Posts Tagged ‘From’

Jaden Smith Not Emancipating Himself From Will Smith, Jada Pinkett Smith

Monday, May 20th, 2013

Instead of discussing the finer points of their father-son sci-fi thriller After Earth (in theaters May 31), Will Smith and his son have spent the past week fielding questions about Jaden‘s reported emancipation plans.

The costars first debunked the rumors during a joint appearance on The Ellen DeGeneres Show May 15. “See, here’s the thing that you need to understand: I’m not going anywhere,” Jaden told the 55-year-old talk show host. “The thing that people don’t get is everything at this house is free! So I can get anything and everything at his house, so I’m going to be there 20, 30 more years.”

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In a May 19 Entertainment Tonight interview, Kylie Jenner‘s 14-year-old boyfriend admitted he “wasn’t aware” of the emancipation rumors until the After Earth press tour began. “I didn’t know what was going on ’cause I don’t really go on the Internet except for going on Tumblr,” Jaden said. “I totally wasn’t aware at all of anything.”

Will added, “We try to avoid that type of stuff. It’s not true and we look at that type of information as, like, bad fuel.”

PHOTOS: Hollywood’s best-dressed kids

The emancipation rumors began after Will was quoted by overseas press as saying Jaden wanted to be freed from the legal guardianship of his parents. The 44-year-old explained that he made a joke in Tokyo that was taken out of context and blown out of proportion. “He’s never leaving me, ever,” Jada Pinkett Smith‘s husband told DeGeneres. “No emancipation for the Smith kids.”

VIDEO: How Will Smith surprised his wife on her 40th birthday

Being born into one of Hollywood’s most famous families has its perks, but it also comes with intense scrutiny. When asked if he feels compelled to follow in his parents’ footsteps, Jaden told Entertainment Tonight, “I just don’t feel the pressure of having to make people happy. That’s really what pressure is. You’re just hoping that people accept you. So, I really don’t care what people think about me.”

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Planning a Wedding? Get Bizarre Wedding Questions Answered from…

Friday, May 10th, 2013

Traverse City, MI (PRWEB) May 07, 2013

Ask and browse wedding question ranging in culture and tradition. In an era of affluent changing times, wedding details offers the tools to get difficult questions answered by the experts. From bizarre to traditional questions, wedding details has the necessary resources to make brides and wedding planners life a little easier.

“Since we launched in 1995 our experts have answered 1,000s of questions every year and we have spent a lot of time researching wedding traditions from around the world. Some Couples want to add a little of the ethnic or religious background to their ceremony and/or understand their partners so we have tracked down a lot of fun and funny things! So don’t get married without celebrating a little family cultural background!“ (Michael Connors, founder of Wedding Details)

WeddingDetails.com offers an array of multi-cultural wedding planning information. Those in the need for fresh ideas or planning tips, wedding details has it covered. There are also extensive photo galleries of inspiration, easy-to-use wedding planning tools, advice columns and vendor search by area, tips tricks and inspirational bridal fashions and trends.

http://www.weddingdetails.com is one of the oldest and most reliable online wedding information sites in the United States. For almost 20 years, WeddingDetails.com has offered specialized information for brides and families looking for information about wedding traditions for all ethnicities. Local guides and bridal show listings are available coast-to-coast in over 60 markets, showcasing some of country’s top wedding vendors who work right in the bride’s backyard. Vendors are able to sign up for free listings and can upgrade to a premium listing for a nominal annual cost.
Liza Fillmore
Email: liza(at)wdweb.com
Phone:(231) 932-0855 ext. 22


Arts & Entertainment: Web sites / Internet

Bullet blitz: Demand from public, government leaves ammo shelves empty

Tuesday, May 7th, 2013
  • Ammunition retailers can’t keep up with government and public demand. (AP Photo/Christian Escobar Mora)

Steve Warholic spends nearly his entire workday at a Nevada ammunition store scouring the Internet, and the owner puts in even more time online. Both think they need to spend more time on the web.

They’re trying to find bullets for their customers at Stockpile Defense and the store’s sister school, where 50,000 people are trained every year in firearms handling. Shelves that once held the most popular calibers, like .22 and .45, are bare. There are waiting lists as long as two months and students are requested to bring their own ammunition. Pre-orders are no longer allowed.

“We’re buying everything we can find and we still can’t bring in enough.”

- Steve Warholic, employee at Stockpile Defense

“We’re buying everything we can find and we still can’t bring in enough,” said Warholic. “It’s a constant battle.”

Demand for guns and ammunition has cleaned out stores nationwide, leading to waiting lists and early morning lines outside of gun and sporting good stores for ammunition shipments. Common calibers routinely sell out within minutes of appearing on store shelves and prices have soared as much as 70 percent. 

After the Newtown elementary school massacre, gun enthusiasts, already anxious President Obama’s re-election would translate into harsh controls on gun ownership, have packed stores, buying as many firearms and as much ammunition as they can find. Moves to expand background checks and limit firearm and magazine sales have added to the hysteria. Massive government purchases, including a plan by the Department of Homeland Security to buy more than 1 billion rounds of ammunition, have further stoked fears – and suspicions.

“People buy ammunition when they see it even if they don’t need it,” said Mike Bazinet, spokesman for the National Shooting Sports Association, which represents firearms and ammunition manufacturers. “It becomes self-fulfilling over time.”

Although Warholic in Nevada has ferreted out new supplies through his online work, he can barely keep up. He has 50 million rounds of ammunition on order this year, but will consider himself lucky to get 10 million. And he’s one of the lucky ones: Competitors ask to purchase his supplies so they can restock their shelves.

“The running joke with our distributor is that we tell him, ‘You don’t need to come to work anymore. We’ll take everything on your list,’” said Warholic.

The run on ammunition has also hit law enforcement agencies, notably smaller ones that don’t have the funds or supplies of larger organizations. Some have stopped using bullets altogether for training. In Richmond, Calif., the 200-member force once trained on the range every month using live ammunition. They’ve since switched to dry fire exercises, laser guns and Airsoft pistols, which fire plastic pellets, to simulate live fire exercises — and to save money.

“Ammunition has tripled in price over the last decade. We now have to wait a year to eight months for a shipment,” said Capt. Mark Gagan, spokesman for the Richmond Police Department. 

This year, concerns over a federal government bid to purchase large amounts of ammunition sent gun enthusiasts back to the stores. The Department of Homeland Security put out bids for up to 1.2 billion rounds of ammunition, leading many gun enthusiasts, including Sen. Tom Coburn , R-Okla., to question if the agency’s five-year purchase plan was fueling the national shortage. 

“These round totals are simply a ceiling,” said Peter Boogard, DHS spokesman, in an email. “It does not mean that DHS will buy, or require, the full amounts of either contract.” 

Over the last three fiscal years, the agency, which oversees the U.S. Secret Service, Coast Guard and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, actually bought fewer rounds of ammunition each year. The number of rounds purchased has fallen from 148.3 million in fiscal 2010 to 103.2 million rounds in 2012. The agency, which includes more than 100,000 law enforcement personnel, uses about two-thirds of the ammunition for qualifications or training purposes. 

Gun enthusiasts and elected officials also grew concerned that DHS was purchasing hollow-point bullets, which expand upon contact. Although police departments use different types of ammunition, most use hollow-point bullets because they have greater stopping power and carry less danger of passing through the target, said Darrel Stephens, executive director of the Major Cities Chiefs Police Association.

Background checks for firearms soared following the shooting at the Newtown elementary school in Connecticut, as people feared some guns would be banned. The week following the Dec. 14 massacre, the FBI reported its busiest week ever for background checks since it started recording figures in 1998. Even the day of the killings, the number of background checks was among the ten highest in the last 15 years. The figures do not reflect denials or the number of firearms purchased.

The spike in demand isn’t new. The sour economy has also played into personal safety fears that crime will rise. Surges in gun and ammunition purchases have been ongoing since President Obama, like many Democrats, a vocal advocate of gun control, was elected in 2008 and then re-elected last year. In an October 2009 Gallup poll, 55 percent of gun owners said they thought the president will attempt to ban gun sales. 

Despite the rush to buy ammunition and guns, household gun ownership among Americans has declined modestly since the 1970s. In 2012, 34 percent of Americans had a gun at home, down from 50 percent in 1973, the first year University of Chicago researchers started tracking gun ownership for the General Social Survey. A 2012 Gallup reported a more modest decline from 50 percent in 1968 to 43 percent last year.

These surveys, however, don’t track how many firearms a gun owner has. While there is no data, retailers and ammunition dealers say ammunition and firearms sales have been to gun owners, and not to those who have never owned a firearm.

With such little supply, retailers have slapped restrictions on the number of boxes of ammunition customers can purchase. In January, Walmart limited ammunition sales to three boxes per customer, per day. Dick’s Sporting Goods and Cabela’s imposed a three and ten box-restriction on purchases, respectively.

At Dick’s Sporting Goods in Bee Cave, Texas, a line of 10 to 15 people wait in the early morning hours outside for the store to open every Wednesday and Friday despite the three-box limit. On those days, new ammunition shipments come in and though they don’t know what’s coming off the truck, gun enthusiasts still show up. Any ammunition calibers that are difficult to get, like 9-mm., .22, .45 or .223, are routinely bought within minutes, leaving shelves bare. Only shotgun shells can routinely be found.

“We’re getting in anything that we can and we still sell out,” said Payton, a salesman at Dick’s. “People panic, that’s all.”

The surge in demand for firearms and ammunition is also reflected in the bottom line of big retailers, like Cabela’s and Walmart. At Cabela’s, a national chain of sporting goods stores, first quarter profit skyrocketed 73 percent, fired by strong sales of guns and ammunition. The company’s stock hit an all-time high last week after reporting its results and blowing apart analysts’ expectations. 

“It’s no surprise guns and ammunition were going to be strong in the first quarter,” said Thomas Millner, Cabela’s chief executive officer in an earnings call last Thursday. “Supply is still tight. It is still constraining ultimate demand because we simply — in some categories, like .22-caliber ammunition, it’s very, very tight.”

Ammunition manufacturers are reporting record profits and sales, with increases that number in the double and sometimes triple digits. Olin, which owns Winchester, reported last week the company’s first quarter earnings climbed 190 percent over the same period last year. Federal Premium Ammunition’s annual earnings for ammunition last year climbed 24 percent over 2011. 

“Our sales are only limited by the amount we can produce,” said Joseph Rupp, Olin chairman and chief executive officer in a conference call last Friday.

Ammunition manufacturers are struggling to make enough and have hundreds of millions of dollars in backorders. They’ve added hundreds of employees and equipment and increased overtime, and, in some cases, are running factories around the clock. Producers have posted notes on all their web sites assuring customers they are working as fast as they can. 

“We are producing as much as we can; much more than last year, which was a lot more than the year before. No one wants to shop more during this time than we do,” a note on Hornady’s site said.

Producers did not return repeated emails and calls. 

“Manufacturers are doing what they can, but it’s not enough to keep up. It’s a supply-and-demand issue,” said Nima Samadi, a senior analyst who tracks the guns and ammunition industry at IbisWorld, a market research firm in Los Angeles.

While demand is strong, manufacturers consider it temporary and aren’t planning to build new factories or make substantial changes that would cost a lot of money and take a lot of time to train people and buy new facilities. The last “surge” in demand only lasted six quarters, and this one, though manufacturers changed their expectations in the last month, now expect demand to remain strong through the end of the year. Some even wonder if it will extend into the new year and beyond.

“I think the honest answer is,” said Millner, Cabela’s chief executive officer. “I don’t know when it’s going to loosen up.”

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Shoppers finally expected to emerge from hibernation as Spring weather arrives

Monday, May 6th, 2013

Optimism follows a quiet Easter

Ipsos’ Retail Traffic Index (RTI), the definitive metric of footfall entering non-food stores across all location categories in the UK, including high streets, shopping centres, retail parks and transport hubs, rose by 1.7% in April over March, but suffered a decline of 8.7% year-on-year. For the Easter fortnight (24th March to 6th April), 9.7% fewer shopping trips were made against the equivalent holiday period last year, making it the quietest Easter on record of the millennium for non-food store retailers.

The absence of sunshine and warm weather has resulted in a particularly slow start for the fashion sector merchandising its spring and summer collections. It has also discouraged browsers and delayed click-and-collectors picking up their purchases from stores.

However, as warmer weather begins to blanket the UK, shoppers across the country are expected to visit their local stores and be inclined to spend some of the money they have not been able to so far in 2013.

“It’s always a difficult picture to assemble at this time of the year, with the Easter period falling into different months,” explains Dr Tim Denison of Ipsos Retail Performance, “so we should not be alarmist about these latest RTI figures. We had expected to see more shoppers break out of their hibernation in April, as better weather had been forecast. However, our footfall data reflect that regeneration was very pedestrian and only really got going in the last few days of the month. Most noteworthy of all though is the poor showing at Easter and that is clearly reflected in the RTI in both March and April. 2013 will be remembered by retailers as ‘the year that Easter failed to deliver footfall to UK stores’.”

“It’s certainly been a jittery start to the year,” continues Denison, “with some retailers reporting double-digit sales growth and others double-digit decline. Sales and footfall trends are confounding each other, and generally national Key Performance Indicators offer confusing reading. They suggest that we have reached the bottom, but the bottom is not flat it is corrugated, paraphrasing Sir Martin Sorrell. Besides the sunshine having a positive impact, the other factor that will make all the difference is some stability in the statistics.

“Their stability should create growth, helping to soothe the hearts and minds of consumers. It is the relentless state of instability that has proved to be so damaging, particularly over the last 12 months. Many retailers are becoming increasingly buoyant about how they are set for the future. More consistency in the upticks and more positivity reported should breathe some extra confidence into the economy and give belief to consumers that they might be able to afford to shop and spend that little bit more. Let’s hope the reported rise in GDP for quarter one will be the start of that path to stability and put a spring in the step of shoppers.”

For media enquiries, contact:

Glen Goldsmith
2thefore
Tel: +44 (0)1483 811 234 / 07812 766 338
email: [email protected]

About Ipsos Retail Performance

Ipsos Retail Performance provides footfall monitoring solutions, shopper tracking systems and in-store behavioural research to retailers worldwide. Its core products – Shopper Count, Shopper Interact and Shopper Engage – scientifically measure all aspects of a shopper experience from store entry to exit. It supplies national and international retailers with essential business metrics to drive accountability and performance improvement.

Ipsos Retail Performance is home to the Retail Traffic Index series, which for over 10 years has been the industry’s leading tracker of national, regional and sector retail footfall trends. It is also co-founder of the KPMG/Ipsos Retail Think Tank, offering thought leadership on the state of retail health and the future of retailing.

More information on Ipsos Retail Performance can be found at
www.ipsos-retailperformance.com

For general information relating to Ipsos Retail Performance, email [email protected]

Ipsos Retail Performance Limited is registered in England and Wales under number 3552625 with its registered address at Minerva House, 5 Montague Close, London, SE1 9AY, UK. Ipsos Retail Performance is a wholly owned subsidiary of Ipsos.

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Research from elephant.co.uk reveals levels of child car sickness

Sunday, May 5th, 2013

New research from elephant.co.uk has found nearly two thirds of parents have a child who suffers from car sickness,* and parents with car sick kids who are planning a long journey should be prepared to hear the words “I feel sick” after just 22 minutes.

The car insurance specialists surveyed 2,000 parents whose children suffer from car sickness, discovering over half (54%) say illness is most commonly caused by simply being in a moving car. Nearly one in three (30%) say reading in the car triggers car sickness and a quarter (26%) say being in a hot car is the main cause.

The research found that over half (54%) of parents say car sickness is most commonly caused by simply being in a moving car. Nearly one in three (30%) say reading in the car triggers car sickness and a quarter (26%) say being in a hot car is the main cause.

On average children manage to get 22 minutes into a car journey before the symptoms start, but most parents (66%) make sure they’re prepared by packing plastic bags just in case. However, having a car sick child impacts on some families so much that two fifths (41%) avoid long journeys altogether.

Brian Martin, elephant.co.uk managing director, commented: “Car journeys with children can be challenging at the best of times, but when you add in the complication of car sickness, they can become even more stressful for parents and children alike.

“Parents react in differing ways to their child’s sickness according to our study. The majority are sympathetic when their child feels unwell, but 17% get impatient as it happens so often and one in ten argue with their children, which surely can’t make them feel any better.”

Parents were also asked what they did to deal with car sickness in their children. Opening the windows and getting air circulating around the car was found to be the best way to alleviate the symptoms, with nearly three fifths (58%) saying it works. Almost a third (32%) of those polled said travel sickness medicine works, followed by getting their child to sit in the front (29%).

However getting them to wear an acupressure wristband (9%), getting them to sit in the middle seat (7%) and the old wives’ tale of sitting on brown paper (2%) were found to be the least likely to work according to the parents quizzed.

It also appears the queasy feeling when travelling runs in the family as 57% of parents with car sick kids suffered themselves as a child. And it looks like bad news for their children, as three quarters who suffered as a child still experience symptoms as an adult.

-Ends-

Notes for Editors:
*Out of 4,077 parents surveyed by OnePoll for elephant.co.uk, 61.49% have at least one child that suffers from car sickness. OnePoll then surveyed 2,000 of these parents whose children suffer from car sickness for the main survey, for elephant.co.uk.

About elephant.co.uk:
elephant.co.uk was launched in August 2000. elephant.co.uk is a trading name of EUI Limited and is part of the Admiral Group plc. which also includes Admiral Car Insurance.

elephant.co.uk specialises in providing car insurance online. elephant.co.uk targets 17-35 year-olds living in cities, who traditionally pay higher premiums for car insurance.

elephant.co.uk writes its motor insurance business to a consortium of insurers, these being:
a. Admiral Insurance Company Ltd
b. Admiral Insurance (Gibraltar) Limited
c. Great Lakes Reinsurance (UK) plc

The Admiral Group employs over 4,900 people in the UK and has over 3 million customers and was named the best large place to work in the UK by the Great Place to Work Institute in 2012. Follow Admiral Group on twitter: www.twitter.com/AdmiralGroup.

PR Contact:
James Carnduff
Capital Tower
Greyfriars Road
Cardiff
CF10 3AZ
029 2043 4232
http://www.elephant.co.uk/

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PROTECT CUSTOMERS FROM CAR THIEVES WHO FAVOUR MERCEDES-BENZ

Friday, May 3rd, 2013

TRACKER 2012 Recovery figures Highlights Opportunities for Dealers

Latest figures from stolen vehicle recovery (SVR) expert, TRACKER, reveals that last year the company recovered over £2million worth of Mercedes-Benz. In total over £12.5 million worth of cars were recovered by TRACKER in 2012, highlighting the opportunity for dealers to add value to their customer proposition and boost profitability by providing peace of mind in the form of SVR units.

Mercedes is a very desirable make and is favoured with the rich and famous. Only recently Made in Chelsea celebrity Millie Mackintosh opted to purchase a SLK-Class Coupé, joining her fiancé Professor Green who already owns a SLS-Class. With the SLK coming out as the top favorite model for thieves to steal and an on the road price tag of around £30k, fitting a TRACKER will give car owners the ultimate reassurance should the worse happen.

Stuart Chapman, Police Relationships Manager for TRACKER explains, “The theft of vehicles has become much more sophisticated and in some instances brutal, as criminals find more ways to steal desirable, high-end cars. In turn, we are seeing that vehicle owners are looking at every way they can to protect their pride and joy, and if a dealer can offer them a way to, it can only serve to strengthen the customer relationship and keep them coming back.”

TRACKER believes that profit generators that don’t require a wholesale revolution in the sales process are the foundation for a successful dealership, but that dealers are not seeing SVR solutions as means to increase revenue. Dealers can truly differentiate themselves from competitors, offering real value, and TRACKER is urging dealers to extend their offering to include SVR solutions alongside warranty, paint-protection and other aftersales products.

Installing a TRACKER significantly increases the chances of a stolen vehicle being recovered and returned to its owner. Over 95% of cars fitted with a TRACKER device are successfully located and returned to owners, usually within 24 hours.

TRACKER is the ONLY stolen vehicle recovery system operated by all Police Forces across the UK. The SVR systems work like an electronic homing device. A covert transmitter is hidden in one of several dozen places around the vehicle. There is no visible aerial, so the thief won’t even know it’s there. Unlike other car tracking solutions, the device works even if the vehicle is hidden in a garage or shipping container.

Top 6 Models Recovered by TRACKER in 2012
• Mercedes-Benz SLK
• Mercedes-Benz ML
• Mercedes-Benz C Class
• Mercedes-Benz CLS
• Mercedes-Benz E Class

For TRACKER product and pricing information please visit www.TRACKER.co.uk
Or follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/TRACKER_UK

Notes to Editors
• Celebrating 20 years in business, TRACKER has been leading the way in the field of vehicle tracking and telematics since 1993. With over a million market leading security and award winning fleet management systems fitted to vehicles including passenger cars, motorcycles, HGV’s, LCV’s and plant and construction equipment, TRACKER is still leading the way.

• TRACKER is a wholly owned subsidiary of Direct Line Insurance Group Plc.

• TRACKER with the police has to date recovered over £471 million worth of stolen vehicles and continues to recover on average £1 million worth of stolen vehicles each month.

• With over a million systems installed to date, its award-winning products ensure its customers have complete peace of mind.

For further press information please contact Justine Hoadley, Cecile Stearn, Dominic Dennis or Arran Fano at HSL, Churcham House, 1 Bridgeman Road, Teddington, Middlesex TW11 9AJ. Telephone: 020 8977 9132. Email: [email protected]

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Andy Dick Eliminated from Dancing With the Stars: I Tried Not to Cry

Wednesday, May 1st, 2013

Andy Dick and Sharna Burgess left Dancing With the Stars on a sad note. The 47-year-old comedian and his 27-year-old professional dance partner were eliminated during week seven of the competition on Tuesday, Apr. 30, after feeling “berated” by the judges.

“We’re sad . . . but it’s okay,” Dick told reporters after being sent home. “We are proud of what we did here.”

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Though he’s proud of what he’s accomplished on the ABC reality dance competition show, Dick did get emotional after learning he was eliminated.

How did he fight back tears? “By clenching my jaw! If it starts going it won’t stop, so I was fighting it!” he said. “We wanted one more week. Deep down we wanted one more week. And that’s how it’s been every week . . . ‘One more week, one more week!’”

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Their exit comes after a controversial judging round during performance night on Apr. 29. The former News Radio actor and Burgess felt they weren’t receiving constructive criticism from the judges.

“Say something about dance because last time I checked, this was a dance show,” Burgess argued to reporters on Apr. 29. “We want to know how to get better . . . It’s upsetting because I hate to see Andy berated week to week.”

But Dick is grateful for how far he made it into the competition. “We did make it really far. I keep that in mind,” he said. “Seven weeks! That’s a long time — for an idiot like me.”

PHOTOS: Incredible DWTS body makeovers

The actor, who has battled substance abuse and troubles with the law in the past, also says the show brought him closer to his 15-year-old daughter Meg.

“We’ve had our ups and down times, so the dance I did for her was probably the best gift I’ll ever give to us — not just her, but to me,” the single dad said of dedicating his Viennese waltz to her. (Dick is also dad to son Jacob, 19, and Lucas, 25.)

Will Dick keep on dancing for his little girl?

“If you’re asking will I dance for her again, I don’t know about that!” he joked. “But you have to dance at her wedding, right? Maybe I’ll reprise that and bring Sharna in to choreograph it!”

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Bookmakers Favour A Solo Singer To Win Britain’s Got Talent Despite Circus PR From Cowell

Sunday, April 21st, 2013

The seventh series of Britain’s Got Talent got underway on Saturday night with Simon Cowell staking his claim to uncover the nation’s hidden nuggets of entertainment gold so far undiscovered by other Reality TV talent shows. The launch was preceded by an expensive and lavish PR campaign focusing on the more quirky and novelty areas of the Variety genre, generating a sense of fun and carnival that has not been evident in the past.

A series of trailers depicted the four judges, Simon Cowell, Alesha Dixon, Amanda Holden and David Walliams as circus acts, from contortionists to trapeze artists to knife throwers . This theme was pursued by a major stunt in London’s Covent Garden, where a passing pedestrian hit a large red buzzer, resembling the ones used on the show, only to initiate a circus style flash mob event across the plaza. Whilst one of last year’s finalists, tenor Jonathan Antoine was featured, it was the acrobats, dancers and fire eaters that took centre stage.

There has certainly been a shift in the branding of the programme, which in many ways seems to have been generated by David Walliams’ presence and yet despite this, the bookmakers still favour a solo singer as the most likely winning act. Walliams’ character has certainly sand papered the usually severe Simon Cowell personna, coaxing the media magnate in an almost flirtatious way out of his hard nosed skin, and he now seems open and even enthusiastic about non-singing talent and even dog acts. Last year’s winners, Ashleigh and her dog Pudsey were volubly supported by Cowell and it seeems that Walliams’ presence has given him license to support the wacky and the quirky even more.

The X Factor is of course the main vehicle on British TV for discovering singing talent, although now it is being challenged by The Voice on BBC1, and Cowell may feel that the country has had enough of vocalists and is ready for something fresh. Singers often have an advantage in the auditions because if they are good they can build an immediate one to one rapport with the audience, that is not as easily achieved by a group. The lonely figure of a soloist on a large stage draws an audience in from the outset, if the voice is then good and the emotion raw, success is sure to follow. Susan Boyle famously did just this in her audition and became a global phenomenon, although it is worth remembering that she did not actually win the show.

Susan Boyle was pipped to the post by dance troop, Diversity and in fact there have only been three winning soloists in the past six years. Whilst the bookmakers are still favouring a solo singing act to win this year, the first show was dominated by shadow play dance group, Attraction, who mesmerized both the judges and the audience. With the money that has been spent on the launch, this fact is sure to please Mr Cowell, although the fact that they are Hungarian is sure to create a whole new set of thorny problems.

Apart from Attraction, the other act to grab the headlines was Alice Fedeham….. a solo singer! The question is will the bookmakers be proved right or will Simon Cowell find the novelty act he is seeking?

To follow this unravelling drama for this prime time show and all the other Reality TV shows go to http://www.whollwin.com or follow us on Twitter @whollwin.

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