Monday, 25 August 2008

Gwen Stefani Gives Birth To Second Son





Singer Gwen Stefani and her married man, Gavin Rossdale, welcomed their second son on Thursday (August 21), according to a statement from Stefani's label, Interscope Records. The child, Zuma Nesta Rock Rossdale, was born at 12:46 p.m. PT and weighed eighter from Decatur and a half pounds.


"Mother, baby and family ar all well-chosen and healthy," the statement read.


Zuma is the couple's second boy, joining Kingston, who off 2 on May 26.


The birth of her minute child crests an already busy year for Stefani, who earlier this summer told fans that she was getting back together with No Doubt to record their first studio album in seven years.


At the time of the announcement, Stefani said she was operative throughout her pregnancy.


"Feels screwball to be pregnant all over once more!!!!!" she wrote on the message boards of her band's Web site. "We have been spending every day up in the little studio in our house, trying to write music. My favorite portion so far is just seeing the guys every day and hanging out. We have so practically fun together. The songwriting part is a minute slow on my part. ... I think it has something to do with the baby in my belly, but I'm indisputable it is all of the process, and I really believe this could be the most elysian No Doubt record so far. Can't wait to see what happens."


It is unknown whether the birth of her second child will hold up the album, which had been pegged for an early 2009 release.


It's besides unclear how the 38-year-old Stefani and 40-year-old Rossdale settled on the make Zuma, although it's worth nothing that there's a Malibu, California, beach called Zuma not far from the couple's Los Angeles home. Neil Diamond named one of his albums Zuma in honor of the same beach. Zuma is also a popular surname in South Africa. Also, the baby shares one of his midsection names, Nesta, with Bob Marley.







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Thursday, 7 August 2008

`Traveling Pants' lose some magic in sequel

Yes, the pants still exist, merely now they're covered in patches and jewels and etched with the memories and dreams of the four young women who've been wearing them. And they still travel - to New York and Vermont, Turkey and Greece, and various points in between.


But the magic in those jeans, and in the bond that linked the friends who've shared them over the days, seems to have faded in "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2."


The sequel to 2005's surprisingly tolerable "Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants" finds our eclectic radical of heroines a short bit sr. and wiser and a lot less connected, despite the anticipate they made to ship the jeans to each other along with a note containing the juicy details of their latest adventures. Now, they barely have