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Online games firm Trion Worlds eyes IPO (Reuters)

Category : Teen myspace

Characters from Trion Worlds, Inc. games Reuters – Little-known online games company Trion Worlds, after raising $ 100 million in venture capital since 2007, is looking at becoming the newest debutante at the digital media IPO ball.



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Online gaming firm 32Red eyes newly licensed markets (Reuters)

Category : Teen myspace

Reuters – With the regulatory environment easing in Europe, online betting and gaming operator 32Red looks to enter licensed markets, particularly Italy, and expects to surpass market estimates for 2011, its chief executive said.
Yahoo! News: Technology – Video Games

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Prada eyes $2.6 billion IPO, tops European peer values (Reuters)

Category : Teen myspace

A handbag is seen behind a display window at a Prada store in Hong Kong in this June 3, 2011 file photo. REUTERS/Bobby Yip/FilesReuters – Italian fashion house Prada is pricing its initial public offering in Hong Kong to raise up to $ 2.6 billion and give the maker of luxury bags and Miu Miu dresses a value higher than its European peers, a source said.



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SKorea’s Kwon Sang-woo eyes Chinese film career (AP)

Category : Teen myspace

FILE - In this July 18, 2008 file photo, South Korean actor Kwon Sang-woo smiles during a news conference in Seoul, South Korea. After building a name for himself in the South Korean film and TV industries in the past decade, Kwon is setting his sights on another booming Asian market — China. The 34-year-old actor is currently shooting a Chinese-language romance alongside Hong Kong actress Cecilia Cheung and will next join the Jackie Chan project 'Chinese Zodiac.' (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man, File)AP – After building a name for himself in the South Korean film and TV industries, Kwon Sang-woo is setting his sights on another booming Asian entertainment market — China.



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Book Looks at Bullying Through Victims’ Eyes; Teaches Children to Avoid, Overcome Abuse

Category : Teen



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Book Looks at Bullying Through Victims’ Eyes; Teaches Children to Avoid, Overcome Abuse












Weston, CT (PRWEB) August 18, 2006

As children prepare to begin another school year, some of them may have a reason to be anxious. Bullying is a common theme in books, films and, most recently, video games. Little serious attention, however, has been given to helping their victims. Author Dickon Pownall-Gray knows that territory all too well.

The 51-year-old London native was abused by bullies during his youth, and now wants to help children in a similar predicament with the “Surviving Bullies Workbook: Skills to Help Protect You from Bullying” helps educators and children understand bullies], published on Lulu.com, a self-publishing site that is host to an increasing number of educational books on niche topics.

“People ranging from teenagers to CEOs care about this topic greatly,” says Pownall-Gray, a former CEO himself who now lives in Weston, Connecticut. “This goes unrealized because being bullied is inherently shameful and humiliating.”

Bullying itself has become a hot topic in education in recent years. Warner Brothers recently released an animated film, “The Ant Bully.” This week computer game company Rockstar, most famous for the brutal “Grand Theft Auto” series, released a new game called “Bully” centered around the struggle of a 15-year old schoolboy named Jimmy who tries to defeat the schoolyard bullies.

It’s a struggle Pownall-Gray lived through in real life. A successful businessman, he had banished his own encounters with bullies to the back of his mind until about four years ago, when an episode of “The Sopranos,” where a truck driver was hijacked, dragged to the ground and kicked unconsciously, sparked a nightmare.

“I was a 12-year-old boy lying on the ground being kicked by faceless assailants,” Pownall-Gray recalls. “It was the beginning of a painful psychological journey to resolve the brutal bullying of my childhood.”

The workbook aims to show youths how to protect themselves when they are the targets of bullies by developing their own social networks. It’s also designed as a support tool for school psychologists and parents.

“Mothers are correctly anxious about when their child moves from elementary school to middle school and from middle school to high school,” says Pownall-Gray, who notes seventh grade is often the toughest when it comes to being bullied.

For Pownall-Gray, writing the workbook was a form of free psychotherapy. The same goes for the book’s illustrator, Shan Shan Jiang, who was badly bullied in the schools of East Haven, Connecticut, after coming from China at age 9.

Jiang was an easy target because she initially spoke poor English and stood out in a tough inner-city school. But her perseverance is emblematic of the book’s message: she was the valedictorian of her high-school glass and graduated from Yale University.

“Although we both have good senses of humor, it was actually a rather scary topic,” says Pownall-Gray, a part-time investor who founded the Surviving Bullies Charity (SBC). “I would rather face a room full of hostile venture capitalists than the gangs of my youth.”

The author, an accomplished speaker, is available to media as an expert commentator on the phenomenon of bullies and bullying.

Dickon Pownall-Gray graduated from University of Birmingham in the U.K. He holds a Master’s degree from University of California, Berkeley and an M.B.A from the London Business School. Contact: dickonpg@optonline.net, 203-247-1442

Lulu.com the world’s fastest-growing source of print-on-demand books, lets you publish your own books, ebooks, calendars, images, music and videos at no advance cost.

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Game eyes step change in online revenue (Reuters)

Category : Video Games News

Reuters – British PC and video games retailer Game said it is aiming to revive its fortunes by increasing sales over the Internet and converting more visitors to its stores into paying customers.
Yahoo! News: Technology – Video Games

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All eyes on stylist Blow, years after her death (AP)

Category : Teen News

This undated photo courtesy of Thames & Hudson shows Isabella Blow from the book titled, 'Isabella Blow,' by Martina Rink and published by Thames & Hudson. Isabella Blow, the eccentric British fashion editor and stylist best remembered for 'discovering' and promoting Alexander McQueen, was one of the most influential personalities in the fashion world before she committed suicide in 2007.    (AP Photo/Thames & Hudson)   ONE-TIME EDITORIAL USE ONLY; NO ARCHIVES; NO SALES; MANDATORY CREDIT THAMES & HUDSON.AP – Valentino admired her style, Naomi Campbell called her a huge inspiration and Boy George said she was what fashion was all about.



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Another Pair of Eyes: A New Campaign for Teen Drivers

Category : Teen tips

Oviedo, FL (PRWEB) October 25, 2005

For millions of American teens, the first rite of passage is earning a driver’s license, a tangible card with a photo that signifies freedom from parental control — at least in the car. Often, however, the elation of independence is quickly replaced with grief and despair. Motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death for youth ages 15-20 in the United States. Kathy Schaefer, the mother of Florida teen Casey Hersch, said in a USA Today interview, “I was a very controlling parent… I never thought my child would be killed in a car.”

Obviously, immaturity and inexperience are the major factors in the high rate of auto crashes and death among teenagers. Experience, however, is gained by driving, and at some point, parents must allow their teen to drive independently. Wouldn’t another pair of eyes watching over a teen driver be beneficial in reinforcing good driving habits? Another pair of eyes may have saved the lives of at least two teens killed in a 2003 car crash. The parents of these two teens thought their teens were washing, not driving, the car, reported USA Today. The use of a reporting system, another pair of eyes, has significantly reduced accidents and poor driving in commercial drivers.

Safety Matters.info, Inc. recently launched an affordable program designed for teen drivers and their parents. A reflective bumper sticker with a unique ID, a toll free number, and state-of-the-art telephone system makes this program unlike many others. Reports are filed using a toll-free number and the unique ID. Once filed, parents are immediately notified via two phone numbers and an email. In other words, if the teen is reported driving recklessly at 11 p.m., the parents are notified within minutes. Because the driver making the report leaves a voice message, parents can hear the actual report and immediately take action. Online enrollment through www.safetymaters.info is simple and secure, and the membership package includes not only the reflective bumper sticker but also helpful tips and tools for parents as well as a parent-teen driving contract.

“A mother’s life is all about being devoted to her child,” said Schaefer in the USA Today interview, “One crazy night took everything away.” Like many teen drivers, Casey Hersch briefly experienced just one of many rites of passage. She won’t experience the others: graduation, marriage, motherhood.

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