge went bra-less and backless halter-neck dress, leaving little to the imagination when she paraded her eye-popping profile.

She was all smiles as she posed for snappers and greeted fans waiting outside 45 Park Lane in London.
Amanda, 42, risked falling victim to a revealing wardrobe malfunction in her risqué outfit, but just about avoided showing more than she’d intended.
She had a narrow escape on the BGT final itself when her plunging frock parted, exposing her left breast.


However, a well-placed strip of sticky tape ensured she didn’t suffer complete humiliation on the prime-time broadcast.
Simon Cowell – who sat blissfully unaware of Amanda’s near-miss – rivalled his colleague in the plunging neckline stakes, sporting a shirt unbuttoned all the way down to his belly.
The music mogul had his own embarrassment to contend with when a contestant pelted him with eggs during her act.

Violinist Natalie Holt – who was booted off BGT last year with string quartet Raven – ran towards Simon and fired five eggs from a box as operatic brothers Richard and Adam Johnson were singing.
After splattering his shirt and jacket with her messy missiles, Natalie was led away by security.
Hungarian shadow dancers Attraction were named winners of the ITV show.

Source: THESUN.CO.UK

Iain Banks dies of cancer aged 59

Author Iain Banks has died aged 59, two months after announcing he had terminal cancer, his family has said. 

Iain Banks dies of cancer aged 59
Iain Banks was best known for his novels The Wasp Factory,
The Crow Road and Complicity

Banks, who was born in Dunfermline, Fife, revealed in April he had gall bladder cancer and was unlikely to live for more than a year. 

He was best known for his novels The Wasp Factory, The Crow Road and Complicity.

In a statement, his publisher said he was "an irreplaceable part of the literary world". 

A message posted on Banksophilia, a website set up to provide fans with updates on the author, quoted his wife Adele saying: "Iain died in the early hours this morning. His death was calm and without pain." 

Publisher Little, Brown Book Group said the author was "one of the country's best-loved novelists" for both his mainstream and science fiction books. 

"Iain Banks' ability to combine the most fertile of imaginations with his own highly distinctive brand of gothic humour made him unique," it said. 

After announcing his illness in April, Banks asked his publishers to bring forward the release date of his latest novel, The Quarry, so he could see it on the shelves. 

On Sunday, it was revealed the book - to be released on 20 June - would detail the physical and emotional strain of cancer. Banks wrote sci-fi titles under the name Iain M Banks It describes the final weeks of the life of a man in his 40s who has terminal cancer. 

Speaking to the BBC's Kirsty Wark, Banks said he was some 87,000 words into writing the book when he was diagnosed with his own illness. 

"I had no inkling. So it wasn't as though this is a response to the disease or anything, the book had been kind of ready to go," he said. 

"And then 10,000 words from the end, as it turned out, I suddenly discovered that I had cancer." 

'Craft and skill' 

You never knew what you were going to get, every book was different
"You never knew what you were going to get, every book was different"

Little, Brown said the author was presented with finished copies of his last novel three weeks ago. 

Banks' first novel, The Wasp Factory, was published in 1984 and was ranked as one of the best 100 books of the 20th Century in a 1997 poll conducted by book chain Waterstones and Channel 4. 

In 2008 he was named one of the 50 greatest British writers since 1945 in a list compiled by The Times. 

The writer also penned sci-fi titles under the name Iain M Banks. His most recent book, The Hydrogen Sonata, was released last year. Continue reading the main story “ Start Quote You never knew what you were going to get, every book was different” Iain Rankin 

Fellow Scottish author Ken MacLeod paid tribute to Banks, saying he had "left a large gap in the Scottish literary scene as well as the wider speaking English world". 

"He brought a wonderful combination of the dark and the light side of life and he explored them both without flinching," he said. 

"He brought the same degree of craft and skill and commitment to his science fiction as he did to his mainstream fiction and he never drew any distinction in terms of his pride in what he was doing." 

Another contemporary, Iain Rankin, told the BBC that Banks was "fascinating, curious and full of life". "He didn't take things too seriously, and in a way I'm happy that he refused to take death too seriously - he could still joke about it," he said. "I think we all thought he would have a bit longer than he got. "

What made him a great writer was that he was childlike; he had a curiosity about the world. He was restless, he wanted to transmit that in his work, and he treated the cancer with a certain amount of levity, the same that made him a great writer. Author Ken MacLeod says Banks' writing was a "wonderful combination of both the dark and the light side of life" 

"You never knew what you were going to get, every book was different." 

Other authors to pay tribute included Irvine Welsh, who tweeted: "RIP Iain Banks. One of the finest writers and greatest imaginations ever." 

Sci-fi writer John-Paul Cleary also said: "Tragic news about Iain Banks, my hero and inspiration, a writer of incredible creativity and wit." 

Scotland's First Minister Alex Salmond said: "Iain was an incredibly talented writer whose work, across all genres, has brought pleasure to readers for over 30 years. 

"His determination not just to complete his final novel but also to reflect his illness in the pages of his work, will make that work all the more poignant and all the more significant." 

After announcing his illness, Banks had described being "hugely moved" by the public support for him through his website. 

"Still knocked out by the love and the depth of feeling coming from so many people; thank you, all of you," he wrote on Banksophilia last month.

Source: BBC News © 2013

Dan Stevens tells Graham Norton he has lost over two stone since quitting Downton Abbey in January


"I’ve lost about 30lbs since New Year, which, in British terms, is about two to three chins," star told Graham Norton




Former Downton Abbey star Dan Stevens says he has lost over two stone since January after quitting the ITV period drama.
Dan, 30, is now trying to make it big in Hollywood and has also che tries to become a movie star in the vein of Hugh Grant.hanged his hair colour as 
He said: "I’ve lost about 30lbs since New Year, which, in British terms, is about two to three chins. It was for a role. It’s always me, just different incarnations, different roles, different costumes and different sizes.
“As for the hair, it’s pretty much my natural colour. I went very dark for the last role but I’ll see where I go with it.”
Asked on BBC1's Graham Norton Show if it was his choice to leave the global hit, Downton Abbey, he said: “Of course it was my decision, a very difficult one too, but it felt like the right thing to do.
“It was good to trust my instincts and go with it.
“I knew Matthew would die, but not like that necessarily.”
Earlier this week, Dan admitted he wasn’t happy with the way he his character Matthew Crawley was killed off on Downton.
He told Radio Times: “I think what emerged is that it’s an unwritten rule that you’re not supposed to die on British television on Christmas Day, and that, specifically, was not my doing.
“I didn’t have any say in the manner in which he went. Ultimately, it was in the hands of Julian [Fellowes] and the producers.”

By Mark Jefferies
Source : mirror.co.uk

Robin Thicke's 'Blurred Lines' Is Number One Five Weeks In A Row! ARIA Take 40 Chart Facts 8th June 2013

robin thickeRobin Thicke and his “Blurred Lines” spend a fifth week at No.1 in Australia, the song also picking up a double Platinum sales certification (2x), plus the track also becomes the equal longest running No.1 for 2013 in Australia, tying with this weeks No.2 song “Let Her Go” by Passenger, which climbs back up a place after four weeks at No.3, swapping with another former No.1, “Get Lucky” for Daft Punk which drops down a place.

NEW - #4 – Bayini (Live) – Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu & Delta Goodrem
Last week in Australia was indigenous awareness week, and at the start of that week on The Voice Geoffrey Gurrumul Yunupingu and Delta Goodrem performed his song on the show featuring the Sydney Symphony Orchestra. The duet debuts at No.4 this week becoming his first singles chart entry and Delta’s 21st Top 100 entry and 14th Top 10. Gurrumul also becomes the fifth aboriginal artist to land a Top 10 single in this country, after Jimmy Little (“Royal Telephone” #10 in Dec 1963), Lionel Rose (“I Thank You” #2 in March 1970), Casey Donovan (“Listen with Your Heart” #1 in Dec 2004) and Jessica Mouboy (first of many was “Running Back” #3, Oct 2008). For further aboriginal artists see this list. Also this week we lost the lead singer from Yothu Yindi and their highest charting single “Treaty” (HP-11) which returns to the Top 100 this week.
Bastille move back one place to No.5 with “Pompeii” after their two weeks at No.4, and climbing three places to a new peak of No.6 is Mariah Carey with “#Beautiful”, which pushes Rudimental’s “Waiting All Night” to No.7. After blasting into the Top 10 last week, Matt Corby and “Resolution” is down three places to No.8 and also down three is Jason DeRulo to No.10 with “The Other Side”. In between those two is the first Top 10 single in Australia for Lana Del Rey, as “Young and Beautiful” jumps up thirteen places to No.9. Her previous best effort was “Video Games” which reached No.23 in February 2012.
Leaping up into the Top 40 at No.11 is Jessie J with her new single “Wild”, with Olly Murs also jumping into the Top 20 at No.18 with “Dear Darlin’”. Imagine Dragons pick up a Gold () sales certification and move up four places to a new peak of No.16. From the Fast & Furious 6 soundtrack, 2 Chainz and Wiz Khalifa take their track “We Own It” into the Top 40 to No.22. And blasting through them all and debuting at No.27 is Macklemore & Ryan Lewis with “Wing$”.
Little Mix holds their No.29 peak with “How Ya Doin?”, whilst Empire of the Sun move back into the Top 40 to a new peak of No.37 with “Alive”. Right behind them are Sheppard with their self-titled EP, which debuts at No.38, and features the radio hit “Let Me Down Easy”.
After two weeks at No.10, “Treasure” for Bruno Mars is down two places to No.12, whilst Paramore are the other Top 10 evacuee, their track “Still Into You” is down five spots to No.13 after six weeks inside the ten, peaking at No.5. The Stafford Brothers fall seven places to No.25 with “Hello” (now 2x) and falling eleven spots to No.28 are MKTO with “Thank You” (now 3x). Pink and Nate Ruess fall nine places to No.30 with “Just Give Me a Reason”, with James Arthur down eight spots to No.39 with “Impossible”.
NEW - #19 – Threads of Silence – Karise Eden
The winner of The Voice Season one was Karise Eden, who sang her new song “Threads of Silence” on the show last Monday (3-June) night. This becomes her ninth chart entry, all of which have landed within the Top 40, her highest being the No.1 song “Stay With Me Baby” (June 2012).
The VOICE Season 2 (The Finals): Celia Pavey lands the highest contestant new entry as her version of “Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow” (Carole King penned, Shirelles performed HP-4, peaked March 1961) debuts at No.23 becoming the fifth version of the song to chart in Australia (4 Seasons-1968, Linda Ronstadt-1970 and Melanie-1974). Right behind her at No.24 is Harrison Craig with “If” (Bread HP-41, July 1971) charting higher than the original from 42 years ago. Miss Murphy lands at No.32 with The Miracles song “You’ve Really Got a Hold on Me” (HP-8 in USA, 1962), and Luke Kennedy debuts at No.35 with “Overjoyed” (Stevie Wonder 1986).
Written by Gavin Ryan
Source:  Take40.com

Nadal takes down Djokovic, reaches French Open final

PARIS — Rafael Nadal is still nonpareil in Paris.

But Novak Djokovic made sure the King of Clay earned it, gritty bit by gritty bit, in a classic French Open semifinal that lived up to the marquee billing.
Nadal, the seven-time French Open champion, served for the match in the fourth set, then fought back from an early break in the decider to hold off No. 1 Djokovic 6-4, 3-6, 6-1, 6-7 (3-7), 9-7 on Friday.

Rafael Nadal of Spain will get a shot at his eighth French Open 
crown after defeating Novak Djokovic of Serbia in five sets.
(Photo: Susan Mullane, USA TODAY Sports)

Source: Douglas Robson, USA TODAY Sports