Yahoo Buzzlog Top 20

Rank Prev. Subject (Days on Chart) Move Score Rank Subject 1-Day Move
1 3 Portia de Rossi (2) +221 420 1 Emilie De Ravin 17912%
2 - Emilie De Ravin (1) +199 200 2 Kim Yun-jin 3027%
3 12 Leelee Sobieski (2) +52 97 3 Maggie Grace 1565%
4 19 Erika Eleniak (2) +44 80 4 Evangeline Lilly 453%
5 8 Angelina Jolie (1441) +7 71 5 Elizabeth Mitchell 384%
6 6 Jessica Alba (1342) -2 68 6 Shirley Maclaine 376%
7 38 Ellen Barkin (2) +29 50 7 Josh Brolin 338%
8 16 Megan Fox (433) +5 50 8 Emily Deschanel 327%
9 17 Jennifer Lopez (148) +6 48 9 Dakota Fanning 305%
10 10 Lindsay Lohan (1233) -9 47 10 Josh Lucas 284%
11 - Evangeline Lilly (1) +36 45 11 Hilary Swank 282%
12 4 Eva Mendes (560) -47 42 12 Maria Bello 268%
13 18 Robert Pattinson (45) +0 40 13 Maggie Gyllenhaal 213%
14 41 Nicole Eggert (2) +18 38 14 Amy Adams 204%
15 20 Miley Cyrus (569) +2 38 15 Marisa Coughlan 202%
16 22 Jessica Biel (565) +1 35 16 Elisabeth Shue 200%
17 - Maggie Grace (1) +33 35 17 Josh Peck 169%
18 21 Pamela Anderson (1820) +0 34 18 Mira Sorvino 163%
19 - Kim Yun-jin (1) +32 33 19 Bruce Campbell 163%
20 24 Jennifer Aniston (148) +0 33 20 Brian Austin Green 156%

Carol Bartz

Carol A. Bartz (born August 29, 1948 in Winona, Minnesota) is the CEO of Yahoo! and was previously the Chairman, President, and CEO at Autodesk from 1992 until 2009.

After college, Bartz worked at 3M, but left after a request to transfer to the headquarters was denied. She has previously worked at Sun Microsystems and Digital Equipment Corporation.

Bartz became CEO of Autodesk in 1992. According to Forbes, "Since 1992, Bartz, 56, has transformed Autodesk from an aimless maker of PC software into a leader of computer-aided design software, targeting architects and builders." She is credited with instituting and promoting Autodesk's "3F" or "fail-fast forward" concept -- the idea that you engineer a company to fail in certain missions, to be resilient to failure, and to respond to it by overcoming quickly.

On January 13, 2009, Bartz was named the CEO of Yahoo!, succeeding co-founder Jerry Yang. In a conference call with financial analysts, she announced that she intended to make sure Yahoo got "some friggin' breathing room" so the company could "kick some butt.".

She serves on the boards of directors of Intel, Cisco Systems, NetApp, and the Foundation for the National Medals of Science.