Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Justin Bieber! Did he break his neck?

Justin Bieber is only 16 years old but he is already King of the world and his head seems to be getting bigger and bigger. Justin Bieber is the biggest teenage sensation around. The latest news to come from the Biebs mouth to your ears is that he is a good kisser, a very good kisser thank you very much. Justin Bieber is a totally brilliant boy with a great singing voice and some incredible moves. His music will be loved no matter whether he likes girls, guys or both.

Justin Bieber is perfectly fine as far as anyone knows and the rumour he has broken his neck is just as false as that one the other day that he had syphilis.

R&B star, Usher handpicked his former assistant, Braun and Ryan Good to be Justin’s road manager and “swagger coach” to sharpen his moves, his attitude and his wardrobe.

Usher admits that Bieber has the skills to pay the bills, which is why he wanted him so badly. I felt like his voice was incredible. Usher also started his career at the age of 16. And until now, he's doing great.

Hopefully he'll invest wisely before his voice starts to crack and becomes deeper. Hopefully he’ll go into acting or something else besides singing. I doubt will sound the same after his voices changes completely.

By Ben Byekwaso

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

What’s a Vuvuzela?

A Vuvuzela is a plastic, about a metre long, brightly coloured music like instrument and sounds like an elephant? It's a noise-making trumpet of South African football fans, and it's come to symbolise the sport in the country.

Describing the atmosphere in a stadium packed with thousands of fans blowing their vuvuzelas is difficult. Up close it's an elephant, sure, but en masse the sound is more like a massive swarm of very angry bees. And when there's action near the goal mouth, those bees soundlike really go crazy.

When you are inside the stadium you can hear a much greater variety of tones, volume and rhythm. The chorus, although seemingly totally chaotic, does respond to events during the game. Inside the stadium, though, South African fans seem happy to blow their own horns.

If you want to get the sound out of it, it requires lip flexibility and lung strength - in short, a fair amount of technique. So be sure to get in some practice before attending a South African football match, or the sound you produce may cause some amusement in the seats around you, if not embarrassment.
South African football fans love to use them while the game is on. It is quite obvious that stadiums are always packed with thousands of enthusiastic fans.

Commentators have described the sound as ?annoying? Other commentators have defended the vuvuzela as being an integral and unique part of South African football culture and say it adds to the atmosphere of the game.

There have been some suggestions to ban the vuvuzelas from all the Stadia, but according to the commentators, FIFA has ruled this out. They will only consider a ban, if they were used violently within the stadia

In 2010 World Cup several fan parks have been erected in the nine cities in South Africa hosting World Cup matches. Private groups and businesses are sponsoring their own football parties. Fans of every team have been spotted with the horns.) Because making noise is fun and this tiny piece of plastic allows you to make a lot of it. Isn't that why the English sing their stupid songs and people bring cowbells to college football games?

Broadcasters have to balance how much crowd sound to use compared to the commentators' voices. If they cut out the vuvuzelas the game lacks atmosphere, so they can't turn it off altogether. Broadcasters complain the drone is disrupting their coverage, and soccer players say they can't hear each other on the field . Patrice Evra, the French captain, even blamed the noise for his team's loss. Despite all of the noise complaints in the stadia, the vuvzelas are here to stay

Several number of European football fans have already orderd the vuvuzelas. When you order one, you can make it custom made with your own logo. Logic suggests that the next football season in Europe will see the arrival of vuvuzelas in the football matches.


By Ben Byekwaso
The author is an internet marketing entrepreneur, with particular interest in Affiliate Marketing. You can find out more by clicking here.

Friday, June 11, 2010