| Lewis Hamilton is '11 out of 10' in bed!
London, Nov 20 (ANI): Formula One race ace Lewis Hamilton drove beauty queen Cemre Mirel crazy in bed the first time they slept together by nibbling fruit off her naked body. The stunning model revealed passionate secrets of a ten-month long affair, and revealed that Lewis was as good in bed as on the racetrack. "He was amazing in bed. I'd give him 11 out of 10," The Sun quoted her, as saying. The couple began seeing each other after meeting at a London nightclub last January. Mirel, a former Miss Turkey finalist, also revealed how Lewis begged her for a sex session in his black Mercedes and sent saucy texts asking her to dress as a secretary for even more raunchy romps and blindfolded her before eating ripe bananas off her curves.
Capsule reviews of movies being released today
-- 'August Rush' 1/2 star There are precious movies and then there are movies about 11-year-old orphans following "the music." In this respect, "August Rush" is on another level. We need to break out a whole new definition of cheesiness for a film like this, augmented by fake tears and vomit gestures. It begins with a boy (Freddie Highmore) standing in an open field where the surrounding sounds -- the wind, the trees, the grass -- swirl like a symphony in his head. In a whispering voice-over, he says: "I believe in music the way that some people believe in fairy tales." It thus proceeds in fairy-tale fashion, though it's more unrealistic than surrealistic. Without any tangible evidence, our protagonist senses his parents (Jonathan Rhys Meyers and Keri Russell) are still alive and that he just needs to make music loud enough so they can hear him (sort of like the ethos behind a Coldplay album).
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PICTURE this: A low sun shining weakly through rain-sodden clouds, and the sulphurous smell of coal smoke from a thousand chimneys as the fumes drift slowly, grudgingly, apologetically, over the roofs of a south Manchester suburb. Sparrows huddled in leaf-barren trees, too tired and apathetic to raise a cheep as the beady-eyed pigeons patrolled the pavement on the look-out for the smallest crumb to eat. A horse standing sleepily between the shafts of the coalman's cart. Iron scales, dust, empty hessian bags neatly folded amidst full bags of coal, nutty slack and coke. The horse peers through leather blinkers, as his master appears, from a gateway, grimy and black. He throws his empty bag onto the cart and looking up at his mate's dust-streaked face turns his leather-clad back and accepts another heavy bag of coal and walks a bow legged walk to deliver its contents into the hole above the cellar.
Rebecca Romijn gets engaged to Jerry O'Connell; Diddy apologizes to Tyson Beckford; H&M drops Kate Moss over coke pix
Jerry O'Connell and Rebecca Romijn have confirmed reports they are set to get married. Earlier this month, reports said the couple were planning a low-key New Year's Eve ceremony, and while they won't confirm the date, they admit they're planning to become husband and wife. O'Connell, 31, proposed to Romijn, 32, over the weekend in the New York City apartment he grew up in. They say in a joint statement, "We couldn't be happier and are looking forward to the next chapter of our lives." Romijn's divorce from actor John Stamos was granted in March, almost a full year after their split was announced. She began dating O'Connell last year. .
Christmas books past, present and future: Part one
Last Christmas I was in my ancestral hometown, Abba in Nigeria, and over two dry harmattan evenings I sat out on the veranda and read Linus Ogbuji's memoir Seeing the World in Black and White (Africa Research and Publications), which charts his early idyllic years in Nigeria, university education in Egypt and emigration to the US. It was funny, honest and unaffected. I loved it. Books I plan to give away as presents this year are Biyi Bandele's Burma Boy (Jonathan Cape), a humorous novel about Africans who fought for the British in the second world war, and Caille Millner's The Golden Road: Notes On My Gentrification (Penguin), a lovely memoir about the complications of race in America. .
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