Showing posts with label Hollywood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hollywood. Show all posts

Friday, November 28, 2008

Celebrity Rumor Mill: November 28 2008



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Entertainment, Celebrities:
News, Rumors, Gossip, Allegations

November 28, 2008

Celebrity Rumor Mill

* Worker dies at Long Island Wal-Mart after being trampled in Black Friday stampede
* Britney is a "Wonderful Mother"?
* SCUMBAG WINS MONEY






  1. Madonna, A-Rod Make Beautiful Music Together
    Are you kiding me? I wonder if he'll get to second base?

  2. NBC's Rosie O’Donnell variety show disappoints
    Rosie's night-before-Thanksgiving TV turkey.

  3. Worker dies at Long Island Wal-Mart after being trampled in Black Friday stampede
    The Wal-Mart Panic? No bargain wide-screen TV is worth an innocent life.

  4. New Buffy movie on the way? Talk about returning from the dead.

  5. SPEIDI NUPS HOAX?
    The Hills stars, who claim they tied the knot in a wedding ceremony at a chapel near Cabo San Lucas on Nov. 20, don't appear to be legally married.






    GAWKER





  6. Lynne Spears: Britney Is a 'Wonderful Mother'
    See link below.

  7. BRITNEY KID DROPS THE F-BOMB

  8. ASHLEE & PETE BRONX CHEER
    Ashlee Simpson-Wentz has boy, Bronx. The baby looks like Queens.

  9. Which Celeb Escaped To Las Vegas To Avoid A Family Thanksgiving?
    No Peeking!

  10. Google Tosses Its Code of Conduct — Along With 10,000 Jobs
    Google Shifts Workers to Keep their "Temporary Worker" status.




by KimeCools
image: dbkp file




Monday, September 22, 2008

Obama: Fiddles in Hollywood While Wall St. Burns



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Culture Watch vol. 33
Nancy Morgan
Right Bias.com




Last week saw an unprecedented government intrusion into the private markets as they continued bailing out, with our tax dollars, failing companies. This is called socialism. For more on this frightening trend, check out, 'Caution: Government At Work.'

ELECTION '08:

As world financial markets melted, Obama took time out from hobnobbing with Hollywood celebrities to pronounce capitalism as a failed institution. No one in the media questioned him on his alternative. They were too busy trying to brand Sarah Palin as some sort of religious loon.

The drive-by media was also too busy to question Obama on a credible report that he tried to influence Iraq to delay the withdrawal of US troops until after the election. Logan Act anyone??

Electioneering has begun in earnest with polls showing a dead heat between Obama and McCain. I expect that may be due, in part, to the Obama campaign's decision to send Obama's teleprompters on the road with him. Or it could be due to the efforts of a group of Palestinian students living in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, who gather nightly to phone US voters and urge them to vote for Obama.

Meanwhile, the investigator looking into Sarah Palins' firing of a state trooper, Stephen Branchflower, has been slapped with a lawsuit by Alaska residents who believe his inquiry represents an abuse of their tax dollars. Alaska legislators, meanwhile, announce that the investigation will be finished before the election, meaning, in time to influence the election.


GOOD NEWS:

In what hopefully could become a trend, students at Dos Palos High School actually staged a protest - by wearing patriotic regalia to school - after a sophomore was forced to remove a T-shirt depicting an American flag. Cool Jeans!

In the face of a legal challenge, search engine Google was forced to lift its ban on pro-life advertisements. Technology is coming closer to developing software that analyse a person's speech, voice and facial expression to determine if they are telling the truth. Imagine the implications.

Remember the war on terror? Top U.S. counterterrorism experts say al-Qaeda is "imploding" and that its violent tactics have turned Muslims world-wide against them. Here at home, the FBI says violent crime is on the downswing. Good news, all around. You probably heard it here first.




CULTURE:

Speaking of violent crime, check out the latest face of terror. A schoolboy, the youngest Briton to be convicted of a terrorism offense, was jailed for 2 years for his part in a world-wide plot to target non-Muslims.

97% of 14 to 17 year-olds play video games. Another survey shows that half of all Americans believe in guardian angels. (Hint: the guardian angel they believe in is NOT the government.) Meanwhile, a Riviera Beach law against 'saggy pants' has been ruled unconstitutional. Cracks are now legal.

Over in Poland, legislators are seriously considering introducing 'coerced treatment' of pedophiles. Translation: castration. And India has become the first country to convict someone of a crime relying on a controversial machine: a brain scanner. Here in the US, a former Army Special Forces commander passed over for a job at the Library of Congress because he was in the process of becoming a she won a discrimination lawsuit.

A new study calculates that a full one-third of American college students have to enroll in remedial classes. The bill to taxpayers for trying to bring them up to speed on stuff they were supposed to learn in government schools is a whopping $2.3 to $2.9 billion, annually.



Search giant Google is set to launch its new "Google phone" operating system this Tuesday. Google is also planning on deploying all the supercomputers it uses in its internet search business to barges located seven miles off shore, away from national laws and taxes.

Speaking of taxes, it appears our government is trying to collect billions of dollars in late taxes from nearly half a million federal employees. One of the most prominent, is Congressman Charlie Rangel, who got caught cheating on his taxes. Did I mention he is head of a key tax writing committee?

Dems have so far shot down two attempts by GOP to punish Rangel for tax fraud, meanwhile, Rangel wrote an open letter to New Yorkers saying he is the target of a "guerilla war." This is called hubris. Its also called 'politics as usual.'


ESSENTIAL TRIVIA:

Standing at just 2ft 5in high, He Pinping has been officially named the world's smallest man. Svetlana Pankratova, meanwhile, owns the longest legs in the world

The owner of the Storchen restaurant in Winterthur is improving his menu by using mother's milk in his soups and sauces. Whoa.

From the schadenfruede files, it might be comforting to know that billionaire George Soros's hedge fund may have lost at least $120 million on its stake in failed Lehman Brothers. I'm smiling. Color me catty.
An Israeli city is compiling a DNA data bank - on dog poop. Apparently they will match dog poop with the owners in order to both reward and fine dog owners who don't use a pooper scooper. How about we initiate a similar DNA test for Democrat's failed policies? Just a thought...



IDIOT OF THE WEEK:

There are so many contenders for this weekly award that RightBias is forced, by space constraints, to publish the myriad idiots lists as a separate page this week. Check out 'IDIOTS OF THE WEEK AWARDS'

The top idiot of the week award goes, hands down, to Dem VP contender Joe Biden, who stated with a straight face that being patriotic means paying higher taxes. No doubt, some will fall for this bunk, which further explains the need for an expanded IDIOT'S list. So many idiots, so little time.

Till next week, keep smiling,

by Nancy Morgan
RightBias.com

Culture Watch may be reprinted, with attribution to RightBias.com



Tuesday, January 22, 2008

80th Academy Awards Nominations

Oscar Nominations Announced


The nominations for the 80th Academy Awards are announced.

There's great excitement in the movie industry and in the Hollywood/New York area. But outside that small area, life goes on.

There's some passing interest, but the days when people stopped what they were doing to find out what pictures and actors have been nominated are in the cultural rearview mirror.

A much shorter list than the 80th Academy nominations might be a list of pictures a broad cross section of society went to the movies and watched--and came out impressed.

There is still some interest in the big 5: Best Motion Picture, Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Supporting Actor, and Best Supporting Actress.

But for what it's worth, here's the 80th Academy Award nominations.

Best motion picture

“Atonement” (Focus Features) A Working Title Production: Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner and Paul Webster, Producers

“Juno” (Fox Searchlight) A Dancing Elk Pictures, LLC Production: Lianne Halfon, Mason Novick and Russell Smith, Producers

“Michael Clayton” (Warner Bros.) A Clayton Productions, LLC Production: Sydney Pollack, Jennifer Fox and Kerry Orent, Producers

“No Country for Old Men” (Miramax and Paramount Vantage) A Scott Rudin/Mike Zoss Production: Scott Rudin, Ethan Coen and Joel Coen, Producers

“There Will Be Blood” (Paramount Vantage and Miramax) A JoAnne Sellar/Ghoulardi Film Company Production: JoAnne Sellar, Paul Thomas Anderson and Daniel Lupi, Producers

Performance by an actress in a leading role

Cate Blanchett in “Elizabeth: The Golden Age” (Universal)

Julie Christie in “Away from Her” (Lionsgate)

Marion Cotillard in “La Vie en Rose” (Picturehouse)

Laura Linney in “The Savages” (Fox Searchlight)

Ellen Page in “Juno” (Fox Searchlight)

Performance by an actor in a leading role

George Clooney in “Michael Clayton” (Warner Bros.)

Daniel Day-Lewis in “There Will Be Blood” (Paramount Vantage and Miramax)

Johnny Depp in “Sweeney Todd The Demon Barber of Fleet Street” (DreamWorks and Warner Bros., Distributed by DreamWorks/Paramount)

Tommy Lee Jones in “In the Valley of Elah” (Warner Independent)

Viggo Mortensen in “Eastern Promises” (Focus Features)

Performance by an actor in a supporting role

Casey Affleck in “The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford” (Warner Bros.)

Javier Bardem in “No Country for Old Men” (Miramax and Paramount Vantage)

Philip Seymour Hoffman in “Charlie Wilson’s War” (Universal)

Hal Holbrook in “Into the Wild” (Paramount Vantage and River Road Entertainment)

Tom Wilkinson in “Michael Clayton” (Warner Bros.)

Achievement in directing

“The Diving Bell and the Butterfly” (Miramax/Pathé Renn), Julian Schnabel
“Juno” (Fox Searchlight), Jason Reitman
“Michael Clayton” (Warner Bros.), Tony Gilroy
“No Country for Old Men” (Miramax and Paramount Vantage), Joel Coen and Ethan Coen
“There Will Be Blood” (Paramount Vantage and Miramax), Paul Thomas Anderson

Performance by an actress in a supporting role

Cate Blanchett in “I’m Not There” (The Weinstein Company)

Ruby Dee in “American Gangster” (Universal)

Saoirse Ronan in “Atonement” (Focus Features)

Amy Ryan in “Gone Baby Gone” (Miramax)

Tilda Swinton in “Michael Clayton” (Warner Bros.)

Adapted screenplay

“Atonement” (Focus Features), Screenplay by Christopher Hampton
“Away from Her” (Lionsgate), Written by Sarah Polley
“The Diving Bell and the Butterfly” (Miramax/Pathé Renn), Screenplay by Ronald Harwood
“No Country for Old Men” (Miramax and Paramount Vantage), Written for the screen by Joel Coen & Ethan Coen
“There Will Be Blood” (Paramount Vantage and Miramax), Written for the screen by Paul Thomas Anderson

Original screenplay

“Juno” (Fox Searchlight), Written by Diablo Cody
“Lars and the Real Girl” (MGM), Written by Nancy Oliver
“Michael Clayton” (Warner Bros.), Written by Tony Gilroy
“Ratatouille” (Walt Disney), Screenplay by Brad Bird; Story by Jan Pinkava, Jim Capobianco, Brad Bird
“The Savages” (Fox Searchlight), Written by Tamara Jenkins

Best animated feature film of the year


“Persepolis” (Sony Pictures Classics): Marjane Satrapi and Vincent Paronnaud
“Ratatouille” (Walt Disney): Brad Bird
“Surf’s Up” (Sony Pictures Releasing): Ash Brannon and Chris Buck

Best foreign language film


“Beaufort” Israel
“The Counterfeiters” Austria
“Katyn” Poland
“Mongol” Kazakhstan
“12″ Russia

Achievement in art direction

“American Gangster” (Universal): Art Direction: Arthur Max; Set Decoration: Beth A. Rubino
“Atonement” (Focus Features): Art Direction: Sarah Greenwood; Set Decoration: Katie Spencer
“The Golden Compass” (New Line in association with Ingenious Film Partners): Art Direction: Dennis Gassner; Set Decoration: Anna Pinnock
“Sweeney Todd The Demon Barber of Fleet Street” (DreamWorks and Warner Bros., Distributed by DreamWorks/Paramount): Art Direction: Dante Ferretti; Set Decoration: Francesca Lo Schiavo
“There Will Be Blood” (Paramount Vantage and Miramax): Art Direction: Jack Fisk; Set Decoration: Jim Erickson

Achievement in cinematography

“The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford” (Warner Bros.): Roger Deakins
“Atonement” (Focus Features): Seamus McGarvey
“The Diving Bell and the Butterfly” (Miramax/Pathé Renn): Janusz Kaminski
“No Country for Old Men” (Miramax and Paramount Vantage): Roger Deakins
“There Will Be Blood” (Paramount Vantage and Miramax): Robert Elswit

Achievement in costume design

“Across the Universe” (Sony Pictures Releasing) Albert Wolsky
“Atonement” (Focus Features) Jacqueline Durran
“Elizabeth: The Golden Age” (Universal) Alexandra Byrne
“La Vie en Rose” (Picturehouse) Marit Allen
“Sweeney Todd The Demon Barber of Fleet Street” (DreamWorks and Warner Bros., Distributed by DreamWorks/Paramount) Colleen Atwood

Best documentary feature

“No End in Sight” (Magnolia Pictures) A Representational Pictures Production: Charles Ferguson and Audrey Marrs
“Operation Homecoming: Writing the Wartime Experience” (The Documentary Group) A Documentary Group Production: Richard E. Robbins
“Sicko” (Lionsgate and The Weinstein Company) A Dog Eat Dog Films Production: Michael Moore and Meghan O’Hara
“Taxi to the Dark Side” (THINKFilm) An X-Ray Production: Alex Gibney and Eva Orner
“War/Dance” (THINKFilm) A Shine Global and Fine Films Production: Andrea Nix Fine and Sean Fine

Best documentary short subject

“Freeheld” A Lieutenant Films Production: Cynthia Wade and Vanessa Roth
“La Corona (The Crown)” A Runaway Films and Vega Films Production: Amanda Micheli and Isabel Vega
“Salim Baba” A Ropa Vieja Films and Paradox Smoke Production: Tim Sternberg and Francisco Bello
“Sari’s Mother” (Cinema Guild) A Daylight Factory Production: James Longley

Achievement in film editing

“The Bourne Ultimatum” (Universal): Christopher Rouse
“The Diving Bell and the Butterfly” (Miramax/Pathé Renn): Juliette Welfling
“Into the Wild” (Paramount Vantage and River Road Entertainment): Jay Cassidy
“No Country for Old Men” (Miramax and Paramount Vantage) Roderick Jaynes
“There Will Be Blood” (Paramount Vantage and Miramax): Dylan Tichenor

Achievement in makeup

“La Vie en Rose” (Picturehouse) Didier Lavergne and Jan Archibald
“Norbit” (DreamWorks, Distributed by Paramount): Rick Baker and Kazuhiro Tsuji
“Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End” (Walt Disney): Ve Neill and Martin Samuel

Achievement in music written for motion pictures (Original score)

“Atonement” (Focus Features) Dario Marianelli
“The Kite Runner” (DreamWorks, Sidney Kimmel Entertainment and Participant Productions, Distributed by Paramount Classics): Alberto Iglesias
“Michael Clayton” (Warner Bros.) James Newton Howard
“Ratatouille” (Walt Disney) Michael Giacchino
“3:10 to Yuma” (Lionsgate) Marco Beltrami

Achievement in music written for motion pictures (Original song)

“Falling Slowly” from “Once” (Fox Searchlight) Music and Lyric by Glen Hansard and: Marketa Irglova
“Happy Working Song” from “Enchanted” (Walt Disney): Music by Alan Menken; Lyric by Stephen Schwartz
“Raise It Up” from “August Rush” (Warner Bros.): Nominees to be determined
“So Close” from “Enchanted” (Walt Disney): Music by Alan Menken; Lyric by Stephen Schwartz
“That’s How You Know” from “Enchanted” (Walt Disney): Music by Alan Menken; Lyric by Stephen Schwartz

Best animated short film

“I Met the Walrus” A Kids & Explosions Production: Josh Raskin
“Madame Tutli-Putli” (National Film Board of Canada) A National Film Board of Canada Production Chris Lavis and Maciek Szczerbowski “Même Les Pigeons Vont au Paradis (Even Pigeons Go to Heaven)” (Premium Films) A BUF Compagnie Production Samuel Tourneux and Simon Vanesse
“My Love (Moya Lyubov)” (Channel One Russia) A Dago-Film Studio, Channel One Russia and Dentsu Tec Production Alexander Petrov
“Peter & the Wolf” (BreakThru Films) A BreakThru Films/Se-ma-for Studios Production Suzie Templeton and Hugh Welchman

Best live action short film

“At Night” A Zentropa Entertainments 10 Production: Christian E. Christiansen and Louise Vesth
“Il Supplente (The Substitute)” (Sky Cinema Italia) A Frame by Frame Italia Production: Andrea Jublin
“Le Mozart des Pickpockets (The Mozart of Pickpockets)” (Premium Films) A Karé Production: Philippe Pollet-Villard
“Tanghi Argentini” (Premium Films) An Another Dimension of an Idea Production: Guido Thys and Anja Daelemans
“The Tonto Woman” A Knucklehead, Little Mo and Rose Hackney Barber Production: Daniel Barber and Matthew Brown

Achievement in sound editing

“The Bourne Ultimatum” (Universal): Karen Baker Landers and Per Hallberg
“No Country for Old Men” (Miramax and Paramount Vantage): Skip Lievsay
“Ratatouille” (Walt Disney): Randy Thom and Michael Silvers
“There Will Be Blood” (Paramount Vantage and Miramax): Matthew Wood
“Transformers” (DreamWorks and Paramount in association with Hasbro): Ethan Van der Ryn and Mike Hopkins

Achievement in sound mixing


“The Bourne Ultimatum” (Universal) Scott Millan, David Parker and Kirk Francis
“No Country for Old Men” (Miramax and Paramount Vantage): Skip Lievsay, Craig Berkey, Greg Orloff and Peter Kurland
“Ratatouille” (Walt Disney): Randy Thom, Michael Semanick and Doc Kane
“3:10 to Yuma” (Lionsgate): Paul Massey, David Giammarco and Jim Stuebe
“Transformers” (DreamWorks and Paramount in association with Hasbro): Kevin O’Connell, Greg P. Russell and Peter J. Devlin

Achievement in visual effects

“The Golden Compass” (New Line in association with Ingenious Film Partners): Michael Fink, Bill Westenhofer, Ben Morris and Trevor Wood
“Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End” (Walt Disney): John Knoll, Hal Hickel, Charles Gibson and John Frazier
“Transformers” (DreamWorks and Paramount in association with Hasbro): Scott Farrar, Scott Benza, Russell Earl and John Frazier

And that's the line-up.

The studios will, as always, use the nominations to try and bump up attendance at their movies who made the cut.

Have we been too cynical?

Do the awards still excite people outside of Hollywood/New York?

What do you think?

by Mondoreb


[image: falling pixel]
Source: the Oscar Gun Goes off

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Saturday, November 10, 2007

The 500 Hats of Stephen Boccho


Producer/writer Stephen Boccho has a wardrobe malfunction.

Upon entering Hollywood last time, one encountered a long line of traffic backed up at a huge police roadblock. As each car stopped, a pair of policeman approached the car. As one inspected the exterior of the vehicle, the other, through the opened window, handed the occupants some "items for your protection."

They were tinfoil hats.

The officer was thanked and the journey resumed. The protective devices the policeman offered proved to be too tight, cutting off the oxygen to the wearer's brain and were soon discarded.

Steve Boccho, creator of TV shows such as Hill Street Blues and others, apparently soldiered on under the reduced brain activity his hat produced.

If proof is needed, it comes from an article at Newsday in an article entitled, "Foreign Wars are Hollywood Hell". In it, Boccho relates his experiences producing shows featuring his particular view of history.
"It's a hugely unpopular war, and there's a staggering amount of depressing coverage," says producer Steven Bochco. Bochco's 2005 TV series "Over There," about a platoon of soldiers fighting in Iraq, lasted just one season. "TV is fully saturated with this war," he adds, "and I don't know if you can do a serious drama about this war and locate any angle that would overcome the negativity about it."
Mr. Boccho's "staggering amount of depressing coverage" apparently refers to increasingly positive news from Iraq about declining death tolls and al-Qaeda's retreat.

Boccho also shines his analytic flashlight of comparative history on another war:
..."World War II was hugely romanticized in terms of its fiction," Bochco says. "There were unambiguous villains, and the feeling we were fighting the right people over the right issues, as opposed to this war, which many people feel is misguided...
This is too much for the Purple Avenger, at Ace of Spades, who reveals that Boccho has traded his tinfoil chapeau for another one.
Steven Bochco is an asshat
What pray tell does this f*cktard find "ambiguous" about blowing up packed markets, school children, chopping heads, etc? Why are the perpetrators of such atrocities NOT the "right people" to have our armed forces engage, and why the f*ck is this NOT the "right issue"?

You want to know why Over There was a bomb Steven? It was a bomb because your morally devoid terror-sympathetic mindset couldn't possibly write something that would appeal to the population in general. Piss be upon you and I hope everything your fetid black hearted hand touches in the future becomes a bomb too.
Bravo!

But one suspects that even 100 bombs would fail to force Stephen Boccho to go hatless.

by Mondoreb

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Friday, November 9, 2007

Networks Scramble to Find Quality


It seemed the new TV season had just started, then, suddenly, the stream of new episodes threatened to run dry.

For the most part, you can relax for the rest of the month. Even with TV writers on strike, most of your favorite comedy and drama series have episodes on tap through November, and even beyond. But a few will be in reruns all too soon.
--AP/MyWay

by RidesAPaleHorse

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