Thursday, June 4, 2009

Max Lapierre @sshole...ya aint that good...

I was on bishop last night and I saw Maxime Lapierre with a leg brace, limping to DiVinci (fancy restaurant). I walked up to the terrasse where he was sitting and thought about asking for an autograph for my daughter, but decided to be nice and not harrass him while he was out relaxing. Later on, I was smoking a cigarette outside a neighbouring bar and saw him limping towards his car (rented nissan 350Z), I asked him for an autograph for my daughter, and in exchange got brushed off. He rudely put his hand up, as if to stop me and then got in his car and quickly drove off- I mean, showed off. I don't even like the guy, my daughter thinks he's cute. What comes around goes around. I put voodoo on your season.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Scarlett Johansson's killer cleavage





Scarlett Johansson's killer cleavage has topped a new TV celebration of Hollywood's best breasts.

The actress beat newlywed Salma Hayek for the booby prize as part of a new poll compiled by TV show Access Hollywood.

The top five actresses on the new list are:

1. Scarlett Johansson

2. Salma Hayek

3. Halle Berry


4. Jessica Simpson

5. Jennifer Love Hewitt

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Bring on the PLAYOFFS !!!

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Thursday, March 19, 2009



Monday, February 23, 2009

True Beauty Winner




Julia Anderson Wins

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Drama of Flight 1549


Hudson 'miracle' pilot gets applause on Broadway
Escorts Montreal reports: Weeks after starring in his own story of bravery and heroism, the pilot who safely ditched his jetliner in the Hudson River received a standing ovation Saturday from the audience at a Broadway performance of "South Pacific."

At the end of the classic revival, the show's stars introduced Capt. Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger as the pilot who set down the disabled plane within reach of rescue boats last month, saving the lives of all 155 people on US Airways Flight 1549.

"It could have been tragic, but it wasn't. It became a miracle," said Kelli O'Hara, who plays the show's lead female character, Nellie Forbush. "We've never been more honored than to perform for you, Captain."

As she spoke, a spotlight was trained on Sullenberger in the audience, and the crowd stood, cheered and applauded. The pilot's wife, Lorrie Sullenberger, began wiping tears from her face.

He hugged her, then turned back to the crowd and waved as the cheers grew still louder.

Many in the audience already had recognized him. Murmurs of "look who's here" had buzzed through the crowd during intermission.

"It was quite exciting just to see this guy who saved so many lives," said David Feldman, who found himself sitting two rows behind the pilot.

"It's so nice to have a hero who's a real hero, instead of movie stars," added Feldman's wife, Ellen Schwartz.

The 58-year-old pilot, his wife and their two daughters went backstage after the show and met the cast of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical, which tells of the romances and heroics of a group of American aviators, nurses and sailors stationed far from home during World War II.

It was an appropriate choice for Sullenberger, who was named best aviator in his Air Force Academy class and served in the military from 1973 to 1980. He flew F-4 Phantom II fighter planes and served as a flight leader in Europe and the Pacific.

The calm and steadiness with which he handled the Jan. 15 near-disaster — witnesses said he walked the length of the waterlogged plane to make sure everyone got out — could have fit right in with the feats depicted on the Lincoln Center Theater stage. A propeller plane even forms part of the show's set.

Sullenberger and his fellow crew members are in New York as part of a media blitz, including an interview with the pilot that is set to air Sunday on CBS' "60 Minutes." He also is expected to appear Monday on ABC's "Good Morning America" and CBS's "The Early Show" and to receive a key to the city from Mayor Michael Bloomberg later in the day.



US Airways airplane crashes in Hudson River - Hero pilot Chesley Sullenberger III saves all aboard

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A former fighter pilot was hailed as the Hero of the Hudson Thursday night after he landed a stricken US Airways jet in the river - and made sure everybody got out alive.

Pilot Chesley Sullenberger was still drying off when Mayor Bloomberg sang his praises.

"He did a masterful job of landing the plane in the river" and evacuating the passengers, Bloomberg said of the veteran pilot who lives near San Francisco.

With water seeping into the plane - and all his 150 passengers and four other crew members safe - Sullenberger walked up and down the center aisle twice to make sure nobody was left before he, too, fled the jet, the mayor said.

"He was the last one off the plane," Bloomberg said.

Gov. Paterson also praised the ferry boat operators and rescue workers who rushed over as the plane bobbed in the 40-degree water and plucked the frigid, frightened passengers off the wings.

"We've had a miracle on the Hudson," Paterson said.

The Federal Aviation Administration said everybody was accounted for - a group that included at least one baby and a passenger who lost a relative in the Sept. 11 attacks.

Passengers described the scene moments after the plane hit the water as "organized chaos." Yet, there was little panic as they helped each other reach the exit - allowing women and children to go first.

"It's just incredible right now that everybody's still alive," passenger Alberto Panero said.

"It was intense, it was intense," added another passenger, Jeff Kolodjay. "You've got to give it to the pilot. He made a hell of a landing."

It was just 20 degrees at the time and shivering survivors were rushed to Roosevelt Hospital and other medical centers to be treated for exposure. Most were expected to be released.

Meanwhile, investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board were inspecting the 9-year-old Airbus A320, which was towed to Battery Park City and moored to a bulkhead just north of the World Financial Center.

Sullenberger, a 57-year-old former Air Force fighter pilot and a 29-year veteran of US Airways, told air traffic controllers he hit a flock of geese and that it knocked out both of his engines.

It appeared to be the first time in 45 years that a major aircraft crash-landed in the water - and every passenger on board made it out alive.

Former Airbus executive George Hamlin said the pilot deserves a big thank you from the city.

"Ditching an aircraft is a significant accomplishment on the part of the pilot, as opposed to crashing one," he said. "There's no place for an airplane of that size to land in Manhattan."

Sunday, January 25, 2009

East battles West in Montreal All-Star Game







Former Montreal Canadien players Jean Belliveau (2nd L)and Bob Gainey (2nd R) drop the pucks during the ceremonial face-off between Eastern conference all-star Alexei Kovalev (L) of the Montreal Canadiens and Western conference all-star Joe Thornton (R) of the San Jose Sharks before the NHL All-Star hockey game in Montreal, January 25, 2009.
The NHL will showcase its best and brightest Sunday evening in the hockey hotbed of Montreal, as the Eastern Conference battles the West in the 57th annual All-Star Game at the Bell Centre.


This is the fourth time Montreal has hosted the mid-season showcase in the expansion era and the first time since February 6, 1993 -- just months before the Canadiens won their last Stanley Cup title. It's also the first time the All-Star Game is being staged in Canada since Toronto hosted the event in 2000.

Playing All-Star game host is also another way for the Canadiens to celebrate their 100th year in existence. The Habs have planned numerous events throughout the season to mark their centennial, including the retirement of goaltender Patrick Roy's jersey.


The 2009 contest is the fifth since the league went back to the traditional East-West format. Prior to this stretch, the league used the North America vs. the World theme for five years.


The East and West have split the last four meetings since returning to the conference format. Last year, the East picked up an 8-7 win in Atlanta as Boston's Marc Savard scored the game-winning goal with 20.9 seconds left in regulation.

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Canadiens fans won't have to wait long to see their local heroes skate on the home ice Sunday, as four Habs were voted in as starters on the Eastern Conference squad.


Carey Price will be the East's starting goaltender, Alex Kovalev will start on one wing, while Andrei Markov and Mike Komisarek will make up the blueline tandem. The Canadiens nearly swept the starting slots on the East, as they led the voting for all six spots at one point.


Kovalev, who was selected as the East captain, will make his fourth All-Star appearance Sunday, while Markov is playing in his second game. Both Price and Komisarek will be making their All-Star debuts.


The remaining two starters on the East were from the Pittsburgh Penguins, as the fans also voted in forwards Sidney Crosby and Evgeni Malkin. However, Crosby will not play in this year's game as he is suffering from a left knee injury. Martin St. Louis of the Tampa Bay Lightning was announced as Crosby's replacement.


Crosby was the leading vote-getter this year as he garnered a record 1,713,021 votes to easily beat the record set by Jaromir Jagr in 2000.


Pittsburgh's duo heads into the break as the top-two scorers in the NHL, as Malkin leads the league with 70 points and Crosby is next with 60.


The Western Conference starting lineup is represented by players from just two teams. From the Chicago Blackhawks, forwards Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews and defenseman Brian Campbell were voted in by the fans. The remaining three West starters are from Anaheim as goaltender Jean-Sebastien Giguere, defenseman Scott Niedermayer and forward Ryan Getzlaf made the squad.


Kane, last year's Calder Trophy winner as the league's top rookie, will be making his All-Star debut after leading the West with 917,551 votes. Toews, a fellow NHL sophomore, was also selected to the mid-season showcase for the first time. Campbell is playing in his third straight game, but his first as a Blackhawk.


Niedermayer leads all starting players with six All-Star appearances. Getzlaf is playing in his second game, while Giguere, a native of Montreal, is getting the start in his All-Star debut.


San Jose centerman Joe Thornton was selected as the captain for the West squad.


Washington's Alex Ovechkin, the NHL's reigning MVP, was not voted in as an East starter, but did make his third All-Star team as a reserve. The Russian superstar is leading the NHL with 31 goals this season and is third behind Malkin and Crosby with 59 points.


The defending Stanley Cup champion Red Wings won't have a representative on the ice this year, as two Detroit players were named as reserves, but will sit out to rest injuries. Red Wings defenseman Nicklas Lidstrom has been replaced on the roster by Stephane Robidas of Dallas, while teammate Pavel Datsyuk will sit out and make way for San Jose forward Patrick Marleau.


The head coach of the Eastern Conference will be Boston's Claude Julien. His assistant will be Montreal head coach Guy Carbonneau.


For the West, coaching will be San Jose's Todd McLellan, and Detroit's Mike Babcock will serve as the assistant.

Friday, January 2, 2009

John Travolta's Son Dies in The Bahamas



Family Lawyer Attributes the 16-Year-Old's Death to Seizure

John Travolta's 16-year-old son, Jett, died Friday morning at the family's vacation home in The Bahamas after what the family's lawyer says was a seizure-related incident.

In this file photo, John Travolta and son Jett walk to a waiting helicopter at the Santa Monica...
In this file photo, John Travolta and son Jett walk to a waiting helicopter at the Santa Monica Airport in Santa Monica, Calif. Jett Travolta, 16, suffered a seizure and died suddenly on Friday at his family's vacation home at the Old Bahama Bay Hotel on Grand Bahama Island, attorney Michael Ossi said.
(Lucky Mat/Getty Images)The family, including Jett Travolta's mother, Kelly Preston, and his 8-year-old sister, Ella, had been celebrating the New Year in The Bahamas.

"A nanny attempted to revive him, all attempts were made, but he couldn't be revived," Travolta's attorney, Michael Ossi, who is also in The Bahamas, told ABCNews.com. "They tried as hard as they could to revive Jett."

Ossi added that the teenager "has had seizures in the past, but they were controlled. This one couldn't be."

The seizure may be only part of the story. Royal Bahamas Police Force spokeswoman Loretta Mackey told the Associated Press that Jett Travolta died from hitting his head in a bathtub.

Jett Travolta's health made national news in 2002. It was at this time that his mother disclosed that at age 2 he had had a poorly understood condition known as Kawasaki syndrome, a collection of symptoms that stem from swollen arteries.

Researchers believe that inflammation from Kawasaki syndrome, or KS, can lead to convulsions and seizures.

KS primarily affects children under the age of 5, though it can occur in older children. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about nine out of 100,000 children have KS. Incidence is higher among Japanese and Korean children, though KS can occur among any ethnicity.

Sunday, December 28, 2008

She's Back !!!!


<a href="http://www.joost.com/135lm0p/t/Britney-Spears-Circus">Britney Spears - Circus</a>

Thursday, December 18, 2008


David Letterman Gets Jen Aniston's 'Naked on GQ' Tie
Thursday, December 18, 2008

Jennifer Aniston presents David Letterman with the tie she wore on the cover of GQ Magazine.
David Letterman is now the proud owner of the most famous tie in the world.

Jennifer Aniston presented the late night host with the tie she wore on the January cover of GQ Magazine, telling the talk show it was "an early Christmas gift."

The GQ cover and inside photos of Jen Aniston naked with two guys, wearing only the tie, caused quite a commotion when it was released last week.

"I wasn't trying to make any statement," Aniston said Wednesday on "The late Show With David Letterman."

Aniston is making the rounds promoting her new movie, "Marley & Me," which co-stars Owen Wilson. The movie opens on Christmas day, opposite her ex-husband Brad Pitt's widely anticipated film, "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button."

It looks like Aniston is doing everything she can to make sure "Marley" gives "Benjamin" a run for movie-goers' money.


Hefner 'impressed' by Aniston nude cover

Hugh Hefner has revealed that he was "much impressed" by Jennifer Aniston's nude GQ cover.

The Marley and Me star appears on the cover of the magazine's latest edition wearing just a red, white and blue necktie.


"This looks like a cover of Playboy," Hefner told Extra. "I'm very much impressed by Jennifer.

"Is it just me, or is Jennifer Aniston getting hotter? Never seen her in this light before."

Earlier this week Aniston defended her decision to pose for the racy photograph, saying: "I wasn't trying to make any statement."

Friday, November 28, 2008

2,700-year-old marijuana found in tomb


OTTAWA - Researchers say they have located the world's oldest stash of marijuana, in a tomb in a remote part of China.

The cache of cannabis is about 2,700 years old and was clearly "cultivated for psychoactive purposes," rather than as fibre for clothing or as food, says a research paper in the Journal of Experimental Botany.

The 789 grams of dried cannabis was buried alongside a light-haired, blue-eyed Caucasian man, likely a shaman of the Gushi culture, near Turpan in northwestern China.

The extremely dry conditions and alkaline soil acted as preservatives, allowing a team of scientists to carefully analyze the stash, which still looked green though it had lost its distinctive odour.

"To our knowledge, these investigations provide the oldest documentation of cannabis as a pharmacologically active agent," says the newly published paper, whose lead author was American neurologist Dr. Ethan B. Russo.

Remnants of cannabis have been found in ancient Egypt and other sites, and the substance has been referred to by authors such as the Greek historian Herodotus. But the tomb stash is the oldest so far that could be thoroughly tested for its properties.

The 18 researchers, most of them based in China, subjected the cannabis to a battery of tests, including carbon dating and genetic analysis. Scientists also tried to germinate 100 of the seeds found in the cache, without success.

The marijuana was found to have a relatively high content of THC, the main active ingredient in cannabis, but the sample was too old to determine a precise percentage.

Researchers also could not determine whether the cannabis was smoked or ingested, as there were no pipes or other clues in the tomb of the shaman, who was about 45 years old.

The large cache was contained in a leather basket and in a wooden bowl, and was likely meant to be used by the shaman in the afterlife.

"This materially is unequivocally cannabis, and no material has previously had this degree of analysis possible," Russo said in an interview from Missoula, Mont.

"It was common practice in burials to provide materials needed for the afterlife. No hemp or seeds were provided for fabric or food. Rather, cannabis as medicine or for visionary purposes was supplied."

The tomb also contained bridles, archery equipment and a harp, confirming the man's high social standing.

Russo is a full-time consultant with GW Pharmaceuticals, which makes Sativex, a cannabis-based medicine approved in Canada for pain linked to multiple sclerosis and cancer.

The company operates a cannabis-testing laboratory at a secret location in southern England to monitor crop quality for producing Sativex, and allowed Russo use of the facility for tests on 11 grams of the tomb cannabis.

Researchers needed about 10 months to cut red tape barring the transfer of the cannabis to England from China, Russo said.

The inter-disciplinary study was published this week by the British-based botany journal, which uses independent reviewers to ensure the accuracy and objectivity of all submitted papers.

The substance has been found in two of the 500 Gushi tombs excavated so far in northwestern China, indicating that cannabis was either restricted for use by a few individuals or was administered as a medicine to others through shamans, Russo said.

"It certainly does indicate that cannabis has been used by man for a variety of purposes for thousands of years."

Russo, who had a neurology practice for 20 years, has previously published studies examining the history of cannabis.

"I hope we can avoid some of the political liabilities of the issue," he said, referring to his latest paper.

The region of China where the tomb is located, Xinjiang, is considered an original source of many cannabis strains worldwide.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Ukrainian beauty Olga Kurylenko puts a new face on the role of Bond Girl







Smart, sexy and strong, Olga Kurylenko is a lot like her Quantum of Solace character
Ukrainian beauty Olga Kurylenko puts a new face on the role of Bond Girl, and what a face it is! Her Quantum of Solace character Camille is nobody’s plaything, not even OO7’s.

Whoever decided women should be called “the weaker sex” never met Olga Kurylenko.

The Ukrainian-born beauty is smart, outspoken and very determined — just the characteristics that also define the newest Bond Girl.

As Camille in Quantum of Solace, Kurylenko gets to play a different sort of femme fatale. She isn’t anybody’s plaything, and the biggest passion she shares with James Bond is their mutual lust for revenge. The secret agent meets his match.

“She’s not just hanging out with him. She doesn’t need Bond to exist,” says Kurylenko of her Quantum of Solace character. “She’s got her own story, her own agenda and her own life.”

That agenda is to avenge the killings of her family.

Quantum Of Solace opens Friday, which also happens to be Kurylenko’s 29th birthday. During a recent promotional stop, she talked about how hard she worked to get the role of Camille. And, no, she had no reservations about being a Bond Girl.


“If I didn’t want the job, I wouldn’t have gone through the casting process,” she says. “If I don’t want to do something, believe me, I’m not going to do it. I worked so hard to get this. A lot of people wanted the part.”

She was told she’d landed the role on Christmas Eve. “And when they told me I got the role, I was like, ‘Yes!’ ”

Kurylenko was raised by her mother and grandmother in Berdyansk, and they were quite poor. Hers is a true rags-to-riches story, although it certainly doesn’t involve intellectual poverty in any way. Kurylenko’s mother was a teacher and her grandmother a doctor, and the former model becomes animated when speaking about them.

“A teacher and a doctor — the two most important professions in the world,” she says. “They were educated and very intelligent, and that’s all good, but when you cannot eat ...” She shrugs. She explains that her grandmother is dead now, and pauses for a second to regain her composure.

Kurylenko was 13 when she and her mother took a trip to Moscow, where an agent who saw her step off the subway immediately approached her with modelling work. By age 17 she was living and working in Paris. At 18 she was a major success story, appearing on such magazine covers as Glamour, Elle and Marie Claire. She was also the face of various cosmetic and fashion lines.


Kurylenko studied acting while earning a living as a model. Her feature-film debut came in 2005 with L’Annulaire. She won roles in Paris, je t’aime, Le Serpent and Hitman (which was her first English-speaking role), and she has roles in Max Payne — in theatres now — and the upcoming Tyranny. Scripts come to her in French and English.

Since her appearance is so extraordinary, Kurylenko is more or less accustomed to being mistaken for just another pretty face. That doesn’t mean she likes it.

The actress, who speaks four languages, says she sometimes thinks intelligence might be wasted in this day and age.

“The world is quite superficial, all about looks and appearance, and nobody cares about what’s on the inside,” she laments.

Speaking of her own physical appearance, she says, with a touch of melancholy, “This is just an envelope. The people who are close to me know who I am. If others want to be negative, they will.”

Asked if she’s worried about the downside of the celebrity that is bound to come with a Bond Girl role, Kurylenko says, “I just want to keep working. Maybe it will be different when the movie is released, but for now I’m back in Paris and I don’t think anybody recognizes me.”


She drops her chin, letting her hair cover most of her face, to show how she can be incognito in a second.

“For now, it’s totally cool. Of course, if you dress up all covered in sparkles and big high heels and everything,” she says, laughing, “yes, you will attract attention!”

In the future, Kurylenko says she hopes to be offered deeper roles.

“Different movies are made for different reasons. Some are to show the truth, or to give a lesson, and to make people think and learn, and those are the movies I want to watch — and the ones I want to be in.”



But she doesn’t just read scripts, she says — she also reads a lot of biographies of famous people, “because their paths are always so interesting. I love those things.

“The one thing all these people seem to believe, and maybe it’s naive of me to believe it, is that if you put out positive energy, it all comes back to you. They make me dream that miracles really do happen.”

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Montreal's Finest Escorts

Obama makes history with win over McCain


Overcoming their nation's torturous racial history, American voters overwhelmingly elected Barack Obama as the first black president of the United States, turning to the inspiring young senator as their best hope to revive a country weary from economic turmoil and war.
Obama tore up the U.S. political map as he defeated John McCain, the veteran Republican senator who had struggled in vain to distance himself from George W. Bush's unpopular presidency. Obama captured states once seen as Republican strongholds, including Florida, Indiana and Virginia, while defending all traditionally Democratic states.

The election of Obama, the son of black Kenyan man and a white Kansan woman, is a remarkable turning point for a nation that denied the vote to many African Americans just decades ago.

"If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible; who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time; who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer," Obama said at a victory rally before more than 100,000 supporters in Chicago's Grant Park.

After almost two years of campaigning on a theme of hope and change, Obama told the crowd, "Change has come to America."

His supporters cheered, screamed and waved flags, welcoming his election in a delirious victory celebration in his hometown. Many, including civil rights leader and two-time presidential candidate Jesse Jackson, had tears in their eyes.

In cities around the country, drivers honked horns through the night. In New York City's Harlem neighborhood, the roar of thousands of people gathered in a plaza near the legendary Apollo Theater could be heard blocks away.

In Washington, hundreds of residents spilled into the streets near the White House, carrying balloons, banging on drums and chanting "Bush is gone!" Along U Street, once known as America's Black Broadway for its thriving black-owned shops and theaters, men stood on car roofs, waving American flags and Obama posters.

Obama's victory marked the rise of a new generation in American leadership, after 16 years of presidents who came of age during the Vietnam War era. Obama. 47, was still a child when most U.S. troops came home.

It also amounted to Americans' final, symbolic rejection of Bush's presidency. Bush's popularity soared after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, then collapsed with his administration's bungled response to Hurricane Katrina four years later, the errors leading up to and during the Iraq war and the chaos in the financial system.

When he takes office Jan. 20 as the 44th U.S. president, Obama will inherit the Iraq war and another in Afghanistan, as well as the economic turmoil. It is perhaps the most trying environment for any new U.S. president since the Great Depression.

But he will do so with many allies in Congress as his Democratic Party expanded its majorities in both chambers.

Nancy Pelosi, the speaker of the House of Representatives, said: "Tonight the American people have called for a new direction. They have called for change in America."

Obama scored a decisive win the in the electoral vote, the state-by-state tally that determines the winner. Needing 270 votes to claim the presidency, Obama had 349 to McCain's 147, with three states still too close to call. By comparison, Bush won the White House twice, and never tallied more than 286 electoral votes.

The largely symbolic popular vote was much closer: Obama had 51.7 percent to 47 percent with 84 percent of all precincts tallied.

Voter turnout, still being counted, was expected to shatter records. The race was the most riveting in memory, and certainly the longest and most expensive. Obama and McCain had been on the campaign train for almost two years.

McCain called his former rival to concede defeat _ and mark the end of his own 10-year quest for the White House.

"This is an historic election, and I recognize the special significance it has for African-Americans and the special pride that must be theirs tonight," McCain told disappointed supporters in Arizona. "These are difficult times for our country. And I pledge to him tonight to do all in my power to help him lead us through the many challenges we face."

Bush added his congratulations from the White House and promised a smooth transition. "What an awesome night for you," he told Obama shortly after the race was decided.

An Obama presidency offers the prospect of a new style and tone in American foreign policy.

Obama has said he will try to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq in 16 months and has called for a new opening to U.S. adversaries, such as Iran and Cuba. He has urged the closing of the Guantanamo Bay prison and favors cap-and-trade systems to reduce global warming.

Internationally, Obama is hugely popular _ a sharp contrast to Bush. Part of his appeal is his personal story that highlights American multiculturalism: Besides his Kenyan father, he has a half-sister who is the daughter of an Indonesian.

In his campaign, Obama mined a deep vein of national discontent, promising Americans hope and change throughout a nearly flawless 21-month campaign for the White House.

He first soared into the national spotlight with his electrifying speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, when he was making his first run for the Senate and polishing his message of unity in a country that was mired in partisan anger.

In a grueling primary battle, he managed to raise more money and out-maneuver the candidate once seen as the inevitable nominee, former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton.

After Obama's victory Tuesday, Clinton called her former rival to promise her full support.

"In quiet, solitary acts of citizenship, American voters gave voice to their hopes and their values, voted for change, and refused to be invisible any longer," she said in a statement.

Throughout his campaign, Obama had to overcome relentless false rumors about his religion, his ethnicity and his patriotism. Some pointed to his middle name of Hussein to claim that Obama, a Christian, was Muslim _ which would disqualify him in the eyes of many Americans.

In his race against McCain, Obama was steady and focused, keeping attention on the economy _ voters' biggest concern _ and linking McCain to Bush.

McCain, 72, was a tough rival for Obama. He is widely admired for the 5 1/2 years he spent as a prisoner of war in Vietnam. His reputation as a maverick gave Republicans hopes of winning over independents and moderate Democrats.

But McCain had an uphill fight. He tried without success a series of tactics: depicting Obama as too inexperienced, highlighting his association with a 1960s-era radical and casting him as an advocate of high taxes and socialism.

McCain also tried to shake up the race by naming Alaska's young conservative governor, Sarah Palin, as his vice presidential running mate. The choice energized much of the Republican base, but her lack of experience and poor performance in interviews worried many voters.

Obama picked a seasoned Senate veteran, Joseph Biden of Delaware, as his running mate. Biden won a seventh Senate term on Tuesday, but will relinquish it for the vice presidency.