The Big Bang Theory Stars Talk Huge Ratings

With an average of 18 million viewers tuning in every Thursday night, The Big Bang Theory has become ratings gold for CBS. 

Despite six years of continued success, the cast of TV's #1 comedy tell ET they're still trying to wrap their heads around the extreme popularity of their show.

Pics: Star Sightings!

"When we hit 10 million a couple of years ago, Kaley [Cuoco] hunted me down at the gym to tell me," remembers Johnny Galecki with glee. "I was so excited. We thought that was the end-all, be-all."

What's the sitcom's secret? Star Jim Parsons has a theory.

"[Syndication] exposed us multiple times a day on a couple of different networks," speculates Parsons. "[It] will make you love us."

Related: Kunal Nayyar Goes 'Beyond' The 'Bang'

Of course, it doesn't hurt that co-star Simon Helberg is Big Bang's personal cheerleader in his free time.

"I hand out flyers over the weekend," Helberg jokes. "I dress up as Spider-Man…with the spinning sign."

Watch the video above for more from The Big Bang Theory's stars!

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Jersey sure bet








Nj Gov. Chris Christie has changed his mind.

In a gamble to save an embattled Atlantic City, the governor essentially legalized online gaming yesterday — paving the way for bets being placed via a computer from anywhere in the Garden State.

The first online bets could be placed sometime in September, insiders predict.

Gov. Christie’s okay came after he vetoed on online gambling measure for the second time in less than two years — but this time with certain conditions that he and lawmakers agree on.

“The conditions are minor changes,” state Sen. Raymond Lesniak, a sponsor of the bill, said in a phone interview, talking about the governor’s insistence that the law expire after 10 years and that funding for programs to help gambling addicts get pumped up.




Gov. Christie also insisted on boosting the tax on online gambling winnings to 15 percent from 10 percent.

“This is going to be wildly successful, and it’s going to bring in millions of dollars of additional revenues for the casinos and the state,” the Democratic lawmaker added.

As word of the conditional veto spread from Trenton to Wall Street, shares of Caesars Entertainment, which operates three AC casinos, including Harrah’s, soared 18.6 percent, to $10.07.

Boyd Gaming, which operates the Borgata, jumped 2.8 percent, to $7.10.

Under the bill, only NJ residents could bet online. Any casino bet could be made from any computer anywhere in the state — whether it’s in your kitchen or at a Starbucks.

Only AC’s 12 casinos could run online betting operations, and the software would be based in AC.

Lesniak predicted that gambling revenue could increase as much as $300 million in the first year — and that thousands of jobs would be saved.

That would help Atlantic City’s 12 casinos, which have seen revenues fall for six straight years as competition has popped up in neighboring states.

Since 2006, AC revenues have fallen nearly 42 percent, to $3.05 billion last year.

“Now is the time for our state to move forward, again leading the way for the nation, by becoming one of the first states to permit Internet gaming,” Christie wrote in a statement. “While Atlantic City’s reputation and stature as one of the premier resort destinations on the East Coast are well-chronicled, it is no secret that revenue from the region’s most important industries, gaming and tourism, has been in decline.

New Jersey will be the third state to legalize online gambling — after Nevada and Delaware passed similar laws.

Lesniak is now in the courts, fighting the National Football League over a bill Gov. Christie has signed allowing sports betting only at casinos and race tracks.

Briefs in the case have been filed, and the lawmaker believes there is a 50-50 chance the judge rules in his favor.

New York is moving forward with its own gaming initiatives. Albany will likely vote this year on whether to legalize brick-and-mortar casinos outside of racetracks.

Online gaming, for the moment, is not on the agenda.

jkosman@nypost.com










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Miami startup that turns text to video receives $1 million in seed funding




















Guide, a new technology startup based in Miami, announced Tuesday it has closed a $1 million round of seed funding from investors including the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, Sapient Corp., MTV founder Bob Pitman, actor and producer Omar Epps, and early Google employee Steve Schimmel. The Knight Foundation is supporting Guide through its new early-stage venture fund, the Knight Enterprise Fund.

Led by CEO and founder Freddie Laker and COO Leslie Bradshaw, Guide’s team of seven is focused on turning online news, social streams and blogs into video for users who may be cooking, exercising, commuting or getting ready in the morning. The free application offers consumers a selection of about 20 “anchors” — including a dog, a robot and an anime character — that will read the article and present the accompanying photos, pull-out information and video clips in its video presentation. Revenue drivers for Guide could include in-app purchases, advertising-based anchors and customizations from publishers, said Laker, a former vice president at SapientNitro.

Laker and his team plan to launch a public beta next month, which they plan to do with a splash at the huge technology conference South by Southwest (SXSW) in Austin, Texas.





Read more about Guide here on the Starting Gate blog. Follow Nancy Dahlberg on Twitter @ndahlberg





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Judge angered after learning mentally ill Miami man was placed in assisted living facility, and escaped




















After Cristobal Abreu was arrested for stabbing a Hialeah SWAT officer with a large BBQ fork in December 2009, doctors deemed his mind too ravaged by mental illness to stand trial.

For years, he bounced around mental health facilities.

Then a stay at a Miami Gardens assisted living facility, where funds for his medications ran out and his mental state deteriorated, ended last month when the 72-year-old Abreu was shipped without a judge’s permission to Jackson North Medical Center.





Then last week, a Jackson case worker — again, without permission from the court — sent him to an ALF in Little Havana. He promptly escaped.

“I’m free! I’m free,” Abreu yelled as he shuffled away from the San Martin de Porras facility Tuesday, according to lawyers and court personnel who aired the episode over two days in court this week.

Abreu’s ping-ponging treatment has drawn the ire of Circuit Judge Ellen Sue Venzer, who has now ordered hospital and state-contracted mental health administrators to court Friday to explain what happened.

“The system is broken,” Venzer said angrily in court this week, adding: “What would have happened if Mr. Abreu had decompensated and gone out and hurt somebody else in our community?”

Abreu’s escape was short-lived: police quickly detained him, committing him back to Jackson Memorial Hospital for an involuntary psychiatric evaluation.

The unusual episode underscores what mental health advocates in Miami-Dade’s criminal justice system say has been a reoccurring problem: “incompetent” defendants are often shuffled between facilities without the knowledge of the court tasked with supervising them.

ALFs mostly house the elderly and others with mental health issues or disabilities. It is not unusual for incompetent defendants, usually non-violent ones, to be placed at an ALF in a residential neighborhood.

“The people in the social services arena have to recognize that a court-order is sacrosanct,” Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle said Wednesday. “I really understand the judge’s ire. She has the absolute right to be livid with everyone in the system.”

Subpoenaed to appear before the judge on Friday: Representatives from Jackson, the South Florida Behavioral Network, which contracts with the state to manage cases of the mentally ill defendants, and New Horizons Community Mental Health Center, which monitored Abreu’s case.

A lawyer for the Florida Department of Children and Families will also appear.

“It sounds like all these different agencies are treating these individuals like hot potatoes,” Venzer said in court Wednesday.

Abreu was initially arrested in December 2009 for attempted murder and aggravated battery of a law enforcement officer. The attempted charge was later dropped; the SWAT officer was not hurt because the knife pierced his shield.

During a jailhouse interview with a psychologist, the incoherent Abreu admitted that he sometimes hears voices and see visions of “flowers [and] gold diamonds.”

The court determined that Abreu was “incompetent” to proceed to trial, meaning he could not assist his lawyer in defending the accusations.

After stays in several other facilities, Abreu wound up at the Graceful Gardens ALF, 18101 NW 47th Ct., in November.





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Justin Timberlake Reveals New Album Cover for 20 20 Experience

We're one step closer to The 20/20 Experience!

Justin Timberlake just dropped a major treat for his fans on Twitter, revealing the cover art and tracklisting to his upcoming solo album, The 20/20 Experience.

"I wanted you guys to see this first!!!," wrote Timberlake with a link to the cover (featuring the singer dressed to the nines behind a phoropter) and song titles.

Pics: Justin & Jessica's Long Road to the Altar

Check out the full tracklisting below:

-Pusher Love Girl

-Suit & Tie

-Don't Hold The Wall

-Strawberry Bubblegum

-Tunnel Vision

-Spaceship Coupe

-That Girl
Let The Groove Get In

-Mirrors

-Blue Ocean Floor

The 20/20 Experience hits stores on March 19.

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Ralph Lauren’s profit jumps 27%








Ralph Lauren posted a 27 percent increase in its fiscal third-quarter profit as the clothing company enjoyed continued momentum in spending among affluent US shoppers and improving trends in Europe during the winter holidays.

The news lifted Lauren stock 6 percent yesterday.

The results are an improvement from the first half of the year, when cotton costs soared and the company was bearing costs to eliminate some of its businesses to focus on the most profitable ones. But the company managed to navigate through the rough patches and delivered better-than-expected results.



Lauren’s performance also shows that even in challenging times, the affluent will spend on trusted brands.

The New York-based company said it earned $215.7 million, or $2.31 per share, in the three months ended Dec. 29. That compares with $169 million, or $1.78 per share, a year earlier.

Revenue rose 2.2 percent, to $1.79 billion.

Analysts had expected earnings of only $2.20 per share on revenue of $1.85 billion.










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Greenberg Traurig shuffles leadership




















Law firm Greenberg Traurig on Tuesday announced a new management lineup that includes naming Hilarie Bass as the first female president in the firm’s history.

Bass, one of the firm’s Miami shareholders, most recently had been global operating shareholder. She will share the presidency with Brian L. Duffy, a Denver shareholder who has been global litigation chair, a position previously held by Bass.

As part of the shuffle, Miami shareholders Cesar L. Alvarez and Matt Gorson move to co-chairs and Larry Hoffman becomes founding chair. Alvarez previously served as executive chair, Gorson as president and Hoffman as chair.





These were just some of the new leadership changes announced by Greenberg’s Chief Executive Richard A. Rosenbaum. The firm began a leadership transition plan in 2010 when Rosenbaum took over the helm of the firm that today includes about 1,750 attorneys in 35 offices in the United States, Latin America, Europe, the Middle East and Asia.

“We are pleased to have so many talented leaders and performers, not just those with titles,” Rosenbaum said in a statement. “We have never been about titles or politics, and titles do not create leaders. We and others already in place in our regions, offices and practices form a seamless team focused on respecting and serving our clients and lawyers.”

Rosenbaum, who will remain in his post, also announced four new vice presidents:

• Ernest Greer, Managing Shareholder of the firm’s Atlanta office.

• Brad Kaufman, Co-Chair of the National Securities Litigation Practice, leader of the firm’s Associate Development Program and a Palm Beach County shareholder.

• Patricia Menendez-Cambo, Chair of the Global Practice, Co-Chair of the Infrastructure and Project Finance Practice and a Miami shareholder.

• Keith Shapiro, Chair of the Chicago office and Co-Chair of the Business Reorganization Practice.





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Miami Heat has scholarships for graduation high school seniors




















The Miami Heat is offering South Florida high school seniors college scholarships for the 2013-2014 school year.

Four scholarships of $2,500 each will go to seniors who excel in academics and community service.

One of the four scholarships is reserved for a student who plays sports.





Applicants must have at least a 3.2 grade point average by their final semester in high school, attend school in Miami-Dade, Broward or Palm Beach counties, be accepted to an accredited four-year college or university and demonstrate financial need.

Applications are available at nba.com/heat/community/community_education_scholarships.html and must be submitted by April 6.





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Kris Humphries Denies Kim Kardashian a Speedy Divorce Because She's Pregnant

In response to Kim Kardashian's request to expedite her ongoing divorce from Kris Humphries, the Brooklyn Nets player has formally refused to speed up the process via official court documents.

In paperwork obtained by ET filed February 4, Kris's lawyer Marshall W. Waller alleges that Kim's rush to bring the case to court has more to do with her impending pregnancy than legitimate pressing matters.

Pics: Five Years of Kim Kardashian Fashion

"What is really going on here is that an 'urgency' in the form of an apparently unplanned pregnancy, something [Kris] had nothing to do with, is perceived by [Kim] as an opportunity to gain a litigation advantage by trying to force this court to prematurely set this matter for trial," writes Waller.

He later asks, "Indeed, why would [Kim] plan to get pregnant in the midst of divorce proceedings?"

Related: Kim Kardashian on Divorce, Surrogate Breastfeeding

Kim, during a January appearance on the Today show stayed mostly mum about her ongoing divorce proceedings from her infamous 72-day marriage to the NBA star. When asked where the process stands ahead of her next court appearance on the matter on February 15, Kim said, "I can't really speak for anyone else. It just is a process."

Kim and Kris formally split in October 2011 citing "irreconcilable differences."

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Dan tops








Investors in Dan Loeb’s Third Point hedge fund who went to its annual meeting last night hoping to learn whether he has sold, hedged or added to his trades in Herbalife were disappointed.

“He said nothing with regard to the [controversy surrounding] Herbalife,” said one attendee of the presentation at the Museum of Modern Art.

Loeb did reveal that he first bought Herbalife shares in the last days of 2012, when they were trading around $30.

That was shortly after the stock fell almost 40 percent following hedgie Bill Ackman’s crusade against the nutritional products company.




Ackman called Herbalife a pyramid scheme that should be shut down by regulators and took a $1 billion short position in the company.

Herbalife’s rise from the Ack-attack low of $26.06 — shares were up 10.4 percent in January — helped Loeb post a better overall return than his rival during the month.

Loeb’s $11.2 billion Third Point finished January up 4.8 percent, according to a letter to investors — a copy of which was obtained by The Post.

Despite the beating he took on Herbalife, Ackman and his Pershing Square fund still pulled down a 3.7 percent gain.










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