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Top 10 Baby Names of 2012

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Top 10 Baby Names of 2012 Patch Hingham, MA --

*
Top 10 Girl Names of 2012*

1. Sophia

2. Emma

3. Isabella

4. Olivia

5. Ava

6. Emily

7. Abigail

8. Mia

9. Madison

10. Elizabeth

___

*Top 10 Boy Names of 2012*

1. Jacob

2. Mason

3. Ethan

4. Noah

5. William

6. Liam

7. Jayden

8. Michael

9. Alexander

10. Aiden

___

*Fastest-Rising Baby Names for Girls in 2012*

1. Arya

2. Perla

3. Catalina

4. Elisa

5. Raelynn

6. Rosalie

7. Haven

8. Raelyn

9. Briella

10. Marilyn

___

*Fastest-Rising Names for Boys in 2012*

1. Major

2. Gael

3. Jase

4. Messiah

5. Brantley

6. Iker

7. King

8. Rory

9. Ari

10. Maverick

___

Source: Social Security Administration Reported by Patch 5 hours ago.

WATCH: Olivia Shares Meryl Streep's Funny English Teeth' Boob

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Olivia Colman, star of 'Broadchurch' and the upcoming 'The Suspicions of Mr Whicher' (Sunday evening on ITV), revealed to Graham Norton this week the embarrassing story of what happened when Meryl Streep mistook Colman's teeth for fake ones.

*WATCH ABOVE for the full story...*

This comes the same week as Colman revealed a BAFTA dress disaster. Let's hope she has more luck on Sunday evening's red carpet when she appears at the BAFTA TV Awards, where she is nominated in two leading categories. Reported by Huffington Post 6 hours ago.

Newtown panel votes for Sandy Hook school to be torn down and rebuilt

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School Building Task Force endorses $57m plan to replace school where 20 children and six adults were killed

A panel of local officials has voted unanimously to tear down Sandy Hook elementary school – the site of a school shooting in which 20 children and six educators were killed – but rebuild on the site. Plans to erect a new school on the exact same spot have been welcomed by some parents in the town as a powerful statement that the community has not been broken by the tragedy.

"I think our message should be at that site that love can win over fear," said Steve Uhde, whose son is a Sandy Hook second-grader. Another Sandy Hook parent, Peter Barresi, said he was worried that if a new school were to be built at a different location: "We didn't just lose 20 children and six adults, we're letting him [the gunman, Adam Lanza] take the building too." Barresi's son attends the first grade and was on the other side of the school from where the shootings happened.

The vote was taken on Friday night by a task force of 28 local elected officials, called the Sandy Hook School Building Task Force. The result was unanimous and will now go to the local school board. It will ultimately have to be approved by residents at a referendum. The panel's recommendation pleased Daniel Krauss, whose daughter is a second-grader.

"It's been a place for learning, for kids to grow up and it's going to go back to that," he said, after attending the meeting at the Newtown Municipal Center.

The 430 surviving students are now attending a renovated school, renamed Sandy Hook Elementary School, in the neighboring town of Monroe. They are expected to remain there until a new school is built in Newtown. The task force had narrowed a list of choices to renovating or rebuilding on the school site or building a new school on property down the street. A study found that building a new school on the existing site would cost $57m. If all goes well, officials said construction could begin in the spring of next year and the new building could open in January 2016.

Plans under consideration call for a building with a shape that resembles homes and barns built in the town in the 1700s and 1800s and 26 glass cupolas on the roof with spires "pointed towards heaven", in remembrance of the 26 victims, according to a report compiled for the task force.

Sandy Hook Elementary School has not housed students since the killings. Some town residents said the school should be torn down, because they couldn't imagine sending children back there. Others favored renovating the school, with some saying that tearing it down would be a victory for evil.

Last week, several teachers told the task force that they didn't want to return to the property. Brian Engel, whose six-year-old daughter, Olivia, died in the 14 December shootings, also told the task force last week that he didn't want Olivia's younger brother to attend school in the place where she died.

Laura Roche, a member of the Sandy Hook School Task Force and vice-chairwoman of the local Board of Education, said it had been "very emotional and very hard" to come to a decision about the school's future. But she was pleased by the unanimous vote, a signal the panel was united. "We came together as 28, and I hope we can come together as a community to rebuild the spirit of our community and build the school together," she said.

Several parents said it was important that children return to a school in the Sandy Hook village of Newtown as soon as possible. Residents of towns where other mass school shootings occurred have grappled with the same dilemma. Some have renovated, some have demolished.

Columbine High School in Colorado, where two student gunmen killed 12 schoolmates and a teacher in 1999, reopened several months afterwards. Crews removed the library, where most of the victims died, and replaced it with an atrium. Virginia Tech converted a classroom building where a student gunman killed 32 people and himself in 2007 into a peace studies and violence prevention center. An Amish community in Pennsylvania tore down the West Nickel Mines Amish School and built a new school a few hundred yards away, after a gunman killed five girls there in 2006.

On the morning of 14 December, Adam Lanza, who had killed his mother at their Newtown home, went to Sandy Hook Elementary School and opened fire with an assault rifle. He killed himself as police arrived at the school.

The school shooting, one of the deadliest in US history, has spurred national debate about gun control and Second Amendment rights. Reported by guardian.co.uk 45 minutes ago.

Sandy Hook Elementary School To Be Torn Down And Rebuilt

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Sandy Hook Elementary School To Be Torn Down And Rebuilt A panel of local officials has voted unanimously to tear down Sandy Hook elementary school – the site of a school shooting in which 20 children and six educators were killed – but rebuild on the site. Plans to erect a new school on the exact same spot have been welcomed by some parents in the town as a powerful statement that the community has not been broken by the tragedy.

"I think our message should be at that site that love can win over fear," said Steve Uhde, whose son is a Sandy Hook second-grader. Another Sandy Hook parent, Peter Barresi, said he was worried that if a new school were to be built at a different location: "We didn't just lose 20 children and six adults, we're letting him [the gunman, Adam Lanza] take the building too." Barresi's son attends the first grade and was on the other side of the school from where the shootings happened.

The vote was taken on Friday night by a task force of 28 local elected officials, called the Sandy Hook School Building Task Force. The result was unanimous and will now go to the local school board. It will ultimately have to be approved by residents at a referendum. The panel's recommendation pleased Daniel Krauss, whose daughter is a second-grader.

"It's been a place for learning, for kids to grow up and it's going to go back to that," he said, after attending the meeting at the Newtown Municipal Center.

The 430 surviving students are now attending a renovated school, renamed Sandy Hook Elementary School, in the neighboring town of Monroe. They are expected to remain there until a new school is built in Newtown. The task force had narrowed a list of choices to renovating or rebuilding on the school site or building a new school on property down the street. A study found that building a new school on the existing site would cost $57m. If all goes well, officials said construction could begin in the spring of next year and the new building could open in January 2016.

Plans under consideration call for a building with a shape that resembles homes and barns built in the town in the 1700s and 1800s and 26 glass cupolas on the roof with spires "pointed towards heaven", in remembrance of the 26 victims, according to a report compiled for the task force.

Sandy Hook Elementary School has not housed students since the killings. Some town residents said the school should be torn down, because they couldn't imagine sending children back there. Others favored renovating the school, with some saying that tearing it down would be a victory for evil.

Last week, several teachers told the task force that they didn't want to return to the property. Brian Engel, whose six-year-old daughter, Olivia, died in the 14 December shootings, also told the task force last week that he didn't want Olivia's younger brother to attend school in the place where she died.

Laura Roche, a member of the Sandy Hook School Task Force and vice-chairwoman of the local Board of Education, said it had been "very emotional and very hard" to come to a decision about the school's future. But she was pleased by the unanimous vote, a signal the panel was united. "We came together as 28, and I hope we can come together as a community to rebuild the spirit of our community and build the school together," she said.

Several parents said it was important that children return to a school in the Sandy Hook village of Newtown as soon as possible. Residents of towns where other mass school shootings occurred have grappled with the same dilemma. Some have renovated, some have demolished.

Columbine High School in Colorado, where two student gunmen killed 12 schoolmates and a teacher in 1999, reopened several months afterwards. Crews removed the library, where most of the victims died, and replaced it with an atrium. Virginia Tech converted a classroom building where a student gunman killed 32 people and himself in 2007 into a peace studies and violence prevention center. An Amish community in Pennsylvania tore down the West Nickel Mines Amish School and built a new school a few hundred yards away, after a gunman killed five girls there in 2006.

On the morning of 14 December, Adam Lanza, who had killed his mother at their Newtown home, went to Sandy Hook Elementary School and opened fire with an assault rifle. He killed himself as police arrived at the school.

The school shooting, one of the deadliest in US history, has spurred national debate about gun control and Second Amendment rights.

This article originally appeared on guardian.co.uk

*SEE ALSO: These Are The Worst Errors Reported After The Sandy Hook Massacre >*

Please follow Law & Order on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

 
 
 
  Reported by Business Insider 1 day ago.

Trailer Trash

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BBC Films falls in love with Matthias Schoenaerts, Danny Boyle reminisces with Philip French, and Olivia Colman seeks direction in the wrong quarter

**Bulging Belgian**

A year ago he was a little-known Belgian actor. Then, on the first Thursday of Cannes 2012, came Rust and Bone and Matthias Schoenaerts – playing a bare-knuckle boxer opposite Marion Cotillard – was suddenly the hottest discovery on the Croisette.

The British film industry in particular seems to have fallen for Schoenaert , and he'll be seen in three forthcoming BBC Films productions. First there's A Little Chaos (directed by Alan Rickman), in which he plays the head gardener at Versailles opposite Kate Winslet's headstrong landscaper. Then he'll go straight to the set of Saul Dibb's production of the second world war drama Suite française, some of which is being shot in his native Belgium. In that, he'll play a German officer opposite Michelle Williams and Kristin Scott Thomas. I hear Harvey Weinstein is already sniffing around that one, scenting classy Oscar material. Schoenaerts will also be taking on Carey Mulligan's Bathsheba in a new adaptation of Far From the Madding Crowd, to be directed by Festen creator Thomas Vinterberg when the Dane returns from jury duty as head of this year's Un Certain Regard section in Cannes.

Vinterberg was in London last week finalising casting and he told me his new film would have very little to do with John Schlesinger's 1967 adaptation, which famously starred Terence Stamp and Julie Christie. "I'm finding out just how much British people seem to love that movie," he said. "I'm surprised because as a Dane, I can't watch it. It's just a typical British period movie, with nice clothes and locations." I know Vinterberg was part of Dogma, with its unadorned rules of no lighting and all that, but I hardly think he's earned the right to disrespect Terry and Julie and Nic Roeg's cinematography. Still, I wish him luck in his bid to subvert the British obsession with period, even if it's from within the confines of costume.

**Trainspotters**

* *

Danny Boyle graciously accepted his special award from the film section at the Critics' Circle centenary celebrations at the Barbican last week. In his speech he made special mention of our own Philip French, who he said had a "pitiless mind but a kind eye". Surprisingly, the director and the critic had never met, so it was my pleasure to introduce them, and Boyle and French reminisced about the 1994 Dinard film festival where French was on the jury and where Bertrand Tavernier had championed Boyle's Shallow Grave. Boyle came away bewildered. He told me: "Philip remembers everything, doesn't he? He was coming up with stuff about that time and that movie that I'd totally forgotten."

I hope Boyle freshens the memory banks for tomorrow night, when he's attending a special screening of Trainspotting at London's Cine Lumiere, to raise funds for the new London Film School in the first of series of classic film reunions. The film will be followed by a Q&A about the making of the film, in which Boyle will be joined by a panel including Robert Carlyle, Ewen Bremner, the film's influential cinematographer, Brian Tufano, and writer John Hodge. I hear Ewan McGregor has agreed to appear remotely via Skype. Expect questions to include the inevitable one about Trainspotting 2.

**Tables turned* *

Also attending the Critics' Circle celebrations was actor Olivia Colman, who's been dominating the telly recently in Broadchurch and The Suspicions of Mr Whicher. In the latter she appeared opposite Paddy Considine, who of course directed her in her breakthrough drama performance in the tough Tyrannosaur. Was it odd acting with Paddy after working so closely with him as director? "It shouldn't have been, but it was, actually," she confessed. "I couldn't get used to it at all. I'd keep turning to him after takes and waiting for a comment or notes, and he'd just look at me blankly and say 'Dude, I'm not directing this one, we're in the same boat this time'." Olivia is doing more telly soon, having just joined the cast of a new comedy series Mr Sloane, to be directed here in the UK by Curb Your Enthusiasm's Bob Weide (who also made that great Woody Allen doc last year). The six-part, 60s-set series also stars Nick Frost, Peter Serafinowicz and Ophelia Lovibond and will air on Sky Atlantic. Reported by guardian.co.uk 17 hours ago.

Capaldi, Colman tipped for success

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Capaldi, Colman tipped for success There could be double delight for Peter Capaldi and Olivia Colman at the TV Baftas with the pair each in the running for two different awards. Reported by Belfast Telegraph 12 hours ago.

New, Expectant Moms: Top Baby Names Revealed

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New, Expectant Moms: Top Baby Names Revealed Patch Ossining-Croton-on-Hudson, NY --

What's in a name? 

Pop culture, population trends, and tradition may be part of the answer, based on Social Security's Most Popular Baby Names List for 2012. The agency released the information this week:


Boys Girls
1. Jacob Sophia
2. Mason  Emma
3. Ethan Isabella
4. Noah Olivia
5. William Ava
6. Liam Emily
7. Jayden Abigail
8. Michael Mia
9. Alexander Madison
10. Aiden Elizabeth

It's the 14th consecutive Jacob takes the top spot for the boys, and the second year in a row for Sophia. Elizabeth and Liam are taking the place of Chloe and Daniel, a change that could have something to do with Liam Neeson appearing in several recent movies.

Social Security folks weighed in what sorts of influences are behind the name choices:



Many pop-culture naming trends appear in a popular feature of Social Security’s baby names website—the “change in popularity” page. This year’s winners for biggest jump in popularity in the Top 500 are Major and Arya.                                                  

The fastest riser on the girls’ list may have been influenced by the popular cable TV series “Game of Thrones.” Arya is the daughter of a leader of one of the Seven Kingdoms. She also is an expert sword fighter, so doubt her influence on the popular names list at your own risk.    

For the boys, parents may associate Major with the military title.  Acting Commissioner Colvin added “I have no doubt Major’s rising popularity as a boy’s name is in tribute to the brave members of the U.S. military, and maybe we’ll see more boys named General in the future.” You also might trace Major’s increase in popularity to a cable TV show. “Home by Novogratz” is a popular home design show featuring Major Novogratz, the youngest son of designers Robert and Cortney.

The second fastest riser for boys was Gael, and for girls, Perla. Both names most likely are on the rise due to the increase in the Spanish-speaking population in the United States. Perla is the Latinized version of Pearl and is popular among Hispanic-Americans. Gael’s popularity could be tied to Mexican actor Gael Garcia Bernal.



The agency's website offers lists of the most popular names for any year after 1879.

*Croton and Ossining residents: Have you or someone you know recently had a baby? Share his or her name in the attached comments section.* Reported by Patch 3 hours ago.

Top Baby Names for 2012 Revealed

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Top Baby Names for 2012 Revealed Patch Harrison, NY --

What's in a name? 

Pop culture, population trends, and tradition may be part of the answer, based on Social Security's Most Popular Baby Names List for 2012. The agency released the information this week:


Boys Girls
1. Jacob Sophia
2. Mason  Emma
3. Ethan Isabella
4. Noah Olivia
5. William Ava
6. Liam Emily
7. Jayden Abigail
8. Michael Mia
9. Alexander Madison
10. Aiden Elizabeth

It's the 14th consecutive Jacob takes the top spot for the boys, and the second year in a row for Sophia. Elizabeth and Liam are taking the place of Chloe and Daniel, a change that could have something to do with Liam Neeson appearing in several recent movies.

Social Security folks weighed in what sorts of influences are behind the name choices:



Many pop-culture naming trends appear in a popular feature of Social Security’s baby names website—the “change in popularity” page. This year’s winners for biggest jump in popularity in the Top 500 are Major and Arya.                                                  

The fastest riser on the girls’ list may have been influenced by the popular cable TV series “Game of Thrones.” Arya is the daughter of a leader of one of the Seven Kingdoms. She also is an expert sword fighter, so doubt her influence on the popular names list at your own risk.    

For the boys, parents may associate Major with the military title.  Acting Commissioner Colvin added “I have no doubt Major’s rising popularity as a boy’s name is in tribute to the brave members of the U.S. military, and maybe we’ll see more boys named General in the future.” You also might trace Major’s increase in popularity to a cable TV show. “Home by Novogratz” is a popular home design show featuring Major Novogratz, the youngest son of designers Robert and Cortney.

The second fastest riser for boys was Gael, and for girls, Perla. Both names most likely are on the rise due to the increase in the Spanish-speaking population in the United States. Perla is the Latinized version of Pearl and is popular among Hispanic-Americans. Gael’s popularity could be tied to Mexican actor Gael Garcia Bernal.



The agency's website offers lists of the most popular names for any year after 1879.

*Harrison residents: Have you or someone you know recently had a baby? Share his or her name in the attached comments section.* Reported by Patch 6 hours ago.

Bates Middle Students Recognized for Achievement on Honor Roll

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Bates Middle Students Recognized for Achievement on Honor Roll Patch Annapolis, MD --

*Grade 6 Principal's Honor Roll*

· Christopher Adkins
· Eleanore Aherne
· Hailey Argonis
· Leah Bellcase
· Corinna Boeck
· Dana Brant
· Lucia Breidenbach
· Josephine Brunner
· Nicholas Bullen
· Samuel Bullen
· Taylor Crosby
· Alexis Danielson
· Nicholas Davidowski
· Maclane Deale
· Julia Depuy
· Fatou Gai
· Grace Goodwin
· Aolani Gutierrez
· Armani Johnson
· Thomas Johnson
· Allyn Lawrence
· Amelia Machande
· Makenzie Mori
· Samuel Murray
· Amanda Nash
· Julia Olds
· Samantha Oliver
· Richard Osikowicz
· Aidan O'Willey
· Helena Petras
· Isabel Pigott
· Egypt Pryor
· Connor Skalitzky
· Sarah Torzone
· Khalil Williams
· SiJie Ye

*Grade 7 Principal's Honor Roll*

· Mia Applegate
· Eleanor Broglie
· Julia Buan
· Oriana Chard
· Mason Cho
· Sofia Coleman
· Mackenzie Curtis
· Grace Dixon
· Huan Elwood
· Andre Gist
· Anna Helgeson
· Alexander Holt
· Madison Hyland
· Megan Jackson
· Seona Jeong
· Caleb Lancaster
· James Macris
· Cassandra McConville
· Claire McDonald
· Rachel Milio
· William Miller
· Tanya O'Malley
· Brennan Ralph
· Nils Salvesen
· Meghan Staples
· Caroline Steele
· Alexis White
· Benjamin Wood
· Christopher Wood
· Cole Wooster

*Grade 8 Principal's Honor Roll*

· Kayla Acker‑Carter
· Ella Burroughs
· Jaen Carrodine
· Maria Coffin
· Elisabeth Dixon
· Emily Evans
· William Fisher
· Kathleen Goodman
· Aidan Griffin
· Emma Gross
· Kierstyn Hale
· Jessica Hosmer
· Meghan Karl
· Eleanor Pline
· Ian Robertson
· Olivia Simmons
· Kylie Sines
· Kory Wells Reported by Patch 5 hours ago.

Baftas 2013: Olivia Colman picks up two awards

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Actress Olivia Colman continued a year of unprecedented success tonight as she picked up two Bafta television awards, was described as the Dame Judi Dench of her generation - and thanked her parents for babysitting.

 
 
 
  Reported by Telegraph.co.uk 19 hours ago.

Double win makes it perfect Bafta night for national treasure Olivia Colman

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She recently said of herself: “My teeth aren’t perfect; I’ve got eye bags – but in England no one minds that.” And on Sunday night, Olivia Colman proved she was still a national treasure, picking up two Baftas for comedic and dramatic acting. Reported by Independent 9 hours ago.

Double win makes it perfect Bafta night for Olivia Colman

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She recently said of herself: “My teeth aren’t perfect; I’ve got eye bags – but in England no one minds that.” And on Sunday night, Olivia Colman proved she was still a national treasure, picking up two Baftas for comedic and dramatic acting. Reported by Independent 18 hours ago.

TV Baftas 2013: 10 things we learned

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We love Olivia Colman even more than we thought, the BBC is still the daddy in broadcasting – and toilet breaks tell you more about the television industry than you'd imagine

*1. Olivia Colman is our Jennifer Lawrence*

Colman took to the stage three times: for Twenty Twelve, as part of the cast; for Twenty Twelve, for best female comedy performance; and for Accused, which bagged her best supporting actress. She chose to share the latter with her co-star Ann-Marie Duff: "We are Ann Molivia Colmuff", and generally made everyone fall that bit more in love with her, for being funny, self-deprecating and exactly the sort of person you'd want to go to the pub with. Her overall verdict? "This is a really lovely evening." Quite.

*2. Crying is an art*

Colman almost blubbed, but pulled back from the brink. Clare Balding's special-award speech came to an end with another near-sob, this time after thanking her mother, father, and partner, Alice. But the best cry of all belonged to Sheridan Smith, who arrived on stage in fits of tears, quickly correcting herself: "I'm so sorry, you shouldn't cry, you look like a knob." Then she swore, then she cried some more: "How embarrassing."

*3. Everyone actually calls each other "darling"*

It's not just a cliche. It's also true. I heard it repeatedly, and am trying hard not to do it myself. Darling. (Sorry.)

*4. It was all about the back seats*

This was a strong year for surprise winners, which meant it sometimes took recipients a while to get to the stage from their seats near the rafters. BBC2's Murder defeated the lauded Henry II in best single drama; ITV's Savile expose lost to a Granada investigation into paedophilia within the Catholic Church; and BBC3's The Revolution Will Be Televised beat hot tip Cardinal Burns for best comedy programme.

*5. The B in Bafta stands for BBC*

The BBC dominated this year, so much so that it was a genuine shock when another broadcaster was victorious. This was particularly the case in the soap and continuing drama category: given that EastEnders' big dramatic moment, involving Kat, Alfie, Derek and the affair, had the audience in inappropriate giggles, surely this should have been Coronation Street's year? Poor Tyrone.

*6. Wee breaks are political*

The ceremony is around three hours long, so toilet breaks are inevitable. By far the largest audience exodus came during the reality and constructed factual slot – an indication of industry snobbery, perhaps? – which saw Made in Chelsea walk away with the prize. But there were definitely people who went to the loo during the memorial reel. I silently judged them.

*7. Romola Garai knows how to present an award*

By introducing her comedy category with an anecdote about post-birth vaginal tearing – "I didn't think I'd be laughing at anything for a while"– Romola Garai managed to both silence the audience for a second, and, immediately afterwards, earn the most impressed whoops of the night.

*8. It all means a lot*

When Olivia Colman stepped up to get her first individual award, the sweetest part of her speech was an acknowledgement that she was, in fact, overwhelmed. "Turns out it does mean a lot," she said, choking back the tears. When Grayson Perry picked up his Bafta for Specialist factual, he was forced to agree.

*9. ... unless you're Danny Boyle*

The Paralympics were a shock winner of the sport and live event category, while Game of Thrones mobilised its international audience to win the Radio Times audience award. This meant the Olympics opening ceremony didn't get anything at all. Sure, Boyle brought the entire nation together while persuading the actual Queen to get involved in a skydiving skit. But Game of Thrones has got dragons in it.

*10. Olivia Colman still has something to aim for*

The only standing ovation was reserved for Michael Palin, who accepted his fellowship with an amiable speech which wasn't nearly as long as Vanessa Redgrave's felt at the film Baftas in 2010. Come on Olivia, buck up your ideas. Darling. Reported by guardian.co.uk 19 hours ago.

Baftas 2013: Olivia Colman bags double at TV's big night out

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BBC's coverage of Olympics loses out to Channel 4's Paralympics programming

It was the television event of the year with a peak audience of more than 23 million viewers. But the BBC's acclaimed coverage of the London Olympics failed to win a single prize at Sunday's Bafta television awards.

The BBC lost out to Channel 4, which took home the sports and live event prize for its Paralympics 2012 programming, and to Sky Atlantic's fantasy drama Game of Thrones in a special award voted for by viewers, despite having a fraction of the audience that tuned in to the Olympics.

In a night of Bafta surprises, ITV documentary The Other Side of Jimmy Savile, which exposed the former Top of the Pops presenter as a sexual predator and plunged the BBC into crisis, failed to win the current affairs award. It was beaten by BBC2's The Shame of the Catholic Church, part of its This World documentary series.

More predictable, perhaps, was the crowning of actor Olivia Colman as the queen of the small screen.

Colman, whose status as a household name was confirmed by her leading role in ITV's hit murder mystery Broadchurch, won the best female in a comedy award for her role in BBC2's Olympics spoof Twenty Twelve – which was also named best sitcom – and the supporting actress prize for BBC1 drama Accused.

Colman thanked her husband, her first drama teacher and her "mum and dad for babysitting". She described Twenty Twelve writer John Morton as a "modest genius". Referring to Jimmy McGovern, who wrote Accused, she said: "I feel a bit of a fraud. When he writes a script, you can't go wrong."

While the BBC's Olympics coverage missed out, there was a special award for Clare Balding, one of the corporation's main London 2012 presenters, who also anchored the Paralympics on Channel 4.

"I'm a little bit embarrassed to be singled out among a wealth of really good broadcasting talent on both Games, but damn pleased it was me," said Balding.

"We're probably living in the strongest era ever of women's sports presenters and I think you need a generation that is strong to help inspire the nine-, 10- and 11-year-olds who now want to do that."

Balding's Paralympics co-presenter Ade Adepitan, a former Paralympian, said he was in shock and used the award to thank Channel 4 for "allowing us to be ourselves".

He added later: "Channel 4 took what a lot of people thought was a risk in bringing in relatively new presenters to front the show but most of us have had Paralympics experience, or experience of disability. We were able to give people a different or deeper insight into the sport."

BBC2 was the biggest winner on the night with eight awards, including Mary Berry's cookery competition The Great British Bake Off and acting prizes for Ben Whishaw and Simon Russell Beale for their roles in its Hollow Crown season of Shakespeare plays.

A tearful Sheridan Smith won a Bafta with her first nomination for her role in ITV Great Train Robbery drama Mrs Biggs, while the best drama series prize went to BBC1's Last Tango in Halifax. Anne Reid, who starred with Derek Jacobi in the romantic drama written by Sally Wainwright, said: "I am so glad the BBC has decided at last to do love stories about people who are over 35."

Reid, 77, was warmly applauded by the audience of TV stars and executives when she told them: "Some of us do have quite interesting lives when we get to 70."

Steve Coogan won the award for best male in a comedy programme for the return of Alan Partridge in Sky Atlantic's Alan Partridge: Welcome to the Places of My Life.

It was one of three awards for Sky Atlantic, which also won for two acquired programmes, Game of Thrones and Girls, both of which are made by US cable channel, HBO.

There were no prizes for BBC2 drama's about Alfred Hitchcock, The Girl, despite its four nominations or for another BBC2 drama, Parade's End, which was nominated twice.

BBC3's Afghanistan war documentary Our War won the factual series Bafta for the second successive year, while the news coverage prize went to ITV's regional news programme, Granada Reports, for Hillsborough: The Truth at Last.

Graham Norton, who presented the awards at London's Royal Festival Hall on Sunday, won the entertainment programme prize for his Friday night chatshow on BBC1.

Anthony McPartlin and Declan Donnelly failed to win despite being nominated twice, losing out in the reality and constructed factual category, where they were nominated for ITV's I'm A Celebrity … Get Me Out of Here!, to E4's Made in Chelsea.

Other winners included another chatshow host, Channel 4's Alan Carr, artist Grayson Perry for his Channel 4 series All In The Best Possible Taste and BBC1's soap EastEnders. Former Monty Python star Michael Palin was awarded the Bafta fellowship.

The BBC won a total of 15 awards with BBC1 picking up four, followed by Channel 4 and Sky Atlantic (three each), ITV and BBC3 (two) and BBC4 and E4 (one). Reported by guardian.co.uk 18 hours ago.

Bafta TV awards: Olivia Colman wins twice on otherwise unpredictable night

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BBC's coverage of Olympics loses out to Channel 4's Paralympics programming

It was the television event of the year with a peak audience of more than 23 million viewers. But the BBC's acclaimed coverage of the London Olympics failed to win a single prize at Sunday's Bafta television awards.

The BBC lost out to Channel 4, which took home the sports and live event prize for its Paralympics 2012 programming, and to Sky Atlantic's fantasy drama Game of Thrones in a special award voted for by viewers, despite having a fraction of the audience who tuned in to the Olympics.

In a night of Bafta surprises, ITV documentary The Other Side of Jimmy Savile, which exposed the former Top of the Pops presenter as a sexual predator and plunged the BBC into crisis, failed to win the current affairs award.

More predictable, perhaps, was the crowning of actor Olivia Colman as the queen of the small screen.

Colman, whose status as a household name was confirmed by her leading role in ITV's hit murder mystery Broadchurch, won the best female in a comedy Bafta for her role in BBC2's Olympics spoof Twenty Twelve – which also won the best sitcom award – and the supporting actress prize for BBC1 drama Accused.

Colman thanked her husband, her first drama teacher and her "mum and dad for babysitting". She also paid tribute to Twenty Twelve writer John Morton, who she described as a "modest genius", and Jimmy McGovern, who wrote Accused.

"I feel a bit of a fraud," she said. "When he writes a script you can't go wrong."

But while the BBC's Olympics coverage missed out, there was a special award for Clare Balding, one of the corporation's main London 2012 presenters, who also anchored the Paralympics on Channel 4.

"I'm a little bit embarrassed to be singled out among a wealth of really good broadcasting talent on both Games, but damn pleased it was me," said Balding.

"We're probably living in the strongest era ever of women's sports presenters and I think you need a generation that is strong to help inspire the nine, 10 and 11-year-olds who now want to do that."

Balding's Paralympics co-presenter Ade Adepitan, a former Paralympian, said he was "in shock" and used the award to thank Channel 4 for "allowing us to be ourselves".

He added later: "Channel 4 took what a lot of people thought was a risk in bringing in relatively new presenters to front the show but most of us have had Paralympics experience, or experience of disability. We were able to give people a different or deeper insight into the sport."

BBC2 was the biggest winner on the night with a total of eight awards, including Mary Berry's cookery competition The Great British Bake Off and acting prizes for both Ben Whishaw and Simon Russell Beale for their roles in its Hollow Crown season of Shakespeare plays.

ITV's Exposure documentary about Jimmy Savile had been expected to win the current affairs prize but was beaten by another BBC2 programme, The Shame of the Catholic Church, part of its This World documentary series.

A tearful Sheridan Smith won a Bafta with her first nomination, for her role in ITV great train robbery drama Mrs Biggs, while the best drama series prize went to BBC1's Last Tango in Halifax.

One of the stars of Last Tango in Halifax, Anne Reid, used the award to thank the BBC for "at last" doing a love story about people over 35.

Reid, who starred with Derek Jacobi in the romantic drama written by Sally Wainwright, said: "I am so glad the BBC has decided at last to do love stories about people who are over 35."

Reid, 77, was warmly applauded by the audience of TV stars and executives when she told them: "Some of us do have quite interesting lives when we get to 70."

Steve Coogan won the award for best male in a comedy programme for the return of Alan Partridge in Sky Atlantic's Alan Partridge: Welcome to the Places of My Life.

It was one of three awards for Sky Atlantic, which also won for two acquired programmes, Game of Thrones and Girls, both of which are made by US cable channel, HBO.

There were no prizes for BBC2 drama's about Alfred Hitchcock, The Girl, despite four nominations, or any for another BBC2 drama, Parade's End, which was nominated twice.

BBC3's Afghanistan war documentary Our War won the factual series Bafta for the second successive year, while the news coverage prize went to ITV's regional news programme, Granada Reports, for Hillsborough: The Truth At Last.

Graham Norton, who presented the awards at the Royal Festival Hall on Sunday, won the entertainment programme prize for his Friday night chatshow on BBC1.

Anthony McPartlin and Declan Donnelly failed to win despite being nominated twice, losing out in the "reality and constructed factual" category, where they were nominated for ITV's I'm A Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here!, to E4's Made In Chelsea.

Other winners included another chatshow host, Channel 4's Alan Carr, artist Grayson Perry for his Channel 4 series All In The Best Possible Taste, and BBC1's EastEnders, which won the soap award. Former Monty Python star Michael Palin was awarded the Bafta fellowship.

The BBC won a total of 15 awards with BBC1 picking up four. Channel 4 and Sky Atlantic won three each, with ITV and BBC3 picking up two, and BBC4 and E4 one apiece. Reported by guardian.co.uk 19 hours ago.

Olivia Colman Is Double Winner At Tv Baftas

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Actress Olivia Colman was the toast of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (Bafta) Tv Awards on Sunday (12May13) after picking up two... Reported by ContactMusic 18 hours ago.

Olivia Colman wins 2 TV BAFTA awards; additional winners include Ben Whishaw and Sheridan Smith - @BBCNews

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Olivia Colman wins 2 TV BAFTA awards; additional winners include Ben Whishaw and Sheridan Smith - @BBCNews Reported by Breaking News 18 hours ago.

Broadchurch star Olivia Colman scores two Baftas

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Broadchurch star Olivia Colman scores two Baftas LONDON: Broadchurch actress Olivia Colman claimed two awards at the annual TV Baftas in London, while James Bond star Ben Whishaw walked away with the best actor prize. Colman took the awards for best supporting actress for her role in Accused and best female in a comedy programme for Twenty Twelve. Olympic satire Twenty Twelve [...] Reported by The News Tribe 12 hours ago.

Baby Olivia gives parents a shock by arriving on holiday - three months early

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This is Gloucestershire --

BENJAMIN and Hannah Markham thought one last holiday before welcoming their first child into the world would be no problem.

But the couple, who grew up in Gloucester, will have quite a tale to tell when daughter Olivia grows up after she arrived while they were in Nice, France last week – three months premature.

Weighing in at 3lbs 10oz, tiny Olivia is being closely monitored by doctors in France until she is big and healthy enough to come home – with Benjamin and Hannah, who now live in Hampshire, forced to find emergency accommodation until that day arrives.

Olivia's granddad Steve Markham, 62, from Haresfield, arrived back in England late last week, just in time to carry out his duties as organiser of the Dragon Boat Regatta yesterday (see page 7). He said: "They've had to register her birth in France so she will need a 48-hour British passport to be able to come home.

"She is okay but they are keeping a very close watch on her – it's one day at a time." Reported by This is 10 hours ago.

The Suspicions of Mr Whicher; The Fantastic Mr Feynman – TV review

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A modest, well-adjusted detective, more plodding than the actual plod

Crime dramas on ITV, they're like buses – you wait for one ... you know how it goes. Three in four days by my count, all of which in some way resemble certain BBC shows. Well you get copycat crime, why not copycat crime drama? So the strange Murder on the Home Front on Thursday was a bit Waking the Dead and a bit Silent Witness but set in 1940, maybe to lure in a historical fiction/period drama/Call The Midwife audience as well. Then Life of Crime on Friday, about a female fed fighting her shouty misogynist colleagues (sexist pigs?) in the 80s to a soundtrack of Culture Club and Duran Duran, was basically Ashes to Ashes minus the sci-fi.

And now this – *The Suspicions of Mr Whicher* (ITV, Sunday) – all murky Victorian London streets, dodgy geezers with mutton chops drinking tankards of ale in dodgy inns, and horribly murdered young ladies ... it bears a passing resemblance to Bafta-nominated Ripper Street, no? Almost as if they thought: let's see what's doing well over there, and then have some of that over here.

But that would be unfair, especially on this one. Because back in 2011 there was an ITV adaptation of Kate Summerscale's The Suspicions of Mr Whicher, or of the whodunnit at the heart of it (in the book the writer also turns detective herself, investigating the connection between the real-life Whicher and the fictional detectives he inspired: Inspector Bucket in Bleak House, Sergeant Cuff in The Moonstone). Now Neil McKay, who did that first adaptation, has taken (the real) Mr Whicher and written a new story – The Murder in Angel Lane – for him. Not only original then, but apt too. Because by marrying fact and fiction McKay is doing not only what Summerscale encourages, he's also following in the not undistinguished footsteps of Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins.

No longer a copper, Whicher (Paddy Considine) meets and takes on the case of well-to-do Susan Spencer (woman of the moment Olivia Colman), who's in town looking for her missing 16-year-old niece. Actually not niece, the daughter of a cousin, she says, that's not a niece is it ... Well, anyway, she's really her daughter, it turns out, and she's dead, stabbed and left in the gloom on the cold cobbles of Angel Lane.

Colman doesn't really get to show her range, or her warmth (she doesn't even smile until right at the end). And Whicher isn't my absolute favourite detective – modest, self-effacing, meticulous, a good man certainly, but a bit of a bore, more plodding than the actual plod. You want a detective to have a bit of swagger or eccentricity about him, don't you? A drug habit, an ego at least? Or perhaps that's cliched, and this more realistic – Whicher is based on a real person, after all.

His way of working is certainly effective. He's methodical and thorough, digs up people's pasts as well as their graves, leaves no stone – or cobble – unturned, almost literally. And this is less about character and more about plot. Which twists and turns, goes up dead ends and down blind alleys. Almost too many: I sometimes got a bit lost in the Victorian gloom. Lost rather than swallowed up emotionally, which is what I've come to expect – and want – when Olivia Colman's involved. A little too long too, at two hours.

Richard Feynman – *The Fantastic Mr Feynman* (BBC2, Sunday) – was also a real detective of sorts. As a Nobel prize-winning physicist of course, also as the key component of the investigating commission into the Challenger space shuttle disaster. Nothing plodding about him though, he was a maverick. And a showman, entertainer, biologist, bongo player, painter, naturalist, poet, lover, lock-picker, mischief maker … oh and bomb-maker, though to be fair he did regret that.

Anyway, there's nothing boring about him. I could have easily watched two hours of this even if I only understand about 90% of quantum electrodynamics, if I'm honest. And even after the excellent BBC Challenger investigation drama the other day (all the real footage here reinforces how spot on William Hurt's performance was in that). Luckily Feynman, and his lectures, are all over the internet, where he continues to find new disciples 25 years after his death.

I love the fact that his father, as well as teaching young Richard to be interested in just about everything, also taught him how to disrespect, especially authority. Disrespect has come to be seen as a bad thing, by school kids and gang members and politicians who'd like to be school kids or gang members. Nonsense. Mr Feynman Snr knew; look what came from it. Take note fathers everywhere, teach your children the value of disrespect. Reported by guardian.co.uk 10 hours ago.
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