Ads 468x60px

Showing posts with label relief. Show all posts
Showing posts with label relief. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Law suit over Lady Gaga Japan relief efforts (AFP)

LOS ANGELES (AFP) – American pop star Lady Gaga is accused of misrepresenting charitable donations from wristbands sold to benefit tsunami and earthquake victims in Japan earlier this year.

The complaint, filed in a Michigan court on Friday by 1800lawfirm, says the star as well as her record label, Universal Music Group, and the Bravado International Group, lacked transparency surrounding the amount of money that was raised from sales of the wristbands and whether those funds were 100% allocated to earthquake and tsunami victims.

After the earthquake and tsunami disasters in March 2011 that devastated Japan, Lady Gaga created the rubber wristbands and the singer's website advertised that all proceeds from sales of the wristband would benefit victims.

The white rubber bracelets were sold for $5 and inscribed in red with the phrase, "We pray for Japan," in English and Japanese.

"While we commend Lady Gaga for her philanthropic efforts, we want to ensure that claims that "all proceeds will be donated to Japan?s earthquake relief efforts" are in fact true," said one of the plaintiff's lawyers, Alyson Oliver, in a press release.

The suit alleges that the singer and her partners "added additional "shipping charges" in excess of the amount required to ship the wristbands based on their weight, and retained a portion of the shipping charges," according to court documents.

"This misguided lawsuit is without merit and unfortunately takes attention away from the kind deeds of the fans around the world who are supporting the people of Japan," said Lady Gaga's spokeswoman, Holly Shakoor in an email to AFP.

"The entire $5 donation made with the purchase of each bracelet is going to support the disaster relief. No profit is being made on shipping costs. Sales tax charges were made in accordance with local legal requirements," she added.

The lawsuit seeks damages, "including a return of all amounts paid for the products," according to the press release.

According to Japanese media, Lady Gaga has so far donated approximately $3 million to disaster zones in the northeast of Japan, most of that from the sale of the wristbands.

The star was in Tokyo last weekend for a charity concert organized by MTV Video Music Aid Japan.


Yahoo! News

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Stradivarius violin sold for $16M for Japan relief (AP)

TOKYO – A Japanese music foundation has sold a renowned Stradivarius violin for $16 million at a London auction to raise money for tsunami disaster relief.

The nonprofit Nippon Foundation said Tuesday the proceeds from selling the nearly 300-year-old violin known as the Lady Blunt will go to relief projects in northern Japan.

The group's music affiliate owned the violin made in 1721 and hardly used. The new owner was not identified.

Foundation spokesman Hideo Fukuda said the group plans to use the proceeds to support and promote traditional arts in the region.

The March 11 earthquake and tsunami left more than 23,000 people dead or missing in northeastern Japan and destroyed hundreds of homes, offices and factories.


Yahoo! News

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Sold-out relief concert raises money, hope in Ala (AP)

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Opening with chilling video of a killer tornado and a prayer, country superstars Alabama headlined a sold-old concert Tuesday night to raise money for storm relief and remind people that thousands across their home state are still hurting from the physical and emotional damage left by the nation's worst tornado outbreak in decades.

Accompanied by a church choir and the symphony orchestra from hard-hit Tuscaloosa, members of the renowned band from Fort Payne had the crowd of 13,000 standing from the start with favorites like "Dixieland Delight" and a new song written by bassist Teddy Gentry called "Alabama Rising." The recording goes on sale Wednesday morning on iTunes, with proceeds to benefit a relief fund for storm survivors.

"Raising Alabama only takes three: The good Lord, you and me," sang Alabama frontman Randy Owen, a hand raised skyward.

Alabama was only one draw on a bill that included 18 more acts from rocker Sheryl Crow to gospel greats The Blind Boys of Alabama, who opened with a soulful version of "Amazing Grace."

The show, called Bama Rising, was staged just a few miles from ravaged communities where nearly two dozen people died in the twisters of April 27. Officials say 241 people were killed in Alabama alone, and thousands more lost their homes. Across the South the storms left more than 300 dead.

Waiting on the music to begin, Julie Kreutz of Hoover said she was happy to pay $75 each for floor seats for her parents and 6-year-old daughter.

"If it will help someone get a roof over their head, that's fine," said Kreutz. She grew up in Walker County, where nine people died in the twisters.

Holding a small Alabama flag and wearing a "One for Y'all" T-shirt sold to raise money for storm assistance, Children's Hospital nurse Katherine Kent recalled treating some of the 60 bloody, battered storm victims who flooded the emergency room the night of the tornadoes.

"That's why I'm here, to support them," said Kent.

The members of Alabama took it personally when dozens of twisters roared across their state, leaving a trail of destruction more than 600 miles long. Before long they were on the phone, talking about ways to help.

"We just said, `We've got to do something. It was just a consensus," Owen said in an interview with The Associated Press before the concert.

As they called friends in the music business, ideas for a benefit show came together quickly. Guitar player Jeff Cook said he worried about people forgetting about the devastation of that awful day.

"The weather is better and people tend to forget unless they are directly affected," Cook said. "So it's important that we tell the rest of the people who were luckier in that situation that the need is not over."

A rush of support poured into Alabama in the tornadoes' aftermath, but some organizations are now reporting fewer volunteers and dwindling donations.

Bama Rising, however, sold out quickly except for a few $1,000 VIP packages. Proceeds will go through the Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham to a new Bama Rising fund established for relief statewide.

Owen, Cook and bassist Teddy Gentry said they would serve on a board to help distribute concert proceeds for tornado relief, and they are looking for other ways to help. Natives of northeast Alabama who are still based in Fort Payne, they say they are particularly interested in helping in rural areas hit by the storms.

The band members said the tornadoes spared them as individuals, but their home county and neighbors were slammed.

"For us, it's a matter of continuing to go out long after this concert," said Gentry. "This is just a drop in the bucket compared to what we need. Things we can do individually or as a group, we're going to be doing that."

Alabama — minus longtime drummer Mark Herndon, who is touring with country singer Leah Seawright — planned a finale that featured all the acts including country singers Rodney Atkins, Brad Paisley and Martina McBride; R&B legends the Commodores; and others.

Atkins already has performed at two concerts for tornado relief, but he said he didn't hesitate when his management company contacted him about Bama Rising and the chance to perform alongside Alabama. The members of the Country Music Hall of Fame have had 42 No. 1 singles and sold more than 73 million records in three decades.

"The group Alabama is one of the biggest reasons I got into country music," Atkins said in an interview before the concert. "I listened to their music over and over, coming up. It is such a huge honor to be included in this."

Atkins and other acts are paying their own expenses to make sure the maximum amount goes to tornado relief.

"Hopefully we can relieve some of the stress that goes with going through such a tumultuous situation that turns lives upside down," he said. "It's the least we can do."

Other artists on the bill included Dierks Bentley; homegrown American Idol contestants Bo Bice and Taylor Hicks; Luke Bryan; Sara Evans, Little Big Town, Montgomery Gentry, David Nail, Jake Owen; Kellie Pickler, Darius Rucker and Ashton Shepherd.

Owen said even more acts volunteered to participate.

"We could have had two or three days of entertainment. A lot of people called and wanted to come," he said

.


Yahoo! News

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Ken Jeong provides comic relief to 'Hangover II' (AP)

By MIKE CIDONI LENNOX, Associated Press Mike Cidoni Lennox, Associated Press – Fri May 20, 8:44 am ET

LOS ANGELES – The doctor is in . just about everything these days.

Comic actor — and licensed physician — Ken Jeong is a regular on the NBC sitcom "Community." He reprises his star-making role as the psychotic mobster from 2009's "The Hangover" in "The Hangover Part II," in cinemas next weekend. Later this year, he'll return to big screens in "Transformers: Dark of the Moon" and "Zookeeper"

And, Sunday, he'll host the Billboard Music Awards in Las Vegas.

"Honestly, it is `The Hangover' dust that gets me these jobs," Jeong said earlier this week in an interview while promoting "Hangover II." "Everything I have done in the last two years, in all honesty, is directly because of `The Hangover.'"

Grateful as he sounds, Jeong was never a starving actor. Long before he made it in showbiz, he was well on the way to becoming a physician. "I was doing my residency in New Orleans and I won a stand-up comedy performance," recalled the 41-year-old.

First prize was a stint at the Improv comedy club in Los Angeles.

"I had to take up a day job at an HMO here in L.A., and at night I would just do stand-up comedy in town __ and all the while, actually, hoping I could kind of go back to acting," Jeong said.

He finally landed a major movie role — playing a physician, no less — in the 2007 smash "Knocked Up," and then came "The Hangover."

"So, really, just four years ago, I was working full time as a physician," Jeong noted. "Every day is, like, `I can't believe, I can't believe I'm doing this.'"

Jeong remains a doctor, having renewed his license just last year.

"It's a hard-won skill," he explained. "You just can't take the doctor out of you. It's funny, though, I was shooting `Hangover Part II' in Bangkok, and one of Ed Helms' friends got sick with food poisoning and I was worried that it would be a very serious infection. So, I got in doctor mode and I'm on the phone and everyone was listening, and I'm like, `OK, this might be C. dificile colitis, and if that is the case, you need to go to an ER stat. They need to give some IV fluids and they need to load up a banana bag for you and they need to check his electrolytes right now. If you are potassium depleted, that could lead to arrhythmia.'

"I was getting that hardcore about it, and that probably was more shocking to the cast and crew — you know, slack jaw — to hear me talk like that than probably anything I do in a movie."

"Hangover" director Todd Phillips calls Jeong "the most fearless actor I ever worked with." It was Jeong himself who suggested he do a nude scene in the first "Hangover," revealing his character's microscopic appendage. He reprises the move in the sequel.

"And (my wife) actually said, and that is a great quote from her, she said, `It will be the feel-good movie of the summer, because every guy will drive home feeling good about themselves.'"


Yahoo! News


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Chesney to donate concert fees to tornado relief (AP)

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Country superstar Kenny Chesney is turning his May 25th tour stop in Tuscaloosa, Ala., into a benefit concert.

Chesney, along with his management and booking agents, are donating all of their fees to the tornado-ravaged town that is home to the University of Alabama.

The massive storm system that swept through the South two weeks ago killed more than 300 people in seven states. At least 41 were in Tuscaloosa. The April 27 tornado outbreak destroyed entire neighborhoods and left the city struggling to recover.

Chesney considered postponing the concert, but the mayor convinced him that the show would be a positive step forward for the community.

The funds will go to GiveTuscaloosa.com and will be funneled to local charities and social services.

__

Online:

http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_en_mu/storytext/us_people_kenny_chesney/41450590/SIG=110tut2t0/*http://www.givetuscaloosa.com/

http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_en_mu/storytext/us_people_kenny_chesney/41450590/SIG=10qj151g9/*http://kennychesney.com/

Join the conversation at: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_en_mu/storytext/us_people_kenny_chesney/41450590/SIG=1133qhv33/*http://www.twitter.com/AP_Country


Yahoo! News


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

Chesney to donate concert fees to tornado relief (AP)

NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Country superstar Kenny Chesney is turning his May 25th tour stop in Tuscaloosa, Ala., into a benefit concert.

Chesney, along with his management and booking agents, are donating all of their fees to the tornado-ravaged town that is home to the University of Alabama.

The massive storm system that swept through the South two weeks ago killed more than 300 people in seven states. At least 41 were in Tuscaloosa. The April 27 tornado outbreak destroyed entire neighborhoods and left the city struggling to recover.

Chesney considered postponing the concert, but the mayor convinced him that the show would be a positive step forward for the community.

The funds will go to GiveTuscaloosa.com and will be funneled to local charities and social services.

__

Online:

http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_en_mu/storytext/us_people_kenny_chesney/41450590/SIG=110tut2t0/*http://www.givetuscaloosa.com/

http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_en_mu/storytext/us_people_kenny_chesney/41450590/SIG=10qj151g9/*http://kennychesney.com/

Join the conversation at: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_en_mu/storytext/us_people_kenny_chesney/41450590/SIG=1133qhv33/*http://www.twitter.com/AP_Country


Yahoo! News


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.