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Coming January 30th

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Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Top 10 Most Important Pages Every Blog Or Website Should Have

Blogging is the best way to express your feelings. You really come to know interesting things and get the knowledge to the whole world. Personally for me, blogging is a medium to earn a decent amount of money and develop good relationship with readers and other fellow bloggers from all around the world.

Making a successful blog is difficult: You have to give your blog a lot of time, regularly update the content, change the design according to the latest trend, essential pages and much more. Talk about the pages, it’s a part of the blog that many bloggers don’t take seriously; including me.

The right way to handle the blog is to add better navigation and pages that are useful to drive more traffic to the blog. In this article, I thought of putting up the list of pages which I consider to be most important for any blog. These pages are mostly which your reader like to see for the better reading experience. These will help readers know more about the blogger like the contact details, the success story, how to subscribe to the future post, easy way out to advertise in the blog and many other activities that can help drive good amount of traffic.

The idea behind creating these pages is to make sure that you give readers what they want and make it easy for them to find everything easily in the header or footer.

In this article, you will see Top 10 most important pages every blog or website should have. I hope this post will inspire you enough to make improvements to your blog or website. Also, feel free to share your own views about the article in the comments section below.

1) About Us Page : This is a very simple page which I believe essential part of a blog. It lets your new readers know more about who you are and why they should subscribe to your blog. This will help them know whom they are reading. Here, I would like to add that every blog should gain trust in first instance.

see more at:

http://savedelete.com/top-10-most-important-pages-every-blog-or-website-should-have.html

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Marilyn Monroe Rare Photos: The Blonde Bombshell in Pigtails and Polka-Dots



Just when you think you've seen every picture taken of Marilyn Monroe, more rare photographs of the iconic bombshell emerge.

A new batch of sixteen images by American photographer Eve Arnold -- five taken in 1955, the rest in 1960 -- have popped up at Castle Galleries in the U.K., where a limited number of the prints will be for sale, with prices starting at $545.

In the oldest set of intimate images, Monroe is photographed on a trip to small-town Bennet, Ill., where she was the guest of honor at the inauguration of a museum dedicated to her idol, Abraham Lincoln.

The black-and-white images include one of her from behind, fixing her famed locks at the Chicago airport's public restroom, and two others of her lounging around her hotel room in a pretty white eyelet dress with a boatneck collar.

The pair of color pictures from 1955 include a pensive Monroe on a plane to Illinois and a vampy image taken in Long Island, NY, where the then 29-year-old Monroe crawls on her belly through high grass while wearing a sexy strapless leopard-print dress.

The pictures Arnold took five years later (and two years before Monroe infamously sang "Happy Birthday, Mr. President") mostly focused on candids of Monroe working on the Nevada set of "The Misfits," where she dons high-waisted denim, jean jackets, button-down tops, wide-brimmed hats, and plaid pants along with a more feminine polka-dot dress.

for more visit:

Monday, August 9, 2010

10 Worst Places To Live In America

1. El Centro, California

2. Cleveland, Ohio

3. Detroit, Michigan

4. Las Vegas, Nevada

5. Oklahoma City, Okla.

6. Los Angeles, California

7. Phoenix, Arizona

8. Newark, New Jersey

9. Miami, Florida

10. Memphis, Tennessee

READ MORE AT:

The Worst Movie Titles That Almost Were


Leonardo DiCaprio once posed the immortal question: "What's in a name?" But instead of allowing his beloved Claire Danes to answer, he just kept prattling on about roses and feet and the next thing you know they're both dead in a sea of neon crucifixes. The moral of the story: Titles matter. I mean, that tragedy was almost called Romeo & Ethel, The Pirate's Daughter. What's more, that story actually was once called Romeo and Juliet, but it wasn't until Baz Luhrmann infused it with that sexy ampersand that anyone cared. Proof, meet pudding.

Hollywood has long understood the power of a strong title, and films are often endlessly renamed throughout their long production cycles in order for the studio to arrive at the perfect thing to slap on the marquee. While that practice hasn't prevented a few truly terrible titles from getting out there (I'm looking at you,
Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever... but I'm not really looking at you, because that would be painful), some films heading for certain disaster have been able to dodge that bullet at the last minute. Just this month, in fact, two such movies have avoided that fate.

Jennifer Aniston / Jason Bateman rom-com The Switch was once known as The Baster (it's about sperm), a working title which endured until post-production, while the gangster flick Takers was inexplicably called Bone Deep. Bone. Deep. Thanks to such fine marketing moves, these two films won't horribly fail because of their titles, but rather because they're obviously awful.

Here's a cursory glimpse at some other films that changed their titles for the better just in the nick of time.

Tonight He Comes became Hancock.

Headcheese became The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.

Tomorrow Never Lies became Tomorrow Never Dies because typos should never be underestimated.

Ecks vs. Sever became Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever because the original title just wasn't ballistic enough.

Route 66 became Cars (and The Grapes of Wrath almost became Route 66because the Steinbeck novel from which the film was adapted wasn't so popular down South back then).

The Madness of King George The Third became The Madness of King George because the distributor feared audiences would have assumed it was a sequel (for reals).

Extremely Violent became Last Action Hero because, um, the movie isn't extremely violent.

Take It Like A Man became Boys Don't Cry because Fox Searchlight decided that the title of their movie probably shouldn't be a direct allusion to the graphic rape contained therein.

This Side of Truth became Invention of Lying because the movie is about the invention of lying, and it seemed appropriate to give the film a literal title. Extended Allegory for Atheism that Somehow Manages to Waste Louis C.K. also would have worked.

Coma Guy became While You Were Sleeping because the original title suggested that Peter Gallagher's character fought crime by slipping into extended bouts of vegetative unconsciousness.

The Presbyterian Church Wager became McCabe & Mrs. Miller, because Robert Altman wanted people to actually see one of his very best films.

Anhedonia became Annie Hall. Anhedonia - or the inability to feel pleasure - would later come to describe the audiences of future Woody Allen films like Melinda and Melinda, as well as innocent readers forced to endure a blogger's Melinda and Melinda jokes.

Eaters of the Dead became The 13th Warrior, thus abandoning the title of the Michael Crichton novel on which the film was based. Because if there's anything audiences avoid, it's movies based on Michael Crichton novels.

3000 became Pretty Woman, 3000 dollars being Julia Roberts' character's fee for an evening. Had they not made the obvious decision to change this title, Bernie Mac's Mr. 3000 might have been perceived as a particularly bold re-imaging.

Renaissance Man became By The Book which then became .
Renaissance Man The Danny Devito classic (Gregory Hines! James Remar! Young Stacey Dash! Mark Wahlberg's film debut!) first bombed out of theaters as Renaissance Man, and was then re-released as By the Book a few months later in the hopes that no one would notice. No one did.

Many of these are among the more storied examples of such switches, so please feel free to add to the list if any others spring to mind or if you happen to stumble upon any good finds on IMDB.

VIA