ET's Power List: Nicki Minaj

Fresh off of her album release, Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded - The Re-Up, Nicki Minaj has another accomplishment to celebrate -- earning a slot on the First Annual ET Power List.

From her mixtapes to her albums to her popular features, almost everyone has a little bit of Nicki on their MP3 player, but what's on Nicki's iPod might surprise you.

"No one knows that I'm in love with Enya!" Nicki says. "Oh my gosh, she makes me feel like I could fly!"

2012 has been a busy year for the rapper outside of music. With the launch of her new Pink Friday fragrance and her new addition to American Idol, Nicki has expanded her empire to become a household name, but just a few years ago she was still virtually unknown.

VIDEO: Nicki Minaj Comments on Idol Feud

"I was still working at Red Lobster when I first heard my song on the radio, so I wouldn't consider myself famous at that time!" says Nicki. "I had to go in that kitchen and make them salads and take that lobster out to that table!"

No one makes it to the top without getting advice (both good and bad), so what's the most questionable suggestion Nicki's ever gotten?

"The worst advice anyone has ever given me is to not incorporate singing and theater into my music and into my image!" says Nicki.

Watch the video for more.

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Penn Station reopens after switch problem








The switch problem that led to a complete service shutdown at Penn Station on the busiest travel night of the year has been resolved, Long Island Rail Road said.

The station — which was shut down due to overcrowding — was reopened.

Amtrak, NJ Transit and Long Island Rail Road were all still down for about an hour.

Expect delays on many lines, officials said.

At one point, thousands of people packed the streets outside the station.

Many of the stranded travelers included people leaving town for the holiday, lugging suitcases.

“Its the busiest travel day and they can’t get their s—t together!” fumed Ashley Smith, 28, a New Jersey bound Queens woman.





Kaylee Osowski



Crowds outside Penn Station tonight.





Twenty-five year old Anh Le was so desperate she contemplated calling a car service from Manhattan to New Jersey.

“It’s frustrating,” she said.

Officials said the problem stems from a power outage that effected Amtrak’s switches.










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Dear daughter, let me give you some career advice ...




















My daughter, a high school junior, wants to be a teacher. That doesn’t sit well with my husband, who worries about the state of education and the job outlook. He and I regularly debate whether we should encourage her to pursue this interest, or strongly steer her in another direction.

Today, coaching our kids about career paths is complicated. Many of my reporter and editor friends who witnessed an overhaul of the media world are highly opposed to their kids becoming journalists. Where parents of the past pushed their kids to follow in their footsteps, we want the generation of college-bound kids we raise to go where the jobs will be.

American workers’ experiences during the recession and the uncertainty of the global economy have made many of us more opinionated about what careers our kids pursue. We have witnessed job loss and burnout. We have seen highly educated professionals such as lawyers and bankers lose their jobs. And worse, we have seen college graduating classes face an overwhelmingly tough employment arena. While it’s true that a college degree usually guarantees better wages, the mantra of parents clearly has become: Can you land a decent-paying job with that degree?





As parents, we’re just beginning to understand that the next generation will have to navigate the workplace differently. Experts forecast that workers starting out now will switch careers — that’s careers, not jobs — an average of more than three times during their lives. Should parents, then, worry less about guiding our kids into careers and focus more on helping our kids identify skills to succeed in the new economy?

Whether my daughter becomes a teacher or an engineer, her success likely will come from a mastery of technology, languages and communications skills. Most importantly, she will need the mindset to be a problem solver, innovator, risk taker and self marketer. She will need to be prepared to continuously acquire new skills, a lesson my generation has learned the hard way.

“We are fooling ourselves to think young people will get a degree and spend the next 20 years at a single company or in a single industry,” says John Swartz, regional director of career services at Everest College, which has campuses in 30 cities including Miami. “They will have to be more focused on dealing with change. In this new world order, they have to follow the jobs in demand, acquire the right skills or at least transferable skills, and know that the skill set needed might change.”

For example, Swartz says, he has seen young people get training to become medical assistants because they have a passion to help others. They later were able to apply those skills to other jobs in healthcare. “Parents need to help their kids soul search, then support their decision whatever they choose, understanding that every good high-wage job requires more skill,” Swartz says.

Cesar Alvarez, executive chairman of Greenberg Traurig law firm, factors this concept into how he advises his four children, 28, 27, 22 and 21. For centuries, the law profession has attracted smart, principled men and women. Yet, in the last few years, we’ve seen lawyers underemployed, law partners burned out and law grads without jobs. I asked Alvarez whether he has encouraged any of his children to enter the legal profession.





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New House Speaker pledges inclusion, cooperation




















Bipartisanship. Cooperation. Across the aisle.

These were the buzzwords and phrases Tuesday during the swearing in of a massive new class of lawmakers who are part of the 86th Legislature that will convene in March.

The aftermath of the Nov. 6 election, which saw Democrats gain seven seats overall, has tempered Republicans. Just two years ago GOP leaders boasted about how conservative Tallahassee had become. Now, amid a backlash against a voting law passed by Republicans in 2011, both GOP leaders set less strident tones during their inaugural speeches, stressing cooperation among all members and a rejection of petty political squabbles.





“The election is over,” said Will Weatherford, who became at 33 the youngest House speaker in modern Florida history and the first from Tampa Bay since 2004.

To those who want President Barack Obama or Congress to fail, Weatherford said: “You are wishing America to fail, and that is unacceptable.”

Tick tock, tick tock

With 8.5 percent unemployment and 3.5 million Floridians on food stamps, Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel, said that the time for action is now. He gave digital countdown clocks to each House member to remind them that they have two years to improve conditions.

“Our time is short, the clock is ticking, let us make the most of every single second,” Weatherford said. “There are people counting on us. I am counting on you. So that when the clock runs out may it be said of us that we were bold, we served with a purpose and we fulfilled our promise to Florida.”

In a speech that broadly outlined themes of inclusion and cooperation, Weatherford stayed away from specific policy. Instead, Weatherford told members it is more important to think big.

“We will need a clear focus, a collaborative purpose and a leadership of conscience that is willing to do what is right,” he said.

Elections reform

Senate President Don Gaetz hit on the same themes.

“The floor in this chamber is not divided by a partisan aisle that freezes us into gridlock on separate sides of every issue,” Gaetz, R-Niceville, said.

Gaetz, however, was more specific than Weatherford. He said the Senate and House will work together to create jobs, improve higher education, tighten up ethics rules and reform the election process to ensure the 2014 elections in Florida are “a model for America.”

He told his fellow senators they will be judged on their results.

“You and I will be judged by whether we have helped or hurt or been irrelevant to the slow, steady, permanent recovery of Florida’s economy,” he said. “You and I will be judged by whether it is more or less likely that a high school or college or university graduate can count on his education as the passport to a job.

“You and I will be judged, in spite of ourselves, not by what we say but by what we do to reform the way we run elections and raise the standards of ethical conduct from the courthouse to the state house.”

Ethics crash course

To show that he’s serious about ethics reform, Gaetz has proposed that senators take an ethics course — for an hour.

In that amount of time, Gaetz hopes to provide an overview of the ethical dilemmas that face lawmakers from time to time.

“My hope is that (the class) will cover the basics of public service and interest people in learning more,” Gaetz told reporters, adding that it’s better for lawmakers to learn the rules up front rather than after they’re in trouble.

Gaetz also installed a rule banning senators from voting on bills that could benefit or harm them personally. Under current rules, senators can vote as long as they disclose the conflict.

Conflicts are inevitable because lawmaking is a part-time job that pays about $30,000 per year, and most legislators and their spouses have other jobs and businesses.

For example, Sen. Greg Evers, R-Baker, disclosed a voting conflict in 2012 on a controversial prison privatization bill. Evers’s wife was a lobbyist for four groups that opposed privatization. Evers was abiding by the rules when he cast his vote against the bill.

In the House, Weatherford has revived the ethics and elections committee after it was disbanded to address reforms that he says is necessary.

Herald/Times staff writers Steve Bousquet and Brittany Alana Davis contributed to this report.





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News Summary: India outrage over Facebook arrests
















WHAT HAPPENED: As India‘s financial capital shut down for the weekend funeral of a powerful politician linked to waves of mob violence, a woman posted on Facebook that the closures in Mumbai were “due to fear, not due to respect.” A friend of hers hit the “like” button. For that, both women were arrested.


THE RATIONALE: The arrests were seen as a move by police to prevent any outbreak of violence by supporters of Bal Thackeray, a powerful Hindu fundamentalist politician who died Saturday.













THE REACTION: But analysts and the media are slamming the Maharashtra state government for what they said was a flagrant misuse of the law and an attempt to curb freedom of expression.


Social Media News Headlines – Yahoo! News



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ET's Power List: Taylor Swift

At 22 years old, the latest addition to ET's Power List, Taylor Swift, has practically grown up in the spotlight. While on the one hand, her early success has garnered her an estimated net worth of $165 million, on the other hand, any moment of aberration could hit the front page of tabloids overnight. So what's the teen star's vice?

PICS: Fierce & Fabulous Fashions of the 2012 AMA Red Carpet

"The one indulgence that I allow myself is food," says Taylor. "I just love food. I can't do crazy birdseed diet stuff."

While her diet may be indulgent, Taylor still displays discipline.

"I like to eat a lot, so I exercise a lot," Taylor explains. "I try to really balance it out, because I just like food so much!"

WATCH: Taylor Swift Shares Home Videos

According to Taylor, the best advice she ever received was "to be kind to people."

"No matter how bad a day you're having, don't take it out on other people," says Taylor.

Watch the video for more.

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Cops questioning person of interest in Brooklyn shopkeeper slays








Cops are questioning a person of interest in the serial killings of three Brooklyn shopkeepers, law enforcement sources told the Post.

The mustachioed man seen carrying a duffel bag near the scene of the latest killing in Flatbush is being interviewed by investigators at the 67th precinct, the sources said.

The unidentified man was seen near the scene of Friday’s murder of Rahmatollah Vahidipour, 78, who was closing up his shop just after 7 pm when he was shot three times.

Casings left at the scene were matched by ballistics tests to two other killings on July 6 and Aug. 2 that were committed with the same .22-caliber handgun.





NYPD / Splash News



This is "John Doe Duffel Bag" - a person of interest in the Brooklyn shopkeeper killings.





A man that resembled “Duffel Bag” was also spotted on grainy surveillance footage near the scene of the shooting of Bensonhurst store owner Isaac Kadare, 59, sources have said — but Police Commissioner Ray Kelly yesterday dismissed the similarity.

“No, that is not the case,” Kelly said. “He was in the vicinity ... roughly at the time we believe the [latest] murder took place."

Cops have also ruled out a man who was identified as a person of interest in the shooting of Kadare.

”It is no longer relevant,” said Kelly. “ That individual washed out again. ... He’s not a subject. He’s a person we simply wanted to speak to.”

Each of the three murders occurred while the lone business owner was closing up shop and all three bodies were also covered when they were discovered, cops said.

“It may be significant, it may not, but in all three cases, the victim’s head was covered either by cardboard or clothing of some sort,” said Kelly.

Mohamed Gebeli, 65, was shot to death on July 6 in his Bay Ridge clothing store and Kadare was stabbed in the neck and shot in the head roughly one month later at his Bensonhurst 99 cent store.

Employees of stores near the latest Flatbush killing are being told by cops to use security cameras and to not close up shop alone.










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Miami-Dade to swear in mayor, commissioners




















Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez will officially begin his first full term Tuesday morning, when he will be sworn in following his August electoral win.

The mayor has been in office for more than a year — but that was filling in for the remainder of ousted Mayor Carlos Alvarez’s term. Gimenez defeated six candidates, including outgoing Commission Chairman Joe Martinez, and now gets four years of his own to govern. He can seek reelection in 2016.

Seven commissioners will also be sworn in, including Juan C. Zapata, Martinez’s successor and the only new member of the board. The Colombian-American Zapata will become the first South American on the commission.





Four incumbents — Bruno Barreiro, Audrey Edmonson, Barbara Jordan and Dennis Moss — won reelection, and two more — Esteban “Steve” Bovo and Xavier Suarez — were automatically reelected without opposition.

Like Gimenez, Bovo and Suarez were finishing former commissioners’ terms and will now begin their first four-year terms.

After the swearing-in, the clock will start ticking for new, eight-year commissioner term limits voters approved earlier this month. The limits do not apply retroactively to time commissioners have already served on the dais.

The swearing-in ceremony will be held at 9:30 a.m. at the South Miami-Dade Cultural Arts Center, 10950 SW 211th St., Cutler Bay.

A regularly scheduled commission meeting will later be convened at 2 p.m. at the County Hall commission chambers, 111 NW 1st St., Miami. There, the board will elect a new chair and vice-chair to serve a two-year term.

The chairmanship race appears unusually wide open this year, with more than a handful of commissioners interested in the job and no clear frontrunner. The chair presides over meetings, sets the agenda for the board, creates committees and could take over some of the mayor’s powers in the event of a mayoral vacancy.

Among the items on Tuesday’s meeting agenda is awarding a $25 million contract to Munilla Construction Management to build a Metrorail train test track at the county’s Lehman Center rail yard.

The 2,500-foot track raised some controversy earlier this year when the county was awarding a separate, more than $300 million contract to purchase 136 new Metorail trains. The runner-up Spanish firm that did not win that contract complained that the new track would unfairly benefit the Italian firm ultimately chosen to build the trains that did not have a U.S. track of its own.

The county, which currently tests its trains on existing rail tracks overnight, says it has wanted the track for years, and that the bid is unrelated to the new trains purchase.





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Stars Party Gangnam Style Backstage at AMAs

BET's Rocsi Diaz acted as a special correspondent for ET at the American Music Awards on Sunday, getting up close and personal with the stars backstage, who were all big fans of Korean pop star Psy.

PICS: The Fierce & Fabulous Styles of the 2012 AMAs

While Psy performed his hit song Gangnam Style, Rocsi used her Nokia Lumia 920 to capture the scene backstage where even Carrie Underwood was dancing along to the tune.

Psy was joined onstage by MC Hammer, who also accompanied him backstage for our interview.

"Twenty years ago, I saw MC Hammer on the TV in Korea and he said, 'You can't touch this.' And 20 years later, I can touch him," joked Psy, patting Hammer on the shoulder.

Watch the video to check out all the star pics Rocsi took with her Nokia Lumia 920.

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Madonna selling Central Park West apartment for $23.5M








The Material Girl’s apartment is up for sale for $23.5 million.

Madonna’s co-op at 41 Central Park West – along 64th Street – was placed on the buying block today, the Post has learned.

It’s a duplex on the fifth and sixth floors that contains more than 6,000 square feet -- with nearly 110 feet of windows facing Central Park.

The exclusive pad comes with two great rooms that have Juliet balconies, five large wood burning fireplaces, four separate bedroom wings, eight baths, a Chef's eat-in- kitchen, and ceilings higher than 10 feet, according to the listing.



Arabella Buckworth, of Brown Harris Stevens, and Adam Modlin, of The Modlin Group, have the co-listing.

The apartment has also been the subject of some controversy, The Post has previously reported.

The pop icon settled a lawsuit with her upstairs neighbor, Karen George in 2011. The suit charged that Madonna blasted music and danced too loudly, and that the co-op board didn’t try to stop the problem.

Madonna moved out of the building last year and moved in to an East Side townhouse.










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