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POSTED 2 YEARS AGO

First of all, Merry Christmas! We hope all of you who celebrate Christmas are having a happy, comfortable and memorable celebration with your family and friends. Aside from being one of the happiest days of the year, Christmas Day is also one of the busiest at the theaters. Every year, after the fun of opening presents is over, millions of people turn to the movies for a source of entertainment.

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This year, there are four main contenders at the box office on December 25: It's Complicated, Nine, Sherlock Holmes and Heath Ledger's final film, The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus.

Are you planning on heading to the theaters today or this weekend? Is going to the movies a regular occurrence on your holiday schedule?

[poll id="155"]

Here are the trailers:



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POSTED 2 YEARS AGO

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For more than 50 years, NORAD has been assisting excited children across the world in tracking Santa's annual Christmas Eve flight. Two years ago, Google partnered with NORAD to allow people to track Santa via Google Earth. Though they ran into some technical difficulties last year when Google classified Toronto as a US city, the kinks have been worked out and they are ready for action for Christmas 2009!

Here's a video about Santa's 2008 journey:



You can begin tracking Santa by clicking here on Christmas Eve! You can even count how many cookies (left by little children) Santa is eating on his journey!

While you're waiting for his flight to take off, visit his village and see what's happening with the elves at the North Pole!


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POSTED 2 YEARS AGO

Looking for a last minute Christmas gift? What could be more perfect than a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle Snuggie? Forget about those robotic hamsters everyone is gaga over - these are the "it" holiday gift this year - and half the holidays are over already!

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The above hotness can be yours at Hot Topic for just $28.

Ok, realistically, you won't be able to get your hands on this in time for the holidays - but there is always Valentine's Day. Or any day of the week. There is no time that isn't the right time for a TMNT Snuggie.

via Best Week Ever


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POSTED 2 YEARS AGO

We're pleased to welcome CW's show Life Unexpected as the newest sponsor to join us here on SocialVibe! You can check out the trailer for the show and earn an automatic 100 points for answering their poll questions, like "What kind of kid were you growing up?" and "Do you think kids should be able to legally emancipate themselves?"

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The show looks completely addicting. Check it out now to earn 100 points, and let us know what you think of the show in the comments!


   
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POSTED 2 YEARS AGO

Here's one alternate to chopping down a real tree or buying a plastic/fake- a Christmas tree made of old Mountain Dew cans. The color scheme works, and hey, it's recycling... kind of. Though drinking the soda itself is not something that does a body good, the used cans sure do make a neat looking Christmas tree.


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Three friends made this tree in Christmas of 2006 after drinking over 400 cans of Mountain Dew in three months. The construction took four days, but the tree will live on forever via Mountain Dew Tree, a website devoted to the project where you can also check out construction photos. The trunk was made from PVC pipe and the guys drilled in construction markers for the branches. Check out a video of the whole project below:


via TreeHugger


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POSTED 2 YEARS AGO

Where did the last ten years go? As far as decades go, the first of the 2000s were about as diverse as they can get. We've had ups and downs and have seen new technology introduced that would have left our minds spinning in 1990. GOOD's Maria Popova has a lengthy but to-the-point list of the past decade's most memorable moments. If you've got a minute, take a look. At the very least, it will leave you wondering what the next ten years have in store.

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2000

Y2K doesn't end the world. Instead, the dot-com bubble peaks, then bursts, wiping out $5 trillion in market value of tech companies.

The ILOVEYOU virus spreads across the world and Vermont makes it legal for same-sex couples to declare love in civil unions.

The final Peanuts comic strip is published after creator Charles Schulz dies.

The preliminary draft of the Human Genome Project is finished.

The American Legacy Foundation launches "truth," considered the most successful anti-smoking campaign in history.

Al Gore wins the Presidential election. Wait, he loses.

2001

September 11th devastates the world.

Kofi Annan wins the Nobel Peace Prize.

Wikipedia launches, forever changing the face of human knowledge.

The Netherlands becomes the first country in the world to legalize same-sex marriage.

The Prius becomes an icon of the mainstream green movement.

Apple introduces the iPod, revolutionizing music culture, and a new generation of white-earbudded youngsters takes to the streets.

The world's first self-contained artificial heart is implanted.

George Harrison dies, leaving only two living Beatles.

Halle Berry becomes the first black female actor to win a major Academy Award. She cries a lot.

2002

Ashton Kutcher inflicts trucker hats on the world.

Bush decides to fix the fact that only a fifth of high school graduates have mathematical proficiency by signing the No Child Left Behind act, a mathematical catch-22 requiring that 100 percent of schoolchildren score above the mean.

Creative Commons releases the first set of licenses, championing a new breed of copyright law for creative culture.

NASA discovers water ice on Mars.

The Queen Mother dies at the age of 101.

Norah Jones's Come Away With Me becomes the most successful jazz album in history.

American Idol debuts, unleashing a new era of reality TV celebrity.

2003

The Human Genome Project concludes, having sequenced 99 percent of the human genome to 99.99 percent accuracy.

Darfur is declared in a state of humanitarian emergency.

The Concorde makes its last commercial flight and the last Volkswagen Beetle rolls of the production line.

The United States and United Kingdom invade Iraq, beginning the most socially, politically, and culturally controversial war in history (you know, from some people's perspective).

Barry White, Johnny Cash, and Nina Simone leave music culture better than they found it.

Italian bandits pull off the biggest diamond heist in history.

Martha Stewart goes to prison, and makes a poncho.

2004

Mark Zukerberg launches Facebook from a Harvard dorm room, and later proceeds to drop out and become a billionaire.

Justin Timberlake cups Janet Jackson's wardrobe malfunction on national television.

All the cool kids have Gmail invites, and the world gets a foxy new favorite open-source browser.

Banksy walks into the Louvre and hangs a smiley-face Mona Lisa.

The Da Vinci Code takes over the world and keeps an entire industry afloat.

Accounts of Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse jab a dagger in the public eye.

The finale of Friends marks the end of a TV era.

Morgan Spurlock spends 30 days eating McDonald's food, supersizes the nation's awareness of fast food's ills.

John Kerry loses the presidential election as Michael Moore premieres Fahrenheit 9/11 at Cannes to a 20-minute standing ovation, the longest in the festival's history.

2005

Al Gore releases An Inconvenient Truth, awakening a generation to our ecological responsibility.

The United States and Australia are the only two countries not to sign the Kyoto Protocol.

Hurricane Katrina devastates New Orleans, and oil prices skyrocket.

YouTube breaks the dawn to a new age of entertainment.

Live 8 aims to make poverty history with 10 simultaneous blockbuster concerts around the world.

Lance Armstrong wins an unprecedented seventh consecutive Tour de France title before retiring.

The One Laptop Per Child program introduces the $100 laptop, offering self-empowered learning to the world's poorest children.

The Colbert Report premieres and the Pope dies (unrelated).

2006

Merriam-Webster makes Google a verb.

Michael Pollan writes a book, and gives us constructive indigestion.

Warren Buffet donates more than $30 billion, 83 percent of his wealth, to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, making it the largest charitable donation in history.

Saddam Hussein is hanged for crimes against humanity and Slobodan Milošević dies in his cell in The Hague, where he is held for the same.

Pluto is no longer a planet.

Microcredit pioneer Muhammad Yunus receives the Nobel Peace Prize.

The TED conference makes publicly available two decades of talks by the world's greatest minds.

Wii like to play.

2007

Apple introduces the iPhone and a new era of personal computing begins.

Sydney completely shuts off its lights for an hour in a political statement against climate change.

Tay Zonday covers the web in Chocolate Rain.

The first gay rights bill is brought to the House floor for a vote.

Twitter launches. No one notices.

The final book of Harry Potter becomes the fastest-selling book in history with 11 million copies sold in 24 hours.

The Writers Guild of America goes on a strike against decades of unfair compensation by studios.

Radiohead releases In Rainbows as a pay-what-you-will album download and enters the Billboard Charts at number one, making a bold case for a new music industry business model in the age of free.

2008

The price of a barrel of petroleum hits $100 for the first time. In a tragicomic bout of irony, Big Three auto execs fly private jets to Washington, D.C. to beg for taxpayer bailout funds.

Bill Gates retires, leaving Microsoft for philanthropy.

Michael Phelps wins a record-breaking eight Olympic Gold Medals in Beijing.

Heath Ledger dies, and many declare him the James Dean of our generation.

Lehman Brothers, the largest dealer in the U.S. Treasury securities market, goes bankrupt.

More than 131 million people race to the polls, the highest number in American electoral history. Hope, Change, Obama.

2009

The Large Hadron Collider tries to find the God particle.

Twitter blows up, illustrates the power of citizen journalism in Iran's presidential elections.

Obama receives the Nobel Peace Prize to a global mixed reaction.

Swine flu is declared a global pandemic.

The Charter for Compassion offers hope for a transnational, transreligious global community.

An airplane lands on the Hudson and everyone lives.

Michael Jackson's death breaks millions of hearts and, nearly, the Internet.

What do you think we'll be doing when we look back at the upcoming decade? Perhaps we'll be reading it from Mars? Maybe we'll be living underwater? Perhaps we'll be able to type using nothing but our minds by then. Oh the possibilities!


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POSTED 2 YEARS AGO

The world-renowned street artist known only as Banksy has struck again - this time with a strong message about global warming. The words "I DON'T BELIEVE IN GLOBAL WARMING" were painted in red along the Regent's Canal in North London, alongside other iconic art by the mysterious graffiti artist. Half the letters are below the water line, obviously drawing attention to rising water levels around the world as a result of climate change and melting ice caps.

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The message was discovered just as the UN Climate Conference in Copenhagen was ending last week, a meeting of world leaders that delivered less-than-satisfactory results in reaching a global climate treaty.

Banksy is arguably one of the most popular graffiti artists in the world, with the likes of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie collecting his work. He is known for emphasizing social, economic and environmental destruction. You can find his books in all the trendy book shops and Urban Outfitters, or you can just check it out here.

via BBC


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POSTED 2 YEARS AGO

The fourth film in the Shrek series is looking to be greener than ever - and it has nothing to do with the color of Shrek and Fiona's ogre skin. A trailer of Shrek Forever After shows Shrek on some kind of a time-warp journey where he finds his beloved swamp in ruins, both socially and environmentally. Could this be the main theme in the film?

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In a 2007 interview, Mike Myer's co-star Cameron Diaz (Princess Fiona), said she would love for the fourth film to emphasize the importance of preserving their environment.

    ‘That’s something I’ve been on Jeffrey’s (producer Katzenberg) ear about, that the swamp possibly could be in danger,’ she said.

Julie Andrews, who voices the Fairy Godmother, agreed, asking “What better way to get a message across than with something that’s so funny?”

Would you like to see the latest Shrek film have a "green" theme?

via ecorazzi


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