17. srpna 2009 v 15:56 | MrS.ChRiStiE
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Členové >>
Donnie Wahlberg
Povolání: Herec, zpěvák, producent
Věk: 40
Datum narození: 17. 08. 1969
Místo narození: Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Znamení: Lev
Výška: 178 cm
Danny Wood
Povolání: zpěvák, herec
Věk: 40
Datum narození: 14. 05. 1969
Místo narození: Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Znamení: Býk
Člen skupin: ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead
Jonathan Knight
Povolání: zpěvák
Věk: 40
Datum narození: 29. 11. 1968
Místo narození: Dorchester, Massachusetts, USA
Znamení: Střelec
Joey McIntyre
Povolání: zpěvák, herec
Věk: 36
Datum narození: 31. 12. 1972
Místo narození: Needham, Massachusetts, USA
Znamení: Kozoroh
Jordan Knight
Povolání: Zpěvák
Věk: 39
Datum narození: 17. 05. 1970
Místo narození: Worcester, Massachusetts, USA
Znamení: Býk
Výška: 180 cm
Info o Kapele >
New Kids on the Block byl americký chlapecký boyband, který se těšil obrovským úspěchům koncem 80. a začátkem 90. let. Kapela pochází z Bostonu, kde byla v roce 1984 producentem Mauricem Starrem založena. Skupina prodala přes 70 milionů alb.
Tři singly se umístily na čele Billboard Hot 100 a celkem devět jejich vydaných singlů se probojovalo do Top 10 v USA. Nejúspěšnějším albem kapely se stala nahrávka Step by Step z roku 1990, které se prodalo přes 19 milionů kusů.
Album
2008 The Block
2008 Greatest Hits
2008 The Block(Deluxe Edition)
1994 Face The Music
1991 No More Games-Remix
1990 Step By Step
1989 Merry,Merry Christmas
1988 Hangin Tough
1986 New Kids On The Block
Singl
2009 2 In The Morning
2008 Single.feat Ne-Yo
2008 Summertime
1994 Never Let You Go
1993 Dirty Dawg
1992 If You Go Away
Press banned from andersons cabaret show
Actors from children's radio show banned from attending the Tony Awards after performing a spoof skit during the opening of the Oscar night.
The prank, from the Tony Awards 2012, included two actors playing Tony nominees in skimpy lingerie - a stunt that they said was meant to be funny but was now the subject of an investigation.
Tony awards presenter John Cleese took to Facebook to express his disappointment on seeing his performance in the film and said he was "shocked".
He wrote on Facebook: "I've been told the show's production company won't be sending a film in so I can't possibly be allowed to participate. The whole thing is wrong and has put the Tony Awards in serious danger.
"I hope they will find someone else to cast as 'The Mayor' for tonight."
The show, which has been running since 2005, stars two children's radio shows and includes appearances by singers like Amy Winehouse and Katy Perry - who were banned from the 2010 event.
John Cleese and his fellow comedians, along with former pop group The Chorus, were set to perform a skit about "The Mayor" after a "cordons" prank.
In the spoof, a woman in the audience was holding a sign that said: "No Mr Mayor" during a performance of the song. When the performance was halted by security, the people on stage had to hand over their ticket stubs.
Some of the performances had a similar effect, with children holding a placard that said "No Tony" and holding up red balloons that read: "No Tony! You're ruining the party!" One actor was suspended with just his jacket up.
The episode has been condemned by a number of charities in the past, including Children's Theatre in London. They said: "If a presenter has got a children's show to host then it's a huge deal if they're playing it for children. The production company had no choice but to ban the performance but Tony awards should never be used as a platform for children.
"We hope this will force the producers of Tony awards to see sense and not put a child's performance at risk in the first place."
A spokesman for the BBC said: "Tony Awards had received complaints after a skit featuring children being told they couldn't attend the event had been aired online.
"This decision was made after listening to the complaints. We are disappointed that some children's charity have decided to ignore that advice. Our priority is to find children performing at Tony Awards that do not involve public nudity, so any decision that can't possibly be right is disappointing."
A spokeswoman for the production company, who asked not to b
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Hospital contracts spark doctor burn out fears they'll go away too
The NHS is being urged to stop overpaying doctors and to find savings that will lead to lower waiting times for appointments.
More than 1,100 doctors are thought to have lost their jobs since 2012 when a huge rise in patient numbers meant the NHS became too expensive.
The report, called The NHS for Doctors and Unions: What needs to be done? outlines how the government is underfunded and understaffed to provide a high standard of care and to provide affordable and effective health insurance.
It also claims that patient care for young people will deteriorate as costs rise under successive Conservative and Labour governments.
The NHS is underfunded and understaffed to provide a high standard of care and to provide affordable and effective health insurance The report, called The NHS for Doctors and Unions: What needs to be done?
The report notes that the rate of junior doctor resignations over the past four years has more than doubled as doctors are asked for more and more shifts each day.
The new government said the "universality of practice in medicine is in crisis", but said doctors had been told to accept their "inherent lack of understanding", as well as a high pay-packet price of £23,000 a year.
The report states: "On almost every subject, and by every account, this is the most dysfunctional organisation in modern British politics.
"But the real problem is not simply that there is such a lack of resources, it is the people making decisions and paying them.
"There are far too many NHS workers, particularly junior doctors, who are told on every issue that they should do a better job. The NHS for Doctors and Unions describes this as a system which has failed to deliver the best service and is in crisis."
Dr Helen Caldicott, a consultant professor of medicine at Royal Holloway University of London, is chairing the report with Peter Gee, of the UK Association of GPs, and former senior medical officer John Larkin.
They say: "The vast majority of junior doctors who have quit over the last four years have not gone through what we call the crisis of the doctors because the management of the healthcare, including salaries and working conditions, is now so successful that junior doctors do not face the stress of negotiating with managers about what they are paid."
They suggest the NHS could be restructured so it was no longer funded "by private business for private profit".