Sandra Bullock's Playdate with Camila Alves

Guess it really is possible to stay friends with your ex!

Sandra Bullock proved that there's absolutely no harsh feelings between Mathew McConaughey -- who she dated back in the '90s -- and his wife Camila Alves, when the two mothers were snapped on a playdate Wednesday afternoon at Carousel Gardens Amusement Park and Storyland in New Orleans. Clad in a hat and sunglasses, Sandra cuddled baby Louis, 2, in her arms while riding a train, seated next to Camila, who had her own hands full with Levi, 4, and Vida, 2.

Pics: The Wildest & Wackiest Celeb Baby Names

Camila is in New Orleans to visit Matthew, who's currently filming The Dallas Buyers Club, a film that's already getting tons of buzz due to Matthew's substantial weight loss in order to play AIDS patient Ron Woodroof.

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US Postal Service reports record loss of $15.9B for year








WASHINGTON — The struggling U.S. Postal Service is reporting a record annual loss of $15.9 billion.

The financial losses for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30 were nearly $11 billion more than the previous year.

The numbers cap a tumultuous financial year in which the post office was forced for the first time to default on more than $11 billion in payments to avert bankruptcy.

The mail agency for months has been urging Congress to pass an overhaul bill to let it trim letter delivery to five days a week and reduce annual payments for future retiree health care.



Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe says the large losses cannot be sustained.

The mail agency forecasts billions in additional losses next year as it awaits financial relief from Congress.










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Dream South Beach wins hotel design award




















The Dream South Beach hotel, which opened in 2011, recently won an award for design at the New York International Hotel, Motel and Restaurant Show.

The hotel at 1111 Collins Ave., formerly the Tudor House and Palmer hotels, won the Gold Key Award for Best Guest Room Design. The ceremony was held Monday.

Designers were Kelly Ogden of Elk Collective and Michael Czysz of Architropolis.








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Police: 1 dead, 2 wounded in car shot up in Miami




















One man was killed and two wounded in a shooting in Miami that left a car pocked with bullet holes.

Miami police responded to a call reporting shots fired at about 11:50 p.m. Monday at the corner of Northwest 11th Place and 43rd Street where they found a Nissan Altima with three young males inside.

The car was “shot up numerous times,” said Officer Kenia Reyes, Miami police spokeswoman.





One of the victims died on the scene and the others were transported to Jackson Memorial Hospital’s Ryder Trauma Unit. The second victim is listed in stable condition and the third was treated and released.

Several blocks away at Northwest 15th Avenue and 44th Street, police canvassed the area where they discovered gunshot casings. It’s not known yet if the incidents are related.

Reyes said the names of the victims are being withheld until the next of kin is notified.

Police have no suspects or motives so far and are asking anyone with information to call 305-471-TIPS (8477).





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Elizabeth Banks Baby News

Elizabeth Banks has welcomed her second son with husband Max Handelman.

The Hunger Games star announced the recent arrival of her baby boy, Magnus Mitchell Handelman, on her personal website. 

VIDEO: Elizabeth Banks' Parenting Approach

"As 2012 winds down and Thanksgiving approaches, I have much for which to be thankful - personal, professional, and Presidential," Elizabeth wrote. "However, nothing can match the joy and excitement my husband and I felt when we recently welcomed our second baby boy, Magnus Mitchell Handelman."

She reveals that like her other son Felix, Magnus was born via gestational surrogate, an experience that she said "has exceeded all expectations." 

VIDEO: Elizabeth & Chris Charm People Like Us

"Magnus joins older brother Felix, thus commencing a decade or more of close hand to hand combat," she wrote. "I now turn my attention to managing two boys under two. For which I am thankful. And all their poop. For which I am less thankful. Wish me luck."

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Feds bust huge shipment of knockoff luxe bags, belts at NY/NJ port, worth $20M in stores








CBP


One of the knockoff bags.



Feds bagged a multi-million-dollar shipment of imported, knockoff accessories in New Jersey, authorities announced today.

US Customs and Border Protection agents uncovered the shipment of contraband at the Port of New York/New Jersey in Elizabeth, NJ, on Oct. 11, officials said.

Agents uncovered 537 cartons of handbags, belts and wallets that had phony trademarked labels of Louis Vuitton, Gucci and Michael Kors, according to feds.

The imported merchandise was simply listed as “plastics” on shipping documents.

If the goods were real, their retail value would have been about $20 million, though authorities declined to make a knockoff street value estimate.




“These interceptions are indicative of the exceptional skill level and superior commodity expertise of our CBP Officers and Import Specialists at the Port of New York/New Jersey,” said Robert Perez, New York director of field operations for Customs and Border Protection.

“Preventing the entry of counterfeit items is crucial to protecting consumers as well as the economy of the United States.”

CBP


One of the knockoff bags.












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Job fair Thursday in Miami Lakes




















One of the region’s most popular job fairs returns to Miami-Dade County on Thursday, Nov. 15, with more than 1,000 openings available.

Job News, which sells employment ads and rents out space at job fairs to companies, will hold its last fair of 2012 at the Don Shula Hotel in Miami Lakes. The hours are 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., and both admission and parking are free. Job News says more than 35 companies will be on hand looking for workers, including the Loews Miami Beach hotel, Flightstar Aviation, Okey Dokey grocery stores, and Borden Dairy.

More information is available at jobnewsmiami.com, where participants are encouraged to register ahead of time in order to avoid check-in lines. Job News recommends bringing 30 copies of a resume to the event.





DOUGLAS HANKS





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Florida man describes being shot by police Taser as he sprayed fire with garden hose




















The fire was all around Dan Jensen.

He could see it. He could smell it. He could hear it.

It was close enough to touch. It was burning down his neighbor's house. It was creeping toward Jensen's own fence 10 feet away, and he started spraying the fire with his hose.





Police ordered Jensen to get back, and he complied.

But after a few minutes passed without firefighters arriving, a frustrated Jensen stepped forward and leaned down to grab the skinny gray garden hose once again.

That's when he heard the order.

"Hit 'em! Take him down! Tase him!"

Within moments, Jensen was on the ground. He felt electric.

"It was all over me," Jensen said. "Crawling all over me."

The 42-year-old commercial fisherman is still struggling to comprehend exactly how things deteriorated so quickly Thursday. He said he doesn't understand why police shot him with a Taser that night as he tried to battle a house fire at 3420 Beechwood Ter. N.

Jensen's family, friends and neighbors have been quick to defend him and accuse police of crossing a line.

"It was wrong," he said. "There's no way around it. … I was fighting a fire. I wasn't fighting police. I thought they were here to help me. Instead, they hurt me."

Police said they can sympathize with the stress Jensen was under. But they said he put himself and officers in danger when he refused to back down from fighting the fire.

Pinellas Park Capt. Sanfield Forseth told the Tampa Bay Times authorities could have even charged Jensen with obstruction, but decided against it.

Jensen's attorney, Heidi Imhof, said she believes authorities are trying to deflect attention from their actions that night. She called the Taser use "excessive force."

"They can't just Taser anyone," she said. "He's an unarmed person on his private property trying to fight a fire."

Imhof said the officers had other options. They could have yanked Jensen away, she said, or just turned off the water.

The agency's policy says officers must issue a warning before using a Taser, "except when such warning could provide a tactical advantage to the subject."

Imhof said her client was never warned.

Jensen said he's "disappointed" in police.

He said that when they arrived on the scene, they told him to back off and let insurance take care of it. He did for a few minutes but grew impatient and irate. He picked up the hose again because he thought firefighters weren't getting there soon enough.

Officials told the Times it took six minutes for fire fighters to respond.

"That's my home," Jensen said Monday, his voice breaking. "That's my family."





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At Mao-style conclave, China embraces Twitter age
















BEIJING (AP) — During China’s last party congress, the cadres in charge of the world’s most populous nation didn’t know a hashtag from a hyperlink. But five years on, there’s a new message from Beijing: The political transition will be microblogged.


Party officials have this fall embraced social media with unprecedented enthusiasm, hoping it can help guide public opinion and stir up excitement about the staid and scripted party meeting taking place this week in Beijing that kicks off a transition to a new, younger set of top leaders.













Dozens of the more than 2,000 party delegates, among them Chairman Mao‘s grandson, are using social media to wax rhapsodic about China’s rise and Party General Secretary Hu Jintao’s live 90-minute reading of highlights from this year’s party work report. Typical posts include pictures of grinning delegates on Tiananmen Square and mobile snapshots of poinsettia arrangements and chandeliers from inside the Great Hall of the People, where the congress is meeting.


Guo Mingyi, a miner from the frigid northeast who was making his debut as a party delegate, tweeted: “On this land with great affections, how can I not sing, how can I not tear up, I love this piece of land, the people and the great Chinese Communist Party!”


State media also are posting microblog interviews with officials and shooting out updates about the congress schedule via Twitter-like accounts.


But apart from being a tool to deliver Beijing’s approved policy messages to the mobile phones of ordinary Chinese, the Internet is a two-way street that’s also being used by the public to poke fun at and critique the propaganda. Online commentators have compared the gushy crying and clapping of some delegates over Hu’s speech to North Korean style mass hysteria.


Responding to state media report about how a female delegate, Li Jian, cried five times at Hu’s work report, a Sina microblog user writing under the name ‘Buying Soysauce’ wrote: “I sobbed uncontrollably too, at the thought that these people were my compatriots.”


Wang Keqin, the assistant to the editor in chief of Beijing’s Economic Observer magazine, wrote about the tears of another delegate, He Guiqin: “It’s back to North Korea overnight!”


Other critics have dredged up old headlines from 1987 about the scourge of bribe-seeking and posted them online to highlight how little party rhetoric, and party problems, have changed despite major social change over the last three decades.


The clash of ideas underscores just how important the Internet has become in China’s campaign to guide public opinion — a major shift from just a few years ago.


At the last party conclave in October 2007, Twitter was a little over a year old and hashtags had only just been introduced. China’s leading homegrown Twitter-like microblog service, Sina Weibo, was still two years from launch.


But as elsewhere, China’s Internet population has exploded over the last five years, jumping from 170 million to more than 500 million today. Social media has boomed with it and now plays a huge part in everyday Chinese life, particularly for urban residents who use it to find restaurants, jobs and mates.


Beijing’s initial reaction to social media was to block and censor, to limit conversations by banning access to Twitter and Facebook and to limit mention of anything considered sensitive or destabilizing with keyword filters. Though authorities still use those tactics, the government is increasingly proactive and working to wrest control of the online conversation by flooding the zone with its own content.


David Bandurski, a researcher with the China Media Project at Hong Kong University, says Chinese officials have learned that simply banning or blocking reports is no longer effective in the porous Internet sphere and that stifling information can backfire by fanning more interest in scandals and crises and sparking online rumors.


“You can’t just stuff the genie back into the bottle,” said Bandurski. “You have also to channel public opinion … officially, they are seeing social media as the best way to send out their authoritative information and kind of drive the agenda.”


But the government remains yoked to its party-ese, which can seem hopelessly out of date in the Twitter age.


A dispatch on the trend by the official Xinhua News Agency gives a hint to the flavor of Beijing’s rhetoric.


“The Internet has been unprecedentedly embedded into the ongoing National Congress of the Communist Party of China,” the news agency trumpeted over the weekend. “Not only can contents on the Internet be found in the congress report, but online media practitioners are attending the congress in person.”


On Saturday, Chairman Mao’s grandson Mao Xinyu tweeted this to his 105,943 followers on Renmin Weibo, the microblog of the official party paper, the People’s Daily: “Mao Zedong thought will always be the guiding ideology of the party.”


It got 155 retweets, a mediocre showing in China‘s lively web sphere.


___


Follow Alexa Olesen on Twitter: http://twitter.com/alobeijing


Social Media News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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Cheryl Burke on Why She'd Be a Good 'Bachelorette'

Cheryl Burke has been heating up the dance floor as a fan favorite for years on Dancing with the Stars and now explains why she'd be eager to join another popular ABC reality show, The Bachelorette.

Speaking to ET after last night's Dancing with the Stars episode, Burke, 28, confirmed that she's already been in talks with producers of The Bachelorette, but said that "nothing has been set in stone" yet. 

VIDEO: DWTS: All-Stars Tackle Week Eight Rehearsals

"If they offer it to me, why not," she said. "I mean I've been so unlucky with love, and finding my own man. I've just been bad picking on my own. So I'm just thinking, why not have someone else do it for me?" The star -- who is currently paired on DWTS with Emmitt Smith -- added that she's been "married to her job" for too long and now wants to focus more on her personal life.

We also spoke backstage with Kirstie Alley, who revealed what it was like dancing the paso doble with her regular partner Maksim Chmerkovskiy, as well as pro dancer Tristan McManus. "I mean, I've never danced with two guys... I've never done anything with two guys." She added: "And if I had, it would have been in my book, but it isn't."

VIDEO: Melissa Emotional Over Brooke's Cancer Reveal

Watch the video for more post-show interviews with Melissa Rycroft, Apolo Anton Ohno and Shawn Johnson, plus Derek Hough gives an update on his lagging neck injury. 

RELATED: DWTS Pro Derek Hough Will Need Surgery

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