Here is Rihanna outside of her NYC Hotel posing for pictures with some lil kiddies while wearing a necklace that says F*ck You.
We know she probably wasnt anticipating being bombarded by a bunch kids and isht, but damn, she couldve tucked that joint in before agreeing to take photos with the little crumbsnatchers. SMH.
Pacific Coast News
Long hair, dont care. On the eve of her fifth album release, Rihanna showed off her long red locks while stepping out in midtown Manhattan. Carrying a Louis Vuitton cranberry tote and wearing a F**k You necklace, RiRi stormed the streets. She will perform today at 5 p.m. EST on MTVs The Seven.
If you don't feel at home unless you're surrounded by a "Who's Who?" of celebrities, then Beverly Park is the community for you. With about 80 well-manicured homes nestled in the hills above Los Angeles, it's actually two gated communities, North Beverly Park and South Beverly Park. Luminaries live in both, but those in the know say the northern estates are more opulent.
Prepare to be cleared at the guardhouse before entering this refuge, where multimillion-dollar mansions have housed actors, media kingpins and athletes. Stars who have called Beverly Park home include actors Denzel Washington and Eddie Murphy, athletes Barry Bonds and Magic Johnson, media magnate Sumner Redstone and "Power Rangers" mogul Haim Saban.
A minimum building size in the covenants keeps out shanties, and the community's homeowner associations are known to be tough critics of the estates' exteriors. Prices of these properties can exceed $30 million.
Unlike the well-established gated communities such as Beverly Park, Brentwood Country Estates in the Mandeville Canyon area of the Santa Monica Mountains is newer, smaller and lower-profile.
Completed in 1991 by the Hilton family of hotels fame, the exclusive community offers 24-hour guarded gates. Outgoing California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger owns a seven-bedroom residence here. Down the street, New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and his supermodel spouse, Gisele Bundchen, are building a 22,000-square-foot Mediterranean-style manse on a 3.75-acre lot they purchased in 2008 for $11.8 million, according to published reports.
There are only about a dozen other home sites in this private subdivision, with only one remaining unsold: a 4.3-acre lot listed for $29.5 million.
When Hawaii's gated village Hualalai grew a bit too big, with Michael Dell and Charles Schwab among the 300 residents rubbing shoulders with tourists at its Four Seasons resort, some members felt squeezed.
In the late 1990s, Dell and Schwab joined property developers in planning Kuki'o, a more hermetic Hawaiian enclave on an adjacent property.
Membership in the community is highly exclusive, and there is no hotel. Amenities include a beach club that attracts elite athletes to instruct members in various beach sports, a spa and fitness center, an elegant restaurant and beach bar, an 18-hole golf course designed by Tom Fazio, a 10-hole golf course and several golf clubhouses.
A private jet is available to speed members to the mainland.
"It's extremely private," says Heidi White, a real-estate specialist in Kuki'o with Hawaii Life Real Estate Services. Undeveloped oceanfront lots can be priced at $15 million each; Dell bought three for his home.
If you're seeking a community where even the ocean is patrolled around the clock, look no farther than the Sanctuary. One the toniest gated communities in Boca Raton, it lies near the Intracoastal Waterway. "You have 24-hour security at the gate, on the roads and on the water," says real-estate agent Carmen D'Angelo of Premiere Estate Properties in Boca Raton.
Established in 1979 and attractive to entrepreneurs, corporate executives and trust-funders, The Sanctuary has about 82 homes. It also has a California-contemporary look that's been evolving with a number of tear-downs in recent years. "The trend now is to take two lots and build one house on it," D'Angelo says.
Think French chateaus, Tuscan villas and Georgian mansions with a backyard dock for your yacht, as about 80% of the community's homes have. "Deep-water dockage for large boats is really what people are after in the Sanctuary," D'Angelo says. Home prices can reach $22 million.
The ultraexclusive Vintage Country Club in the Coachella Valley is where Bill Gates was admonished for appearing at a practice tee in a T-shirt. The attire was considered too casual for this superelite, gated golf enclave, founded in 1979 and tucked into this desert town among other gated golf communities.
Club membership comes only via nomination; homeownership does not guarantee it.
"The Vintage is probably one of the more snobby neighborhoods to get into," says John McMonigle of The McMonigle Group, a real-estate firm in California's Orange County. "A lot of people get turned down from The Vintage."
With two Tom Fazio-designed golf courses, The Vintage has provided vacation homes for such boldface names as Microsoft Corp. co-founder Paul Allen, former Chrysler Corp. Chairman Lee Iacocca, automotive-industry giant Roger Penske and entrepreneur Philip Anschutz. Some home prices here top $20 million.
This gated, barrier-island community has served as a refuge for Fortune 500 executives, politicians and industrialists since 1969. "You've got all the major CEOs there," says real-estate agent Carmen D'Angelo of Premiere Estate Properties. "It's not flashy, but (it's) very exclusive."
With about 1,800 residents, many living in Georgian-style homes that lend the community its aristocratic feel, John's Island is one of the larger guard-gated communities and tightly gated it is.
John's Island developers also built Lost Tree Village, another gated refuge in North Palm Beach, Fla., where security guards in golf carts reportedly patrol with German shepherds in tow.
Much like in The Sanctuary in Boca Raton, John's Island has seen a rash of tear-downs and replacements with fancier new homes. The community replaced its 30-year-old private beach club with a posh $20 million facility in 2008. Prices can reach $15 million.
Indian Creek is not just a gated community. It's a gated, 300-acre island and a tiny village. With only about three dozen Spanish villas and colonial mansions and a dozen police officers, it's one of the most secure patches of ground around. Patrols extend to Biscayne Bay, as well. No one gets past the island's solitary gatehouse without an invitation.
Indian Creek is especially popular with celebrities and the international set, and residents respect one another's privacy no unannounced house calls. The pedigreed community, developed in the 1930s, also has a private, Maurice Fatio-designed country club and an 18-hole golf course.
"What makes it attractive are the very large lot sizes with deep driveways with the golf course intertwining throughout the community," says real-estate agent Carmen D'Angelo of Premiere Estate Properties. Prices for these homes can exceed $20 million.
One of several gated communities in Laguna Beach with top-dollar oceanfront homes, Emerald Bay distinguishes itself by counting the residences of billionaire Warren Buffett and former U.S. Olympic Committee Chairman Peter Ueberroth among its roughly 522 dwellings.
About 20 of those are worth more than $20 million, down from about 90 at the height of the market, with about eight waterfront properties having stratospheric values of more than $35 million, says Nancy Casebier, a lifelong resident and a real-estate agent with Coast Sotheby's International Realty.
Emerald Bay began as a modest yet idyllic community built in the 1920s and 1930s on steep hillsides 50 miles south of Los Angeles. It has transformed into a wealthy, diverse enclave with one of the few private beaches in California the community owns the actual rocks in addition to tennis courts, a pool complex, a new clubhouse and 135 acres of parkland.
Gated communities are rare in the Northeast, and one of the few and most exclusive is this 1,500-acre refuge established in the 1980s for the horse set in Greenwich. Besides home sites with bounteous acreage a minimum of 10 acres each and community polo facilities, the 24-hour security in Conyers Farm appeals to film and television celebrities, such as director Ron Howard and TV anchor Paula Zahn. There are also plenty of Wall Street types at Conyers, including David Stockman, who was director of the Office of Management and Budget during the Reagan administration.
With about 96 home sites outlined with white fences, Conyers Farm has extensive guidelines, deed restrictions and an outspoken planning committee that has prevented construction of at least one 39,000-square-foot McMansion. Home values range from about $8 million to $34 million, though one estate that sold for $45 million before the recession is probably worth more now, says David Ogilvy of David Ogilvy and Associates in Greenwich.
One of several gated enclaves overlooking Lake Washington, this tiny community with fewer than a dozen homes has attracted the likes of Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz and former Microsoft Corp. executive Greg Maffei.
The estate features private lanes and stately traditional homes of 5,000 to 15,000 square feet that were built in the 1940s and 1950s. They are now are the most secure in Seattle, says Brian Losh, chief executive of real-estate agency Ewing & Clark Inc.
"It's very understated," Losh says. "Most people don't even know it's there."
There are reports of Reed Estate homes listed in recent years for more than $15 million.
We often look up at the sky at night and wonder at the stars, but from space Earth has its own impressive light show.
These pictures taken by an astronaut on the International Space Station show London, Paris lit up at night, the southern Mediterranean including Ibiza and Majorca and the light of towns snaking down the river Nile from Cairo.
One shot even captures the green northern lights spread out across the top of the earth above Britain.
Aurora Borealis in the distance on this beautiful night over Europe. The Strait of Dover is clear as is Paris, the City of Lights, though there is a little fog over the western part of England and London.
Each spectacular picture shows the cities as hubs, blazing away with the power of millions of watts of electricity all at once.
Doug Wheelock, currently orbiting the earth on the ISS took the series of pictures over the last 12 days.
He said: 'You can see the Aurora Borealis in the distance on this beautiful night over Europe. The Strait of Dover is pretty clear as is Paris, the City of Lights, though there is a little fog over the western part of England and London.
'Here is Europe on a cool autumn night. We can see the Mediterranean Riviera and beautiful mosaic along the coastline from Valencia, Spain to Livorno, Italy and all the magical places in between.
'And here we have a night view of the River Nile winding up through the Egyptian desert toward the Mediterranean Sea, and Cairo in the river delta.
Clear outline: The Florida peninsula and the southeastern U.S. on a clear autumn night, with moonlight over the water and the haze of the inner atmosphere visible
Stark contrast: The dark desolate lifeless desert of northern Africa and the Nile River teeming with life along its shores, and the Mediterranean beyond
Nasa Shuttle commander Douglas H. Wheelock
He continued: 'There is such a stark contrast between the dark desolate lifeless desert of northern Africa and the Nile River teeming with life along its shores. In the distance lies the eastern Mediterranean on a beautiful autumn evening.'
He added: 'It is incredible to see the lights of the cities and small towns against the backdrop of deep space. I am going to miss this view of our wonderful world.'
The images are a stark illustration of our incredible energy usage, particularly in the cities where lights are left on in office blocks for 24 hours and every light on every street blazes away all night.
However the latest official figures show that energy consumption per household has actually fallen from the equivalent of two tonnes of oil per household in 1980 to 1.6 tonnes last year.
Looks like there's a party going on: The Mediterranean Riviera, along the coastline from Valencia, Spain, to Livorno, Italy, and the Balearic Islands
The ancient gateway city of Istanbul, in Turkey is the only city in the world to span two continents, linking the Black Sea to the north and the Sea of Marmara to the south
The approaching dawn moves across the horizon revealing the Aurora Borealis, or northern polar lights
Morning breaks over the majestic Andes mountain range in South America, although astronaut Doug Wheelock was uncertain what peak this is
Here is the new 2011 Bentley Continental GT! For power the car touts a twin-turbo W12 engine that puts out 567 horsepower which gives the car a 0-60 time of 4.4 seconds and a top speed of 198 miles per hour.
The new 2011 Bentley Continental GT comes standard with a 6 speed automatic transmission, all wheel drive and 20 and 21-inch alloy wheels.In addition, the car comes with newly designed jeweled headlights, LED running lights, a revised front grille and some minor tweaking to the body lines.
The new 2011 Continental GT will formally be released later this month at the Paris Motor Show.