الجمعة، 31 يوليو 2020

نجوى ابراهيم

نجوى ابراهيم

نجوى إبراهيم (28 أبريل 1946 -)، ممثلة ومذيعة مصرية.
حصلت علي شهادة الثانوية العامة المصرية من مدرسة مصر الجديدة الثانوية بنات. بدأت كمذيعة في التلفزيون العربي في القاهرة عام 1965. كانت متزوجة من مروان كنفاني، الأخ الشقيق للأديب الفلسطيني غسان كنفاني.

أولت العمل الإعلامي التليفزيوني اهتماما أكبر فعملت في التليفزيون المصري في التليفزيون العربي، قدمت مجموعة من البرامج التليفزيونية منها"6/6"، "صباح الخير يا مصر"، "اخترنا لك" و"فكر ثواني واكسب دقايق" الذي استمر ونال نجاحا لأكثر من خمس سنوات متتالية. أهم أعمالها هما برنامجي "صباح الخير" و"مساء الخير" اللذان قدمتهما مع "بقلظ" ولذلك يعرفها المصريون وأطفال جيل الثمانينات وأوائل التسعينات باسم "ماما نجوى".

وفي عام 1998 تولت رئاسة قناة النيل للاسرة والطفل، ثم عملت لاحقاً في قناة دريم كما رفضت عرضا من قناة روتانا للعمل بدلا من هالة سرحان ، ومن برامجها الشهيرة "فرح كليب" و"الحياة"، وتعمل حالياً في برنامج "بيت العائلة" على قناة النهار.
المراجع

امل حجازي

امل حجازي

أمل حجازي (20 فبراير 1977 -)، مغنية، وعارضة أزياء لبنانية معتزلة.

ولدت في بيروت، لأسرة مسلمة سنية من بلدة كفرفيلا، في جنوب لبنان، لديها خمسة أخوة: إبراهيم، ويوسف، ومصطفى، وأحمد، ومحمود. توفي والدها في العاشرة من عمرها؛ فعكفت والدتها نادية الكيلاني على تربيتها هي وإخوتها، وكونَّت أسرة كبيرة  و حصلت أمل على بكالوريوس الهندسة المعماريّة عام 2001. ورغم أنها عاشت في فرنسا لمُدة عشر سنوات بسبب ويلات الحرب الأهلية اللبنانية، إلا أنها فضلت اللغة العربية، واعتبرتها الأصل
ارتبطت أمل قبل زواجها بقصة حب مع شربل ضومط وهو أحد مدراء قسم إدارة أعمال الفنانين في "روتانا"، ولكن هذه العلاقة لم تتكلل بالزواج لأن والدتها لم تكن راضية عن هذا الزواج بسبب اختلاف ديانتها معه. تزوجت عام 2008 من رجل الأعمال اللبناني "محمد البسام" وقد التقت به في محل مجوهرات تعددت لقاءاتهم، وعندما اكتشفت أنهما على تفاهم حول كل المواضيع قررا كتب الكتاب وإعلان خطوبتنا في شكل رسمي ثم الزواج لم يتدخل في حياتها الفنية، بل دعمها ووقف إلى جانبها. رزقت منه بطفلين كريم عام 2009 وبعد ولادة إبنها كريم إفتتحت امل حجازي مطعماً في منطقة الصيفي في بيروت وما لبثت أن اقفلته بعد عام واحد ولارين عام 2012، وهي تسكن معه في منطقة الحازمية في جبل لبنان.
مراجع

الخميس، 30 يوليو 2020

Joe Kelly

Joe Kelly

Joseph William Kelly Jr. (born June 9, 1988) is an American professional baseball pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers of Major League Baseball (MLB). He has served as both a starter as well as a reliever. Listed at 6 feet 1 inch (1.85 m) and 190 pounds (86 kg), Kelly throws and bats right-handed. The St. Louis Cardinals drafted Kelly in the third round of the 2009 MLB draft. He pitched for the Cardinals and the Boston Red Sox before joining the Dodgers in 2019.

Kelly has gained publicity for his comical repertoire, such as dancing in the outfield during practice, disguising himself while interviewing the unwitting rapper Nelly, and engaging in a lengthy staredown with Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Scott Van Slyke before a 2013 National League Championship Series game.
Kelly was born in Anaheim, California,  and attended Corona High School in Corona, California. After high school, he attended the University of California, Riverside (UCR), and played college baseball for the Highlanders team.  An outfielder in high school, he converted to pitcher in college and served as the closer.  He was named Big West Conference Pitcher of the Year in 2007 as a freshman.  After his sophomore season in 2008, he played collegiate summer baseball for the Yarmouth–Dennis Red Sox of the Cape Cod Baseball League.  In 2009, Kelly posted a 5.65 earned run average (ERA) with a 1–1 win-loss record. Kelly set a Highlanders record with 24 career saves and was named an All-American. His final career stats at UCR included a 4.65 ERA and an 8–11 record in 42 career games.
Reference

Nate Pearson

Nate Pearson

Nathan Alexander Pearson (born August 20, 1996), nicknamed "Big Nate", is an American professional baseball pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays of Major League Baseball (MLB). He is considered the top prospect in the Blue Jays organization by MLB,[1] and 8th overall on the 2020 Top 100 MLB prospects list. 
Pearson attended Bishop McLaughlin Catholic High School in Spring Hill, Florida. As a senior he went 9–1 with a 1.75 earned run average (ERA) and 117 strikeouts and hit .318 with nine home runs and 30 runs batted in (RBI). After graduating, Pearson attended Florida International University (FIU) where he played college baseball for the FIU Panthers. He made 19 appearances with one start, going 1–1 with a 2.70 ERA and 33 strikeouts. After one year at FIU, he transferred to the College of Central Florida.[4] In his first year at Central Florida, he had a 1.56 ERA and 118 strikeouts and was named the JUCO Pitcher of the Year by Perfect Game. 
Reference

Canucks

Canucks

The Vancouver Canucks are a professional ice hockey team based in Vancouver. They compete in the National Hockey League (NHL) as a member of the Pacific Division of the Western Conference. The Canucks play their home games at Rogers Arena, formerly known as General Motors Place, which has an official capacity of 18,910. Travis Green is the head coach and Jim Benning is the general manager.

The Canucks joined the league in 1970 as an expansion team along with the Buffalo Sabres. In its NHL history, the team has advanced to the Stanley Cup Finals three times, losing to the New York Islanders in 1982, the New York Rangers in 1994 and the Boston Bruins in 2011. They have won the Presidents' Trophy in back-to-back seasons as the team with the league's best regular season record in the 2010–11 and 2011–12 seasons. They won three division titles as a member of the Smythe Division from 1974 to 1993, and seven titles as a member of the Northwest Division from 1998 to 2013. The Canucks, along with fellow expansion team, the Buffalo Sabres, are the two oldest teams to have never won the Stanley Cup. 

The Canucks have retired six players' jerseys in their history—Pavel Bure (10), Stan Smyl (12), Trevor Linden (16), Markus Naslund (19), Daniel Sedin (22) and Henrik Sedin (33); all but Bure and Daniel Sedin have served as team captain. Smyl has the distinction of being the only Canuck to have his jersey number retired at their former arena, the Pacific Coliseum.
The first professional ice hockey team based in Vancouver were the Vancouver Millionaires, formed by Frank and Lester Patrick. Established in 1911, the Millionaires were one of three teams in the new Pacific Coast Hockey Association. To accommodate the Millionaires, the Patrick brothers directed the building of the Denman Arena, which was known at the time as the world's largest artificial ice rink.  The arena was later destroyed in a fire in 1936. The Millionaires played for the Stanley Cup five times, winning over the Ottawa Senators in 1915 on home ice.  It marked the first time the Stanley Cup was won by a West Coast team in the trophy's history.  Absorbed by the Western Canada Hockey League in 1924, the team continued operations until folding at the end of the 1925–26 WHL season.

From 1926 to 1970, Vancouver was home to only minor league teams. Most notably the present-day Canucks' minor league predecessor (also known as the Vancouver Canucks) played from 1945 to 1970 in the Pacific Coast Hockey League and the Western Hockey League.
Reference

Tyler Perry

Tyler Perry

Tyler Perry (born Emmitt Perry Jr.; September 13, 1969)  is an American actor, writer, producer, comedian and director. In 2011, Forbes listed him as the highest-paid man in entertainment, earning US$130 million between May 2010 and May 2011. 
Perry created and performs the Madea character, a tough elderly woman.  Perry's films vary in style from orthodox filmmaking techniques to filmed productions of live stage plays. Many of Perry's stage-play films have been subsequently adapted as films.

Perry wrote and produced many stage plays during the 1990s and early 2000s. Perry has developed several television series, most notably Tyler Perry's House of Payne, which ran for eight seasons on TBS from June 21, 2006, to August 10, 2012. On October 2, 2012, Perry struck an exclusive multi-year partnership with Oprah Winfrey and her Oprah Winfrey Network. The partnership was largely for the sake of bringing scripted television to OWN, based on Perry's previous success in this area.  Perry has created multiple scripted series for the network, The Haves and the Have Nots being its most successful. The Haves and the Have Nots has given OWN its highest ratings to date as of 2014,  with the series also referred to as "one of OWN's biggest success stories with its weekly dose of soapy fun, filled with the typical betrayals, affairs, and manipulations." 

Perry has additionally acted in films not directed or produced by himself, including as Admiral Barnett in Star Trek (2009), the titular character in Alex Cross (2012), Tanner Bolt in Gone Girl (2014), Baxter Stockman in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Out of the Shadows (2016) and Colin Powell in Vice (2018).
Perry was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, as Emmitt Perry Jr., the son of Willie Maxine Perry (née Campbell) and Emmitt Perry Sr., a carpenter.  He has three siblings. Perry once said his father's answer to everything was to "beat it out of you". As a child, Perry once went so far as to attempt suicide in an effort to escape his father's beatings. In contrast to his father, his mother took him to church each week, where he sensed a certain refuge and contentment.  At age 16, he had his first name legally changed from Emmitt to Tyler in an effort to distance himself from his father. 

Many years later, after seeing the film Precious, Perry was moved to reveal for the first time that he had been molested by a friend's mother at age 10;  he was also molested by three men prior to this, and later learned his own father had molested his friend.  A DNA test taken by Perry indicated that Emmitt Sr. was not Perry's biological father. 

While Perry did not complete high school, he earned a GED.  In his early 20s, watching an episode of The Oprah Winfrey Show, he heard someone describe the sometimes therapeutic effect the act of writing can have, enabling the author to work out his or her own problems. This comment inspired him to apply himself to a career in writing. He soon started writing a series of letters to himself, which became the basis for the musical I Know I've Been Changed. 
Reference

Joey Bosa

Joey Bosa

Joseph Anthony Bosa (born July 11, 1995) is an American football defensive end for the Los Angeles Chargers of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Ohio State, and was selected by the Chargers third overall in the 2016 NFL Draft. He was named AP NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year in 2016.
Bosa attended St. Thomas Aquinas High School in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where he played high school football for the Raiders.  He was rated by Rivals.com as a four-star recruit and was ranked as the fourth best defensive end in his class.   Bosa committed to play college football at Ohio State University in April 2012
As a true freshman in 2013, Bosa started 10 of 14 games, recording 44 tackles and 7.5 sacks.  He was named a freshman All-American by the Sporting News and College Football News.  In 2014, Bosa was named a Unanimous First Team All-American, becoming the 27th Buckeye in 84 years to do so. He finished his sophomore year with 13.5 sacks on 55 tackles.  He earned Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year. 
On July 30, 2015, it was announced that Bosa would be suspended from the first game of the 2015 season with three other Ohio State football players for undisclosed reasons.   During his junior year, Bosa finished with five sacks and an interception on 47 tackles. On December 31, 2015, he announced his intentions to enter the 2016 NFL Draft. During the 2016 Fiesta Bowl against Notre Dame on January 1, 2016, Bosa was ejected in the first quarter for a targeting penalty when he made a hit on quarterback DeShone Kizer. Ohio State won the Bowl game by a score of 44–28.  After his junior season, he entered the 2016 NFL Draft. 

Bosa was a highly decorated Buckeye receiving National and Conference honors beginning his Freshman year. In 2013, Bosa was named a First Team Freshman All-American  as well as selected to the Freshman All-Big Ten First Team.  In 2014, his sophomore year, he was named Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year, Big Ten Lineman of the Year, First Team All-American, and All-Big Ten, as well as a Lombardi Award Finalist. He repeated most of the honors his Junior year, falling short of claiming the Nagurski-Woodson Defensive Player of the Year for the second time.
Reference

زياد علي

زياد علي محمد