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Jamie Foxx circling role of major villain for 'The Amazing Spider-Man 2'

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Image Credit: Paul Archuleta/FilmMagic.com In a conceivably  shocking development*, Jamie Foxx is in preliminary negotiations to take on the role of the villain Electro in  The Amazing Spider-Man 2 , EW has confirmed. “Dressed up as Electro for Halloween last night,” Foxx tweeted out this afternoon . “Costume fits well.” (*Apologies for the pun.) Variety  first broke the news. In the Marvel comics, Maxwell “Max” Dillon is an engineer who gains the ability to control electricity after he’s struck by lightning, and becomes the supervillain Electro.  The character hasn’t traditionally been African American, though snagging the Oscar-winning Foxx for the role would be in keeping with other recent color-blind casting for super hero films, like Laurence Fishburne as Perry White in  Man of Steel , and Idris Elba as Heimdall in  Thor . (In Marvel’s alternate “Ultimate” universe, Spidey himself is now a mixed-race kid named Miles Morales .) Foxx would...

The Arnold's Blueprint

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This Video Show You The Real Life Of Mr.Arnold The Man Of  Great Body Builder ,Great Tips And Great Achiever  He Work Out And In the End He Win ...................

'Iron Man 3' Trailer Teaches Lessons In Villainy

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The first lesson to learn from the  "Iron Man 3" trailer ? There are no heroes — except for Tony Stark. After  a long day  of  teasing  yesterday, the first official "Iron Man 3" trailer is now online, and it's filled with everything you could possibly want out of an adventure starring the armored Avenger. There's romance, there's jokes, there's fires of all kinds to put out — and there's a certain ring-wearing mischief maker  with a serious distaste for billionaire philanthropists. Check out the trailer below! "Iron Man 3" pits brash-but-brilliant industrialist Tony Stark/Iron Man against an enemy whose reach knows no bounds. When Stark finds his personal world destroyed at his enemy's hands, he embarks on a harrowing quest to find those responsible. This journey, at every turn, will test his mettle. With his back against the wall, Stark is left to survive by his own devices, relying on his ingenuity and inst...

Adele - He Won't Go

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I will Say Perfect !!

The new iPad mini reveals that Tim Cook’s Apple is a better company than the one Steve Jobs left behind.

Every fall, Apple holds a big event to show off its holiday lineup of gadgets. This year, it held two big events. That pretty much sums up the most important thing about Apple in 2012. The company has long been obsessively focused on making a few devices really well. Now it’s making a lot more than a few devices. Before CEO Tim Cook took the stage in San Jose, Calif., this morning, he had already given the world a whole bunch of new stuff in 2012: a new iPhone, a passel of iPods, an iPad with a high-definition display , and a  15-inch MacBook Pro with an even better display . Everyone guessed Cook would unveil a smaller iPad this morning, and they were right. But in addition to the  iPad mini , there was also a  13-inch MacBook Pro  with a high-def screen and a  stunning new iMac desktop computer  that’s almost comically thin. Releasing so many new things in a single year marks a major philosophical shift for Apple. When Steve Jobs returned to th...

What all Objects abouts

Always Think of Objects in java as what Object Know and what that Object Does For example: Object name Car Object Know : --------------- carName; carColor; ----------------------------------- Object Does; ..................... carAccelerate(); carLights() turnWeel();

The best big cities for jobs in the U.S.

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Throughout the brutal recession, one metropolitan area floated serenely above the carnage: Washington, D.C.  Buoyed by government spending, the local economy expanded 17% from 2007 to 2012. But for the first time in four years, the capital region has fallen out of the top 15 big cities in our annual survey of the best places for jobs, dropping to 16th place from fifth last year. It’s a symptom of a significant and welcome shift in the weak U.S. economic recovery: employment growth has moved away from the public sector to private businesses. In 2011, for the first time since before the recession, growth in private-sector employment outstripped the public sector. More than half (231) of the 398 metro areas we surveyed for our annual study of employment trends registered declines in government jobs, with public-sector employment dropping 0.9 percent overall. Meanwhile, private-sector employment expanded 1.4 percent. Instead of government, the big drivers of growth now appear to...