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Angelina Jolie sets the record straight on Brad Pitt, Shiloh and self-harm

Angelina Jolie

After months of speculation about the state of her relationship with Brad Pitt, the couple’s family plans, four-year-old Shiloh’s obsession with dressing as a boy and her risky past behaviour including self-harm, Angelina Jolie has broken her silence.

Speaking exclusively to US magazine, Vanity Fair, the star confesses marriage may not be off the table for her and Brad, and speaks about the prospect of adding more kids to the couple’s brood as she plans to retire from films.

While she has come under criticism from some child behaviour experts for indulging her girl’s interest in all things male, Ange explains, “Shiloh, we feel, has Montenegro style. It’s how people dress there. She likes tracksuits, she likes suits.

“She likes to dress like a boy. She wants to be a boy. So we had to cut her hair. She likes to wear boys’ everything. She thinks she’s one of the brothers.”

“Children are a commitment, a bigger commitment [than marriage]. It’s for life.”

“I used to cut myself or jump out of airplanes, trying to find something new to push up against because sometimes everything else felt too easy,” Angelina told the US magazine.

“I was searching for something deeper, something more. I tried everything. I always felt caged, closed in, like I was punching at things that weren’t there. I always had too much energy for the room I was in,” she said.

“I went through a period when I felt my film characters were having more fun than I was. It might partly explain why I ended up tattooed or doing certain extreme things in my life.”

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*MasterChef* in crisis

MasterChef in crisis

As MasterChef enters its final few weeks, there’s no doubt the pressure is on. But as the contestants – and the judges – reveal they’ve got their own personal issues to deal with, the show is fast becoming a melting pot of scandals and shock revelations.

“Reality shows like this can become very insular,” says psychologist Sally-Anne McCormack. “Dealing with personal issues can be stressful enough – but add the pressure of filming a television show 24/7 and it can get very intense. Sometimes great friendships can be formed under pressure, but sometimes it can create tension and arguments.”

Fears for Matt’s health

Matt Preston is becoming a bigger star every day – literally. Fears for the popular 49-year-old food critic’s health are growing as quickly as his waistline. Matt’s eating, which has included a reported 11 helpings of rich bonemarrow risotto in one sitting, is said to be out of control.

Although enjoying food is part of Matt’s job, the stress of long hours of filming and pressure to make the show a success could be causing the judge to become an emotional eater, says psychologist Sally-Anne McCormack.

“Savouring a mouthful of something delicious can help you zone out of the stresses around you,” she says. “It’s a form of comfort and a way of escaping things for just a moment.”

While fellow judges Gary Mehigan and George Calombaris have managed to remain pleasantly plump, Matt’s expanding girth is putting him at risk of serious conditions such as heart disease.

While George, 31, is careful to do some sport to counteract his eating, he says Matt is stubbornly sedentary. “[He does no exercise] that I know of. We talk about food and we eat,” George says.

Matt can taste up to 24 dishes a day on the MasterChef set. His wife Emma, 45, is so concerned she’s enlisted the help of Biggest Loser trainer Michelle Bridges.

See more Masterchef news including Adam’s great loss Courtney’s big secret in this week’s Woman’s Day, on sale July 5, 2010.

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I tricked my boyfriend into marrying me

Image source: Getty - posed by models

Image source: Getty - posed by models

I had been dating Anthony for about 18 months and I had always felt that I was more into the relationship than he was. He would always stare at other girls when we went out, which I was fine with, he could look, but he couldn’t touch.

We shared an apartment together and it was great, I was sure Anthony was the one for me and despite his wandering eye I was very happy.

However, I did have another niggling worry, for the last 6 months, our sex life had been slowly degrading to the point that it was almost non-existent.

I figured that it was because he was under a lot of pressure and stress at work, meaning he couldn’t properly unwind at home. My university studies were keeping me busy too, so it didn’t bother me that much.

It was only a few months later that I realised he was cheating on me. When he was in the bathroom I casually took a sneaky look through the messages on his phone and saw the one that every girlfriend/wife dreads to see.

It was from a woman unbeknown to me and said, ‘Yesterday was great baby, and I can’t wait to see you tomorrow.’ I was devastated.

I couldn’t bear to confront Anthony, I knew our relationship would be over if I did and above all the emotional turmoil I knew one thing for sure, I didn’t want to loose him.

After some scouting around I found out that ‘Gemma’ was Anthony’s boss’ PA, it’s such a cliché it would almost be laughable if it wasn’t true.

I didn’t know how long their affair had been going on, but from the other text messages I found it became clear that it wasn’t just a one-off. I was heartbroken. I couldn’t imagine myself with anyone else and my family was always pressuring me to get married and have a baby.

I told my best friend Michelle as she knew how in love I was with Anthony and I knew I could rely on her to help work out a plan to save our relationship.

She was 5 months pregnant and after a night of comforting and planning, we decided we would trick Anthony into marrying me because I was going to fall pregnant. I knew that it was a bad thing to do but then so was his cheating.

The following day I went to the supermarket and bought a home pregnancy test and kept it in my bathroom until after the next time Anthony and I had sex.

A month later I drove to Michelle’s to put our plan into action.

Later that night I told Anthony I had some exciting news, he looked nervous so I tried to calm him by explaining ‘It’s good news, darling! – I’m pregnant!’. He looked very alarmed and asked me if I was sure so I presented him with the pregnancy test with positive plus sign (courtesy of Michelle).

His face was priceless, his first words were, ‘you told me you were on the pill!’ I put on the water works, ‘don’t you want to have a baby with me?’, my plan was working.

The following day we began to plan our wedding. Anthony’s parents were very ‘moral’ so we couldn’t let them know that I was ‘pregnant’ until we were married.

We decided that we would take an unexpected holiday and get married whilst we were away at a registry and allow our families to have a small party when we arrived home, it was perfect.

We came home the following week as Mr & Mrs and I couldn’t have been happier. I had a ‘miscarriage’ 2 months later, where the cheating stopped and we were happily married!

Anthony and I have been married for 3 years now and we have our ‘2nd’ baby on the way, I haven’t even considered telling him the truth and I don’t think I ever will.

Picture posed by models.

Your say: What do you think of this true confession? Share your thoughts below…

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Review: *Shrek Forever After*

The originalShrekwas a great movie, with funny fairytale references, hilarious support characters and a wit that appealed to adults, with animation that left the children starry eyed. The second was a great sequel, and the third … well, it was forgettable. So forgettable, we didn’t call for a fourth. But they made one anyway.

Shrek Forever Afterin 3-D, is a case of the franchise fights back. The 3-D effect is an attempt to give it more marketing angles and the storyline tries to go back to the future to find its original spark.

Shrek (Mike Myers) is settling into family life, children and notoriety, which seems to be a Groundhog Day of nappies, thwarted mud baths and toiletus interruptus. He longs to be an angry ogre again. And when Rumpelstiltskin (Walt Dohrn) grants him one day as an ogre in return for one day of Shrek’s life, he signs on the dotted line.

The problem is, while Shrek enjoys his newfound freedom as a bully, Rumpelstiltskin steals his birth date, so he technically won’t exist when the day ends. Rumplestiltskin is the new tyrant and the palace is a dance party of hip-hopping witches, while everyone Shrek knew or loved doesn’t recognise him. So he has to win them over, all over again.

Suddenly and cleverly, we are back in the same territory of the firstShrekfilm: bad ogre turns good, in the name of love. And it certainly has some similarities toIt’s a Wonderful Life. And you thought they were running out of new ideas, eh?

Fortunately, the effects are as dazzling as ever. Not a freckle or pock mark is missed; the weave of Shrek’s shirt incredibly detailed. Many of the flying shots benefit from the 3-D film, but otherwise they aren’t really necessary. The animation is vivid enough to impress.

The great support characters are still there: Cookie (Craig Robinson) now has the angry streak of a resistance fighter, donkey (Eddie Murphy) is still funny, and Puss in Boots (Antonio Banderas) still tries to win us over with his big eyes. And it works.

Walt Dohrn — who is the head of story — cast himself as Rumpel’s voice, and it is annoying and indulgent for him to do so. It’s an indicator of what has gone wrong with theShrekfranchise.

Despite any misgivings, you will enjoyShrek Forever After, with or without the 3-D. It still lacks the magic of the first, but is better than the third. The comedy is still there, but has lost its edge over time.

When the writers look for a way to rehash the first movie as way forward, you know it tastes a bit stale, but you will still take a bite anyway. You won’t regret it, but like many, you will vow it will be your last. Let’s hope the producers think the same.

Shrek Forever Afteris in cinemas now.

Your say: Have you seenShrek Forever After? What did you think? Did you enjoy it? Share with us below.

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Suit yourself

Getty Images

Getty Images

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In review: *The Twilight Saga: Eclipse*

In review: The Twilight Saga: Eclipse

The tension in the love triangle between Edward, Bella and Jacob mounts in the third instalment of the Twilight saga.

Bella, the teen misfit who fell in love with a vampire, Edward, played by Robert Pattinson, is forced to confront the depth of her feelings for long-time friend and some-time werewolf Jacob, played by young heartthrob Taylor Lautner.

In this dramatic and suspense-driven story, themes of lust, revenge and hard choices are explored whilst the characters work together to defeat a terrifying common enemy.

An exciting and enjoyable watch for teens and young-at-hearts alike.

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Olive oil can prevent breast cancer

Do you consume 10 teaspoons of high-quality, extra-virgin olive oil a day? New research from Spain suggests this is exactly what you should do to protect yourself against breast cancer.

New research by scientists at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona found that olive oil can work towards preventing and fighting against a gene that drives the growth of breast tumours, the Daily Mail reported.

Olive oil was found to stunt the growth of the tumour causing their cells to implode. It also protected against potentially cancerous damage to DNA.

The scientists, who carried out their experiment on rats, also found that olive oil switched off proteins that cancer cells rely on to stay alive.

Dr Eduard Escrich, who led the research, said having 50ml or 10 teaspoons of high-quality, extra-virgin olive oil a day over a long period of time would help to protect against breast cancer.

Breast cancer is the most common cancer among Australian women, with the number of Australian women diagnosed with breast cancer increasing from 5289 in 1982 to 12,614 in 2006.

This number is set to grow to 15,409 by 2015, the National Breast and Ovarian Cancer Centre reported.

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Alexander McCall Smith’s guide to Botswana

Alexander McCall Smith's book "No.1 Ladies' Detective Agency" has put small Botswana towns on the map. McCall Smith shows us around 'his' Botswana.

It’s Sunday morning and the sound of gospel singing floats down the main street of Mochudi, a straggly, red dirt town in south eastern Botswana. There’s not much traffic under a streaky blue sky. What there is — clapped-out utes, dented sedans, a dinky white van or two — crawls along dodging goats, donkeys and cows.

In the past, Mochudi was the kind of place most tourists passed by without even a glance — a typically shambolic African country town of thatched houses and hairdressers called “Respect”, “Lovely Ladies Hair Saloon” (sic) and “Dreamland Hair & Clinic Boutique”.

But ever since Alexander McCall Smith’s hugely successful No.1 Ladies’ Detective Agency, featuring his deliciously reliable, sensible and thoroughly comfortable heroine, Precious Ramotswe, towns such as Mochudi, Molepolole, Gaborone, Maun, Selebi-Phikwe and Tlokweng, have gained a quiet kind of notoriety.

The books may be fiction, but McCall Smith’s line between fact and fantasy is so ephemeral that organised tours in Gaborone, the sprawling and untidy capital of diamond-rich Botswana, are flourishing. Tourists are travelling to Mochudi to see where Mma Ramotswe was born and to Molepolole to see where her father, Obed, kept his treasured cattle.

They are drinking the same red bush tea (rooiboos) that Precious Ramotswe sips as she struggles to solve local mysteries and unravel the endless moral issues that confront daily life — no matter where we live.

“What is the appeal of Mma Ramotswe?” McCall Smith mulled when I met him in Sydney before travelling to Botswana to tread in the footsteps of his heroine. “She is a maternal figure and she answers people’s need for a sympathetic person to listen to them. We all yearn for stability.”

Sandy, as he is known, sipped a cup of English breakfast tea. He looked like a favourite uncle — round-faced, tufts of grey hair curled at his ears, a high, domed forehead and glittering blue eyes that suggested he was up for any kind of mischief. Like his books, though, his demeanour was deceptively simple.

A former professor of medical law at the University of Edinburgh, McCall Smith, who spent his childhood in Africa, is an extraordinary observer of people and country. He brings Botswana to life while dealing with universal issues and themes: tolerance, kindness, thoughtfulness, even abuse, exposing the fragility of all cultures in a modern world.

“Is your heart is Botswana?” I asked, because he has spent most of his adult life in bleak Edinburgh.

He paused. Sipped more tea. “No,” he said, finally. “My heart, my home, my wife and children, are bound up in Scotland. But I still have strong feelings for that part of Africa and I could never have written the books if not for the years I spent there.”

“Is it really as innocent as you describe?”

“In a way,” he said. “Although Mma Ramotswe represents a lost Eden — or the old Batswana morality — which is sadly disappearing. It is a country that beguiles, though. It is beautiful and gentle — and yes, beguiling.”

A few months later, my husband and I begin our Botswana adventure, landing in frying-pan flat Maun, the laid-back gateway to the lush Okavango Delta. In truth, even the most die-hard fans of McCall Smith’s books primarily visit Botswana to experience the amazingly diverse animal and birdlife found here.

We would spend four nights in total at &Beyond’s Sandibe Safari Lodge and Xaranna Okavango Delta Camp, situated deep among crystal clear lagoons, winding channels and the tall papyrus reed and pampas grass of the delta. Then begin a two-day drive south to Gaborone: Mma Ramotswe country.

At Maun, we climbed into a five-seater aircraft for a flight to Chitabe, a pitted clay airstrip 20-minutes from Sandibe. Our guide, Patricia, helped us load our bags and we set off along a sandy track in the standard open-sided safari four-wheel drive.

Five minutes later, she suddenly braked hard. “Jesus!” she whispered, pointing at a pile of pooh. “That’s leopard dung. And it’s still steaming.” She looked around. Cautious. Then glanced up. Less than 10m away, louche and lovely, a fully-grown leopard stared straight back at us from the branch of a tree. It looked so silken and benign, the desire to jump out of the truck to stroke it was almost overwhelming.

“Never, ever, look a leopard in the eye,” Patricia whispered. “It’s like a challenge. And the leopard will win.”

“What’s he doing?” we whispered back.

“Looking for dinner.”

Our lodge, set serenely and discreetly among jackalberries (African ebony) and palms, was a tall hut without walls — just a long column of ebony trunks supporting a thatched roof so that it seemed we were not just in the bush, but part of it.

There was an open fire at one end, leather armchairs, kilims on the floor, a coffee table scattered with leather-bound books filled with notes of animal sightings from past travellers.

After cool drinks, we were given a rundown of the schedule (early morning game drives, breakfast on location, lunch at the lodge, nap-time, traditional high tea, then afternoon game drives with cocktails on location, before returning for dinner), and a brief outline of the animals and insects.

“The spiders are harmless,” we were told, “but a staff member will always take you to and from your room after dark because there are no fences and this is truly the wild.”

All around, always, there were smiling faces and helping hands, folk songs sung beautifully by the staff, and we were enfolded in such warmth and humour it was like being guests in a friends’ home. Africa as we fantasise about it, but rarely find.

On our first evening, we stood motionless, our breath held in, as an elephant calmly wandered past the main hut, intent on eating the fruit hanging from palms. It felt, for a cosmic moment, as though we were, in truth, in Eden.

At Xaranna, a sister camp, sleek and new, a luxurious permanent but tented camp, hippos snuffled, snorted and feinted under water until we retreated (they are dangerous and unpredictable). Saddle-billed storks with beaks like red hot chillies strolled with wattled cranes, Egyptian geese, pied kingfishers, jacanas, egrets, white-faced whistling ducks, lapwings and babblers. We saw a pair of magnificent fish eagles, bateleurs, francolins and the impossibly pretty lilac-breasted roller.

At night, exquisite little painted reed frogs chorused joyfully like a host of heavenly xylophones, lulling us to sleep. It was hard, very hard to say goodbye to the Okavango Delta.

We picked up a four-wheel drive at Maun airport, and armed with a map, set off along a pot-holed road that was more a passageway for goats, cattle, donkeys and even — once — a five-wide string of horses galloping towards us like an apocalypse, than cars.

This was Mma Ramotswe’s world at last. An unadorned world without extravagance and tuned so finely into self-sufficiency, it made a mockery of excess. While yes, there was an odd Mercedes-Benz or two, it was more common to see rattle-y timber carts drawn by teams of earnest little donkeys, trotting along the old dirt tracks next to the highway. No doubt as they’ve done for centuries.

Like all Edens, though, there was a downside. In Gaborone, the capital city, liquor stores looked like war zones after what had clearly been a raucous Saturday night. AIDS affects 17 percent of the population with 33 percent of women testing positive and children — often AIDS-infected themselves — are being left to fend for themselves.

“The traditional extended African family has broken down to the point where it has become a myth,” says Derek James, national director of SOS Children’s Villages, one of the driving plot forces in McCall Smith’s books, where they are known as the “orphan farm”. “It’s estimated there are 110,000 orphans in Botswana, mostly as a result of AIDS,” he says.

James, blunt, irreverent, passionate and driven to find a way to help the helpless, tells stories of “his” kids that shock. A baby found in a sewer, another in a cardboard box dumped outside a store. Some so badly abused sexually and physically, they never recover. It is a litany of quiet and mostly unacknowledged disgrace.

“Sandy visits once a year,” James says. “He is a kind man who has helped us to build a clinic and book-based tours to our villages have brought in a lot of money. You know, I really believe Mma Ramotswe’s character is based on our matron, Betty Mpodi, a sunny, sensible woman with a husband who needs a lot of kindly direction. Just like Mma Ramotswe’s husband.”

He grinned. “Batswana men are generally useless. But they sing like angels. That’s something, I suppose.”

Another real-life character out of the books, Fiona Moffat, a now-retired librarian, is married to Dr Howard Moffat (he also appears in the books), a senior ranking member of the Ministry of Health and a former superintendent of the Princess Marina Hospital. She has lived in Botswana for 33 years.

“I went to school in Zimbabwe with Sandy’s sisters,” she says. “He’s always been able to charm, to make us laugh. Even when he was a kid.”

She tells me, too, that her husband’s grandfather, Robert Moffat, translated the Bible into Setswana (the language of Botswana) and Robert’s daughter, Margaret, married the famous missionary and explorer, Dr David Livingstone.

She remembers the day Sandy walked with her husband along the streets of Mochudi and saw a grateful woman kill and expertly pluck a chicken in the frontyard to present to the doctor. “Sandy wrote a short story about that. It was the seed,” she says. “I think, for the books that came later.”

Fiona believes the way of life Mma Ramotswe knew as a child and young woman began to change in the late 1960s. That’s when diamond and gold mines lured Batswana men from their quiet rural homes and strong family life with promises of instant wealth. Instead, it introduced them to disease and ultimately, despair.

“There was a time when you couldn’t drive in the streets of Gaborone on a Saturday morning because of the funeral processions,” she says. “Since the government provided free anti-viral drugs to treat AIDS, it’s not like that anymore. Thank God.”

It is a town, nevertheless, that is trying to cope with an exploding population, poor infrastructure and a rising, mostly petty, crime rate.

“What has never changed, and hopefully never will, is the warmth, kindness and humour of the people. Sandy gets that so perfectly right in the books.”

The 11th book by Alexander McCall Smith in the No.1 Ladies Detective Agency series, The Double Comfort Safari Club (Little, Brown, hardback, $34.99) is now on sale.

Travel essentials

Fly: South African Airways or SAA (phone 1300 435 972; www.flysaa.com) flies non-stop from Sydney to Johannesburg six days a week and daily from Perth, with connections to the largest network in Africa, including daily flights to Gabarone, Botswana. Australians can fly direct to South Africa on a round-the-world-ticket and return via Europe or the US, with SAA and a Star Alliance partner airline. SAA is consistently voted the Best Airline and Cabin Crew in Africa.

Stay: &Beyond (www.andbeyond.com) has luxury, eco-safari lodges throughout southern Africa, including Sandibe Okavango Safari Lodge and Xaranna Okavango Delt Camp in Botswana, on private concessions of 27,000 and 25,000 hectares respectively. Included in the daily tariff are villa or luxury tent lodgings, two safari drives and three meals. Sandibe is $400 per night per person and Xaranna $550 per night per person.

When: The Okavanga Delta is best visited during when the delta is full of water from May to September.

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Lion around: South Africa’s Kruger National Park

On a two-day walking safari through South Africa’s Kruger National Park, Mike Dolan can’t rid himself of the thought that he could end up as a tasty snack for a lion.

Five of us stand under a giant Marula tree where a bull elephant has feasted on its fallen fruit. Joseph and Jesus, our guides, lean on their rifles as Jesus lectures us on how to behave on our walking safari.

“If we are charged by a lion, don’t run. The lion will give chase. Stand behind the rifle.” The newly weds, who make up the rest of the party, look as if they’re having second thoughts about their honeymoon of choice, but Joseph continues.

“If it’s leopard, look down and back away. Stare and he’ll crush your skull before you have time to swallow.” The honeymooners’ eyes are the size of saucers. Joseph is doubled over with laughter. “I’m sorry, he says, tears streaming down his cheeks, “Just do as you’re told and everyone will be safe, including the animals,” he adds lifting his rifle

For two days, we have been pampered at the Rhino Post Lodge. Today, we are swapping the safety of the lodge for a walk on the wild side and, if all goes to plan, will be sleeping in a tree house tonight.

We set off in single file. Joseph and Jesus lead, the honeymooners follow and I’m at the back … feeling like lion bait. Every 10 steps, I swivel around expecting to see a lion crouch back into the knee-high grass.

Casually, Jesus tells us we are about to enter the territory of two lions, brothers called Itchy and Scratchy. “They are both as ugly as each other,” says Jesus. “Scratchy has only one eye and a scarred face and Itchy has had his tail bitten off by another lion. They have no wives and this means they have to hunt for themselves.”

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Suddenly Joseph raises a hand. There’s something in the scrub ahead. The sound of thickets being trampled is approaching us. Then a dozen curious buffalo calves trot towards us, leaving their 650kg mothers behind. They stare at us intently, toss their heads before beating a retreat.

An hour later five war-torn male buffaloes appear. The most battered of the mob has a missing horn – he looks like an old prize-fighter with a grudge against the world. Within seconds we’re scrambling into a dry river bed and up the opposite bank. “We’re safe here. It’s too steep for those bad-tempered old men,” assures Joseph.

The honeymooners don’t look convinced. “Why didn’t we climb a tree?” asks the husband. “Because we don’t want to bleed to death,” replies Jesus. “Look at those pencil-length thorns …”

The honeymooners look crestfallen. During lunch on a hillock with a view, we eat sandwiches. It’s surprising how a little altitude can calm the nerves.

In a ravine below, Jesus catches sight of a leopard and her cub playing tag. They are oblivious to us and that’s the way Joseph wants to keep it.

An hour later we arrive to find a troop of baboons in the branches around the tree house. There’s a comical stand-off before the troop beats a retreat. Our home for the night is a rambling Robinson Crusoe creation with very few right angles. We sleep on platforms under mosquito nets next to a bathroom hut with shower and porcelain toilet with brass fittings.

That night, we feast on barbecued meat and yams around a log fire. Everyone sleeps badly. Hyenas howl and the tree house rocks like a cradle as an elephant rubs itself on a big branch below, but as we get up and set off in the morning, our spirits lift when we spot a “tower” of giraffe, a “dazzle” of zebra and four white rhino.

Just before we get back to the lodge, I glimpse an animal in the grass behind me. “Ah ha,” I call out loud, “I am being stalked by a lion. Then an animal the size of a Jack Russell breaks cover. “It’s a jackel,” says Jesus. And for the first time in two days, the honeymooners burst out laughing.

Travel essentials

SAFARI:Rhino Post Safari Lodge (1800 447 164; www.rhinoafrica.com) offers spectacular game viewing and walking safaris on a private concession in the Kruger National Park. Rates from $330 a night, inclusive of meals and two game drives each day.

FLY: South African Airways (1300 435 972; www.flysaa.com) flies from Sydney to Johannesburg six days a week and daily from Perth.

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Girl power: Most powerful female stars

Forbes has released its latest list of the richest and most powerful female celebrities in Hollywood. See who makes the cut and where they rank.

Ellen DeGeneres has turned herself from a stand-up comedian to a successful television host. With her own day time TV show The Ellen DeGeneres Show and her stint as a judge on American Idol it’s easy to see why she is loved!

With a number of new movies under her belt and arguably the world’s sexiest husband, Angelina Jolie still makes the top 10, just.

Country music teen queen Miley Cyrus has worked her way up from children’s television show Hannah Montana to one of the most powerful female celebrities.

From one country music teen queen to another, Taylor swift just beats Miley Cyrus. The starlet has been crowned the most played artist on the radio in 2009.

Fifty-one year old mother Madonna is still going strong. Her 2009 concert brought in $6 million a night and $138 million overall.

Opening up the top five most powerful females in Hollywood is Sandra Bullock. The Oscar winning actress has had a whirlwind year with two hit movies, but the downfall of her marriage to Jesse James made her one of the most talked about celebs in the world.

Pop princess Britney Spears isn’t about to let herself drop off the list. Despite her ups and downs, Britney is firmly placed at number 4 thanks to her 2009 world tour.

Despite her kooky looks and crazy behaviour, there’s no doubt Lady GaGa is a notable contender to take out top spot next year. This year however she comes in at number three.

Beyonce’s money making music isn’t the only thing she has to thank for her star power. The singer and actress has a number of lucrative product endorsement deals.

Queen of TV Oprah Winfrey takes the top spot for the most powerful female in Hollywood. Although her TV show is coming to an end this year, she still has control over her media empire company Harpo.

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