Tuesday, 29 September 2015

SMART DRUGS!!

Experts say most people only use 10% of their brain's potential. What if there was a pill that could unlock the other 90% ? Clinical Trials have shown that the ingredients in this pill can boost your brain power, sharpen your mind, and sky-rocket your energy levels.
Welcome To The Future -  The use of a Legal Study Drug known as Adderin has skyrocketed on college campuses, Silicon Valley and Wall Street, since coming back on the market in April. Specifically, men and women between the ages of 19-48 benefited the most as the effects were amplified due to the ingredients' reaction to the gene called NRXN3 in the human brain. It's being touted as an Adderall replacement, and many people are taking full advantage of its availability to buy online without a prescription.
There has been much controversy around this memory-enhancing pill, not only on college campuses, but also in the media. Sales of Adderin have been tripling overnight as students, athletes, entrepreneurs, and business executives all want to get their hands on this powerful brain enhancer.

Adderin, which has no recorded side effects in any clinical trials, was soon the target of critics who claimed it was too powerful to be sold without a prescription. Other people in academic circles insisted that Adderin provided an artificial edge for its users and was unfair to those who weren't taking it. This led to it being banned from quiz shows and at many top universities as well. Facing outside pressure, the creators of Adderin were eventually forced to halt production of the brain-enhancing pills.
Fortunately, after 3 years of litigation and clinical studies showing its safety, the online ban was finally lifted and the creators of Adderin were allowed to resume selling from their website (http://adderin.com/). Its reappearance has thrilled users around the world - people who genuinely suffered during its absence. "My ability to think and focus more than doubled when I was able to buy Adderin again. The pill's return prevented me from dropping out of college," a premed student told us.

We tested it ourselves - is it all hype?

With so much praise from the media and countless reviews from people experiencing success with Adderin, we at Secret Brain wanted to verify whether this was all hype. Practically everyone in our building volunteered to test it out, but we chose our Health & Science Editor, Warren Carter. Below is his account of using Adderin over a 4 week period.

My Results - 4 Weeks on Adderin

Week One

Buying a bottle of Adderin proved to be tougher than I ever imagined. It was SOLD OUT on their website almost immediately after coming back on the market. Some Ebay sellers were asking $300 for just 1 Bottle! That's too rich for me. I finally secured a few bottles at their regular price after waiting 2 long weeks for them to restock.
About 30 minutes after taking my first pill, I felt the effects kick in. It started with a pleasant wave of calmness that washed over my entire body like a warm blanket. The mental fog and stress I'd been carrying around vanished instantly. Soon, I reached a level of alertness and concentration I'd never experienced before. Sounds didn't even register. It was like walking around on a winter day after it just snowed. It became easy for me to ignore distractions and outside noises. Best of all, there weren't any of the negative side effects like I get when taking Adderall.

Week Two

I was a bit concerned that Adderin would stop working for me after one week. Not so. I am feeling even more focused and energized than before. After a 10-hour work day my energy levels were still high, and I was focused and determined to finish all tasks for the day. Adderin improved my ability to focus and function, and I made absolutely no change to my diet, exercise or work schedule. My results came from only taking Adderin.

Week Three

The effect's of Adderin are still with me, and I was pleased at how many items on my to-do list were crossed off. Previously, I had problems starting and completing tasks. Adderin has me laser-focused on the job at hand, and I am suddenly able to get things done before I move on. I noticed throughout the week I was hardly ever stressed, and I was able to control my emotions without losing focus. I expected to run out of steam around the third week due to my body getting used to the ingredients. But my energy levels haven't dipped at all. They remain steady throughout the day.

Week Four

I was given the nickname "Superman" at the office, as I've become most productive member of the staff. I give all the credit to Adderin. The drug worked as well this week as it had in previous weeks. My mind is crystal clear and I'm able to recall stored memories with near perfect accuracy. It's unbelievable how much has changed in just 4 short weeks. It's not like I became a genius overnight after taking Adderin, but it's definitely improved my memory and the speed at which I process new information.

In conclusion: Over the past 4 weeks, I found myself bouncing out of bed, sometimes even before my alarm went off because I couldn't wait to take Adderin. Things that used to annoy me were no longer an issue. I hardly got stressed and when I did, I was able to control my emotions and get back into peak performance mode. One thing I didn't expect was the euphoric feeling I got while doing work on Adderin. As a result, I've enjoyed my work so much more and my mood has greatly improved. In fact, my co-workers keep making fun of me for walking around with a permanent grin on my face.

I've tried modafinil and countless other smart drugs, but this is by far the closest thing to feeling like you are the guy from the hollywood blockbuster brain-enhancing movie. Don't just take my word for it though; this is something you need to experience for yourself. For your convenience, I've provided a link below for discounted bottles of Adderin.
WARNING: Adderin was specifically created for anyone looking to drastically increase their focus - you will experience an extreme boost in energy and memory recall as well as the ability to focus like never before - use as directed if you think you can handle these effects.*

Note: As of Tuesday, September 29, 2015, Adderin is currently IN STOCK, BUT it's selling out fast!

10 CELEBRITY DOG LOVERS!!


Celebrities Who Are Dog Lovers

It's no surprise that celebrities like dogs as much as we do. Paris Hilton started the trend of "purse dogs" for crying out loud.
But if you were rich and famous, what kind of dog would you get? Surprisingly, many celebrities have literally plucked lonely pups right off the street. Some in this list have less-than-perfect dogs, and one celeb saw a dog featured on a story on TV and called immediately to adopt them.
If you're rich, you can do that. You can also afford someone to follow the pooch around with a pooper-scooper, so you don't have to.

 

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Dead dogs inspired her new album.

In recent years, she has adopted Mary Jane (a black and white mutt), Happy, (a Rottweiler-Beagle mix), Penny Lane (a tiny mix), Ziggy (an English Bulldog), Lila, (a Yorkie mix), Emu (a Sheepdog), and Floyd (an Alaskan Klee Kai) who died when a coyote killed it in 2014.
The most recent stunt of Miley Cyrus was that at then end of this year's VMA awards show, that she hosted, she announced that she was releasing her new album for free. The odd title of the record is Miley Cyrus and "Her Dead Petz", inspired by her pup's tragic deaths. Sounds like a depressing record.

 

Ryan and George – BFFs forever.

In an interview with The Independent, Ryan Gosling shared about his "great love" of his life - his mixed breed dog fashioned with a mohawk haircut.
"George is way more interesting than I am. I'd much rather talk about him...Normally, I take him everywhere. I have special paperwork so he can travel with me wherever I go. Can we just talk about George?"
Gosling and George have been an item for about 11 years now. People magazine recently did a feature about the pair and how George was photographed by Hama Sanders, who said, “This is my handsome friend George and some actor.”

 

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 You get a dog and you get a dog...

Oprah has always been a lover of dogs, and she pretty much has always had one by her side through her life's ups and downs. On January 29, 2010, Oprah's birthday, she bought herself a birthday gift. Make that two gifts: two Springer Spaniels, Sunny & Lauren.
She said on her website that she contacted the Chicago-based no-kill shelter, PAWS, and asked if they would contact her when one came in. Oprah said, "I thought that I was going to name my next dog Lauren," she says. "So when I heard this dog was Lauren, I thought it was fate." Oprah also owns two golden retrievers (Luke and Layla) and a Cocker spaniel (Sadie).

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 She gave her dog and daughter same name.

Actress Drew Barrymore has had a love affair with dogs her whole life. In fact, her first acting job was for a dog food commercial.
Barrymore owned Flossie, a Chow and Yellow Lab mix for 16 years. In 2010, she and then-boyfriend Justin Long adopted Douglas, a blond fox-like dog. In 2012, she and fiance, Will Kopelman, adopted Oliver, a Shepherd mix just before the birth of their daughter, Olive. (Yes, she has a pet and a dog with basically the same name. What's more, in 1999 Barrymore voiced a dog for a Christmas TV special - "Olive and the Other Reindeer.")
In 2014, a second daughter, Frankie, was added to the family. Looks like it might be time to adopt another dog!

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 Prefers older … dogs.

Kaley Cuoco (from "Big Bang Theory") and husband Ryan Sweeting, own two rescue dogs, Norm (a blond Pit Bull) and Ruby (a blond furry little thing she saw on E-News and quickly adopted).
Cuoco understands that adopting adult dogs can be difficult, but Ruby has been great.
“…if you can, rescue a slightly older dog! They get the short end of the stick and end up living out their older days in shelters. Ruby is a dream. Calm, quiet and sweeter than candy," the actress said in Dogtipper.com.

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 Welcomed pregnant mother into his home.

Somerhalder had adopted the dog when he spotted her in the middle of traffic near "The Vampire Diaries" set. He was unaware that she was pregnant. The star got some help in 2013 when his dog Nietzche went into labor, when an ex-girlfriend, Nina Dobrev came over to help deliver the pups.
When it was time for the puppies to arrive, he was right there by her side along with Dobrev there to help. He posted, "Make no mistake about it-Ladies rule...Women of every species blow my mind...Incredible what mamas go through! Love to you mamas-all over the world. Jeez."

Even his dog is on Facebook.

According to his wife, Priscilla, Beast is Mark Zuckerberg's second priority after Facebook.
Beast looks like a walking mop head. How do we know? By looking at his Facebook page of course (Beast Zuckerberg - Mark and Priscilla Zuckerbergs Dog).
His about page says, "Hi, my name is Beast. I am a Puli, which is a type of Hungarian Sheepdog. I live in Palo Alto with Mark and Cilla. I like cuddling and herding things." His page is just shy of 5,000 likes. He as a way to go before he reaches the over 34,000,000 followers that his owner has.

Sarah McLachlan

Changes channel to her own ASPCA commercial.

If Sarah McLachlan actually owns a dog, we weren't able to find any information about it. But we do know that she is a true lover of animals.
She's the voice you hear late at night when the sad ASPCA TV commercial comes on asking you to adopt a furry friend. "I change the channel. I can't take it," McLachlan said during an interview with Huffington Post.. "I can't even look at it. It's just so depressing."
She also said that she is proud that the ads have generated more than $30 million for the charity, but she wants to be known for her love of children and music. She also mentioned how she enjoyed playing a bit bat in the 2014 Audio commercial where she is seen asking for help for the Doberman/Chihuahua mix dog that was a disaster to own.


ROBIN WILLIAMS DAUGHTER SPEAKS OUT ABOUT DEPRESSION!!


 <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2014/08/14/showbiz/robin-williams-advice/">Robin Williams</a> died August 11, 2014, at age 63. Williams' peers regarded him as a brilliant actor and comedian. His friend <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2014/08/19/showbiz/tv/david-letterman-robin-williams-tribute/index.html">David Letterman remembered him</a> as "nothing we had ever seen before." Click through to see moments from the beloved actor's remarkable life.

  In the year since beloved comedian and actor Robin Williams took his own life, his daughter, Zelda, has occasionally posted to Instagram to share her feelings about depression and hope.
Zelda and Robin Williams attend a premiere in 2009.
"I spent this night shivering and laughing under a clear, cold sky full of stars with people I love just to witness something beautiful," wrote the 26-year-old Williams on Saturday, posting a picture of a moon rising over a lake. "Avoiding fear, sadness or anger is not the same thing as being happy. I live my sadness every day, but I don't resent it anymore."
"And for those suffering from depression, I know how dark and endless that tunnel can feel," wrote Williams. "But if happiness seems impossible to find, please hold on to the possibility of hope, faint though it may be. Because I promise you, there're enough nights under the same yellow moon for all of us to share, no matter how or when you find your way there."


Moonrise on the lake 🌕 I spent this night shivering and laughing under a clear, cold sky full of stars with people I love just to witness something beautiful. We mooned the moon and laughed ourselves hoarse, and I'm so incredibly grateful for every silly second. I came to a realization this year that I feel compelled to share here, for whomsoever may need it: Avoiding fear, sadness or anger is not the same thing as being happy. I live my sadness every day, but I don't resent it anymore. Instead, I do it now so that the wonderful moments of joy I do find are not in order to forget, but to inhabit and enjoy for their own sake. It's not easy. In fact, I'd say it takes much more effort to consciously do than it does to just stay sad, but with all my heart, I cannot tell you how worth it it is. And for those suffering from depression, I know how dark and endless that tunnel can feel, but if happiness seems impossible to find, please hold on to the possibility of hope, faint though it may be. Because I promise you, there're enough nights under the same yellow moon for all of us to share, no matter how or when you find your way there.


Williams killed himself on August 11, 2014, after suffering from depression for many years. He had recently been diagnosed with the early stages of Parkinson's disease, said his widow, Susan Williams.
"He has been battling severe depression of late," his media representative Mara Buxbaum told CNN in 2014. "This is a tragic and sudden loss."
Williams has shared tributes to her late father on Instagram over the past year. In October 2014, she got a hummingbird tattoo on her right hand in honor of him.
"For poppo," she wrote. "I'll always put my hand out to shake with a smile."
Robin Williams won an Oscar for best supporting actor in in "Good Will Hunting." He also starred in movies such as "Mrs. Doubtfire" and "Good Morning, Vietnam." His television show, "Mork and Mindy," premiered in 1978 and made him a star.
His three children and his widow, who is the children's stepmother, have been fighting over the terms of his will.
If you or someone you know is suffering from depression, you can call the National Suicide Prevention Helpline at 1-800-273-TALK.


SELENA GOMEZ ON HER EX JUSTIN BIEBER'S COMEBACK!!

Opinions may differ on these two, but we thought they were a cute match. <a href="http://marquee.blogs.cnn.com/2011/09/26/bieber-takes-over-staples-center-for-date-night/?iref=allsearch">Justin Bieber swept the slightly older Selena Gomez off her feet</a>, and the two were <a href="http://www.eonline.com/news/518860/omg-justin-bieber-reunites-with-selena-gomez-after-he-storms-out-of-deposition-get-the-scoop" target="_blank">on and off </a>for a while. Although their relationship appeared to end for good in 2013, they spent an awful lot of quality time together in 2014 before finally going their separate ways.
 There would appear to be no hard feelings years after Selena Gomez and Justin Bieber broke up.
In an interview with the New York Times, the actress and singer avoided speaking her ex-boyfriend's name but did seem happy for Bieber, who is garnering lots of positive press with his new single "What Do You Mean."
"While people were writing that I was stupid for being in it, this is what I always saw in him," she said. "I'm like, duh!"
The pair were off and on for a few years, and Bieber went through some hard times, which included scrapes with the law.
But he seems to have turned over a new leaf, and coincidentally, he and Gomez appear to be on similar career paths with upcoming albums (her "Revival" releases on October 9, and his as-yet-untitled album drops November 13).
The 23-year-old is also in a different stage in her life, though she acknowledges that fans are still very aware of her past.
"It's all part of my story," she told the Times. "I'm growing and changing. I was in a relationship, and I was being managed by my parents, and I was still under Hollywood and Disney, and I was being held to this expectation of being the good girl."

FAT-SHAMING AND OTHER WAYS TO GET FAMOUS!!

Canadian comedian Nicole Arbour's online presence blew up after she posted a YouTube video exhorting overweight people to drop the pounds, in a not-so-nice way. Plenty of famous faces have gained notoriety by courting infamy; click through for more examples.
  In her "Dear Fat People" video, comedian Nicole Arbour took to YouTube to rant about how fat people are killing themselves.
"If we offend you so much that you lose weight, I'm OK with that," Arbour said in a six-minute rant exhorting overweight people to lose weight. "I'll sleep at night."
Never heard of her till now? The Canadian comedian, who has been posting videos on YouTube for five months without much fanfare, picked a good topic to blow up the Internet.
Homing in on a red-hot issue like body image and blaming people for it has brought the former Toronto Raptors cheerleader and Canada's Sexiest Comedian more attention than she's gotten for her movie roles and comedy appearances.
'Fat shaming' video draws outrage online

'Fat shaming' video draws outrage online 01:17
The video has gotten more than 20 million views on her Facebook page and 1 million YouTube views since she posted it Thursday. It has sparked many response videos from people disagreeing with her, including from "My Big Fat Fabulous Life" reality star Whitney Way Thore.
Will a controversial YouTube video translate into anything more than her allotted 15 minutes of Internet fame? Will casting agents and Comedy Central come calling? That's yet to be determined.
What's clear is that people who want to become famous no longer have to be approved by a modern-day Johnny Carson or Dick Cavett or a small cabal of Hollywood studios and agents. Great jokes, music or dance moves may garner attention, but generating controversy is a surefire way to get noticed.

Sex tapes can have the same impact.

It's not clear whether reality star and heiress Paris Hilton's sex tape with her then-boyfriend was for private enjoyment or something more. What we do know is that the tape was shared online in 2003, and her reality show "The Simple Life," co-starring Nicole Richie, launched the same year.
Then-unknown Kim Kardashian's sex tape with singer Ray J was released in 2007, and fame and fortune followed.
"I think that's how I was definitely introduced to the world," Kardashian told Oprah Winfrey in 2012.
Whether it's an offensive rant or a private moment gone viral, shocking the public is now a tried and true path to fame.

The social media spotlight isn't always positive.

Sometimes, asking for social media attention can backfire, especially for those who don't know the current mood or moods of the "Internet."
Controversial celebrity chef Paula Deen wasn't looking for negative attention when her social media staff tweeted out a picture of her son wearing "brownface" in July.
Her fans didn't seem to be upset, but many others decried the picture. They asked what the popular chef was thinking, given that she was fired from the Food Network for using a racial slur.
But the tweet didn't stop "Dancing With the Stars" from casting the lightning-rod chef on its upcoming season 21.
We expect her tweets and other social media to be vetted by Disney/ABC public relations during her appearance on the show.

Singers gotta sing -- and court controversy.

Happily, YouTube and other Internet sharing sites allow the young Justin Biebers of the world to show off their talent and moves without a filter, and sometimes that gets them noticed. But some stars like Bieber can stay in the spotlight with their antics.
Vine star Curtis Lepore got famous with his short online videos and was even included in Rainn Wilson's upcoming half-hour comedy show starring five famous Vine users. He lost the gig after being charged with the rape of his ex-girlfriend. He pleaded guilty to assault and still proclaims his innocence online.

Will 'fat acceptance' stars get a bump?

Though "My Big Fat Fabulous Life" star Thore didn't start the debate with Arbour over fat-shaming, she responded via YouTube on Saturday.
"The next time you see a fat person, you don't know whether that person has a medical condition that caused them to gain weight," said Thore, who attributed her own weight gain to polycystic ovarian syndrome.
"You don't know if their mother just died. You don't know if they're depressed or suicidal or if they just lost 100 pounds. You don't know."
Thore's heartfelt response generated more than 13 million views on her Facebook page and more than 150,000 YouTube views.
And the timing of the debate couldn't be better. Season two of TLC's "My Big Fat Fabulous Life" premieres Wednesday.
When it comes to building fame, riding a wave of controversy can be smart for the offender as well as the offended.

BOLLYWOOD ACTRESS FEATURES IN HOLLYWOOD NEW MOVIE!!


<strong>Priyanka Chopra</strong> becomes the first Bollywood star to headline an American TV series with ABC's "Quantico," premiering September 27. The show is a drama about a group of young FBI recruits who discovers that one of them is suspected of masterminding the biggest attack on New York since 9/11. Here's a look at some other Indian actors on TV.



Story highlights
  • Priyanka Chopra is the first Bollywood movie star to headline an American TV series
  • Chopra is the star of ABC's upcoming drama "Quantico"
(CNN)She's a megastar from Mumbai, India, home to the world's most prolific film industry.
She's an award-winning actress, a former Miss World, a singer and a dancer. She serves as a UNICEF goodwill ambassador and as a United Nations Girl Up Champion, and she is involved in efforts to promote the education of girls in India.
She's a social media queen, with more than 10 million followers on Twitter.
Priyanka Chopra has international cachet and a global fan base. But her star power has been relatively lackluster in the United States.
That may be about to change. Chopra is the star of "Quantico," a drama premiering September 27 on ABC. In recent weeks, her face has been splashed across billboards and buses from Los Angeles to Toronto to New York.
Priyanka Chopra as FBI recruit Alex Parrish in ABC's "Quantico."
Chopra, 33, has thrived in the Indian film industry for more than a decade. But as she gets ready for her close-up on American television, she feels like a complete newcomer.
"I'm excited about making a new foray, but I'm also very nervous," Chopra said. "I feel like a debutante, like how I felt when my first movie was releasing in 2003. Every time I see a billboard, every time I see my face on a bus or a magazine, I'm just like, 'It's a new culture, a new country.' I hope that I'm accepted as an actor."

'An empowered woman'

In the series, Chopra plays Alex Parrish, one of a diverse group of new FBI recruits, each with a mysterious past. As the show cuts between the present and the past, Parrish becomes the prime suspect in a devastating terrorist attack in New York.
Chopra describes her character as a "Jason Bourne in a female form."
"She's smart, she's sexy, she's intelligent, she kicks ass, and she's not afraid to take her life in her own hands. But the beauty of Alex is, she's not macho. She's very feminine, and she's vulnerable," Chopra said. "I love that she's a celebration of the modern woman. She's not just an ass-kicking, feeling-less robot."
"Quantico" has been described as "Homeland" meets "Grey's Anatomy." Its cast includes Aunjanue Ellis as the assistant director of the FBI academy and Jake McLaughlin as a fellow FBI recruit and love interest, but Chopra's character has the central role.
"This is an idea that no one has explored: taking a global actor, a global talent, and launching them in the American market," Chopra said. "It's new for all of us -- ABC, me, everyone -- it's the new prototype. I guess we'll find out what happens."
Chopra, who lived in the U.S. for four years as a teenager, credits the show's producers and ABC for taking a chance on her. She believes that such diverse casting could be a precursor of entertainment's future as the world shrinks.
"I think the globe has become a really small place now, and we are all global citizens, at least I think I am," she said. "The girl next door's face has changed. She does not come from a particular place. ... She can be anyone from anywhere."

Indian actors on American TV

In recent years, an increasing number of actors of Indian origin have made an impact on American TV: Kunal Nayyar of "The Big Bang Theory," Mindy Kaling of "The Mindy Project," Archie Punjabi of "The Good Wife," Dev Patel of "Newsroom," Nimrat Kaur of "Homeland," Aziz Ansari of "Parks and Recreation," Aasif Mandvi of "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" and "The Brink," and Kal Penn of "House" and "Battle Creek."
Veteran Indian actor Anil Kapoor ("Slumdog Millionaire") is the first major Bollywood star to get a meaty role on U.S. television, as the president of a fictional Middle Eastern country on the eighth season of "24."
The "Slumdog Millionaire" cast -- from left, Dev Patel, Madhur Mittal, Freida Pinto, Irrfan Khan and Anil Kapoor -- at the 2009 Academy Awards. The film won Best Picture.
But he was not the lead character. That distinction goes to Chopra, the first bona-fide star from India to headline an American series.
"It's certainly unprecedented for an A-list Bollywood actor, male or female, to land a major role on a major American network series," said Gitesh Pandya, editor of BoxOfficeGuru.com and an entertainment analyst who follows the Indian film industry.
"This could be huge for the years ahead, not only for Priyanka but for other stars out of Bollywood, because Hollywood does have a copycat mentality," Pandya said. "So when something works, competitors want to do the same thing."

Breaking stereotypes

In "Quantico," Chopra does not come across as a Bollywood actress, said Matt Roush, senior television critic for TV Guide. Alex Parrish's dad is white, and her mother is Indian. Even the character's name does not sound Indian, he said.
"This kind of colorblind casting is a step in the right direction," Roush said. "What I like about this kind of casting is that the character could be played by an Asian; she could be played by an African- American; she could be played by a Swede. It doesn't really matter."
It is a part that any actor would love, and this drew her to the role, Chopra said.
"I don't want to be the stereotype of an Indian girl, because I see a lot of Indian talent being put into that box," Chopra said. "I like to break barriers."
Chopra has refused roles that called for her to change accents and act more Indian, said her U.S. manager, Anjula Acharia-Bath, who herself faced prejudice as an Indian girl growing up in England.
Chopra was cast in "Quantico" after Acharia-Bath met with Keli Lee, executive vice president of casting for ABC, and compared notes about growing up in a television culture that did not reflect the diversity of the real world.
Lee has helped discover some of the most famous faces in television, including Sandra Oh in "Grey's Anatomy," Sofia Vergara in "Modern Family" and Kerry Washington in "Scandal." She flew to Mumbai to meet Chopra last year, and the actress signed a talent deal with ABC studios.
Priyanka Chopra, right, is among a group of new recruits at the FBI's training base in "Quantico."
Chopra said she owed it to her fans to settle for nothing less than a stellar, starring role.
"I have a certain belief in myself, and I wouldn't want to do anything less than I'm used to," she said. "I feel ABC recognized that, and they gave me 'Quantico' on my terms, which is why I've taken this leap."

Power of Indian cinema

Even before its pilot airs, "Quantico" has been sold to dozens of countries around the world, Chopra said.
"That just goes to show the power of Hindi cinema," she said. "It's amazing the kind of reach we have in countries where people don't even speak English. Hindi transcends language and borders. We're just stories about life."
Although the Indian film industry is commonly identified with Bollywood -- the Hindi-language film industry based in Mumbai -- regional movie centers across the country churn out hundreds of films every year in other languages, including Tamil, Telugu and Bengali.
The scale of the industry is staggering. India's film board estimates that more than 1,250 feature films are produced every year. Most of the movies follow a predictable pattern: gorgeous heroines, dashing heroes, implausible plot lines and much dancing and singing -- a formula that has captivated Indians for a century.
With 48 movies and counting, Chopra is one of Hindi cinema's highest-paid actresses. She began her movie career shortly after being crowned Miss World in 2000 and has appeared in hit Indian films playing a variety of roles, from an autistic girl (in "Barfi," India's 2012 Oscar entry) to a world boxing champion (in "Mary Kom") to a serial killer. In one movie, she played 12 distinct characters.
But until now, Chopra may have been best known to American audiences for her music. Her debut single, "In My City," featuring entertainer will.i.am, was a theme song for the NFL's "Thursday Night Football."
Manager Acharia-Bath said people often underestimate the strength of Chopra's following, which reaches from Sydney to Dubai, Berlin to Cape Town. She recalled an episode last year in which the actress, as a model for Guess, visited the brand's flagship store in London. As word of Chopra's presence spread on social media, fans mobbed the store and police had to shut down Regent Street.

'A different beast'

It's been crazy-busy lately for the "Quantico" cast and crew, who've been shooting 16-hour days in Montreal and New York to get the 13 episodes ready for this season.
"I've only done movies in my life. Television is a different beast," Chopra said.
Chopra's "Quantico" character becomes an unlikely suspect in a terrorist attack on New York.
She got unexpected insight into the medium from an unlikely source: actor Kevin Spacey, whom she met at the International Indian Film Academy awards last year. The two conducted a film workshop class together and exchanged notes about acting.
"He happened to mention that TV was most exciting medium of almost everything, because he has no idea what his character (Frank Underwood in 'House of Cards') is going to do, and I find that so true," said Chopra, who admits to being mostly in the dark about "Quantico's" plot line. Audiences will learn the identity of the terrorist by the end of season 1, she said.
Early reviews for Chopra in "Quantico" have been positive. Entertainment Tonight named her one of three breakout stars for the fall TV season, while The Hollywood Reporter called her "one of the most formidable talents hitting TV this fall."
Roush said Chopra was the only "Quantico" actress to appear at the Television Critics Association's press tour in Los Angeles in August. "It's unusual during the press tour with a cast of that size to present only one actor, so it's clear they see a big star in her," he said.
For now, Chopra's plan is to straddle two performing careers: one in the U.S. and the other in India. Next, she's working on an Indian epic historical drama about an 18th-century Indian warrior.
"For me, success means achieving something people did not expect you to achieve," said Chopra, who is extremely close to her family and still feels the absence of her father, who died in 2013.
"My dad always told me -- and I always follow this," she said. "As a girl, you should not be someone who tries to fit into a glass slipper. You should shatter the glass ceiling, and that's what I'm trying to do."

HOW TO DEFEAT ISIS: 10 IDEAS!!

The Islamic extremist group ISIS has reportedly blown up a nearly 2,000-year-old temple in the historic ruins of Palmyra, Syria. The temple is seen here on March 14, 2014, before the destruction.
 On Tuesday, President Obama meets in New York with world leaders to discuss how the campaign against ISIS is going and how it might be improved.
Peter Bergen
Earlier this month, the outgoing chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Martin Dempsey, said that the war is "tactically stalemated" and there are no "dramatic gains on either side."
Here are some ideas about how to move forward:
1. Enlist defectors from ISIS to tell their stories publicly. Nothing is more powerful than hearing from former members of the group that ISIS is not creating an Islamist utopia in the areas it controls, but a hell on earth. The flow of "foreign fighters" to ISIS from around the Muslim world is estimated to be about 1,000 a month. Reducing that flow is a key to reducing ISIS' manpower.
2. Amplify voices such as that of the ISIS opposition group Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently, which routinely posts photos online of bread lines in Raqqa, the de facto capital of ISIS in northern Syria, and writes about electricity shortages in the city. This will help to undercut ISIS propaganda that it is a truly functioning state.
3. Amplify the work of former jihadists like the Canadian Mubin Shaikh, who intervenes directly with young people online who he sees are being recruited virtually by ISIS.
4. Support the work of clerics such as Imam Mohamed Magid of northern Virginia, who has personally convinced a number of American Muslims seduced by ISIS that what the group is doing is against Islam.
5. Keep up pressure on social media companies such as Twitter to enforce their own Terms of Use to take down any ISIS material that encourages violence. Earlier this year, Twitter quietly took down 2,000 accounts used by ISIS supporters, but the group continues to use Twitter and other social media platforms to propagate its message.
6. Keep up the military campaign against ISIS. The less the ISIS "caliphate" exists as a physical entity, the less the group can claim it is the "Islamic State" that it purports to be.
7. Applaud the work that the Turks have already done to tamp down the foreign fighter flow through their country to ISIS in neighboring Syria, and get them to do more.
8. Provide "off ramps" to young ISIS recruits with no history of violence, so that instead of serving long prison terms for attempting to join ISIS -- as they presently do in the United States -- they would instead serve long periods of supervised probation.
This will help families that presently face a hard choice: If they suspect a young family member is radicalizing and they go to the FBI, that person can end up in prison for up to 15 years on charges of attempting to support ISIS; but if they don't go to the authorities and their child ends up traveling to Syria, he or she may well end up being killed there. Providing off ramps would offer families a way out of this almost impossible choice.
Three of Shafi and Zarine Khan's teenaged children were arrested by the FBI last year at Chicago's O'Hare Airport as they attempted to join ISIS. The Khans say they would have intervened effectively with their children if they had known they were radicalizing, but now their oldest son, Hamzah, faces 15 years in prison, despite the fact he has no history of violence nor does the government allege he was a planning a violent act.
9. Educate Muslim parents about the seductive messages that ISIS is propagating online.
10. Relentlessly hammer home the message that ISIS positions itself as the defender of Muslims, but its victims are overwhelmingly fellow Muslims.

CHEATING HUSBAND DUMPED WITH HUGE BILLBOARD SIGN!!


 Photo Credit:
Prince Davey!!
 The hard hitting billboard sign was positioned alongside a busy highway in Sheffield, northern England.

 The hard hitting billboard sign was positioned alongside a busy highway in Sheffield, northern England.

  Partner cheating on you? Well, you could talk it through. Or send him packing. Or how about dumping him with a giant billboard sign that he -- and everyone else -- just can't miss on his usual commute?
A woman called "Lisa" did just that.
The sign -- strategically positioned alongside a busy highway in Sheffield, a city in northern England -- read: "To my cheating husband Paul. You deserve each other. When you get home I won't be there. Enjoy your drive to work! Lisa."
Mark Catterall of Kong Outdoor, the advertising company that sold Lisa the space for the sign, said she ordered it two weeks ago and "it was obviously planned in advance, she obviously had a date in mind," he told CNN.
The sign measures a significant 18.4 feet (5.6 meters) wide and 8.5 feet (2.6 meters) high, and was up during rush hour between 6 - 9am Wednesday morning, Catterall confirmed.
"It's the busiest road in the city of Sheffield, with most of the traffic traveling to the city center," said Catterall. "It's one of the most prominent billboard locations in the city." Lisa also opted for a digital screen "so she could deliver the message at the right time", he said.
"She paid three figures for it," Catterall confirmed; a sign for a week would normally cost £400 ($611). He also had suggestions for how the advertising method could continue to be used by members of the public.
"It's something that's unfortunate for one of the parties involved but it has been used as marriage proposals. Might be a bit nicer in the future." Catterall asserts that Lisa was a private consumer who had not paid for advertisements in the past.
Twitter users waded in with their thoughts on the matter. "Breaking up... Sheffield style with just a 'small' sign on the Parkway!" tweeted Peter Spencer.
Some expressed concern. "Oh dear, anyone in the Sheffield area passed this sign today? #Sheffieldissuper," wrote Northgate Careers.
Others gave Lisa a virtual pat on the back. "Saw the sign on the #sheffieldparkway on my way to work! Good for you Lisa!"


YAZIDI GIRL REMEMBERS HORROR OF HELICOPTER ESCAPE FROM ISIS!!

It was an escape from hell.
The terror of the ordeal she -- and so many like her -- had endured was imprinted on the face of a young girl dressed in purple, as she sat opposite me on a mercy dash away from Mount Sinjar.
Aziza Hamad, then 14, was one of more than 30 desperate civilians who made a mad scramble to get onto an Iraqi military helicopter -- with a CNN team on board -- in August 2014. Their dramatic journey was captured on camera.
Thousands of civilians from Iraq's Yazidi religious minority had fled to higher ground to escape the murderous advance of ISIS militants.
Families like Aziza's had spent more than a week trapped on the barren heights of Mount Sinjar, under siege by the fighters, and with little access to food or water.
The helicopter that hovered briefly overhead offered them a vital chance of escape; missing it could have meant their family was separated, perhaps forever.
Fortunately for the Hamads, Aziza and eight of her relatives managed to clamber on board, crouching for shelter, clinging together for comfort and crying as the Iraqi air crew opened fire with machine guns on suspected ISIS targets during their flight to safety.
More than a year after their chaotic escape, CNN tracked down Aziza and her family to the refugee camp in Iraqi Kurdistan where they now live.
"The year passed and we're all safe, thank god," says Dunya, Aziza's 18-year-old sister. "But if we went home it would be better."
The pre-fabricated, two-room containers that the Hamad family now calls home are a dramatic improvement from the conditions they were living in not long ago.
For the first seven months after their escape, the family had little choice but to squat amid the bare concrete in an unfinished construction site.
"We used cardboard and plastic sheets for shelter," Aziza recalls. "There was a lot of smoke ... because we didn't have gas for heat and there wasn't enough electricity. In the camp it's much better."
Aziza and Dunya had smiled broadly as we arrived to visit them, but it did not take long for the trauma of their past year to surface.
In the middle of a conversation, Aziza's eyes suddenly well up with tears. "When I see you," she explains, "I remember what happened."
In the year since they fled their home, the mental and physical health of Aziza and Dunya's father has deteriorated significantly. He is no longer able to walk.
During our hour-long meeting with the family, he sits and stares silently at a wall; the only time he engages with others is at the mention of his two adult sons, Fahed and Wahed.
Former ISIS captives get chance for a new life

Former ISIS captives get chance for a new life 03:13
The two men are believed to have been captured by ISIS back in August 2014. They haven't been heard from since.
"We don't have time to think about the future right now," says Dunya. "All we're thinking about now is when my dad will stand up on his feet again, and when my two brothers will return to us."
A third brother, Karem, 23, left Iraq shortly after the family's flight from Mount Sinjar to follow the migrant trail from Turkey into Europe, paying traffickers to help smuggle him across dangerous seas and international borders.
The journey cost his family thousands of dollars and took months, but he made it to safety eventually; Karem now lives in Hanover, Germany.
In a video call with CNN, he explains that he spends his days in school learning German, before working for several hours a night on an assembly line in a factory.
Asked whether he misses Iraq and his family home in Sinjar, Karem does not hesitate: "No, that's gone for me. I lost Iraq and Sinjar."
Instead, he explains: "I want to build something for myself and my future. I wasn't able to do anything in Iraq. I'm not going to let this opportunity go away."
Much of the responsibility for leading the Hamad clan now falls on the shoulders of another brother, Thabit, who has a wife and three small children of his own to care for.
Yazidi woman describes captivity by 'American jihadi'

Yazidi woman describes captivity by 'American jihadi' 08:36
Squinting from beneath a blue baseball cap, he says he is grateful to have found work as a car mechanic in a town just outside the refugee camp.
But he admits he has little hope of moving the family back to their house in Sinjar any time soon.
"Even if the Peshmerga liberate Sinjar," he says, referring to the Kurdish military forces, "our return would be very difficult because there is no electricity, no running water and no services there.
"I think we're going to stay here for at least a year."
Despite the competing demands on his time, Thabit takes a moment to watch CNN's footage of his family's flight from Mount Sinjar on board the helicopter. The images -- and the memories they spark -- leave him weeping.
"I just want to start a new life," Thabit explains, wiping away tears. "And I want my family to stay safe and to stay together."
Aziza is now 15 and a little taller than her older sister. More than a year after her family's escape, she is still haunted by the past.
One of the few times she truly looked happy during our conversation was when asked what she would like to do to the men from ISIS who attacked her family.
"I would stomp on their heads and kill them," she said with a smile, repeating insistently: "I would stomp on their heads and kill them."

WHITNEY HOUSTON HOLOGRAM COMING IN 2016!!

 (Billboard)A Whitney Houston hologram is coming in 2016 thanks to Pat Houston, President of the Whitney Houston Estate, and Greek billionaire Alki David, the CEO of Hologram USA.
The holographic representation of Whitney Houston will perform in "a major U.S. venue" for a show that will be beamed to TVs and computers around the world via David's FilmOn.com, according to a press release. The announcement even promises a posthumous international tour after the show's U.S. debut.
Pat Houston had this to say about the partnership that will -- in the words of the press release -- "bring back" Whitney Houston. "It's a great opportunity for her fans to see a reinvention of one the most celebrated female artists in history and to continue a legacy of performances that will not be forgotten in years to come. I look forward to the partnership."
David's Hologram USA will design the Whitney hologram in partnership with her estate. Alki David recently made headlines for teaming up with controversial rapper Chief Keef for his series of attempted holographic concerts.
When asked about a Whitney hologram in late 2014, Pat Houston expressed mixed feelings. "I don't know how I would feel about [a hologram] and certainly I've been approached to do a project of that magnitude, and I said, 'No.' But who knows what the future holds," she said at the time. "I mean, it's just been only two and half years. Maybe down the road."