Sunday 8 May 2016

BLOGS OF THE DAY



Actress Mila Kunis got more than she bargained for when promoting her latest comedy Bad Moms on the Ellen DeGeneres Show when she found herself being encouraged to reveal tit bits about her sex life with husband Ashton Kutcher.

The 32-year-old started the conversation innocently enough by talking about her one-year-old daughter Wyatt and telling Ellen - and Kristen Bell who was sharing the couch with her - that she would definitely like to have more children.

This led Ellen to ask if Mila and Ashton were currently ‘trying’, to which Mila replied, astonished: ‘Like, am I having sex?’

This only served to open up the floodgates about the mum-of-one’s sex life with Kristen then eventually asking: “How’s the sex?”

Eventually, Mila was able to say: ‘Great’. All three ladies were in fits of giggles at this point and the conversation became more one-sided as Ellen said to a bemused Mila:

“I feel like he’s a generous lover. I feel like he’d be attentive.”

Mila’s latest film, Bad Moms, is all about motherhood.

In the film, her character struggles to meet the criteria of a perfect mom.

-contactmusic.com

Why Cannes Fest loves Amazon?

The last time Ted Sarandos went to Cannes, he got heckled.

“You are destroying the film ecosystem of Europe!” a French journalist screamed after Netflix's chief content officer finished a 2015 keynote on the future of cinema.

It was up to Harvey Weinstein, also in the audience, to stand up and defend the streaming service, as well as Sarandos' cinematic credentials.

Compare that reception with the warm embrace Cannes has given Amazon.

Festival director Thierry Fremaux picked five Amazon titles this year - Woody Allen's Cafe Society, Paterson, The Neon Demon and The Handmaiden in competition, and Gimme Danger.

-hollywoodreporter.com

How the birds got their wings

The evolution of major novel traits - characteristics such as wings, flowers, horns or limbs - has long been known to play a key role in allowing organisms to exploit new opportunities in their surroundings.

What's still up for debate, though, is how these important augmentations come about from a genetic point of view.

New research from an international team of evolutionary biologists, led by the University of Oxford, has used bacteria to show that acquiring duplicate copies of genes can provide a 'template' allowing organisms to develop new attributes from redundant copies of existing genes.

-sciencedaily.com



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/indiahome/indianews/article-3578821/BLOGS-DAY-Mila-Kunis-opens-sex-life-Ellen-DeGeneres-Show.html#ixzz482yw6B9w
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