Tuesday, July 8, 2008

German or American Women of the New Everyday Media? You Decide 2008: Who's Hotter?! ...

German or American Women of the New Everyday Media? You Decide 2008: Who's Hotter?! ...

We start this series off with German TV's Annika Kipp and in Manhattan CNN's Kiran Chetry.

Annika Kipp happens to represent the finest of Germany's women of the new everyday media and Karin Chetry is definitely one of my favorite American women of the new everyday media.

Snapshot
Name Annika Kipp Age 29
Height 5' 5¼" (166 cm), Build Average, Eye Color Blue, Hair ColorBrown - Light
Date of Birth March 12, 1979, Birthplace München, Star Sign Pisces
NationalityGermany, Occupation TV Personality

Bio
After successful school-leaving exam in 1999 in the high school of Tutzing Annika so surely did not know what it should do and there her father somebody knew again somebody knew just a trainee with the radio in Straubing had looked, she has also landed immediately there (luckily *g *). After one year as a trainee with radio AWN Annika might immediately begin an education or a practical training in the connection. From February, 2002 to December, 2005 Annika Tilting was active with aerial Bavaria and to hear there also on air. Beside broadcastings like " the Bavarian night ", " good mornings Bavaria on the week-end " and " velvet and Sunday " she presented since 2004 also "Highlife" and " aerial Bavaria in the evening " (former "18/21"). Since 2005 also the aerial to Bavarians Morning-Show " good morning Bavaria ". Besides, Annika stood also with the aerial to Bavarians Open Air events like " Cheffe sink " and since 2004 also with the "Watersplash" (former " Aerial to Bavarians Beach-Clubbing ") with Florian Weiss and Mike Hager on the party stage! After a successful presenter`s casting in Berlin Annika Tilting now since January, 2006 also begins a television career and now presents together with Jan Hahn the breakfast television on Mondays to on Fridays from 5:55 o`clock to 9:00 o`clock in Sat.1.

Annika Pics:











Snapshot
Name Kiran Chetry, Age 33, Birthplace: Kathmandu, Nepal
Height 5' 7" (170 cm), Build Average, Eye Color Brown - Dark, Hair Color Brown - Dark
Date of Birth
August 26, 1974, Star Sign Virgo
Occupation: Journalist, Nationality: United States, Executive summary: CNN anchor
Bio
Kiran Chetry anchors American Morning with John Roberts. Since joining CNN's flagship morning program in April 2007, Chetry has covered major breaking news stories such as the shooting massacre at Virginia Tech and interviewed such newsmakers as first lady Laura Bush and Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.). She also reported for the series Children of War, which examined how American children cope with their parents' deployments in Iraq.
Chetry joined CNN in February 2007 and immediately began anchoring various CNN programs including American Morning, Anderson Cooper 360º, Paula Zahn Now and CNN Newsroom. Previously, Chetry was the anchor of Fox & Friends First and Fox & Friends Weekend for the Fox News Channel. She has covered major breaking news stories including reports from the field during the aftermath of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the Columbia Space Shuttle disaster, the invasion of Baghdad and Hurricane Katrina.
Chetry began her journalism career at News 21 in Rockville, Md., in 1995 before moving to WICU-TV in Erie, Penn., to become an anchor and health reporter. At WICU-TV, she earned the Best Enterprise Reporting award from the Pennsylvania Associated Press Broadcasters Association in 1997 for "Young and Hooked," a series about teen smoking. She then served as a morning anchor and reporter for KXTV in Sacramento, Calif., before joining Fox News in 2001.
Chetry received her bachelor of arts in broadcast journalism from the University of Maryland.
Karin Pics:


So, who is more TOTALLY SMOKING RED HOT???!!!
You Decide 2008 and send me an email or post a comment...
THE NEXT SERIES WILL FEATURE FRANCE'S Mélissa Theuriau AND FOX NEWS CHANNEL'S Megyn Kelly = coming sometime soon in the near future so stay tuned...

Best of the Roses, John French
mystrawhat.com $$$$$$$$$$$$ myspace.com/mosshead7 $$$$$$$$$$$$


Monday, July 7, 2008

The New York Times Travel Piece for the 6th Day of July 2008: "36 Hours in Pittsburgh"

Travel




North America > United States > Pennsylvania > Pittsburgh
36 Hours in Pittsburgh


Jeff Swensen for The New York Times --- A cable car gives passengers great views of the city.



By JEFF SCHLEGEL
Published: July 6, 2008

Friday

4 p.m.
1) GRIDIRON AND STEEL
Get to know what makes the city tick at the Senator John Heinz History Center (1212 Smallman Street; 412-454-6000; http://www.pghhistory.org/), which chronicles the city’s past and present glories from United States Steel to the Pittsburgh Steelers. This is actually a two-fer: the main museum is devoted to everything from the Heinz food empire to the polyglot population. The upper two floors are occupied by the Western Pennsylvania Sports Museum, which pays homage to the region’s rich sports heritage. It’s hard to miss the seven-story brick warehouse building; look for the giant photograph of the Hall of Fame running back Franco Harris.
7 p.m.
2) WATERFALL DINING
The martini menu almost changes as often at the seasonal specials at Soba (5847 Ellsworth Avenue; 412-362-5656; www.bigburrito.com/soba), a pan-Asian restaurant with a Victorian exterior and a Zen-like interior that features a two-story wall of cascading water. The menu includes a rock-shrimp tempura lettuce wrap ($11) and pan-roasted Alaskan halibut ($30). The wine list is extensive, as is the variety of over 20 sakes. The vibe is upscale and trendy, but not in an overbearing way. If you arrive early, grab a special martini, perhaps made with ginger-infused vodka, on the rooftop deck.
10 p.m.
3) BRILLO PAD
Brillobox (4104 Penn Avenue; 412-621-4900; http://www.brillobox.net/) feels like an arty East Village bar — little wonder, considering the 30-something artist couple who own it are former New Yorkers. They came back home to Pittsburgh, they said, to contribute to the city’s growing arts scene. Art film screenings, spoken-word performances and live music are held upstairs in a room decked out in velvet wallpaper and murals. Or just hang loose in the downstairs bar with its atmospheric red lights and an eclectic jukebox that has Goldfrapp, Patsy Cline and Snoop Dogg.
Saturday

10:30 a.m.
4) NOSH ’N STROLL
By night, the formerly industrial Strip District is filled with partygoers bouncing between bars and clubs. But on Saturday mornings, the parallel thoroughfares of Penn Avenue and Smallman Street (roughly between 16th and 26th Streets) are turned into a sprawling outdoor market with international food kiosks that serve Middle Eastern kebabs, Italian sausages and Greek baklava. Shop for produce, clothing and vintage knickknacks as accordionists and mariachi bands provide a festive soundtrack. Take a breather with a cup of coffee and a mele, a fruit-filled pastry, at La Prima Espresso Company (205 21st Street; 412-565-7070), where the old men sitting at the outdoor tables look like they’ve been sipping espresso and playing cards for eternity.
1 p.m.
5) NO BEDS HERE
You can probably find the Andy Warhol Museum (117 Sandusky Street; 412-237-8300; http://www.warhol.org/) on your own. For more radical contemporary art, beat a new path in the Mexican War Streets neighborhood to the Mattress Factory (500 Sampsonia Way; 412-231-3169; http://www.mattress.org/; admission $10). Housed in a former mattress factory, the museum is dedicated to room-size art installations. Current exhibitions include “Instant Before Incident,” a riveting sculpture by the Italian artist Luca Buvoli that depicts a vintage Fiat in stop-action motion, as it seems to hurl out the window.

3 p.m.
6) HARD TO FIND ITEMS
Some of the city’s funkiest shopping can be found in the 16:62 Design Zone, which spans the Strip District and Lawrenceville. It has more than 100 locally owned shops that focus on design, home décor, contemporary art, clothing and architecture. Among the more interesting is the nonprofit Society for Contemporary Craft (2100 Smallman Street; 412-261-7003; http://www.contemporarycraft.org/), a gallery and store that showcases handmade crafts like shiny metal handbags ($300 to $500) and recycled steel cabinets (from $3,500).
6 p.m.
7) GRAB THE CAMERA
The best views of Pittsburgh are from Mount Washington, and the best way to get there — or at least the most fun — is up the Duquesne Incline (1220 Grandview Avenue; 412-381-1665; http://www.incline.cc/; $4 round trip). One of two surviving hillside cable cars from the 1870s, it takes three minutes to climb 800 feet to Grandview Avenue. There’s a neat little history museum that has old newspaper clippings, but the real spectacle is the view of downtown Pittsburgh, where the Allegheny and Monongahela meet to form the Ohio River.
7:30 p.m.
8) CITY UNDER GLASS
While you’re up there, Grandview Avenue is also home to a cliff-hugging restaurant row. For amazing seafood to go with the river views, make reservations for the Monterey Bay Fish Grotto (1411 Grandview Avenue; 412-481-4414; http://www.montereybayfishgrotto.com/). This tri-level restaurant sits atop a 10-story apartment building. Jackets aren’t required, but nice clothes are apropos. Fresh fish is flown in daily, and the menu reflects whatever is fresh. On a recent visit, the specials included a charcoal-grilled Atlantic salmon with fresh peppered strawberries in a red-wine sauce ($26).
9 p.m.
9) OFF DOWNTOWN THEATER
Generally regarded as Pittsburgh’s most innovative theater company, the City Theatre (1300 Bingham Street; 412-431-2489; http://www.citytheatrecompany.org/) does challenging plays that aren’t likely to be staged in the downtown cultural district. The theater, in a pair of former churches, has both a 272-seat mainstage and a 110-seat house. A production of “The Wonder Bread Years,” a comedy written by the former “Seinfeld” writer Pat Hazell, starts on July 10 ($35 and $40). Recent productions have included works by Adam Rapp, Christopher Durang and Jeffrey Hatcher.
11 p.m.
10) PUB MARATHON
Venture over to East Carson Street, by some counts the country’s longest continuous stretch of bars. It’s all there, from shot-and-beer joints to trendy night spots. Dee’s Cafe (1314 East Carson Street; 412-431-1314; http://www.deescafe.com/) is a comfortable dive jammed on weekends with a mix of grizzled locals, bohemians and college students. Grab an Iron City beer and perhaps a game of pool ($6 an hour).
Sunday

11 a.m.
11) BRUNCH AND BRIC-A-BRAC
One of city’s more unusual brunch spots is the Zenith (86 South 26th Street; 412-481-4833; http://www.zenithpgh.com/), a combination art gallery, vintage clothing store, antiques shop and vegetarian restaurant. For those who can’t stomach tofu, brunch ($10) includes traditional staples like eggs, pancakes and French toast. It gets busy, so get there before it opens at 11 a.m. to avoid the line.
12:30 p.m.
12) THE OTHER OAKLAND
The Oakland district teems with intellectual energy from the University of Pittsburgh, Carnegie Mellon University and a bunch of museums. Start out at the Nationality Rooms at the Cathedral of Learning (4200 Fifth Avenue; 412-624-6000; http://www.pitt.edu//~natrooms), a 42-story Gothic-style tower on the Pittsburgh campus with 27 classrooms, each devoted to a different nationality. Then head over to the renowned Carnegie Museum of Art (412-622-3131; http://www.cmoa.org/) and Carnegie Natural History Museum (http://www.carnegiemnh.org/), both at 4400 Forbes Avenue, for Degas and dinosaurs. Before leaving, pick up a handy walking tour of Oakland and its public art. Not mentioned in the booklet but worth seeking out: the brick wall on Roberto Clemente Drive that was part of the outfield wall of the Pirates’ long-ago home, Forbes Field.
THE BASICS
Delta and JetBlue have nonstop flights from Kennedy Airport in New York to Pittsburgh for about $238, according to a recent online search; American Airlines and US Airways fly nonstop from La Guardia.

The Parador Inn of Pittsburgh (939 Western Avenue; 412-231-4800; http://www.theparadorinn.com/) is a Caribbean-themed bed-and-breakfast in an 1870s mansion on the city’s North Side. All rooms are $150 a night.

Also on the North Side is the Priory Hotel (614 Pressley Street; 412-231-3338; http://www.thepriory.com/), a European-style boutique hotel in a restored 19th-century Benedictine rectory. Doubles start at $145.

For more upscale lodging, try the Renaissance Pittsburgh Hotel (107 6th Street, 412-562-1200; www.marriott.com/hotels/travel/pitbr-renaissance-pittsburgh-hotel), a 300-room downtown hotel in a historic landmark. Rooms start at about $180 a night.

Multimedia --- Slide Show
A Weekend in Pittsburgh


Pittsburgh Travel Guide
Where to Stay
Where to Eat
What to Do
Go to the Pittsburgh Travel Guide »


Best of the Roses, John French mystrawhat.com
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http://theneweverydaymedia.blogspot.com/

P.S. I really want to see the production of “The Wonder Bread Years,” a comedy written by the former “Seinfeld” writer Pat Hazell, starts on July 10 ($35 and $40) @ the City Theatre (1300 Bingham Street; 412-431-2489; http://www.citytheatrecompany.org/)

P.S.S. I leave for California the day it opens though so I hope it's still running in a few weeks

P.S.S.S. If anyone wants to go w/ me just send me an email or post

Smoking Red Hot Women of the New Everyday Media = A+++ +++ (+)

My Megyn Kelly

Julie Chen
Julie Chen and Maggie Rodriguez
SMOKING RED HOT = Mary Beth Mcdade and Sharon Tay
Kiran Chetry
Annika Kipp

Ainsley Earhardt (far right) and Courtney Friel (left middle)
Gorgeous Shoes, Feet & Ankles = Ainsley Earhardt (far right) and Courtney Friel
Robin Meade


Jenna Lee

Alisyn CameHota
the Judge, Alisyn Camerota and Brian Kilmeade

Andrea Tantaros, Steeve (Peter Sellers/Kevin Klein) Doocy and Alisyn Camerota and Kilmeade


Gretchen Carlson

Becky Quick


Ayesha Faridi - CNBC India

Go Go and Sandra Smith
Sandra Smith and Cheryl Cason Jamie Colby
Jill Dobson

Julie Banderas

Courtney Friel


Katrina Szish and Jodi Applegate Martha MacCallum


Larisa Poznyak

Lauren Sanchez
Natalie Morales
Natalie Morales, Amy Robach and Giada De Laurentiis



Amy Robach

Natalie Del Conte


Best of the Roses, John French mystrawhat.com
$$$$$$ myspace.com/mosshead7 $$$$$$