Sábado, 14 Abril 2018 13:13

Leonardo grava DVD em São Paulo

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Na próxima quarta-feira, dia 11, Leonardo faz seu primeiro registro em vídeo

 após o fim do projeto “Cabaré”.

O cantor gravará um DVD em São Paulo, no Villa Country, fechado apenas para convidados (entre amigos e fãs).

Com 80% de regravações, o projeto será registrado no palco menor do Villa, mais restrito e de produção mais controlada.

Adianto aqui no blog o repertório das regravadas. Boas lembranças, acima da média.

A direção será do Jacques Jr.

icatriz – Rene e Ronaldo
Coração está em pedaços – Zezé di Camargo e Luciano
Renan e Ray – Será que pensa em mim
Biquini Bordô – Trio Parada Dura
Chora peito – Chrystian e Ralf
Quem é que chora por mim – Adalberto e Adriano
Amor rebelde – Chico Rey e Paraná
Perder você é abraçar a solidão – Chico Rey e Paraná
Você Marcou pra Mim – Ataíde e Alexandre
Acabou o amor – Eduardo Costa
Homens – Milionário e José Rico
Pare com Isso – João Mineiro e Marciano
Noite de Tortura – Chrystian e Ralf
Ponto Negro – Chitãozinho e xororo
Amigos de bar – Teodoro e Sampaio
Estrela de Ouro – Tião Carreiro e Pardinho
O Homem da sua vida – Matogrosso e Mathias
Devolva a passagem – Leandro e Leonardo

Ler 3886812 vezes Última modificação em Sábado, 14 Abril 2018 14:05

247863 comentários

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    A Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? contestant swore in frustration on last night's episode after losing £15,000.


    Justin Beattie, from Bristol, was so stunned to learn he would be leaving the ITV competition with just £1,000 that he dropped an expletive in a
    show first, shocking host Jeremy Clarkson.

    The player, who spent 25 years as a submarine
    safety engineer and was aiming to open a pub with his potential winnings, was sent home when the presenter asked: 'Which sportsman retired aged
    just 26, before making an unsuccessful return to competition eight
    years later?'

    Justin had a choice of four answers, including Bjorn Borg,
    Alain Prost, George Foreman and Carl Lewis.

    But Justin answered the £32,000 question wrong while he still
    had all four lifelines remaining, guessing Carl
    Lewis instead of correctly saying Bjorn Borg. 

    The contestant walked away with just £1,000 after failing to secure his
    £16,000 win with a safety net before trying the £32,000
    question. 

    Scroll down for all the questions and answers









    Justin Beattie (pictured), from Bristol, was so stunned he would be leaving the ITV
    competition with just £1,000 that he dropped an expletive in a show first, shocking host Jeremy Clarkson

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    RBS today admitted that it had failed to invest
    properly in IT systems for decades, as customers woke up to find money had been emptied from their accounts by a computer glitch.


    Supermarket trolleys full of food were abandoned,
    mothers were unable to buy milk for babies and motorists could not purchase
    fuel as the error also left Britain's shoppers high and dry last night.



    On the biggest online shopping day of the year, customers of
    the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) Group, which includes NatWest and Ulster Bank,
    were left unable to use their debit or credit cards.





    Problem: A computer glitch at NatWest left customers unable to
    use their cards or make online purchases

    Chief executive Ross McEwann insisted the bank
    was now investing heavily in building IT systems that its
    customers 'can rely on', adding that he was 'sorry for the inconvenience we caused'.


    On the first working day of the month and just three weeks before Christmas, some
    customers found their wages had gone missing and they had gone overdrawn as direct debits went out.





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    The problem - which lasted for around three hours
    between 6.30pm and 9.30pm yesterday - also affected use of the bank's cash machines, smartphone apps and websites, on 'Cyber
    Monday'.

    Other customers logged on to find they were overdrawn - when there should have been funds available in their accounts, but the bank said this had only happened to a
    small number of people.




    Shocked: RBS customer Rachael Horrocks, 24, pictured at her workplace in Berkshire,
    found her account value was negative today, despite
    her having 'a reasonable amount of funds in there yesterday'



    Mr McEwann said: ‘Last night's systems failure was
    unacceptable.


    CUSTOMERS COMPLAIN AT SPEED OF RBS RESPONSE ON
    TWITTER

    Customers complained that it took RBS and NatWest at least one hour to
    alert customers to the problem via Twitter.

    Once the details were made public, the banks were met with a
    tidal wave of frustration and anger from people stranded without money or turned away from tills.



    Many people complained direct to the Help Twitter feeds of NatWest and RBS.


    Andy Neillans said: ‘Can't believe it took so long to get an announcement out.
    Looks like issues for last one hour plus, and
    this is the first info.'

    And Samuel Cramer wrote: ‘I'm stuck - unable to either go home or go where I'm meant to be going, so hurry up
    with it. Switching banks first chance I get.'



    ‘Yesterday was a busy shopping day and far
    too many of our customers were let down, unable
    to make purchases and withdraw cash. For decades, RBS
    failed to invest properly in its systems.

    'We need to put our customers' needs at the centre of all we do.
    It will take time, but we are investing heavily in building IT systems our customers can rely on. I'm sorry for the inconvenience we caused our customers.
    We know we have to do better.


    ‘I will be outlining plans in the New Year for making RBS the bank that our customers and the
    UK need it to be. This will include an outline
    of where we intend to invest for the future.'

    As well as anger among internet users, people complained about
    being caught up in long queues at supermarkets and
    petrol stations as those affected struggled to find
    alternative payment methods.

    The bank has apologised to customers across the
    country who were hit by the problem. Reports of cards being declined began at 6.30pm - when many people go online to buy groceries after
    work.





    Not in use: A mother and baby pass an out-of-order NatWest cashpoint in the town of Olney, Buckinghamshire



    At 7pm, one customer reported NatWest cards being declined ‘en masse'
    at a supermarket in Kent.


    'I WAS FORCED TO CANCEL MY JOB INTERVIEW BECAUSE I HAD NO MONEY TO GET THERE'



    NatWest customer Natasha Lewis said her card was declined while getting
    petrol last night, which caused ‘a huge lot of grief as I knew I had money
    in there', and she had to call her partner to walk up to pay for
    it instead.

    But the 26-year-old nursery nurse from Birmingham experienced further problems this morning, being woken up by a text message that
    she was overdrawn.



    Since then she has had to cancel a job interview because she had no money to get there, and was not able to reschedule
    it.

    Ms Lewis told MailOnline: ‘I rang customer services, to be
    on hold for an hour to be told I took money out which was not in there.
    I explained I got paid that day and I checked my available balance first
    like I always do.

    ‘Then (the woman on the phone) told me that my money
    had disappeared and there were no signs of money going into my account yesterday.

    She wanted to take money out of my savings to cover it.


    ‘I said "no" as it's not my fault the money has gone,
    so I shouldn't have to pay. I had a job interview today which I've
    had to cancel as I've got no access to money to get there as
    my partner has the car. The bank is a joke.'

    She added that she will be changing banks if the problem is not sorted today, because she has a
    number of bills to come out tomorrow.


    Posts on Twitter included: ‘NatWest useful
    banking - really? Useless banking is more appropriate.' Another person tweeted: 'I'm pleased that Natwest has
    crashed. No, not that. Furious, that's it.'

    RBS customer Rachael Horrocks, 24, said: 'Just checked my account now this morning and my
    account was in minus, when I had a reasonable amount of funds in there yesterday.
    Today they just disappeared.

    The freight imports co-ordinator, who works in Colnbrook,
    Berkshire, near London Heathrow Airport, told MailOnline:
    'I was ringing RBS for one hour this morning, only to be told that
    they don't know when they will be able to return services
    back to normal. Absolutely useless.'

    She said there was around £200 in the affected account when she checked at 4pm yesterday, but
    found it was showing -£65 when she woke up this morning.

    Ms Horrocks added later on: 'I have called again now and they have advised me
    that people should start seeing their money back in their accounts,
    but mine still has not been restored.'

    Another customer, Jill Gale, said she was affected last night
    and by the outage last year - and has finally had enough of NatWest, so switched banks
    this morning.

    The 34-year-old from County Durham told MailOnline:
    ‘My wages disappeared last year for three days and
    last night when I filled up my car I couldn't pay for my petrol.


    ‘Why should I carry £50 cash in my purse? Surely having my card and ensuring I have valid funds in the account should be enough.
    As it happens I had a separate Visa which I used.

    ‘But it is humiliating when it happens, even though the people
    behind me were in the same position - and two of them didn't
    have any other way of paying.

    ‘Needless to say, the first thing I have done this
    morning is change banks. My new bank will close my old accounts when the switch is
    successful, but not without a complaint from me first.'

    Meanwhile, a pilot and his crew who arrived yesterday in the Falklands for
    a two-month tour found once they reached their base
    that they could not use their cards when they went to a cashpoint
    to pay for dinner.

    The pilot's mother Sarah Prosser told MailOnline:
    ‘They all had to queue up to use a phone to
    call home to find out what was going on and to tell families that they could not access any money.


    ‘Not only are the poor lads away from home for Christmas, but they can't buy anything either.




    NatWest apologised for the glitches and told the Twitter community it was trying to resolve the situation



    ‘The least RBS/NatWest could do would be to fly some "Christmas cheer" down to them and sort their accounts out as soon as possible, as a way of
    saying sorry.'


    Q&A: WHAT SHOULD YOU DO NOW?

    HOW MANY PEOPLE WERE AFFECTED?

    It is believed around 750,000 people unsuccessfully
    tried to take out cash last night. Many more had problems with credit or debit
    card payments. And a small number of people have also found their accounts
    to be incorrectly overdrawn, the bank said.

    CAN I CLAIM COMPENSATION FOR THIS?

    RBS said it will consider claims for compensation on a ‘case-by-case'
    basis and insisted that if anyone has been left out of pocket as a result of the problems, ‘we will put this right'.
    But it will not reimburse people for inconvenience or time wasted,
    although it has apologised for this. If customers
    are unhappy with the response, they can then complain to the free Financial Ombudsman Service.


    HOW DO I GET IN TOUCH WITH THE BANK?

    The bank has asked everyone affected to get in touch.

    It can be contacted on the freephone numbers 0800 151 0404 (NatWest),
    0800 151 0405 (RBS), or 0800 046 5486 (Ulster).

    I'VE BEEN SENT AN EMAIL SAYING MY SECURITY DETAILS HAVE BEEN RESET

    There is a phishing scam trying to trick customers into giving away security details to fraudsters.
    Security experts are advising people not to click on the
    links in any email claiming to be from the bank. If you
    have concerns about this, you should call the bank

    HOW CAN I SWITCH MY BANK ACCOUNT?

    Switching bank accounts takes seven working days and all incoming and outgoing payments
    will be moved to your new account, by your new
    bank, MoneySavingExpert.com said.


    And NatWest customer Kim Forsdyke, 48, of Wraysbury,
    Berkshire, said: ‘Went to pay in a shop last night and card
    got declined. Put it in the cash machine and got declined.



    'Went for a meal for my daughter's birthday
    and card got declined again. This morning, went to log onto internet banking and cannot.'

    Woman, 21 of Streatham, south London, said: 'I was also
    unable to access my app yesterday for the times stated as well as
    even past 9:30pm.

    'Also, I was trying to purchase a camera from Currys which was at
    a reduced price as a result of the recent Black Friday,
    and was unable to as it stated that the transaction was unsuccessful.
    Looks like NatWest will be losing a customer.'

    MailOnline reader Melissa, of Cheshire, said she was trying to buy Christmas presents
    online from clothing retailer Topshop, but 'because NatWest messed up, the transaction went through six times even though it
    got declined each time - and I got charged nearly £500'.


    Another reader, Keri, from Liverpool, said she was declined when trying to buy shopping
    today  - and then found her account was overdrawn and a £300 payment in had gone missing.


    ‘To try and save some embarrassment I tried to transfer
    money from my savings account into my current account, only to
    find they had lost the hundreds made into that account online on Sunday
    had also gone missing,' she added.

    ‘I went straight to the bank - resulting in me not only being late for work,
    but the time spent on the phone to the complaint department meant
    I had to request work allow me the day off - now more out of pocket.



    ‘I've got direct debits due this week to credit cards.
    Who knows whether they'll find the missing money or how long when they do.
    Worrying about my credit scoring now as well as everything
    else.'

    Megan Clarke, 20, who went shopping last night at
    the Trafford Centre in Manchester, had a fortunate escape after filling up her car with petrol before the glitch occurred.



    Trying to get money: Megan Clarke, 20, who went shopping at the Trafford Centre in Manchester last night, described seeing a queue
    by a cash machine, 'with many panic-stricken people'




    She told MailOnline: ‘My card got declined three
    times in a shop. I went to the cash machine and it said "unable to access account contact provider".
    A queue starting forming by the cash machine, with many panic-stricken people in need
    of money to get home.'

    Susan Allen, director of customer solutions at RBS Group, told BBC News today: 'We sincerely regret the inconvenience that customers have had.
    There have been some fairly horrible stories this morning about the inconvenience and distress caused
    for people out shopping yesterday evening.

    'If anybody is out of pocket, then we have made a commitment that we will make sure that everybody is put back in the
    right position.

    'It's very upsetting when you hear the stories, and I've talked to a
    number of customers and seen their stories this morning, so I can understand the frustration and anger that people are feeling.'

    She also told BBC Radio 5 Live: 'We put all our focus on getting it fixed and we now
    start the detailed work on what went wrong.
    We understand the impact on our customers.

    'It is completely unacceptable that customers couldn't access their own money.
    The investigations would suggest it is completely
    unrelated to the volumes on Cyber Monday.'

    A spokesman also told BBC Radio Four's Today programmethat for ‘even one customer not to be able to access their money was unacceptable'.


    The problems have rekindled memories of the meltdown the bank suffered in the summer of 2012, which delivered days of
    issues.



    Sale denied: Twitter users vented their frustration about the crash

    A technical glitch millions saw unable to access their salaries in what was branded one of the biggest IT failures
    at a UK bank.



    'I COULDN'T PURCHASE MILK FOR MY FOUR-WEEK-OLD BABY'



    A mother said she was left without milk for her four-week-old baby after the NatWest glitch.


    Kady Pike, 25, of Basingstoke, Hampshire, told MailOnline she went to a Tesco store last night to purchase milk
    for her child Ted, but her card was declined three times. 



    She then went to the cashpoint outside the store only
    to receive the message that the machine ‘cannot process
    request at this time'.






    Ms Pike said: ‘I have just suffered an acute cardiac arrest bought on by
    a suspected clot I my lung, so my trips outside of the house
    are very few and far between.  

    ‘Seeing that my card had been declined; naturally I panicked - a) My newborn baby needs his milk and b) What's happened
    to my money?'

    She then called NatWest but said the member of staff
    was unable to help further than putting her through to the customer service team.


    Upon calling them, she was put on hold for 10 minutes and eventually decided to hang up.
    Her father later went out to buy the milk.
    She added on BBC Radio 5 Live: 'We put all our focus on getting it fixed and we now start the detailed work on what went wrong.
    We understand the impact on our customers.



    Branches were forced to open late and on a Sunday to cope with the aftermath of
    millions of people unable to receive money or
    pay bills.

    A investigation by City regulator the Financial Conduct
    Authority into the outage last year is still ongoing.


    Yesterday's high profile collapse has dealt a further blow to RBS NatWest as it
    tries to rebuild its reputation after  that event
    and being forced into a taxpayer rescue during
    the financial crisis.

    Experts say Britain's bank customers could face increasing technical problems due to systems creaking under the
    weight of new technology and increased online payments.



    Banks were early adopters of  IT systems when technology
    was still young and still rely substantially on decades old platforms that have high levels of demand placed on them thanks
    to the internet age.

    MoneySavingExpert.com creator Martin Lewis said:
    ‘People have been left stranded and unable to get home, embarrassed in shops, and missed out on hot deals on the biggest
    shopping day of the year - all because NatWest, RBS and Ulster haven't got their act
    together.

    ‘This is at least the third time in the last 18 months this
    has happened, and while thankfully it was shorter than last summer's almost a month-long outage for Ulster customers
    - it should still raise huge questions for customers.


    ‘Couple this not-fit-for-purpose technology with the fact
    its bank accounts are mostly far shy of the
    best-buy deals, and many of its customers should genuinely be looking to place their custom elsewhere.'  


    Iain Chidgey, from data management company Delphix, told
    MailOnline: ‘Software glitches are becoming more
    and more frequent in the banking industry. Often the cause is insufficient testing.


    ‘The databases in financial institutions
    are large and often more complex than in other companies.
    IT departments provide copies of databases for testing,
    but by the time a copy is available, the data
    itself is often old.


    ‘In our data-intensive world, data can be obsolete after only a couple of hours, but
    when refreshing just a single testing data set can takes days, the data will never be up
    to date enough for risk free testing.'

    And, following the technical problems, security specialist firm Check Point today
    warned customers to watch out for phishing emails which appear to have been sent by their bank.




    Cash machines have been affected and one customer reported NatWest cards being declined 'en masse' at a supermarket in Kent



    The company's UK managing director Keith Bird said:
    ‘Bank customers need to be very careful not to click on links in emails which appear to come from RBS, NatWest or Ulster Bank advising them about changes
    to account security, no matter how authentic the email seems to be.



    'DECLINED CARD MEANT I COULDN'T BUY ANY CHRISTMAS PRESENTS'



    Suresh Mekala spent more than £13 on a train ticket from Gloucester to Bath to do some Christmas shopping.


    But it was a wasted trip as the 29-year-old ended up having his NatWest card
    declined at several stores - and could not buy anything.




    He told MailOnline: ‘I never keep cash as I use my card to
    pay for all my transactions. But I had a really bad
    day - I went to my favourite shops got lots of shopping but my card was declined
    several times.

    ‘NatWest is the only bank account I have and no cash. My trip was for nothing.


    'I couldn't withdraw money from cash point or check my online banking.
    I'm really frustrated with the bank.'


    ‘Attackers have jumped at this opportunity to try
    and trick customers affected by yesterday's technical problems
    into revealing their bank details.

    'For those attackers, it's just a numbers game, but it could
    have serious consequences for customers. Phishing emails continue to be the most common source for social engineering attacks.'

    RBS, which is 80 per cent owned by the taxpayer after being rescued
    during the financial crisis, has also been under fire over the last
    week over allegations that it drove distressed firms to collapse to buy back their assets at rock-bottom prices.



    Trade union Unite, which represents RBS staff,
    called for the bank to halt its cost cutting programme - which
    has seen thousands of jobs axed and IT functions sent abroad - in the wake of the IT problems.



    National officer Dominic Hook said: 'It is unacceptable that the bank's customers are once
    again facing inconvenience.

    'Unite has grave concerns that staffing challenges are exacerbating the problems facing the bank.'

    Richard Lloyd, executive director of consumer group Which?, said: 'Yet
    again consumers are bearing the brunt of bank failures.


    'RBS must explain why these IT glitches keep happening and assure customers that
    they are doing everything to prevent it in future.


    'Banks' IT systems are not fit for modern banking purposes, and it's high time the Financial Conduct Authority took action.

    'Unhappy customers should also remember it is now quicker and easier to switch banks so they can vote with their feet.'


    IT'S A FEELING OF DEJA-VU FOR MILLIONS OF NATWEST CUSTOMERS WITH CYBER
    MONDAY'S FIASCO BEING THE LATEST IN A LONG LINE OF GLITCHES

    NatWest's slogan is 'helpful banking', but that phrase will leave a
    bitter taste in the mouth for many of its customers,
    with the bank suffering a spate of major IT glitches recently.



    In mid-2012 the technical meltdowns were so severe that Stephen Hester, the former boss of NatWest
    owner RBS, personally apologised for the issues.



    The IT problems led to payments going missing, wages disappearing and holidays and home purchases being
    disrupted.

    The bank kept 1,000 branches open late for one day in all major
    towns and cities to help frustrated customers.


    Mr Hester admitted that NatWest had let down its customers after
    hundreds of people vented their anger over the issue.



    The fiasco cost the bank some £175 million in compensation.

    And in October 2012 the bank had to suspend a mobile
    phone banking App feature called GetCash, after the service
    was subject to a spate of ‘phishing' attacks by fraudsters.


    The bank also had huge technical problems earlier this year when the mobile
    Apps used by two million customers to access their accounts from iPhones,
    Android smartphones and tablets failed.

    Millions of customers were locked out of their accounts for several hours as a result.







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    Septic diving peeping Tom discovered inside Tulsa park toilet by
    7-year-old girl

    The 52-year-old man claimed he was dumped there by a girlfriend
    named Angel after she hit him over the head with
    a tire iron and took him to the park in a 1972 Chevy Monte Carlo

    Once fished out, he had to be hosed off by the fire
    department

    This is not the first time he's been arrested

    By RYAN GORMAN

    Published: 21:59 GMT, 8 July 2013 | Updated:
    22:19 GMT, 8 July 2013









    e-mail


    89

    View
    comments

    An Oklahoma man was arrested after being found in a septic tank in a park outhouse.


    Kenneth Enslow, 52, was discovered by a 7-year-old girl and her mother
    at about 5pm Sunday when the two went to use the bathroom at a park
    near Tulsa, OK, heard coughing and saw him looking up at them, according
    to officials.

    The two fled the bathroom and called the authorities, who ended up
    having to fish the peeping Tom out.







    Disgusting: Kenneth Enslow, 52, was discovered inside a Tulsa,
    OK park toilet looking up at unsuspecting park goers while they did their business


    By the time officials arrived, Enslow was ‘standing with his head and
    shoulders out of the hole… covered in feces,' according to an arrest
    report filed by the Tulsa County Sheriff's office.


    The fire department helped the unemployed degenerate out
    of the cesspool using rope and hosed him off, literally, with the fire hose, the report
    said.

    ‘They extracted him with rope and sprayed
    him off with the hose on the fire truck,' Stuart Meyer told KOTV, ‘he was covered in defecation and looked like he had
    been down there for quite some time.'


    Enslow first claimed that he was hit over the head with a tire iron, tossed in the back of
    a 1972 Chevrolet Monte Carlo and dumped there by
    his girlfriend Angel, according to the report.

    Enslow claimed he did not ask for help because
    he was unconscious.

    After being taken to a local hospital as a precaution, even after officers failed to find injuries consistent with assault from a tire
    iron, the pervert later admitted he made the story up, according to KJRH.




    Tempting: Enslow couldn't resist the urge to hop into the septic tank below the outhouse in a Tulsa park





    Relaxing: The park is a haven for locals looking to fish and hike, not to
    be fished out of the latrine



    Explaining that Enslow is not a small man, Meyer said that Enslow ‘had to work to get into that hole… there were claims he was put in that hole by somebody else,
    I don't think that happened.'

    The arresting officer did observe ‘several scratches on [Enslow's] head,
    but they were old and had scabbed over,' the report states.
    The deviant also had scratches on his arms ‘from the rough edges of
    the concrete slab.'

    White Water Park is a lake situated on a dam just west of Tulsa, OK.
    It is a popular local fishing and hiking area.


    Enslow was taken from the hospital to a local jail
    and charged with being a Peeping Tom, a misdemeanour, a Tulsa County Sheriff's Office spokesperson told Mail Online.

    He is also being held on warrants dating back to 1998 for embezzlement and
    illegal dumping in Okmulgee County, a spokesperson from that
    county's sheriff's office told Mail Online.




    Peaceful: The park usually offers residents a respite from
    the stresses of everyday life



    This is not Enslow's first run-in with the fuzz, he has also been arrested
    for public intoxication and driving under suspension, arrest records
    show, according to KOTV.

    Despite the septic swimmer being locked up for now, Meyer isn't taking any chances.


    ‘To think that there's somebody down in the bottom watching you is plumb scary,' Meyer told
    KOTV, ‘we'll take a flashlight and look below first, I don't want to see anybody scuba diving in the toilet.'

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