Barcelona star Neymar flies busty Serbian model in private jet for Spanish romance

The pair reportedly decided to meet up at the end of October - but after deciding that they couldn't wait to see one another, Neymar cancelled the plane tickets and sent a private plane to pick her and a close friend up and take them to stay with the Brazilian.
Soraya, six years Neymar's senior at 28, published on Instagram a photo of herself in the player's Barcelona jersey aboard the aeroplane.
She was reportedly shown the city's sights, as she was wined and dined by Los Cules' 11-goal top scorer.
Beach beauty: Soraya Vucelic on the beach
Soraya was recently asked about the issue but responded angrily: "Is it possible that you're asking me? When I discovered something from their private lives? Sometimes I really do not know the limit."
Despite the anger, you might say she's flying on the wings of love.

three boobs jobs



Surgery-obsessed twins Emma and Sara Koponen have spent about £15,000 on identical plastic surgeries - to look like 'artificial dolls'.
The sisters have each had three boobs jobs, taking them from A to E cups, and supersize their lips with regular filler injections.
And the obsessive pair spend every day at the gym together so their bodies stay the same shape.
They even eat the same food at the same time to stay the same weight.
The identical twins, originally from Sweden, moved to the glamour-obsessed world of Marbella, Spain in pursuit of artificial perfection.
Sara said: “As twins we have to look the same, people expect have expected that from us since we were children.
“We are both addicted with modifying our bodies - but we have to make sure we both do the same things otherwise we won’t match.
"We are obsessed with surgery and the pursuit of perfection - for us there’s no such thing as too much.”
Barcroft USA
Obsessed: Twins Sara and Emma Koponen are determined to look the same
The twins, who are both single, are planning on more surgery including butt implants, dental veneers and rhinoplasty.
However, they admit they will never be fully happy with their bodies.
Growing up in Vastervik, Sweden, the girls were studious and more interested in sports than boys.
Emma said: “We were always skinny and boyish with small boobs.
"We were shy and preferred playing basketball to chasing after boys.
“From a young age we dreamed about changing our appearance."
BarcroftSara and Emma Koponen
Regime: The girls always workout at the gym together

At age 16 the sisters moved to a larger town and began thinking seriously about enhancing their bodies.
Sara said: “There was one girl in our class who had big boobs and we fixated on her - we were so jealous.
“We were so self-conscious about our boobs we grew our hair long to cover our chests."
In 2009, aged 19, the pair took out a bank loan to pay for matching boob jobs, boosting their chests from an A to a C.
Sara said: “Our first boob jobs cost £3,000 each. Emma went first and was there waiting for me when I woke up from surgery.
“We immediately felt better about our bodies - and we got a lot of attention.
“Dad told us he was disappointed in us, but our mum approved and our friends were jealous.”
Roland Quesnel / BarcroftSara and Emma Koponen
Surgery: They both had their first boob jobs aged 19

But just a year later the desire to go up a size proved too strong and the twins decided to go under the knife again.
Sara said: “We really wanted to go bigger, to have super-sized boobs. Our surgeon recommended we go to a D cup, which we did.”
However, after spending £3,500 to go up one size, twelve months later, at age 21, they opted to go bigger again for an additional £3,000.
Sara said: “We went back to the surgeon and said we still didn’t feel big enough. He told us he could take us to an E-cup - but no bigger."
Now the sisters feel happy with their dramatically enhanced curves - however, some people find their appearance too much to handle.
Roland Quesnel / BarcroftTwins Sara and Emma Koponen
Treatment: The twins with their surgeon

Emma said: “Not everyone likes the look we are going for - our dad and our grandmother really don’t like it.
"Our father is not proud of us at all - he hates our big boobs and our tattoos.
“Some girls have called us names like ‘whore’ to our faces, but I think they are just jealous of the attention we get."
In 2011 the girls moved to Spain’s Costa del Sol looking for adventure and they hit the party scene.
And it wasn’t long before they were hitting the cosmetic surgery clinic again.
Sara said: “We love our boobs but we know there’s other parts of our body where we can make adjustments.
"We had lip fillers because we had small lips and we wanted to get a more fake look.
“The work we have done is for us - it’s not about getting men to like us, it’s about becoming our idea of perfection."
Barcroft USASara and Emma Koponen as children aged about seven
Youngster: Sara and Emma Koponen aged seven

However, Sara believes she will never be 100 per cent happy with her body - or being compared to Emma.
She said: "Sometimes people compare us which can be hard to hear. They might say ‘Emma is a bit slimmer, or she’s better’.
“There’s always a bit of competition between us - you always want to be the one looking the best.”
To keep in shape the sisters hit the gym every day for a gruelling workout.
Roland Quesnel / BarcroftTwins Sara and Emma Koponen pictured in October 2014, in Marbella
Copycat: They even have identical pets

Emma said: “Every day we hit the gym for two hours. We make sure we do the same exercises on the same machines to get the same body shape.
“We also have a strict diet and we measure food out equally so neither one puts on more weight than the other.
"If one of us wants to eat ice cream and the other wants chocolate, we fight over which to buy as we can't eat different things.”
As well as living together, the sisters share a phone, a wardrobe and spend all day together.
Roland Quesnel / BarcroftTwins Sara and Emma Koponen
Athletic: The girls say they were more interested in sports than boys when they were young

Emma said: “We always try to be similar, we have same diet, we train together, we have the same friends and go to the same place - we do everything together.
“Sometimes it feels as though we are one person. If Sara is sad, I will feel it too."
But despite the unnatural closeness, the twins have never shared a boyfriend.
Sara said: “Some people see our appearance and make assumptions about the kind of people we are, but often they are wrong.
“We have lots of plans for future surgery - our goal is to look as artificial as a doll by the time we are finished.
“It’s very important for us to make our dreams come true and we have many things we want to do with our body to change it."
Roland Quesnel / BarcroftTwins Sara and Emma Koponen
Diet: They even eat the same so their weight remains identical

However, Sara said although she and Emma love their looks, she would never allow a child to follow in her footsteps.
She said: "I’m proud about how I chose to change my body but I would never let my own child do this to herself.
"You will never be happier - that’s the point. You will always want more. If you start, you will never stop."

Rosie Huntington-Whitely looks smoking hot in red leopard print in new shoot for Vogue Mexico

Rosie Huntington-Whitely looks smoking hot in red leopard print in new shoot for Vogue Mexico


FilmMagic / Splash
Rosie Huntington-Whiteley
She always looks a million dollars, but our eyes nearly popped out of our heads when we saw Rosie Huntington-Whitely in red leopard print.
The gorgeous supermodel, who has legs to die for, features in a new photoshoot for Vogue Mexico which is so hot we had to be the first to show you it via sneaky Instagram shots.
Rosie is seen relaxing in a laundrette in one snap, although she doesn't look like she's been focusing on her chores, as she kicks back in a pair of red stilettos and rests her toned pins across a trolley full of clothes.
The photos, taken by snapper James Macari, were posted by Sarah GoreReeves, fashion director for Vogue Mexico, who gushed about the model in a series of hashtags.

 
The blonde star, 27, looks incredible in the patterned one piece and a long red coat, showing off a perfect blow dry with her hair in a side parting and a huge red necklace on.
Rosie is seen lying back next to a takeaway pizza but we can't imagine she scoffed much of it, unless she's like Cara Delevingne, who seems to be able to eat loads of fast food and still have an amazing figure.
Hmmm meat feast pizza, anyway, back to Rosie...
 
We've had a sneak peak at the rest of the shoot and she's seen in other shots sucking on an ice lolly, showing off some serious cleavage and sitting on top of a washing machine looking all seductive.
The gazelle-like star appears on the front of the magazine in a classy dark red suit and huge gold necklace.
 
 
She would certainly turn heads if she walked into a Laundrette in London looking like that.
Check out our gallery of sizzling Rosie pics below..

sexiest bum


Kim Kardashian's sister gave the star some serious competition with this photo and we're afraid Kim, you have have just been beaten



im Kardashian might have made a name for herself as the queen of belfies and, well, all things bums, but she didn't anticipate her sister doing this.
Yes, Khloe has entered the competition for sexiest bum shot, and won hands down.
The stunning brunette posted a snap from a photoshoot to celebrate "THOT Thursday" and reaching 14 million Instagram followers - which to be honest, who wouldn't celebrate?
She wrote: "THOT Thursday #14Milli."
In the snap, Khloe is leaning forwards on a stool in a tiny black lace leotard, hiding her face under the material and showing off every inch of her toned bum.
Who wins this?

Wearing sky high and very glitzy heels, her legs look endless and we think it could be one of her sexiest photos to date.
Kim might be sharing bum photos here there and everywhere, but she's not the only Kardashian to prove she's up for the fight.
 
 
All three sisters recently teamed up to model their new Lipsy range, proving it's all friendly deep down thank goodness.
Shot by famed snapper Ellen von Unwerth, the pictures show the trio posing up a storm in a variety of outfits from the collection.
And it's Kim like we've never seen her before.

Proud to be Gay

Apple CEO Tim Cook said that fighting for equality is at the core of his personal and business ethos. -AFP Photo
Apple CEO Tim Cook came out as gay Thursday and said that fighting for equality is at the core of his personal and business ethos.
The head of the tech giant said his sexuality has never been a secret at his company, but acknowledging his homosexuality as a public statement about equality was “more important” than his privacy.
“Let me be clear: I'm proud to be gay, and I consider being gay among the greatest gifts God has given me,” Cook said in a statement in Bloomberg Businessweek.
“I've had the good fortune to work at a company that loves creativity and innovation and knows it can only flourish when you embrace people's differences. Not everyone is so lucky,” he said.
The Apple CEO said coming out was part of his personal fight to stand up for minorities, a value he said his company also embraces.
“Part of social progress is understanding that a person is not defined only by one's sexuality, race, or gender,” he said.
“Being gay has given me a deeper understanding of what it means to be in the minority and provided a window into the challenges that people in other minority groups deal with every day. “ “We'll continue to fight for our values, and I believe that any CEO of this incredible company, regardless of race, gender, or sexual orientation, would do the same.
“And I will personally continue to advocate for equality for all people until my toes point up.“ Cook took over as the head of Apple in 2011 after the death of former CEO Steve Jobs.
He has faced criticism for not maintaining Apple's lustre after the death of Jobs, who was hailed by fans as a visionary.
But the recent frenzy over the big screen iPhone 6 launch had some analysts applauding Apple's comeback as it seeks to carve out its niche in the increasingly popular “phablet” market.
Cook said that being gay was only part of his identity, and described himself as a “an engineer, an uncle, a nature lover, a fitness nut, a son of the South, a sports fanatic, and many other things.“
He said he is inspired by civil rights champions Marin Luther King and Robert Kennedy, whose portraits hang in his office.

A letter to Malala

A letter from Dr Abdus Salam to Malala

You were mocked and alienated by your countrymen, when you did nothing wrong. I know something of that.
You were mocked and alienated by your countrymen, when you did nothing wrong. I know something of that.

Dear Malala,
Despite all that occurred, I’d always lugged around with me a sliver of optimism. They referred to me as Pakistan’s ‘only’ Nobel laureate; I insisted on being called the “first”.
I was born in a small town called Santokh Das; arguably not as beautiful as your Swat valley, but it did have much to offer. I grew up in Jhang, a city now tainted by its name’s association with dangerous groups.
My father was an education officer working for the Punjab government. I have a feeling your father would've liked him.
Like you, I took a keen interest in my studies. I enjoyed English and Urdu literature, but excelled at mathematics. At a very young age, I scored the highest marks ever recorded then, in my matriculation exam.
My education, however, was never as politically challenging as yours.
I did not have to contend with the Taliban destroying my school, or forbidding boys from receiving education. But whatever barriers they constructed in your way, you bravely broke through them.
In fact, you continue to defy them with every breath you take.
Winning the Nobel prize has enraged your attackers, as it has annoyed many of your countrymen.
It takes courage to walk through it all, and knowing you, courage is not in short supply.
Not a lot has changed in this country. You were mocked and alienated by your countrymen, when you did nothing wrong. I know something of that.
As a nation, we do not want to be celebrated.
What we wish for, is to be pitied.
They were pleased with you as long as you were another local victim. But then, you cast off your victimhood and emerged as a hero, a beacon of hope for young girls around the world. That’s where you lost them.
We don’t like heroes, Malala.
We like battered souls that we can showcase to the world. We want to humiliate the ‘colonialists’ and the ‘imperialists’ for their crimes, real or imagined, against the Muslims of the subcontinent.
We want them to acknowledge the Iqbalian paradise we lost to the plots and schemes of the ‘outsiders’. Any mention of the incalculable harm caused by perpetrators within us, does not assist that narrative.
We do not want to acknowledge the bigotry within, of which I know something too.
This is not something I had fully realised the day I received my Nobel prize. Standing in ceremonial Punjabi garb among a group of men in tuxedos, I was proud to represent my country, though my country was far less thrilled being represented by me.
I was demonized and successfully disenfranchised for my religious beliefs; I was not allowed to offer lectures in certain universities due to threats of violence; my work was belittled by my own people.
I decided that working abroad was better than being treated as foreigner in my own homeland. That only gave further wind to the hurtful theories about me being a ‘traitor’ to my country.
Now, the mantle passes to you, dearest child.
And with it, I regret to pass onto you the heart-wrenching burden it brings.
You are the new 'traitor'.
You are presented with the dire challenge of bringing peace and pride to a country, that doesn't want your gift.
Like a mother of a particularly rebellious child, you must find a way to love them nonetheless. Eventually, I pray, they will understand.
I had the privilege of being the first to offer this country a Nobel Prize. But now there are two of us.
And, I’m still counting.
Yours truly,
Abdus Salam


The Holy Cow



These are a few statements I overheard at a family lunch, reinforcing my belief that Qurbani has now completed its transformation into purely a status statement, meant to up your prestige in society.
Nearing Eidul Azha, the hottest topic of conversations are the qurbaani kay janwar (sacrificial animals). But it isn't the ritual or the spirit behind it which people are interested in discussing; it's the type/breed and most importantly, the size and price of cattle which they have either purchased or are planning to purchase for sacrifice.

When it comes to Bakra Eid, you are inevitably in a state of competition with your family, neighbours, colleagues, friends and even those present at the same bakra mandi (cattle fair), while you're making a purchase. You just have to get your hands on the best one or else you will be gloated over by others.
In search of an obviously oversized goat or cow, you keep visiting themandis and keep inquiring from others. Not only does it get you attention, it also helps you find out about the size of others’ wallets.
Reactionists as we are, we want to be better than others.
Another episode begins once you have brought your cattle home; you have bookings ready for chaanppaayekalejimaghaz, etc. You have essentially set up a store where shopping for your favourite flank of meat is free once every year, and expect it to earn you tonnes of sawaab.
The number of goats/cows is directly proportional to the level of regard you earn during the Eid stretch. Yes, you score more points in the social realm if you spend more on your gaaye/bakra, and its an added bonus if you are asked to flash the price tag.

You know what's amazing? Amongst women, it's usually lawn which rules the domain of status screaming. But when Bakra Eid comes along, women readily skip chattering about the most expensive lawn to make way for gaaye/bakra expenditure stories.
Let me tell you that if ladies let anything move higher than branded lawn on their gossip agenda for the day, it is cause for concern.
Actually, I'm willing to bet most showoffs secretly wish that their sacrificial animals were branded, so they could flaunt them around as Samsung ka bakraGucci ki gaaye or maybe evenKhaadi ki bachhiya.
In fact, they have been branded, even if only with much less chic labels. There have been news reports of animals being named Bholu no. 1,Gullu Butt Bayl and the Shareef Bradraan Jori.
Is that like a saintly gesture to assign identities to the poor animals? Is this a circus or what? Because your animal is gigantic in physique and walks around like an unleashed beast, you chose to find analogies with the famous car-smasher?
Your Gullu Butt Bayl is supposed to be sacrificed, for God's sake...literally!
The question that arises, then, is that in a country where people die from starvation, where the vast majority sees eating meat as luxury, where people suffer heart attacks on seeing their power bills, and where every other year we face a natural disaster, which leaves thousands displaced; do we even qualify for financially exorbitant, ostentatious acts of animal-slaughtering just to be deemed superior?
All the way from Thar to Waziristan, the situation is dire when it comes to even basic food and protection from fatal diseases.
Why must the money go to egocentric and pretentious objectives?
This is not something we can blame the United States or neighbouring countries for. It is a social parasite we've bred ourselves and that has gotten into our very fabric as a society now.

Failing to prioritise, we have gone to such extremes as completely losing any sense or meaning of rudimentary religious rituals, and the Bakra Eid frenzy is just one of the many confused customs.
I do not mean to say that the festivities of the occasion should be compromised but, surely, one must realise that immoderation at one end leads to unbalance in the whole of the society. It triggers a ripple effect.
With every passing Eid, these glitzy trends are solidifying a tad more, turning the entire monomania bigger and bigger, spreading it further and further.
As hypocrisy runs high, ethics and morals are left decaying on the streets, much like the offal will, following all the qurbanis (because of course, once everyone has seen we sacrificed a Samsung, who cares what happens to stinky streets?).

We love to exploit everything for entertainment and social approval. I have seen people borrowing money so that they can commit to the sacred sacrifice just to gain social approval, ignoring the fact that the indebted are actually exempted in Islam.
Not performing qurbani is considered an embarrassment even though it's not even a compulsion. Your sacrifice is your personal affair and you are answerable to no one for it. And increasing the number of animals for slaughter will not get you any extra divine points.
This is a matter of spirit, not statistics.
Please stop shopping religion.