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  • Why Men Cheat Escort-Turned-Relationship Counselor Talks Reasons For Infidelity

    While working as a high-class escort for nine years, Rebecca Dakin saw hundreds of married men turn to her to fulfill sexual needs not being met by their wives.

    In 2009, she switched gears professionally and became an infidelity counselor, using her experience as a call girl to teach women about how to satisfy their husbands.

    "I’ve spent years hearing men tell me why their relationships failed and why they slept with escorts or other women," the 37-year-old Brit told The Sun. "I know better than anyone just what it is that women do that drives men away.”

    Dakin says that the number one reason men look outside of their relationships for sex is because they're not getting enough of it at home.

    According to Dakin, other reasons for infidelity include a need for thrill or excitement, feeling bored by the sex they receive from their partner or feeling hesitant to share their intimate desires and fantasies with their spouse.

    And it appears that research backs up Dakin's hypotheses. According to "The Normal Bar," an extensive survey of 100,000 people published this year, 71 percent of unfaithful men and 49 percent of unfaithful women said sexual boredom was the reason they cheated in their relationships.

    Click through the slideshow below for 26 other reasons why men cheat, according to men.

    Angelina Jolie Topless Photo By David LaChapelle Goes To Auction

    A never-before-seen photo of a topless Angelina Jolie posing with a horse is up for auction at Christie's.

    The 2001 photo titled "Horseplay' is an outtake from a David LaChapelle shoot for Rolling Stone, and is expected to fetch between $38,325 and $53,655.


    According to the Daily Mail, the photo of Jolie will go on sale alongside a black and white print of the 37-year-old actress and Brad Pitt posing as husband and wife for photographer Steven Klein, which ran in W magazine in 2005. That photo is expected to go for approximately $15,000, reports E! News.

    How to Prepare for AG-3 Food Corporation- SSC-FCI 2013 Written Exam-Test -Pattern, Syllabus and Selection Process

     As we have already announced about the latest recruitment project of  Food Corporation India-
    Click Here to Apply for---Latest Food Corporation SSC-FCI 2013 Govt. Vacancies for General, Depot, Technical and Account Cadres in AG- 3- Sept 2012
    So its time to tell you the selection process, pattern and  syllabus of written examination

    The selections will be done on the basis of a written examination test. This test required to clear in 2 stages

    Main Written Examination Test- 1 (11th Nov 2012)

        Paper I
        Paper II
        Paper III

    Computer Proficiency Test- 6th January 2012 (For Selected Candidates Only)

    Body and Pattern of Paper I, II and II-
    Objective Type Questions in All 3 Papers during Written Exam

    Paper-1 : General Intelligence, General Awareness, Quantitative Aptitude and English (*Compulsory for all)
    50 Marks for each section= 200 Marks for 200 Questions
    Duration- 3 Hours

    Paper II- Quantitative Method and English Language (* for Everyone Except Technical Cadre)
    50 Question+150 Questions= Total 100+100=200 Marks
    Duration 2 Hours

    Paper III- Biological Sciences (*only for Technical)
    200 Q= 200 Marks
    Duration- 3 Hours

    Syllabus of SSC-FCI AG 3 Examination-

    Katrina Kaif Nude Dance in Chikni Chameli

    Check out Katrina Kaif's naked breasts, those boobs are so sexy, saucy and shapely. What is your fantasy about nude topless Katrina Kaif ? This is a fake picture just for fantasy.

    Carey Mulligan Kardashian Not Unlike Daisy From 'Gatsby'

    Carey Mulligan says she doesn't take roles unless they feel authentic, so taking on the role of shallow Daisy Buchanan was quite a departure from the norm. Mulligan was able to build the character of Daisy by making certain parallels -- such as her likeness to the Kardashian clan.

    The 27-year-old appears as Daisy in Baz Luhrmann's adaptation of "The Great Gatsby." To truly understand the privileged and self-absorbed Mrs. Buchanan, Mulligan read letters to F. Scott Fitzgerald from Ginevra King, a 16-year-old socialite whom he romanced and used as a muse. She also read a biography of his wife, Zelda Fitzgerald. These two women helped create her “Daisy cocktail," Mulligan told Vogue.

    "‘I seem always curiously interested in myself, and it’s so much fun to stand off and look at me...' That’s a direct Zelda quote," she recounted to Vogue about the components of Daisy. "It’s that kind of feeling: I’m-so-little-and-there’s-nothing-to-me, watch-me-have-nothing-to-me. She feels like she’s living in a movie of her own life. She’s constantly on show, performing all the time. Nothing bad can happen in a dream. You can’t die in a dream. She’s in her own TV show. She’s like a Kardashian.”

    Comparing Daisy to the Kardashians -- who have been airing the daily minutiae of their lives on television since 2007 -- might not be such a stretch. "Daisy is one enigmatic broad with so little to offer," the Gothamist's Jen Carlson notes.

    Mulligan is quite the antithesis to the reality TV family. She manages to avoid grandstanding and Hollywood hobnobbing, even as a Oscar-nominated star married to Mumford and Sons frontman Marcus Mumford. “I once put my hand on my hip on the red carpet and regretted it instantly,” she told Vogue.

    Even if she was more like a Kardashian, she still might have snagged the role of Daisy.

    Luhrmann said when casting for "The Great Gatsby" he didn't care about an actor's appearances in the tabloids, extramarital affairs or scandals. He only cared about the fit.

    Krystle Campbell, Second Boston Marathon Bombing Victim, 'The Most Lovable Girl'

    Krystle Campbell, a 29-year-old from Medford, Mass., has been identified as the second victim who lost her life in the Boston Marathon bombing.

    This is a developing story

    Campbell's father, William A. Campbell Jr., told Yahoo News, "My daughter was the most lovable girl. She helped everybody and I'm just so shocked right now. We're just devastated."

    UPDATE: Campbell's parents were reportedly told their daughter was alive but found another woman in the intensive care unit at the hospital.

    Hordon Health gym in Boston released a statement saying the company had "lost a member of its extended family," Inside Medford reports.

    "Please take a moment to read… Light a Candle, Say a Prayer for our loss…," the statement said. "Hordon Health lost a member of its extended family yesterday at the Boston Marathon. Her name was Krystle Campbell, and she died instantly yesterday at the bombings. Krystle could easily have been described as the salt of the earth, but her complexity demands more."
    GRAPHIC PHOTOS | Bomb Photos | Bag Or Bomb? | Remembering 1st Victim, Martin Richard | 3rd Victim, Lu Lingzi | Stories Of The Dead And Injured | Both Legs Amputated | 'We Are Saddened And Shattered' | Witness Accounts | How To Help | History Of U.S. Bombings | Bombing Timeline | Prayers For Boston | Media Coverage

    UPDATE: WCVB reports that, in a "hospital mix-up," Campbell's family members were initially told by medical staff that their daughter had survived, only to find out later she had died.

    More from the Associated Press:

    A 29-year-old restaurant manager has been identified as one of three people killed in the bombing at the Boston Marathon.

        Her father says Krystle Campbell, of Medford, Mass., had gone with her best friend to take a picture of the friend's boyfriend crossing the finish line on Monday afternoon.

        William Campbell says his daughter, who worked at a restaurant in nearby Arlington, was "very caring, very loving person, and was daddy's little girl." He says the loss has devastated the family.

        He says the friend was seriously injured in the explosion.

        An 8-year-old, Martin Richard of Boston, also died. He was at the finish line watching the race with his family.

    Monica Dixon, South Carolina Woman, Arrested After Apparently Stripping During News Conference

    Authorities in Columbia, S.C., arrested Monica Dixon on Tuesday afternoon after she apparently stripped down to her underwear during a news conference being held on the State House steps.

    The news conference was promoting Palmetto Pride's Zero Tolerance for Litter Campaign, a statewide education and law enforcement effort to curtail littering.

    According to local news station WIS-TV, Dixon, 42, "dropped her clothes and purse and walked slowly toward those attending the event," before being intercepted by authorities. Raw footage of the event (above) captures the moment of her arrest.

    In the video, a person presenting at the news conference continues speaking as Dixon is handcuffed. "[Y]ou've got littering of all shapes and sizes, I can tell you right now," says the presenter, drawing light laughter from the crowd. Talking Points Memo suggests the comment is a reference to Dixon stripping and tossing her clothes on the ground.

    Dixon was charged with disorderly conduct and is being held at a local detention center, pending a bond hearing.

    The reasons behind Dixon's disrobing are not known, but motivations in such cases generally aren't clear.

    In March, Alabama police arrested a man after he removed his clothes and paraded himself in front of high school classroom windows. When confronted by authorities, the man claimed that he was "high on Jesus."

    Letter sent to Obama tests positive for ricin, officials say

    A letter addressed to President Barack Obama tested positive for the poison ricin and was from the same sender who mailed a letter to a senator that also tested positive, officials told NBC News on Wednesday.

    The letter to Obama was intercepted at an off-site White House mail facility and was being tested further, the FBI said. A federal law enforcement official said that the letter was “very similar” to one addressed to Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss.

    Federal officials told NBC News that they believe they know who sent the letters, but no arrest was made because authorities were waiting for further test results.

    Ricin is made from castor beans and can kill within 36 hours. There is no antidote. Some threatening letters simply contain ground castor beans, resulting in a positive field test for ricin without the concentrated poison. Results from full laboratory tests are expected in the next 24 to 48 hours.

    Filters at a second government mail screening facility also tested positive for ricin in preliminary screening Wednesday.

    An FBI official told NBC News that the agency did not initially believe the letters were related to the attack on the Boston Marathon on Monday.

    Authorities cleared the atrium of a Senate office building Wednesday and were investigating a suspicious package there. Capitol police were also investigating a suspicious package at the office of Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala. Shelby’s staff had not been evacuated.

    The Wicker letter was postmarked Memphis, Tenn., and had no return address. The FBI confirmed the preliminary positive test on it Tuesday. That letter was intercepted at a postal facility in Maryland that screens mail sent to Congress, and never reached Wicker’s office.

    Other senators were made aware of the Wicker letter during a briefing Tuesday evening on the bombing in Boston. Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., said that the person who sent Wicker the letter writes often to elected officials.

    People can be exposed to ricin by touching a ricin-laced letter or by inhaling particles that enter the air when the envelope is opened. Touching ricin can cause a rash but is not usually fatal. Inhaling it can cause trouble breathing, fever and other symptoms, and can be fatal.

    Field tests are conducted anytime suspicious powder is found in a mail facility, and the FBI cautioned that field tests and other preliminary tests can produce inconsistent results. When tests show the possibility of a biological agent, the material is sent to a laboratory for full analysis.

    Russell Brand's Scientology Plea To Tom Cruise Doesn't Work

    Russell Brand has apparently not been invited to become a member of the Church of Scientology. He told "Conan" that he tried to get their most famous member to recruit him while they worked together on "Rock of Ages," but either his pleas fell on Tom Cruise's deaf ears, or Cruise knew better than to take him seriously.

    "Every so often, I’d say thing like, ‘Tom, sometimes I’m a bit lost in life.’ See if he would try and get me," Brand told Conan O'Brien. "That man had no interest in getting me in Scientology at all." Or, as Vulture put it, "Cruise just left him hanging on a thread of fabricated despondency."

    The more the comedian thought about it, the more it seemed to bother him. "If there’s a cult that don’t want me, I want to know why," he said. Maybe he can convince Tom Cruise to come on his talk show, "Brand X," and discuss it. But probably not.

    Either way, it could make for a fun future topic on "Brand X with Russell Brand," airing Thursdays at 11 p.m. ET on FX. "Conan" airs at the same time every weeknight over on TBS.

    TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

    Ricin scare rattles Washington

    Government laboratories are testing samples of a suspicious substance found in letters at off-site White House and Senate mailrooms after preliminary test results pointing to the deadly poison ricin rattled Washington, authorities said Wednesday.

    White House mail handlers identified a "suspicious substance" Tuesday in a letter addressed to President Barack Obama that preliminarily tested positive for ricin, the FBI said. The same day, a similar letter addressed to Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Mississippi, tested positive for ricin -- a toxin with no known antidote, officials said.

    But the FBI said initial tests can be "inconsistent," and the envelopes have been sent off for additional tests.

    Meanwhile, Sen. Carl Levin, D-Michigan, says one of his home-state offices received a "suspicious-looking" letter and alerted authorities. "We do not know yet if the mail presented a threat," said Levin, the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

    Filters at a government mail-screening facility preliminarily tested positive for ricin Wednesday morning, an FBI statement said, and mail from that site is being tested.

    Mail for members of Congress and the White House has been handled at off-site postal facilities since the 2001 anthrax attacks. But Capitol Police were checking out reports of suspicious packages or letters in two Senate office buildings and evacuated the first floor of one those buildings Wednesday afternoon.

    Police questioned a man in the area who had a backpack containing sealed envelopes, but a federal law enforcement official told CNN that authorities do not believe the man was connected to the letters found Tuesday.

    In a statement issued Wednesday, the FBI said it has no indication of a connection between the tainted letters and Monday's bombings at the finish line of the Boston Marathon. But the discoveries further heightened security concerns at a time when Congress is considering politically volatile legislation to toughen gun laws and reform the immigration system.

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