Sir Mick Jagger calls for marijuana to be legalised on Isle of Man

London, May 20 (ANI): Rolling Stones lead singer Sir Mick Jagger has called for cannabis to be legalised on the Isle of Man to gauge whether it prevents drug-related violence.

In an interview on American television, the 66 year-old British rock star suggested a trial scheme should be conducted on the channel island ‘to see what happens’.

The singer, who was convicted of possessing narcotics in the 1960s, urged officials to legalise cannabis only on the island, and only for a limited time, to test whether such a ban would work.

“The whole question of legalising drugs is fraught,” the Telegraph quoted him as telling the Larry King Live show on CNN.

“You usually try these things out in very small places. You know, like you try a new product out in a small kind of society or an island somewhere.

“In England they always try out new mobile phones in the Isle of Man. They”ve got a captive society. So I said, you should try – you should try the legalisation of all drugs on the Isle of Man and see what happens,” he added. (ANI)

Liam Gallagher promises not to get into films

London, May 15 (ANI): Former Oasis singer Liam Gallagher, who is working on new film ‘The Longest Cocktail Party’, claims he will never get completely absorbed into films.

However, the rock star, whose new production company, In 1,is backing the movie, admitted that he could not let go an opportunity to be part of the biopic based on Richard DiLello”s memoir.

He was present at the Cannes Film Festival with Andrew Eaton of Revolution Films, who will collaborate on the project, which charts the “wild rise and fall” of the record company at the end of the 1960s.

“I”m not going into films, this is the last thing for me. I mean I”m not going to get sucked into that. I”m going to do this one thing because I like it, and I”ve got the opportunity to do it, and Andrew”s going to make it happen, and that”s it,” the Mirror quoted Gallagher, as saying.

DiLello worked as the resident “House Hippie” at Apple, which signed artists such as James Taylor, Mary Hopkin and Badfinger, from 1968 to 1970.

Gallagher added that the memoir had held “biblical” meaning for his former Oasis bandmates. (ANI)

Suspected Maoists force Orissa youth to join their cause

Malkangiri (Orissa), May 12 (ANI): With the aim of building a strong youth brigade, suspected Maoists are now threatening the unemployed youth in Orissa”s Malkangiri District and forcing them to join their group.

The lack of employment and deprivation had made them a soft target for the rebels.

“The young people in our village don”t have any work, they are all unemployed. We don”t even have land to cultivate. We all are educated but are still unemployed. That is why the young people here join their (Maoists) gang,” said Daitari Sisa, a local.

He added that the Maoists also misbehave with the women of the village, if they refuse to obey their orders.

“They always threaten us; they force us to join their group and if we don”t, they threaten to kill us. These Maoists live behind this hill. We are facing a lot of problems due to them,” said Palla, a local.

Thousands have been killed during the Maoist insurgency, which began in the late 1960s, Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh has described the Maoist threat one of the gravest homegrown threats to India”s internal security.

The rebels claim they are fighting for the rights of poor farmers and landless labourers.

They have spread into the rural pockets of 20 of India”s 28 states. (ANI)

Twenty20′s serious business now: Clarke

When Australia’s Michael Clarke took part in the first ever international Twenty20 match, against New Zealand five years ago, the emphasis was very much on “fun”.

New Zealand players dressed up in retro kit, with some sporting hairstyles more associated with the 1960s and 70s.

Australia captain Ricky Ponting made 98 as his side won by 44 runs in Auckland but questioned whether the “novelty” of Twenty20 would endure.

The emphasis in Australian cricket remained very much on Tests and one-day internationals so that the side’s defeat by outsiders Zimbabwe at the inaugural World Twenty20 in Cape Town was brushed aside by Australian fans.

Australia was well beaten by India in the 2007 semi-final and at last year’s edition in England, it was knocked out in three days after defeats by the West Indies and Sri Lanka.

But that exit was overshadowed by the context of an Ashes tour and when Ponting announced he was retiring from international Twenty20, there was a general sense of relief the star batsman would still be available to play ‘proper’ cricket for his country.

However, with Clarke now at the helm in this format, Australia began its 2010 World Twenty20 campaign with a 34-run win over defending champions Pakistan on Sunday.

And top order batsman Clarke said the advent of the tournament had led to a change in Australian attitudes towards Twenty20.

“I think now there’s a world championship, that plays a big part,” he said.

“When I played in my first Twenty20 match, we played against New Zealand and they were growing moustaches, not cutting their hair and wearing 1960s outfits to play the games.

“Everybody is taking the game a lot more seriously now and in tournaments like this, you want to do well. We haven’t done as well as we would like but we’ve started well.”

Australia completes its group program against Bangladesh in Barbados on Wednesday and, having seen his team lose to Zimbabwe in a warm-up fixture, Clarke was adamant he would not be underestimating Bangladesh.

“It just shows in this form of the game, you have to be at your best, it doesn’t matter who you are playing against,” he said.

“We certainly won’t be taking Bangladesh lightly. They’ve got some wonderful Twenty20 players who are very aggressive with the bat.”

Rolling Stones wrote some songs while high on drugs

London, May 5 (ANI): Sir Mick Jagger insists that drugs had a positive impact on the Rolling Stones, and the band wrote some of their biggest hits while under the influence.

The legendary group was notorious for their drug usage in 1960s and 70s heyday – particularly chief songwriters Jagger and Keith Richards.

But the frontman says that the “party atmosphere” was inspiring, particularly for their iconic 1972 album ‘Exile on Main Street’.

“That was a period of time when everyone took loads of drugs, it was very fashionable, but I mean, we did a lot of hard work as well, so it was a bit of a party atmosphere, loads of visitors, you know, there was a lot of drugs floating around, but not everyone was completely out of it all the time and we did a lot of good tracks, you know,” The Daily Express quoted Jagger as telling Absolute Radio. (ANI)

Macca admits small gigs make him nervous

London, May 03 (ANI): Sir Paul McCartney has admitted that he still gets butterflies in his stomach – when he plays in small venues.

The former Beatle says that playing in front of a large audience doesn’t bother him but it’s the more intimate gigs that still make him nervous, reports the Telegraph.

Sir Paul – due to play the Hard Rock Calling event in Hyde Park, as well as the Isle Of Wight Festival in June said in an interview with Absolute Radio:

””I”ll tell you what does get me nervous, when you”re playing to small groups of people. If it”s at all kind of corporate – so in other words, charity dos – you don”t know who you”ve got in the audience.

“It can be people who really don”t like rock and roll, and you”re sitting there going ”Yeah, we”re going to have a great time tonight” and they”re just chatting to each other.

””You know, ”Well I think that was a great deal, how”s your bank?’ I sort of turn round to the band and give a look which says ”We”re working, we”re going to have to work this one, you know, there”s no relaxing”.””

Sir Paul told DJ Geoff Lloyd that he once almost gave up before Beatles were due to play at the NME pollwinners concert in the 1960s, but now he has no such problem with massive shows.

””I don”t get that kind of nervous, because if the tickets sell really well, you get an idea that these people really want to come and see you. And I kind of feel that about the people who come and see me, we”re sort of mates. We get this kind of thing going, so I don”t feel too bad.”” (ANI)

Unseen Beatles photos go on display

London, April 28 (ANI): A collection of unseen photos of The Beatles just before they rose to fame is to go on display.

The 37 shots of the Fab Four on a tour with Helen Shapiro in 1963 were unearthed after languishing in an attic for almost 50 years.

Photographer/journalist Paul Berriff discovered the pics at his home in north England.

“I started to root around in my attic and I found this box of about 800 negs (negatives), and in it were shots of these old pop groups in ”63. I was absolutely knocked out when I saw the quality and realised I should do something with them,” the Daily Express quoted Berriff as saying.

Berriff took the pics after the boy band gave him unlimited access on tour when he was a teenage snapper – just months before Beatlemania gripped the world.

The photog had stored the negatives at his home, along with hundreds of other images of musicians in the 1960s.

The photos, which chronicle the band members rehearsing onstage, smoking in their dressing room, and relaxing with drinks and snacks backstage, will go on display at London”s Menier Gallery on Apr 28, (10). (ANI)

Ronnie Wood says he stole guitar riffs from The Beatles

London, April 26 (ANI): Rolling Stones guitarist Ronnie Wood owes his musical excellence to his rivals The Beatles as he spend a lot of time listening to their riffs.

Wood has admitted that he picked up tips tuning into a live jam radio session by The Beatles in the 1960s.

The rocker then had just started his career with his first band The Birds, reports The Daily Express.

“They had their own radio show. They were like a bunch of kids let loose in the studio, shouting and hollering. I used to tune in every week and kop steal some riffs off them,” Wood said.

“When I was in my first band, we used to get inspired listening to their madness and the live tracks they would play,” the 62-year-old guitarist added. (ANI)

Al Pacino gets rave reviews for Dr. Death role

London, April 19 (ANI): Hollywood actor Al Pacino has got accolades and praises for his role as the American pathologist and voluntary euthanasia follower Dr. Jack Kevorkian a.k.a. Dr. Death.

The 81-year-old doctor, who claims to have assisted 130 patients to die, is the subject of a television movie called ‘You Don”t Know Jack’.

The film, also starring Susan Sarandon, will be screened in the US on April 24, reports The Telegraph.

Pacino said that he has not met Dr. Kevorkian but had a chat with him and seen his television footage.

“The real zealots are rare, they go out the window. That kind of commitment, I wanted to see what that was like. There are times when you want to meet the person you”re playing. With Kevorkian, I just enveloped myself in the research. I see him as a doctor who cared for his patients. A sort-of 1960s revolutionary,” said Pacino.

Right-to-die activist Dr Kevorkian was convicted of second degree homicide in 1999 and jailed in Michigan. He was released in 2007. (ANI)

Al Pacino gets rave reviews for Dr. Death role Home

London, April 19 (ANI): Hollywood actor Al Pacino has got accolades and praises for his role as the American pathologist and voluntary euthanasia follower Dr. Jack Kevorkian a.k.a. Dr. Death.

The 81-year-old doctor, who claims to have assisted 130 patients to die, is the subject of a television movie called ‘You Don”t Know Jack’.

The film, also starring Susan Sarandon, will be screened in the US on April 24, reports The Telegraph.

Pacino said that he has not met Dr. Kevorkian but had a chat with him and seen his television footage.

“The real zealots are rare, they go out the window. That kind of commitment, I wanted to see what that was like. There are times when you want to meet the person you”re playing. With Kevorkian, I just enveloped myself in the research. I see him as a doctor who cared for his patients. A sort-of 1960s revolutionary,” said Pacino.

Right-to-die activist Dr Kevorkian was convicted of second degree homicide in 1999 and jailed in Michigan. He was released in 2007. (ANI)

Was LSD an influence on Doctor Who?

LONDON (Reuters Life!) – The regenerations of Time Lord Doctor Who were modeled on the “horrifying” side effects of drug-induced trips, according to archived documents published by the BBC.

Lifestyle

Doctor Who, an eccentric TV hero who has fearlessly fought Daleks and Cybermen with the help of his Tardis time machine in the shape of a 1950s London police box, has become a classic figure since the show first aired in the 1960s.

The regenerations started in 1966 to allow writers to replace the lead actor. The series recently saw an 11th actor, Matt Smith, take on the role.

A BBC memo outlining the character describes his metaphysical change over the years as a “horrifying experience.”

“It as if he has had the L.S.D. drug and instead of experiencing the kicks, he has the hell and dank horror which can be its effect,” it says.

(Reporting by Kylie MacLellan; Editing by Steve Addison)

Doctor Who’s metamorphic trip through LSD

The regenerations of time lord Doctor Who were modelled on the “horrifying” side effects of drug-induced trips, according to archived documents published by the BBC.

Doctor Who, an eccentric TV hero who has fearlessly fought Daleks and Cybermen with the help of his Tardis time machine in the shape of a 1950s London police box, has become a classic figure since the show first aired in the 1960s.

The regenerations started in 1966 to allow writers to replace the lead actor. The series recently saw an 11th actor, Matt Smith, take on the role.

A BBC memo outlining the character describes his metaphysical change over the years as a “horrifying experience”.

“It is as if he has had the LSD drug, and instead of experiencing the kicks he has the hell and dank horror which can be its effect,” it said.

Restored convict bridge unveiled

An iconic Greenough bridge, built by convicts in the 1860s, has been reopened.

The Maley’s Bridge was badly damaged by floods from Cyclone Clare in January 2006.

The State and Federal Governments, along with the local council, funded a $1.2 million restoration of the limestone and timber bridge, which is now open to traffic.

While reopening the bridge, the Heritage Minister John Castrilli also announced Greenough’s historic St James Church will be added to the state’s Register of Heritage Places.

Mr Castrilli says a passionate local community saved the building, which had been earmarked for demolition in the 1960s.

Court rejects Percy’s move request

Victoria’s longest serving prisoner, convicted child killer Derek Percy, has been denied his request to move to a psychiatric hospital.

Percy was ruled to be unfit to stand trial on grounds of insanity for the murder of 12-year-old Yvonne Tuohy.

She was murdered after being abducted from a Western Point beach in 1969.

He has been in jail ever since.

Today, the Supreme Court has refused his request to be moved to the Thomas Embling Hospital for treatment.

Percy has been a suspect in a string of cases from 1960s, including the disappearance of seven-year-old Linda Stilwell from St Kilda Beach in 1968.

Playboy Bunny Girl outfit up for grabs

Melbourne, March 27 (ANI): Women have been offered a chance to own their very own Playboy Bunny Girl outfit for the first time after owner Hugh Hefner agreed to produce a limited edition.

The Playboy mogul was said to have initially brushed aside the idea but nodded to it for the firm”s 50th anniversary, according to The Sun.

The costume, invented in the 1960s and worn by waitresses at The Playboy Clubs, consists of a rayon-satin corset, bunny ears, a collar, cuffs and a fluffy cottontail, News.com.au reported.

The outfit, a part of the Playboy Bunny”s mystique, will be up for grabs for 74 dollars in Ann Summers stores and online. (ANI)

Joan Collins once snorted cocaine

London, March 27 (ANI): English actress Joan Collins has confessed that she once snorted cocaine but found it horrible.

The ‘Dynasty’ star, 76, insisted she is totally against the use of drugs.

She also referred to her third husband Ron Kass, the former chief of Apple records, who fought against cocaine.

“It’s extremely sad, anybody that ruins their life by drugs,” the Daily Express quoted her as telling Piers Morgan on ITV’s Life Stories.

She added: “I am so anti-drugs. I have never taken… Well, once somebody forced me to take some coke and it was just so horrible.”

The incident apparently occurred in the late 1960s at a nightclub in St Tropez.

Collins mentioned that she has always taken care of her body.

She said: “I’d rather just grow old gracefully, while fighting all the way. I have always, always, always used make-up and kept my face out of the sun since I was 20.” (ANI)

Beta-blocker pioneer dies

Prize-winning Scottish scientist Sir James Black has died at the age of 85.

Sir James developed beta-blockers, drugs that have saved the lives of millions of people with heart problems.

In 1988 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his pioneering work in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

Today’s women have far more sexual partners than those in swinging 60s

London, Mar 16 (ANI): Today’s young women have slept with three times as many men as girls of the same age in the so-called “Swinging Sixties”, known for mini skirts, the Rolling Stones and drugs, according to a study.

Despite the image of practicing free love, the average 24-year-old woman in the 1960s had 1.72 sexual partners.

On the other hand, today”s women of the same age have an average of 5.65 bed partners, which is more than her mother who is likely to have had 3.72 partners.

The study of 3,000 females of all ages, conducted by the chain Lloydspharmacy, comes as the chain voices fears of increased sexual health risks for women at a time when screening and better information should be reducing it.

A Lloydspharmacy spokeswoman said that cervical cancer rates in women under 25 have not decreased over the past decades despite better screening, possibly because of the greater number of partners, reports the Scotsman.

The chain is promoting a campaign for women to get a vaccine against HPV – the human papilloma virus – which is a sexually transmitted infection and a major cause of cervical cancer. (ANI)

Stooges, ABBA finally make it to Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

New York, Mar 16 (ANI): After years of being nominated for the Rock And Roll Hall of Fame, the Stooges have finally been inducted.

The band was finally honoured at an event held at the Waldorf-Astoria on Monday night and telecast on the Fuse cable channel.

“After the seventh time” the Stooges were nominated, said the band’s guitarist, James Williamson, in his acceptance speech.

“We were beginning to think we would have to take pride in not getting in,” the New York Daily News quoted him as saying.

This was a year of belated admissions for the Hall of Fame—besides the Stooges, the hall’s latest performing members are the Swedish pop group ABBA, the reggae songwriter Jimmy Cliff and two English bands, Genesis and the Hollies.

All but ABBA, which came together in the early 1970’s, have careers dating back to the 1960s.

De Niro tackles role of football great

Two-time Oscar winner Robert De Niro may soon take on the role of iconic US football coach Vince Lombardi.

ESPN Films says De Niro has signed on to portray Lombardi as he took the Green Bay Packers from worst to first in the National Football League.

Eric Roth (Forrest Gump) has been hired to work on a screenplay.

The film will start in 1959 when Lombardi was given his first chance to be an NFL coach by taking over the lowly Packers.

The coach’s hard-nosed approach helped lead the team to three straight NFL championships and victories in the first two Super Bowls.

The Packers dominated football throughout much of the 1960s.

Lombardi died in 1970 at age 57.

Since 1971, the trophy awarded to the Super Bowl winner has been named the Vince Lombardi Trophy.

ESPN says the movie looks set to be released around the professional football championship games in 2012.

- Reuters