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Thursday, August 31, 2017

Louise Hay, advocate, speaker and author dies age 90



Louise Hay, advocate, speaker and author dies age 90

Statement from Hay House


Our beloved friend and founder Louise Hay transitioned this morning, August 30, 2017 of natural causes at age 90. She passed peacefully in her sleep.
Louise was an incredible visionary and advocate. Everyone who had the privilege to meet her, either in person or through her words, felt her passion for serving others.
Considered a founder of the self-help movement, Louise was dubbed “the closest thing to a living saint.” She published her first book, Heal Your Body, in 1976 (at age 50) long before it was fashionable to discuss the connection between the mind and body.

Louise started what would become her life’s work in New York City in 1970. She began attending meetings at the Church of Religious Science and then entered a ministerial program. She became a popular speaker at the church, and soon found herself counseling clients. This work quickly blossomed into a full-time career. After several years, Louise compiled a reference guide detailing the mental causes of physical ailments and developed positive thought patterns for reversing illness and creating health. This compilation was the basis for Heal Your Body, also known affectionately as “the little blue book.”
Louise was able to put her philosophies into practice when she was diagnosed with cancer. She considered the alternatives to surgery and drugs, and instead developed an intensive program of affirmations, visualization, nutritional cleansing, and psychotherapy. Within six months, she was completely healed of cancer.

In 1980, Louise began putting her workshop methods on paper. In 1984, her second book, You Can Heal Your Life, was published. In it, Louise explained how our beliefs and ideas about ourselves are often the cause of our emotional problems and physical maladies and how, by using certain tools, we can change our thinking and our lives for the better.
You Can Heal Your Life became a New York Times bestseller and spent 16 weeks on the list. More than 50 million copies of You Can Heal Your Life have been sold throughout the world.

In 1985, Louise began her famous support group, “The Hayride,” with six men diagnosed with AIDS. By 1988, the group had grown to a weekly gathering of 800 people and had moved to an auditorium in West Hollywood. Once again, Louise had started a movement of love and support long before people began to wear red ribbons on their lapels.
In 1987, what began as a small venture in the living room of her home turned into Hay House, Inc.: a successful publishing company that has sold millions of books and products worldwide and now has offices in California, New York, London, Sydney, Johannesburg, and New Delhi. 

“Meeting Louise changed the direction of my life,” said Reid Tracy, President and CEO of Hay House, Inc.
“Her passion for serving others translated into everything she did. Simply by working alongside her, an analytical accountant like me transformed into someone who became aware of the power of affirmations and self-love. Being able to learn from her has been one of my life’s greatest blessings. The beauty of Louise was that you didn’t have to work alongside her to learn from her, you felt like you were there with her with every word you read or heard.”

Hay House has published works by many notable authors in the self-help movement, including Dr. Wayne Dyer, Doreen Virtue, Dr. Christiane Northrup, and Esther and Jerry Hicks, among others.

Louise was very vocal in her belief that age was irrelevant to achieving one’s dreams. To that point, at 81, Louise released her first-ever film on her life and work, You Can Heal Your Life: The Movie.

Hay House will carry on Louise’s legacy and continue to publish products and online learning courses that align with her message of self-improvement and self-love.

Louise Hay’s estate, as well as all future royalties, will be donated to The Hay Foundation, a nonprofit organization established by Louise that financially supports diverse organizations supplying food, shelter, counseling, hospice care, and funds to those in need.

The service in honor of Louise Hay will be a private and intimate event. In lieu of flowers, we welcome your donations to the Hay Foundation. www.hayfoundation.org

Read more
Remembering Louise Hay, One Positive Thought at a Time




Sunday, August 27, 2017

The MTV Video Music Awards – VMAs 2017 - Red Carpet and List of WINNERS!


The MTV Video Music Awards – VMAs 2017

Winners coming soon here http://www.mtv.com/vma/vote/



LIST OF MUSICAL PERFORMANCES 



Video of the Year
DJ Khaled (featuring Rihanna and Bryson Tiller) — "Wild Thoughts"

Artist of the Year


Best New Artist


Best Collaboration

DJ Khaled (featuring Rihanna and Bryson Tiller) — "Wild Thoughts"
D.R.A.M. (featuring Lil Yachty) — "Broccoli"
The Chainsmokers (featuring Halsey) — "Closer"

Best Pop

Fifth Harmony (featuring Gucci Mane) – "Down"

Best Hip Hop

Chance the Rapper — "Same Drugs"
D.R.A.M. (featuring Lil Yachty) — "Broccoli"
Migos (featuring Lil Uzi Vert) — "Bad and Boujee"

Best Dance

Zedd and Alessia Cara — "Stay"
Major Lazer (featuring Justin Bieber and MØ) — "Cold Water"
Afrojack (featuring Ty Dolla $ign) — "Gone"

Best Rock


Best Fight Against the System

Logic (featuring Damian Lemar Hudson) – "Black Spiderman"
Big Sean — "Light"
Taboo (featuring Shailene Woodley) – "Stand Up / Stand N Rock #NoDAPL"
John Legend — "Surefire"

Best Cinematography

Kendrick Lamar — "Humble." (Director of Photography: Scott Cunningham)
Imagine Dragons — "Thunder" (Director of Photography: Matthew Wise)
Ed Sheeran — "Castle on the Hill" (Director of Photography: Steve Annis)
DJ Shadow (featuring Run the Jewels) — "Nobody Speak" (Director of Photography: David Proctor)
Halsey — "Now or Never" (Director of Photography: Kristof Brandl)

Best Direction

Kendrick Lamar — "Humble." (Directors: Dave Meyers and The Little Homies)
Katy Perry (featuring Skip Marley) — "Chained to the Rhythm" (Director: Mathew Cullen)
Bruno Mars — "24K Magic" (Directors: Cameron Duddy and Bruno Mars)
Alessia Cara — "Scars to Your Beautiful" (Director: Aaron A)
The Weeknd — "Reminder" (Director: Glenn Michael)

Best Art Direction

Kendrick Lamar — "Humble." (Art Director: Spencer Graves)
Bruno Mars — "24K Magic" (Art Director: Alex Delgado)
Katy Perry (featuring Migos) — "Bon Appétit" (Art Director: Natalie Groce)
DJ Khaled (featuring Rihanna and Bryson Tiller) — "Wild Thoughts" (Art Director: Damian Fyffe)
The Weeknd — "Reminder" (Art Directors: Lamar C Taylor and KID. STUDIO)

Best Visual Effects

Kendrick Lamar — "Humble." (Visual Effects: Jonah Hall of Timber)
A Tribe Called Quest — "Dis Generation" (Visual Effects: Brandon Hirzel of Bemo)
KYLE (featuring Lil Yachty) — "iSpy" (Visual Effects: Max Colt and Tomash Kuzmytskyi of GloriaFX)
Katy Perry (featuring Skip Marley) — "Chained to the Rhythm" (Visual Effects: MIRADA)
Harry Styles — "Sign of the Times" (Visual Effects: Cédric Nivoliez of ONE MORE)

Best Choreography

Kanye West — "Fade" (Choreographers: Teyana Taylor and Guapo)
Ariana Grande (featuring Nicki Minaj) — "Side to Side" (Choreographers: Brian and Scott Nicholson)
Kendrick Lamar — "Humble." (Choreographer: Dave Meyers)
Sia — "The Greatest" (Choreographer: Ryan Heffington)
Fifth Harmony (featuring Gucci Mane) — "Down" (Choreographer: Sean Bankhead)
Best ing
Future — "Mask Off" (or: Vinnie Hobbs of VHPost)
Young Thug — "Wyclef Jean" (ors: Ryan Staake and Eric Degliomini)
Lorde — "Green Light" (or: Nate Gross of Exile )
The Chainsmokers (featuring Halsey) — "Closer" (or: Jennifer Kennedy)
The Weeknd — "Reminder" (or: Red Barbaza)

Song of the Summer

Fifth Harmony (featuring Gucci Mane) — "Down"
Camila Cabello (featuring Quavo) — "OMG"
DJ Khaled (featuring Rihanna and Bryson Tiller) — "Wild Thoughts"

Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award


PRESENTERS


HERE’S WHEN YOU CAN WATCH THE 2017 VMAS THIS SUMMER


KATY PERRY IS READY TO BE YOUR ‘MOONWOMAN’ AS HOST OF THE 2017 VMAS


EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE 2017 MTV VIDEO MUSIC AWARDS