Media power couple and parents of one, Beyonce Knowles and her husband Jay-Z went to Hawaii to celebrate their 7th year wedding anniversary and the “Flawless” singer shared some intimate bikini photos from the get away.
Beyonce gave a peek view of their then wedding by sharing a snippet of their wedding video on Instagram. The mother of one also shared many also shared several photos of what they were doing at their lovely getaway. The celebrity powerhouse couple and parents of three-year-old Blue Ivy tied the knot on April 4, 2008.
See more intimate photos from media power couple Beyonce and Jay-Z’s Hawaii wedding anniversary below.
A foundation is often confused with a charitable or non-profit organization. Charities operate from donations and often have volunteer workers. They usually have a specific goal in mind, such as feeding hungry people or providing services to those who cannot afford them, but all charities are dependent upon donations. A Non-profit organization may or may not be categorized as a charity, but all organizations with this designation do not operate to make a profit.
How do foundations differ? Foundations do not attempt to make a profit and do not operate as charitable organizations. They are simply organisations that have money, which is used to fund various groups. Although a foundation may give money to a charity, other types of organizations benefit from funding from a foundation.
Foundations fund new charities that they create. A foundation may give to a charity, but it is more common for a foundation to create a charity and then fund it. This is because the man or woman who created the foundation may have a particular cause they want to support. It may be a disease they want to see more research done for, or perhaps an area of suffering they see in society that needs a charity to address. There are many problems in society, and foundations can address problems that few, if any, charities have addressed in the past.
Foundations fund public policy organizations Many foundations will create a think tank that is composed of men and women who are attempting to develop solutions to problems in society. A government often implements these solutions, so this is the reason for funding organizations such as think tanks: not only to develop solutions but also to advocate for their implementation.
Foundations fund the fine arts. Whether it is an orchestra, sculpture, dance or paintings, foundations are well known for providing grant money to organizations promoting the arts in the United States. Many organizations cannot operate without outside help. This includes museums and art galleries that need the money to help provide art exhibitions for new and old artists throughout the country and the world.
What a particular foundation supports has a lot to do with its founder. Foundations will always reflect the values and interests of the man or woman who started the organization. In some cases, the foundation will have a narrow focus, while others may provide a range of support with its money. One example of this type of foundation is the Rosenkranz Foundation. Created by Robert Rosenkranz , it funds organisations devoted to public policy and those involved in higher education and the arts.
Kim Kardashian and Kanye West are currently on a tour. The reality TV star and her family visited Armenia, their father’s homeland and were welcomed by a massive and enthusiastic crowd.
But when Kim and Kanye took their tour to Jerusalem, the embrace changed. When an ultra-Orthodox website “Kikar HaShabbat” published a photo of Kim and Kanye, they made sure they did not show the reality star to their audience by erasing her out of the pictures before publishing them online.
Kim pixelated out of photo.
The newspaper published the article on Tuesday and used two photos from the meeting. In one, the mother of one was covered up with a restaurant bill superimposed onto it. In a second photo, Kim was pixelated into fuzzy oblivion.
More and more models are now open to the idea of letting the public see their before makeup, as well as before photoshop photos. A few months ago, American supermodel, Cindy Crawford leaked an untouched photo of herself and was praised and called ‘stunning’ and ‘inspirational’.
And just this week, German supermodel, Heidi Klum shared a before and after makeup photos of herself on her Instagram. But this is not the first time the 41-year-old celebrity and mother of four is sharing a makeup-free photo. In 2012, the former wife of British-Nigerian singer, Seal, posed au naturel for a UK-based charity known as Children in Need.
While Heidi posted the photo to show the dramatic difference make-up artist and hair stylist can make, the supermodel still looks stunning in both photos.
Beyonce’s mum Tina Knowles got married to Richard Lawson in an elegant yacht wedding that was attended by her celebrity daughters, Jay-Z and little Blue Ivy.
Beyonce and her man Jay-Z, Solange Knowles, and little Blue Ivy were all dressed in white to celebrate the special day with their mum, 61. The very romantic wedding was attended by about 300 people and Tina was dressed in a Romona Keveza bridal couture gown.
Arcade Content’s Lebogang Rasethaba has found his rhythm with two brand films about South African dance culture.
Lebo directed an eight-minute documentary on the Johannesburg leg of Boiler Room and Ballantine’s Stay True tour, which has taken the brands from Chile to Mexico to South Africa so far, with Russia next up.
Intercut with dance footage from the event, Stay True: South Africa features interviews with the South African musicians who performed: Black Coffee, Black Motion, Shimza, Culoe de Song, DJ Vinny Da Vinci, and Okmalumkoolkat, who sums it up succinctly in his interview: “South Africa. It’s a dancing nation.”
As Boiler Room’s Jack Hart says, “Sometimes on the global Stay True Journeys we’re undertaking with Ballantine’s Scotch Whisky, local themes emerge gradually. Not so in South Africa. There, the theme came instantly. Right up front, everyone we spoke to in the SA music world mentioned one thing above all others as important to them: the power and centrality of dancing in their lives.”
“When I make a song, I picture how the people would dance to it,” says Black Coffee in the film. “In South Africa, there’s always a new kind of dance. There’s always a new way of dancing to music.”
“As something that is so central to our identity, dance is still a relatively novel topic here,” says Lebo. “Can you imagine such a big story has almost never been told like this? I got to interview people who have been interviewed a million times, but as we were talking it occurred to me that they had never had this conversation before, not like this.”
Stay True South Africa is beautifully shot by Lebo and DOP Motheo Moeng, who make the most of the distinctive combination of slow motion, smoke, incredible dancers and downtown Jozi at night. “The concept allowed me to tell a story that was so visually expressive I couldn’t believe some of the footage I was getting,” says Lebo.
The brand film has already been featured on international sites like i-D and High Snobiety, with over a quarter of a million views in its first week online.
“We’ve tried to capture just what a vital collective activity dance really is for South African music makers and their fans alike,” says Jack. “It’s a compelling vision of generations of tradition being retooled for the 20th century, and we couldn’t be prouder of it.”
Lebo also directed the first episode of +27: Social Innovators of South Africa, which recently premiered on Red Bull TV. His 22-minute documentary focused on Jarrel Mathebula, the co-founder of Indigenous Dance Academy in Tembisa. Together with his girlfriend, Neo, Jarrel has built an innovative business that gives township dancers the chance to earn money doing what they love.
“In South Africa, people still tend to think of branded content as cool short clips we watch at our desks during work hours, but Red Bull is being far more ambitious than that, building their own channel rather than just buying space on someone else’s,” says Lebo. “The length originally freaked me out a bit, but it was great to be challenged and broaden my idea of what branded content can be.”
This colourful and artistic photo painting of a Chameleon with an impressive and creative illusion was posted on the UK Daily Mail and we think it’s awesome.
This Nigerian woman was photographed eating Amala in what looked like a London underground train. In the photograph, the woman is seen opening the wrap on the Amala in a white plastic bowl.
The woman, who wrapped her head with a red scarf and wore a white sweat shirt with a zipper, and another one with black and white stripes is seen cutting the Amala she was eating with a spoon or fork. Amala is a popular Nigerian food originally from the Yoruba people. The Yoruba tribe is the second largest etnic group in Nigeria.
Chelsea Clinton, the child and only daughter of former American President, Bill Clinton and former First Lady and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is the cover girl of Elle Magazine’s May 2015 Issue. Chelsea, who became a first time mother six months ago, talked about motherhood and life with her daughter, Charlotte.
For the cover shoot, Chelsea 35, was dressed in sleeveless black Gucci dress accessorised with a golden lock in the belt area.
The former special correspondent for NBC News also talked about her mother’s decision to run for the office of the President, in the upcoming American elections 2016.
In 2008, Hillary Clinton, 67, contested against President Barack Obama seeking the nomination of the Democratic Party but lost. Yesterday, she announced her candidacy and there has been a huge discussion about it as no woman has ever won the nomination of a major party in the history of the American presidential elections.
American model, Chanel Iman did a photo shoot for the April issue of Malibu Magazine dressed in Louis Vuitton’s spring/summer 2015 collection. The Victoria’s Secret model is photographed wearing a blue sweat dress and ankle boots.
In another photo, the 24-year-old Los Angeles-raised beauty is captured wearing a white jumpsuit and flaunting her beautiful long hair with a smile on her face while posing on a quiet street. Another photograph shows the Atlanta, Georgia born celebrity with an African American father photographed topless and in white.
Chatting with Malibu magazine about her love for fashion and how her half Korean and half African American mother used it as a way for punishing her for sneaking out to parties as a teen, Chanel said: “She’d know just what to do to punish me. She wouldn’t give me money for the mall, and she knew I loved fashion. So my girlfriends would get fresh outfits to go to the movies, and I’d have to wear something I’d already worn.”