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Archive for the ‘Entertainment and Media’ Category

Jackson, Lennon and Elvis

In Celebrities, Culture, Entertainment and Media on July 5, 2009 at 9:07 pm

by James Hirsen

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Media coverage of the death of Michael Jackson has reached a fever pitch with his memorial service that is scheduled to take place this week in Los Angeles.

Fans from all over the world have registered for the chance to receive tickets to attend the event, although only 11,000 people will actually be allowed into the Staples Center.

All three networks will broadcast live coverage of the service with their primetime attendant anchors present at the arena.

The cable news channels will feature wall-to-wall coverage of the event, too, and the memorial service will likely be the lead story on the evening news everywhere.

As we have all witnessed, numerous stories of significance involving foreign policy and domestic legislation have been shunted aside in favor of Jackson interviews, retrospectives and specials. This is part and parcel of what our celebrity loving country has come to expect.

Regrettably, the tragic scenario has played out a number of times before. A music icon dies suddenly and unexpectedly, and under a mysterious set of circumstances. Along with Jackson, two other legendary stars come to mind, and their passing had the same dramatic effect on the public and the culture.

It was a chilly December day when John Lennon and his wife Yoko Ono finished a routine recording session. They had no idea how deep a darkness would soon fall.

The world at the time was consumed with things other than a former Beatle’s solo career. A new leader, Ronald Reagan, had just been elected President of the United States, with a full slate of issues ahead of him that included a faltering economy and enemies abroad.

As John and Yoko returned to their Manhattan apartment at the Dakota, a disturbed fan, Mark David Chapman, sent four hollow point bullets racing Lennon’s way. Police took the legendary musician to the hospital where he was pronounced dead.

The media behaved quite differently the day the Lennon music died. The New Media was not yet in force. Cable news programming was still in formation. Much of the public heard the word of Lennon’s death from Howard Cosell during a broadcast of “Monday Night Football.”

Still, news of the former Beatle’s passing spread fast. It was the lead story on all of the major networks and above the fold in newspapers around the world.

As the sad news traveled, crowds gathered outside the Dakota. Much like the throngs who mourned for Jackson in New York, London and L.A., Lennon fans sang songs and recited lyrics in his honor. Yoko Ono asked the mourners to return the next Sunday for a memorial for John. That Sunday, Central Park was overrun with over 100,000 people. A similar gathering took place in John’s hometown of Liverpool with 30,000 people in attendance.

Many radio stations played Lennon music exclusively for several days in a row.

Although John’s death was similar to Michael’s in terms of public reaction, media coverage and cultural impact, another pop music icon passed on under much more eerily parallel circumstances.

His career was fading. His performances had fallen far below expectations with the resultant criticism from the entertainment press. He appeared unhealthy, but he and his handlers decided it was time for a summer comeback tour.

Just like in Jackson’s case, the tour never happened. In August of 1977, Elvis Presley was found dead on the floor of his Graceland home by his fiancee, Ginger Alden.

His death was the lead story on all of the broadcast networks except for CBS, which made it second to a Panama Canal story, possibly because Walter Cronkite was away on vacation.

For years insiders at the CBS newsroom were said to have repeated the words “remember Elvis,” because the network felt as if it had been remiss in its coverage of the star.

The day the Elvis music died dominated the media cycle for weeks on end. Much like the death of Jackson, the cause of Elvis’s death would remain a mystery and consume massive amounts of media airtime.

Early reporting indicated that Presley died from a cardiac arrhythmia, which fit with the excess weight he was carrying. But an autopsy of the legendary singer showed large quantities of a host of drugs including Morphine, Demerol, Valium, Codeine and Quaaludes, some of which were also found in Jackson’s home.

The passing of Jackson, Lennon and Elvis invites the kind of speculation that, like their iconic images, goes on forever.

James Hirsen, J.D., M.A. in media psychology, is a media analyst, 
teacher of mass media and entertainment law at Biola University, 
and professor at Trinity Law School.

Tweeting with the Stars

In Celebrities, Culture, Entertainment and Media, law on April 5, 2009 at 7:06 pm

Lately Twitter has been getting a terrabyte’s worth of celebrity buzz.

After a tweeting addiction got pinned with the blame for John Mayer’s breakup with Jennifer Anniston, Mayer opined that posting on the micro blogging social network is “inherently silly and inherently dumb.”

He proceeded to put up a non-silly and fairly astute post on the subject of self-esteem.

“Living by the power of other people’s suggestion will slowly kill you. Genuine self esteem isn’t a roller coaster. It comes from within,” Mayer texted.

Look for esteem or something like it to end up in a new Mayer song.

Meanwhile Demi Moore’s Twitter wits may have helped save a life.

A distressed woman had sent the “Charlie’s Angels” star an ominous Twitter message that read: “Getting a knife, a big one that is sharp. Going to cut my arm down the whole arm so it doesn’t waste time.”

The alert actress and Ashton Kutcher spouse forwarded the terrible tweet to her 350,000 Twitter followers, adding this supplemental message: “Hope you are joking. Everyone I was very torn about responding or retweeting that woman’s post but felt uncomfortable just letting it go.”

Demi’s followers sprang into action and contacted the police who were able to find the woman and prevent the potential suicide.

“Thanks everyone for reaching out to the San Jose PD,” Moore later tweeted. “I am told they are aware and no need to call anymore. I do not know this woman…”

“It is my understanding that the situation was not a joke and that through the collective efforts here action was taken to provide help!” Moore added.

It just goes to show that social networks can be used for more than mere amusement.

They can be twitterly important and at times tweetastic.

BTY, I’m a twitterer, too, and if you’re so inclined please forward me your choicest news twips and H-tweets.

Twanks.

James Hirsen is a media analyst, teacher of mass media and entertainment law at Biola University and professor at Trinity Law School.

Jimmy Kimmel Gets the Rush Limbaugh Treatment

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment Business, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Television, sports on October 21, 2007 at 9:54 pm

ABC late-night host Jimmy Kimmel was essentially fired from his position as comedic color commentator on ESPN’s Monday Night Football.

After two editions of the show, Kimmel was let go for a quip about former QB and announcer Joe Theismann, in which he said that Theismann, who was let go last season, was “watching from his living room with steam coming from his ears.”

The next day, Monday Night Football producer Jay Rothman characterized Kimmel’s joke as “classless and disappointing,” adding that “it was cheap.”

Rothman confirmed Kimmel won’t be back.

This is reminiscent of 2003, when ESPN bowed to pressure and accepted Rush Limbaugh’s resignation after the talk show host directed commentary at the media about quarterback Donovan McNabb’s overly favorable press coverage.

Sports talk used to be the last bastion of freeform ranting.

Looks like PC-itis has really infected the announcing booth when a commentator gets let go for expressing an opinion and a comedian gets fired for telling a joke.

On another ambiguously funny note, Stephen Colbert was teasing as usual when he announced that he’s a candidate for the U.S. presidency.

But the law could create some serious trouble for the satirical talk show host.

Congress has created a load of complex election laws that Colbert may have already triggered with his latest politically charged prank.

The Comedy Central notable executed the necessary documents to have his name added to both the Democratic and Republican primary ballots in South Carolina. In addition, he set up a Web site for his budding campaign while at the same time declaring that he was crossing out the part of an oath stating that he would not “knowingly violate any election law.”

Colbert appears to be mildly serious. He indicated that he has sought the advice of an election law firm, Wiley Rein. The caricaturist switched to his campaign site a petition seeking signatures from the show’s Web site, based on his lawyers’ recommendations.

If Colbert actually follows through as he has promised and pays the fees ($2,500) and collects enough signatures (3000), campaign finance laws will expose his show and network to violations that could even involve criminal penalties.

To the extent that Colbert’s cable show promotes his candidacy, it could arguably be viewed as an illegal “in-kind” contribution from Comedy Central.

The whole problem might be mitigated if Colbert would do something he almost never does—admit it was just a joke.

Brad Pitt’s Southern Sadness Suspicions

In Brad Pitt, Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Music, celebrity, entertainment on September 23, 2007 at 7:46 pm

Brad Pitt has been out promoting his latest flick with the long-winded title, “The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford.”

In an interview on ABC’s “Good Morning America,” Pitt shared some of his thoughts on being a dad. He also talked about how fatherhood has helped him overcome a sadness that he has had since he was a boy growing up in Missouri.

Pitt’s onscreen character Jesse James also grew up in the Show Me State, which evidently spurred the actor into examining his past and the region of his childhood.

Pitt spoke of something he characterized as the South’s “congenital sadness.”

“It’s something that I feel in my grandparents, in the people I’ve met, in a Southern way of life,” Pitt said.

Interestingly, he sees the Christian faith as an antidote for Southern woe.

“It’s something pervasive, an undercurrent that I think Christianity answers,” Pitt professed.

O.J. Simpson’s Courtroom Fate

In Celebrity Crime, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, OJ, law on September 16, 2007 at 9:02 pm

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A poetic turn toward justice seems to have taken place in the strange saga of O.J. Simpson.

The former athlete, actor and murder defendant was recently arrested on multiple felony counts. The charges involve serious felonies—robbery with a deadly weapon, conspiracy to commit robbery and burglary with a firearm.

The Las Vegas police followed textbook criminal procedure, carefully arresting, charging and questioning the accomplice and obtaining two firearms and other evidence before going after O.J.

The accomplice, Walter Alexander, was arrested on two counts of robbery with a deadly weapon, two counts of assault with a deadly weapon, conspiracy to commit robbery and burglary with a deadly weapon, enough charges to induce a deal with prosecutors.

Simpson seems to have a strange strain of narcissism that makes him think he is immune to the workings of the justice system. “I’m not walking around feeling sad or anything. I’ve done nothing wrong,” he told the Los Angeles Times.

Ironically, O.J.’s arrest comes as his book, “If I Did It,” a hypothetical account of his ex-wife’s murder, hits the bookstores.

In 1997 a civil jury found O.J. responsible for the deaths of wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman and ordered him to pay the families of the victims $33 million. Goldman’s sister Kim said she is not surprised by the robbery allegations because Simpson “thinks he can do no wrong.”

If the current case goes to trial, any actions taken by O.J. in avoidance of payment of the judgment would become relevant. If he had been involved in autographing memorabilia and secretly selling it to avoid paying the judgment, additional criminal charges could ensue.

David Cook, a Goldman family lawyer, said he plans to go to court to make sure the mementos were not sold but instead turned over to the family to be used to help settle the civil judgment.

Even though it is in the early stages, this O.J. trial may drastically differ from the “Trial of the Century.” O.J. will probably be unable to afford a “dream team” of lawyers, Nevada prosecutors will likely be more proficient and the judge less star struck than counterparts in the murder trial, a D.A. will be less inclined to permit a change of venue to another jurisdiction and, with any luck, cameras in the courtroom will be disallowed.

O.J. has already admitted to some of the crimes of which he is accused. He said that he entered a man’s room with a group of friends, one of whom was posing as a potential buyer, after being tipped off that some of his personal items were for sale there. He also said his friends helped him carry the items from the room, although he claims no guns were involved.

When all is said and done, Orenthal James Simpson may go to prison for a long stretch this time around, a punishment that would fit—like a glove.

Jessica Alba’s Kissing for Dummies

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies on September 9, 2007 at 9:32 pm

She’s one of the hottest female stars and he’s one of the hottest stand-up comics.

Jessica Alba and Dane Cook appear together in the Lions Gate film “Good Luck Chuck,” which is about a guy who discovers that every girl he gets involved with marries the next man she dates.

In the movie, Alba plays the role of a woman that Cook’s character himself would like to marry.

In real life, Alba actually handed Cook some new comedy material on a silver platter when she was asked about the love scenes that she did with the comedian.

“Kissing? Well…,” Alba tells Fox News, “I don’t really remember. It was like kissing a dummy.”

Puppet puckering aside, Alba is a romantic when it comes to the way stories are told in movies.

“The films I do always have a happy ending,” she says, adding that she hopes “it reflects back to real life.”

Papa Gorbachev’s Got a Brand New Bag

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment Business, Entertainment and Media, Media, News and politics, fashion on August 5, 2007 at 8:12 pm

Hollywood is not the only place former communists are drawn to.

Louis Vuitton, the French manufacturer of chichi leather goods and other high-end paraphernalia, has chosen its new celebrity rep.

If you’re thinking Jessica Biel, Scarlett Johansson or Reese Witherspoon, you’re off the mark. The latest face of Louis Vuitton is actually Mikhail Gorbachev.

Not just a former Soviet leader and environmental activist anymore, Gorbachev will be featured in a Louis Vuitton ad campaign for the designer brand.

The commie chic celeb will have some big-name co-stars in the advertisements, like legendary French actress Catherine Deneuve and supermodel Steffi Graf and her tennis champ spouse Andre Agassi.

Gorbachev will be seen riding in a car with a Louis Vuitton bag at his side, and in the background will be the oh-so-untrendy Berlin Wall.

Let Murdock Buy the WSJ

In Entertainment and Media, Media, News and politics, Politics on July 30, 2007 at 11:31 am

Has Rupert Murdock been so completely demonized over his ownership of the Fox News Channel so that a perfectly reasonble media deal?l

Left-Wing Pressures Fox News Advertisers

In Entertainment and Media, Hillary, Hollywood, Media, Politics, Television on July 29, 2007 at 10:39 pm

The fringe of the Internet Left has just launched a new campaign against the Fox News Channel.

The DailyKos, MoveOn, Campaign for America’s Future and other way-out lefty sites are asking rabid fans to determine which companies are sponsors on Fox. They then plan to launch a phone calling campaign.

These are the same groups that urged Democrat presidential candidates not to appear at any Fox sponsored debate. The candidates caved in to their demands.

The groups are purportedly trying to convince Home Depot to stop its Fox advertising, the bent-headed thinking being that the company shouldn’t be advertising on a network that in any way questions global warming.

Home Depot has a reputation for promoting environmentally friendly products.

Most of the lib anger has been directed at Fox’s Bill O’Reilly because he has exposed left-wing bloggers for their hate mongering.

MoveOn.org spokesman Adam Green’s wobbly way of cogitating was revealed when he told the Associated Press, “We’re not trying to silence anybody. Rush Limbaugh has a right to be on the air – he admits his point of view. Fox doesn’t.”

Meanwhile on the network TV front, when a popular late-night TV show celebrates an anniversary, who are left-leaning entertainment powers that be going to call to help mark the special day? Dem presidential contender Hillary Clinton, of course.

This is exactly what CBS’ “Late Show with David Letterman” has in store for viewers who tune in on August 30.

New York’s junior senator will be seated in Letterman’s guest chair, getting some free campaign promo and helping Dave observe the 14th anniversary of the show.

It just so happens that the show ranks as one of the most popular late-night programs on the air.

Consequently, it is a coveted venue for national political figures.

Late-night shows like Letterman’s, Jon Stewart’s and Jay Leno’s have become TV spots that politicians seek because of the exposure provided and scope of audience potentially reached.

Letterman is apparently quite fond of both Bill and Hill.

Hillary’s main campaign squeeze and advisor spouse Bill appeared on Letterman’s show on the first anniversary of the 9/11 attacks and was also a guest on a 2005 show to talk about his quadruple bypass.

As for Hillary, the August appearance will be her seventh.

Hollywood’s Hidden Villains

In Entertainment Business, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies & Entertainment, News and politics, Politics, entertainment on July 15, 2007 at 3:42 pm

Check out this brilliant piece by Nick Cohen in The Observer:

Screens that flicker and fail to challenge

In Die Hard 4.0, a cyber-terrorist paralyses the eastern seaboard of the United States. The lights go out all over New York, roads are gridlocked and airports closed, and a panicking citizenry hears rumours of anthrax attacks.

If this sounds a touch familiar, the writers and director are careful to emphasise that resemblances to 9/11 only go so far. The criminal mastermind isn’t an Islamist, but Thomas Gabriel, a deranged computer genius. When the US government refuses to fund his research, he cries ‘one day you will be sorry you spurned me’, or words to that effect. Gabriel doesn’t have a political motive for throwing the nation into chaos. He wants to steal billions of dollars to satisfy his wounded pride, not destroy the Great Satan. Indeed, Gabriel insists to Bruce Willis that he’s a patriot of sorts who has ‘done America a favour’. If he hadn’t revealed the weaknesses in the computer defences to the authorities, ‘some religious nut job’ trying to bring an apocalypse might have found them instead.

What specific types of ‘religious nut jobs’ want to bring apocalypse to the United States, the Die Hard team don’t say, and their silence is everywhere in Hollywood, and at first glance baffling.

The global mayhem since 9/11 has not affected film in America, nor television in Britain, to anything like the degree a reasonably well-informed media buff would have predicted on the day. Hollywood has produced documentaries, from Paul Greengrass’s poignant United 93, which recaptures the uprising by passengers against their hijackers, to Michael Moore’s seedy Fahrenheit 9/11, which portrays Saddam Hussein’s Iraq as a happy land of playful children and blushing lovers. But when we turn to Hollywood fiction we find that the ‘war on terror’, or whatever it is we’re meant to call it these days, has barely shown its face.

The absence is all the more perplexing because before 9/11, when there had been no serious Islamist assault on America, Middle Eastern villains were so common in films Hollywood faced plausible charges of anti-Arab racism. In Back to the Future, Executive Decision, True Lies and dozens of others, Arabs were off-the-peg bad guys. Yet after 9/11, the stereotypes weren’t fleshed out with an all-too-real psychopathic ideology, but abandoned.

Writing in the Los Angeles Times Andrew Klavan, a Hollywood screenwriter of a conservative bent, blamed liberal nervousness. ‘In order to honestly dramatise the simple truth about this existential struggle, you have to depict right-minded Americans – some of whom may be white and male and Christian – hunting down and killing dark-skinned villains of a false and wicked creed. That’s what’s happening, on a good day anyway, so that’s what you’d have to show. Movie-makers are reluctant to do that because, even though it’s the truth, on screen it might appear bigoted and jingoistic.’

Maybe, but Hollywood’s alleged political correctness was not in evidence before 9/11 and, in any case, Bruce Willis is a gung-ho American conservative, not a comrade of George Clooney. A hard-headed liberal might say that the real reason for the down-playing of the conflict is that Hollywood is a global business. American television can show Islamists in 24 and other thrillers because it sells primarily to the domestic market. Movies must sell everywhere and a world which is appalled by the second Iraq war and will not pay to see America venerated – and nor will many Americans for that matter.

I’m sure there’s truth in that argument too, but it misses how dislocating the war on terror seems when viewed from the comfort of the rich world’s democracies. From the 9/11 atrocities on, the dimmest citizens could be in no doubt that forces were swirling around the globe that would murder them without restraint. Yet after 9/11, they haven’t been murdered in significant numbers. I don’t mean any offence to the bereaved of the attacks on London and Madrid, but when set against the astonishing scale of the Iraqi massacres the casualties have been tiny. The rich world is coping with a relatively low level of violence, while all the time knowing that fantastic violence remains possible.

This leads to a frantic desire to appease and deny. To pretend we’re the ‘root cause’ of the threat or say that the it has been manipulated by cynical politicians would be natural responses in normal circumstances. After America and Britain launched the second Iraq war on the worst intelligence since the US military dismissed the possibility of a Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour, a global outbreak of wishful thinking and conspiracy theory was inevitable.

You can see this better in BBC dramas than in Hollywood films. The 2006 series of Spooks, for example, showed Islamist suicide bombers taking over the Saudi Arabian embassy. Nothing too far-fetched in that; real MI5 agents are running themselves ragged as they try to close down terror cells. The BBC’s novel twist was that its fictional MI5 agents discovered that the Islamists weren’t Islamists at all, just Mossad agents in disguise engaged in the perennial Jewish conspiracy.

Meanwhile, the actor playing Guy of Gisborne in the BBC’s reworking of Robin Hood for the 21st century explained that the old story was now about ‘the perpetuation of terror’ by the powerful. ‘It’s almost in the bad guys’ interests to keep Robin alive – like the modern situation with terrorists. Guy and the Sheriff need him as a scapegoat, to keep fear in the hearts of the people’.

I’m not sure if he meant that Robin and his Merry Men were Osama and his Merry Islamists, but the BBC certainly wanted viewers to believe that the government was the real villain, hyping up the threat to justify placing the British under the iron heel of the national security state. See through that lie, and we could relax.

The BBC’s logic is absurd when I write it out on paper but it makes psychological sense on the screen. Given the state of unrealised fear we live in, it feels reasonable in London and Hollywood to avoid provoking enemies we rarely see. Better to ignore them instead or blame them on the government or Jewish conspiracies and then, with luck, they will leave us alone, and confine their bombs to the poor world.

It would be nice if that were true.

Rod Stewart’s Profanity Peeve

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Media, Social and Politics, live earth on July 15, 2007 at 3:10 pm

rod.jpgThere was one prominent celebrity at Al Gore’s Live Earth concerts who focused on a different kind of environmental contamination.

Veteran rocker Rod Stewart was appalled at the profane language that polluted the global festivities.

Comedian Chris Rock’s vile vernacular at the London venue necessitated U.K. TV and radio personality Jonathan Ross to issue an apology to the viewing audience.

“I listened to people effing and blinding during the Live Earth Concert last weekend and it just sounded so cheap,” Ross remarked.

The lewd, crude language prompted Stewart to promise his audience that he’ll personally pay up if he curses while performing.

“If you hear me swear on stage I’ll give you all a tenner [10 British pounds],” the legendary singer pledged.

Will Al Gore’s Kid Use the Prius Defense?

In Culture, Entertainment and Media, Gore, Hollywood, News and politics, global warming, law on July 4, 2007 at 9:28 am

gore.jpg So what if Al Gore’s son was arrested on suspicion of possessing marijuana and prescription drugs after being pulled him over for speeding.

Al Gore III, 24, had his mind on the future of the earth. He was driving a Toyota PRIUS. He was doing about 100 miles per hour on the San Diego Freeway, apparently testing the hybrid car’s gas mileage.

The police found some marijuana, Xanax, Valium, Vicodin and Adderall. Gore Jr. was probably depressed over climate change.

Roseanne Barr e-Mimics Rosie O’Donnell’s ‘View’ Views

In Celebrities, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Star Celebrity Gossip!, Television on July 2, 2007 at 7:34 am

roseanne.jpg With the vacancy on ABC’s “The View” still up for grabs, Roseanne Barr is doing her best Rosie imitation on her Web site.

Barr, whose name has been mentioned as a possible replacement for O’Donnell, has this advice for Congress: “Impeach the president and the vice president, they are traitors to America, and so are all of their supporters. Impeach! Anyone in congress who refuses to save our union from these traitors by doing nothing needs to be recalled.”

The comedienne also puts out the following pleas: “Save our troops!!! Save our schools and hospitals and jobs. Feed our hungry and poor!”

No lefty rescue roster would be complete without at least one mention of Katrina. “Save the drowning people in New Orleans!” Barr blogs.

The national anthem decimating diva fails, however, to provide any ideas on how the saving should take place.

Barr closes her post with a non-partisan wisecrack and smacks the media in the process: “Anyone who mentions Paris Hilton one more time must die!”

Natalie Portman Wants to Stop the Killing in Rwanda – Of Gorillas!

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Rwanda, genocide on July 1, 2007 at 9:36 am

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Natalie Portman publicly used her fame to express concern for the travesty happening in Rwanda, but instead of focusing attention on the 800,000 human beings massacred in the 1994 genocide, and those who continue to be killed, she and other celebs concentrated on gorillas.

Portman joined other international celebrities at a ceremony to provide names for 23 baby mountain gorillas living in Rwanda.

According to the World Wide Fund for Nature there are only 720 mountain gorillas surviving in the wild, in parks that straddle Rwanda, Uganda and the Congo.

Don’t get me wrong I want to protect mountain gorillas from threats.

But let’s protect the humans first.

Michael Moore Bumped for Paris Hilton Interview

In Entertainment Business, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, celebrity, moore on June 24, 2007 at 5:44 pm

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Michael Moore can’t seem to work the press the way he used to.

Heiress and reality star Paris Hilton will do her first post-prison TV interview on CNN’s “Larry King Live.”

It turns out that “Sicko” propagandist Moore had to be bumped so Larry could do some jail time talking with “The Simple Life” star.

“She will be on for the hour,” Spokesperson Bridget Leininger told Reuters. “We had Michael Moore originally scheduled for that time.”

Hilton was released from jail after serving roughly half of her 45-day sentence.

It turns out that Hilton’s jail stint produced something positive after all.

It generated some discussion about the appearance of a two-tiered justice system, shed light on the checkbook journalism issue and sank a Moore promo spot.

Did NBC Agree to Buy the Paris Hilton Interview?

In Celebrities, Celebrity Crime, Celebrity News, Entertainment and Media, hilton on June 22, 2007 at 6:47 am

The New York Times is reporting that ABC News said that they had lost to NBC for the first interview with Paris Hilton after her release from jail because ABC was unwilling to make a “high six-figure deal” with Ms. Hilton’s family.

NBC executives did not deny that they had had discussions about interview rights with Hilton and the spokeswoman for NBC News, Allison Gollust, insisted, “NBC News does not pay for interviews — never have, never will.”

Of course the money won’t come from the news division. The compensation normally will be paid in a separate deal, with a different part of the company, like the entertainment division.

Is TMZ in a Legal Tangle?

In Celebrities, Celebrity Crime, Celebrity News, Entertainment and Media, Media, OJ, entertainment, law on June 20, 2007 at 5:07 pm

If lawyers for the family of Ron Goldman and a bankruptcy trustee get their way, Internet site TMZ.com could be held in contempt for posting a manuscript of O.J. Simpson’s “If I Did It” book.

The Web site and its lawyer claim no wrongdoing.

At an emergency hearing U.S. Bankruptcy Judge A. Jay Cristol said he would schedule a hearing later on whether to hold TMZ in contempt and even discussed possible finacial liability for the joint venture between America Online Inc. and a Time Warner Co. subsidiary.

Although O.J. was acquitted of murder charges, Goldman’s family won a civil wrongful death case against Simpson now totaling more than $33 million.

As part of their efforts to collect, the Goldmans seized on securing the rights to the aborted “If I Did It” project.
The Goldman family wants to rewrite the book and put it out under the title “Confessions of a Double Murderer.” The judge had ordered all copies of the manuscript and related materials turned over to a court-appointed trustee, partly to satisfy Simpson’s debt to the Goldmans.

Goldman attorney Paul Battista said TMZ’s posting of the manuscript on Tuesday violated that order and may do irreparable harm to the family’s attempt to benefit financially from it.

“I can’t tell you how distraught the Goldmans are to hear that this hit the Internet for free,” Battista said.

Michael Moore is an Unabashed Phony

In Celebrity News, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, celebrity, law, moore, sicko on June 19, 2007 at 4:12 pm

sicko.jpg Here’s Michael Moore a few years ago after he already pocketed lots of box office cash:

“I don’t agree with the copyright laws and I don’t have a problem with people downloading the movie and sharing it with people,” said Moore when asked about pirating. “I make these books and movies and TV shows because I want things to change, so the more people that get to see them the better, so I’m happy when that happens. I think information and art, ideas should be shared.”

Now here’s Michael Moore talking about “Sicko”:

“Every filmmaker intends for his film to be seen on the big screen,” Moore said. “This wasn’t a guy taking a video camera into a theater. This was an inside job, a copy made from a high-quality master and could potentially impact the opening weekend boxoffice. Who do you think benefits from that?”

When asked about accusations that he may have leaked the film himself for publicity purposes, Moore responded, “Oh no. The (Weinstein) brothers are devastated.”

Steven Spielberg Crumbles under Heavy Hillary Lobbying

In Culture, Entertainment Business, Entertainment and Media, Hillary, Hollywood, Movies & Entertainment, News and politics, Politics on June 19, 2007 at 3:16 pm

hillary.jpg Hillary Clinton’s people have been going after Hollywood director Steven Spielberg in a big way.

Ever since the Left Coast showed the love for Barack Obama, the Clinton camp has been in lobbying overdrive.

Last February, Spielberg, David Geffen and their partner Jeffrey Katzenberg co-sponsored an Obama fundraiser that roped in a whopping $1.3 million.

For weeks Clinton staffers have had their sights set on Spielberg, partially because of the director’s fondness for Hillary’s hubby. They were resolute. They had to get an early endorsement to avoid the impression that the entertainment industry had gone gaga for Obama.

They basically nagged the director, repeatedly pleading for him to declare his support for the New York Senator. He may even have received a call from his old bud Bill Clinton.

If Spielberg had endorsed Obama, it would have been viewed as a rejection of Hillary, much like Spielberg’s partner Geffen has publicly affirmed.

In a statement released through Hillary’s campaign, Spielberg said that he had become familiar with the Democratic candidates and that he was convinced “Hillary Clinton is the most qualified candidate to lead us from her first day in the White House.”

The grab for Hollywood cash is of great interest to Democrats who in the 2006 election cycle received 63% of the $23 million donated, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

The media are filled with stories about how Hillary has now won the Tinseltown money battle.

But with Obama backers like George Clooney, Lawrence Bender, Geffen, Katzenberg and Oprah Winfrey, it’s way too early to say where the most Hollywood dough will eventually go.

Michael Moore’s ‘Sicko’ Stunts

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment Business, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies & Entertainment, News and politics, Social and Politics, law on June 17, 2007 at 7:16 pm

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In a transparent move to promote his “Sicko” film, Michael Moore showed up in Sacramento, California, and testified at a briefing hosted by former actress of “The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis” and current state senator Sheila Kuehl to advocate a so-called universal health care system. The event was followed by a rally and screening of Moore’s film.

“I’d like to see executives of these companies in a perp walk in handcuffs,” Moore muttered.

Then the frustrated filmmaker granted the town of Bellaire in his home county the privilege of paying $40 per ticket for a sneak peek at his movie and, for an additional sixty bucks, the chance to attend a party where he autographed film posters, surgical gloves and bandages. The money went to the Democratic Party.

“I am anticipating the onslaught of attack,” Moore told reporters at the event.

In a kind of comical karma, Moore’s “Sicko” film has been pirated. The public can now view the thing for free thanks to its wide availability for downloading on the Web at no cost.

Ironically, in 2004 Moore told a Scottish paper, the Sunday Herald, he was happy that people engaged in copyright violations.

“I don’t agree with the copyright laws and I don’t have a problem with people downloading the movie and sharing it with people as long as they’re not trying to make a profit off my labor. I would oppose that,” Moore said.

“I do well enough already and I made this film [“Fahrenheit 9/11”] because I want the world, to change. The more people who see it the better, so I’m happy this is happening.”

More words for Moore to eat on the eve of his “Sicko” release.

On another Moore hypocritical note, I reported a while back on how filmmakers Debbie Melnyck and Rick Caine had set out to film a biography of someone they truly admired. However, while producing “Manufacturing Dissent,” the two made a discovery that their hero, Michael Moore, was far from the person, or for that matter the professional that they had imagined.

During their movie making experience, Melnyck and Caine learned about Moore’s fabricated persona; in particular that he did not grow up in working class Flint, Michigan, but in Davison, a wealthy nearby suburb.

They discovered that Moore was not removed as editor of Mother Jones for political reasons as he has claimed, but was fired for bad editing. They learned that Moore shot footage of himself and interspersed it with other events to imply things that never actually happened (such as Moore asking Roger Smith, former CEO of General Motors, a question at a shareholders’ meeting).

The most devastating information unearthed, though, is that Moore actually did speak with then-GM chairman Roger Smith, whose supposed evasion is the central premise of “Roger & Me,” but withheld the footage from the film. (Premiere previously reported this but “Manufacturing Dissent” actually displays footage of Moore interviewing Smith.)

“Anybody who says that is a (expletive) liar,” Moore told the Associated Press when confronted with the charge at his Michigan “Sicko” sneak preview.

Moore also admitted that he had “a good five minutes of back and forth” with Smith at a 1987 shareholders’ meeting, as reported by Premiere magazine in 1990. But Moore claims that was before he began working on “Roger & Me” and had nothing to do with the film.

By evading interviews with Melnyck and Caine, Moore and his staff behaved like the corporate targets that Moore despises. At one event, the filmmakers’ soundboard was unplugged while other reporters were allowed to tape. At another event, a staffer kicked the filmmakers out of an arena and threw their camera to the ground.

An indication that the makers of “Manufacturing Dissent” had a serious change of heart about Moore was revealed in the tagline used to market the film. It read: “Michael Moore doesn’t like documentaries. That’s why he doesn’t make them.” A slogan that appeared on movie posters also conveyed their dampened sentiments: “It’s Never Been so Hard to Get Michael Moore in Front of the Camera.”

Because the criticism of Moore came from self-described “progressive liberals,” who were originally motivated by their admiration for Moore before they reluctantly concluded that he was not what he appeared to be, the mainstream press actually treated the film more favorably than similar polemic material from the Right.

Moore’s talent has been to bring humor, a brisk pace and controversy to the documentary genre. “Manufacturing Dissent” demonstrated that Moore also brings fabrication.

Can we expect Moore of the same from “Sicko?”

Campbell Brown will Bring New Viewers to CNN

In Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment Business, Entertainment and Media, Media, News and politics, Television on June 16, 2007 at 10:16 am

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It’s been rumored for months. CNN is obtaining the services of veteran broadcast journalist Campbell Brown.

Two things are likely. One: Paula Zahn’s spot may be given to Brown. Two: CNN’s ratings will go up.
Brown has extensive experience in hard news, but also has the kind of media image and personality that viewers love.

HBO Sopranos Con Job

In Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Media, Sopranos, Television, entertainment on June 10, 2007 at 6:10 pm

What an absurd faux finale. The ending looked as though the cameraman ran out of film.

The producers dissed their following.

It is nothing less than a cowardly attempt to leave the door open for more episodes.

Diary of a Mad Hilton?

In Celebrities, Celebrity Crime, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, law on June 3, 2007 at 8:08 pm

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As Paris Hilton (minus her pet Chihuahuas and cell phones) readies herself to spend 23 days in the slammer at the L.A. Century Regional Detention Center, she’s also busy prepping a new book.

The former high school dropout has made a lot of money turning headlines into bottom lines. The Internet home sex video that served to inflate her fame quotient appeared just prior to the premiere of her reality TV show “The Simple Life.”

Now Paris is planning the release of a prison diary, which is apparently set for later this year, according to the New York Daily News. This means Paris’ punishment will end up stuffing even more dollars into her already heavily padded pockets.

The hotel heiress wisely stayed away from the Hollywood party scene as she came to grips with her inevitable jail time.

She did, however, manage to make a surprise appearance at the MTV Movie Awards where she let it be known that she opted for harder prison time than she had to.

“I did have a choice to go to a pay jail,” Paris indicated. “But I declined because I feel like the media portrays me in a way that I’m not and that’s why I wanted to go to county, to show that I can do it and I’m going to be treated like everyone else. I’m going to do the time. I’m going to do it the right way.”

While in prison, Paris will reportedly receive special treatment for her own protection. And she’ll also be assigned to a section of the prison facility that is separate from an area where hardened criminals are held.

She will allegedly have one handpicked cellmate who has been incarcerated for a traffic related offense.

Her grand entrance into the prison will likely resemble a red carpet affair. Every imaginable media are sure to be present, snapping pictures, streaming video and profusely punditing.

The big question is who’ll be first to get the shot of the quintessential party girl in her non-designer jumpsuit.

While Paris’ fortunes may be going up, another Hollywood star’s career may be headed south.

Charlie Sheen wants the public to know that reports about him nixing the narration of a questionable 9/11 documentary are wrong.

The “Loose Change-Final Cut” film deals with the same ideas that Rosie O’Donnell has been pushing; the theory being that some of the buildings that collapsed on Sept. 11 were not brought down by aircraft but rather were destroyed by explosives, which were planted inside the structures.

“My views and convictions regarding the events of 9/11 have not wavered. I still firmly believe the citizens of this great country, especially the family members of those tragically lost, deserve a much more accurate and thorough investigation surrounding the horrific events,” Sheen said in a press release.

“The suspicious fact that certain relevant testimonies were not included in the Keen Commission’s final report, discredits the majority of their findings,” Sheen added.

Sheen advocates a “bi-partisan, democratically selected panel” to investigate the matter, “not some tepid rehash of Bush-serving lap-dogs cherry picking evidence to support erroneous and fictional ‘Magic Bullet’ explanations.”

“I’m baffled as well by the fact Bin Laden’s crimes listed on the FBI’s most wanted list DO NOT include those of 9/11,” the actor railed.

Evidently, Sheen is undecided about whether he’ll volunteer to be the poster boy for the “Loose Change-Final Cut” flick.

“I await the newest version to be presented to me, at which point I will make my decision to participate (or not) based on the film’s content and merit,” Sheen shared.

Sarah Jessica Parker’s Conservative Clothing Line

In Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, News and politics, Politics, celebrity, fashion on May 28, 2007 at 7:25 pm

sarah-jessica.jpg With the number of delinquent and/or jailed female pop stars on the rise, somebody had to start urging young women to quit dressing like trollops.

Well, Sarah Jessica Parker has.

The former “Sex and the City” actress is now an unofficial spokesperson for a return to modesty.

Parker has launched a new clothing line, and she is taking the opportunity to encourage folks to cover up.

Parker’s new Steve & Barry line of affordable female fashion consists of exclusively conservative attire.

“There’s not going to be any inappropriate midriff showing, regardless of your age. I really don’t care for it,” Parker passionately proclaimed to the Female First Web site.

“I feel like, as a culture, we have seen enough damage done by it. It’s provocative in a way that I just don’t feel comfortable with,” she added.

It turns out that Parker’s new line of apparel is a bargain in more ways than one.

The cost of the clothing has been held down; this despite the fact that in order to create attire that reflects the desired class and refinement, more fabric is needed.

And just think, if celebrities actually clean up their outfits and their acts, taxpayers’ jail bills may go down.

That’s “Advertainment”

In Culture, Entertainment Business, Entertainment and Media, Media, Television on May 21, 2007 at 8:44 am

When it comes to TV audience, size matters. And nowhere does it matter more than in commercials.

New stats are on their way from Nielsen Media Research that will reveal how many people are tuned in during TV ads. This has the industry scrambling to find new ways to keep eyeballs glued to the set for the latest car, clothes and Viagra commercials.

Approximately one-fifth of American households have digital video recorders (DVRs), which makes it oh-so-easy to fast forward through all those commercial spots.

ABC network has responded via an arrangement with cable companies Cox Communications, Inc. and Time Warner Cable, Inc. to stop the nasty little viewer practice.

But a more promising trend has come along, and it fits the short attention span of today’s TV watchers, whets the entertainment appetite and effectively pushes product at the same time.

I call it “advertainment.”

Some clever broadcasters have come up with a way to combine short programming with big name talent while integrating a commercial message.

For example, the Fox network recently aired a series of shorts in which the storyline centered around a taxi driver. In between commercials, viewers were treated to animated clips of a cabby named Oleg.

“It’s something that pops up that is unexpected and the viewer says, ‘What the hell is that?’ It may keep them around for a while longer,” Jon Nesvig, Fox Broadcasting’s president of sales, told the Wall Street Journal.

This fall NBC will air similar programming to that of Fox, which will feature Jerry Seinfeld. Seinfeld has reportedly taped 20 short episodes for the network, which are part entertainment and part commercial.

I predict another trend for this fall—campaign advertainment.

Picture this. The score is Bears 17, Packers 3. In pops Hillary with a Closet Palooza promo, telling everyone how pleased she is now that she has her new closet organizer with its roll-out sock drawers, built-in hamper and double pant racks.

Or smack dab in the middle of a “Heroes” episode, John Edwards arrives to give Quaker Oats a plug as a skin exfoliator.

Or as “Grey’s Anatomy”’s George and Izzie are exchanging furtive glances, in walks a cranky John McCain applying HeadOn directly to his forehead.

That’s advertainment, and it’s coming to a plasma near you.

John Travolta’s Global Warming Lecture

In Celebrities, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Movies, News and politics, Politics on March 30, 2007 at 11:38 am

John Travolta preached to Brits, asking them to “do their bit” to reduce global warming, while admitting “I fly jets,” according to the London Evening Standard.

He talked about using “alternative methods of fuel” to help the environment. 

The former Vinnie Barbarino owns five jets and his own private runway. During the last year he flew 30,000 miles and produced an estimated 800 tons of carbon emissions.

Perhaps drawing on his religion, Scientology, Travolta said that the solution to global warming could be found in outer space.

Hollywood Heavyweight Phil Spector on Trial

In Celebrities, Celebrity Crime, Celebrity News, Entertainment and Media, Music on March 20, 2007 at 4:45 pm

Expect the courtroom to be standing room only when the press of the world crowd in to report on the murder trial of legendary record producer Phil Spector.

Spector is accused of killing movie actress Lana Clarkson.

Jury selection begins this week for those who will decide whether on Feb. 3, 2003, the reclusive Spector murdered Clarkson after bringing her from the House of Blues to his home.

Spector gained fame in the 1960s for his “wall of sound” recordings. He has written such rock classics as “Da Doo Ron Ron,” “Be My Baby” and “You’ve Lost that Lovin’ Feeling.” He also produced the Beatles’s “Let It Be” album and George Harrison’s “Concert for Bangladesh.”

Clarkson acted in Roger Corman’s cult film “Barbarian Queen.” She was working as a hostess at the House of Blues when she was spotted by Spector.

Spector’s chauffeur, Adriano De Souza, told a grand jury that Spector had said, “ I think I killed somebody,” and that Spector had emerged from his home with blood on his hands holding a gun.

The court battle will center on the question of who pulled the trigger. The coroner’s office noted that Clarkson had gunshot residue on both of her hands and may have pulled the trigger.

A slew of forensic scholars is expected to demonstrate expertise in front of the jury.

Spector has pleaded not guilty and has remained free on $1 million bail since being arrested after the shooting. If convicted, he faces life in prison.

Evidently, Superior Court Judge Larry Paul Fidler didn’t learn much from the O.J. debacle. He has decided to let the trial be televised.

Tables Turned on Michael Moore

In Celebrities, Entertainment Business, Entertainment and Media, News and politics, Politics, Social and Politics on March 19, 2007 at 7:24 am

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Filmmakers Debbie Melnyck and Rick Caine set out to film a biography of someone they truly admired.

However, while producing “Manufacturing Dissent,” the two made a discovery that their hero, Michael Moore, was far from the person, or for that matter the professional that they had imagined.

During their movie making experience, Melnyck and Caine learned about Moore’s fabricated persona; in particular that he did not grow up in working class Flint, Michigan, but in Davison, a wealthy nearby suburb.

They discovered that Moore was not removed as editor of Mother Jones for political reasons as he has claimed, but was fired for bad editing. They learned that Moore shot footage of himself and interspersed it with other events to imply things that never actually happened (such as Moore asking Roger Smith, former CEO of General Motors, a question at a shareholders’ meeting).

The most devastating information unearthed, though, is that Moore actually did speak with then-GM chairman Roger Smith, whose supposed evasion is the central premise of “Roger & Me,” but withheld the footage from the film. (Premiere previously reported this but “Manufacturing Dissent” actually displays footage of Moore interviewing Smith.)

Other well-known documentary filmmakers such as Errol Morris (“The Fog of War”) express disdain in the film for Moore’s documentary style.

By evading interviews with the filmmakers, Moore and his staff behave like the corporate targets that Moore despises. At one event, the filmmakers’ soundboard is unplugged while other reporters are allowed to tape. At another event, a staffer kicks the filmmakers out of an arena and throws their camera to the ground.

An indication that the makers of “Manufacturing Dissent” have had a serious change of heart about Moore is revealed in the tagline used to market the film. It reads: “Michael Moore doesn’t like documentaries. That’s why he doesn’t make them.” A slogan that appears on movie posters also conveys their dampened sentiments: “It’s Never Been so Hard to Get Michael Moore in Front of the Camera.”

Because the criticism of Moore comes from self-described “progressive liberals,” who were originally motivated by their admiration for Moore before they reluctantly concluded that he was not what he appeared to be, the mainstream press are actually treating the film differently than similar polemic material from the Right.

Here is a sampling of some recent mainstream media takes:

- “Balanced documentary lifts lid on Michael Moore,” Reuters

- “Filmmakers question Michael Moore’s tactics,” A.P.

- “An intelligent, provocative and, arguably, even necessary examination of the phenomenon of Michael Moore — the man, his movies and his methods…,” Variety

Moore’s talent has been to bring humor, a brisk pace and controversy to the documentary genre. “Manufacturing Dissent” demonstrates that Moore also brings fabrication.

Maybe now there will be more skepticism about Moore from left-of-center folks who in the past refused to question his work.

Leo DiCaprio in Production on Global Warming Flick

In Celebrities, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Movies, News and politics, Politics, Star Celebrity Gossip!, entertainment, gossip on March 14, 2007 at 8:19 am


Leonardo DiCaprio gazed on as the Academy showered affection on Al Gore as he accepted an Oscar for his global warming lecture.

Now DiCaprio is in production on his personally penned documentary on the same gaseous subject.

Global warming is not only the number one environmental challenge we face today, but one of the most important issues facing all of humanity,” DiCaprio elucidated.

The movie will be released in late 2007.

With the alarmist title “11th Hour,” the flick will examine the global environment and like Gore’s flick will present solutions to the eco-problems of the world.

I wonder if solutions will include buying phony carbon offsets like Gore and Hollywood entertainment companies do.

Valerie Plame Flick on the Hollywood Docket

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Politics on March 5, 2007 at 8:34 pm

Warner Bros. has acquired the life rights of ex-CIA agent Valerie Plame and husband Joseph Wilson.

 The studio is reportedly developing a movie that will tell the story of Plame’s supposed outing.

Plame’s upcoming book “Fair Game,” for which Simon & Schuster reportedly paid Plame an advance in the neighborhood of $2.5 million, will be the basis for the feature. 

Akiva Goldsman and Jerry and Janet Zucker will co-produce the flick. (The Zuckers got to know Plame and Wilson because of their common interest in embryonic stem cell research, a.k.a. cloning.)

There’s one glitch that may give Plame and her Hollywood friends a headache. Before her work can be published or made public in a film, the CIA has to approve.

 Hope the CIA opts to preserve Valerie and Joe’s privacy and nixes both projects.

‘Titantic’ Producer Tries to Sink Christianity

In Celebrities, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies, entertainment on March 1, 2007 at 8:06 pm


 It seems director James Cameron has done his best Dan Brown imitation and produced a documentary that once again slams the Christian faith. 

Working together with Canadian-based filmmaker Simcha Jacobovici, Cameron has made a film about an archeological site in the Holy Land that is supposed to contain the body of Jesus.

The film also throws in the same Dan Brown assertion that Christ was married (albeit to a woman other than Mary Magdalene). 

As is typical of Hollywood filmmakers these days, Cameron apparently refused to bother with those pesky little things called facts. 

Bar-Ilan University Professor Amos Kloner, an archeologist who originally worked at the site, has dismissed the claims as “nonsense.” 

“There is no likelihood that Jesus and his relatives had a family tomb,” Kloner told the German Press Agency, DPA. “They were a Galilee family with no ties in Jerusalem. The Talpiot tomb belonged to a middle-class family from the 1st century CE.”

The Media’s Mormon Fixation

In Celebrities, Entertainment and Media, News and politics, Politics on February 15, 2007 at 9:31 am

What’s the deal with the mainstream media?

These days they seem to be infatuated with two subjects: Anna Nicole Smith and Mormons.

Their questions come in headlines and TV segment titles:

“Are you a Mormon?”

“Would you vote for a Mormon?”

“Would you date a Mormon?”

Why is there suddenly with such a negative subtext a focus on a person’s religious convictions?

Didn’t the same mainstream media force-feed us the idea that Congressman Keith Ellison’s Muslim religion should be of no concern?

And if the Minnesota representative wanted to use a Quran instead of a Bible to be sworn in, that was his business. And that his faith was in no way going to interfere with his ability to carry out his duties or ably serve his constituents.

Apparently, for the mainstream media, the same principles do not apply to Mormons.

Could it have something to do with Mormon voting patterns? After all, it’s about as common to find a Mormon who doesn’t vote Republican as it is to find a “Dennis Kucinich for President” button.

I guess in the eyes of a typical reporter, who can’t imagine voting for anyone other than a Democrat unless the person hails from the Socialist Workers Party, Mormons aren’t particularly progressive.

Even the godless New York Times has gotten into theological commentating. Now here’s a headline for you: “Mormon Candidate Braces for Religion as Issue.”

What’s next? Will we see the “man on the street reporter” asking folks, “Whose statues are cooler, Catholics or Mormons?”

Personally, I think we need to show more religious tolerance. Let’s agree to accept the idea that someone can hold high office in this country and be of the same religion as Donnie and Marie.

This narrow-minded coverage has got to stop so our Mormon Majority Leader Harry Reid can do his job in peace.

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“Hound Dog” and Dakota Fanning

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media on January 23, 2007 at 12:09 pm

I hear the rape secene may have been edited down to make it less graphic. The producers are trying to make the film seem noble by claiming to raise awareness and provide toll free phone numbers for rape victims. This misses the primary point that for millions of kids, Dakota is one of them and a symbol of innocence.

It isn’t merely Dakota’s psyche we are concerned with here.

It is irresponsible to place any child in the position to deal with the emotions of a rape victim, but it is also irresponsible to use the notoriety of the most famous 12 year old of our time to get publicity for a movie and it’s tragic to justify this mindless choice as a way to win an Oscar.

Oscar Loves Dreamgirls, But Not for Best Pic

In Academy Awards, Celebrities, Celebrity News, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies, Movies & Entertainment, Oscars on January 23, 2007 at 7:28 am

 

Although “Dreamgirls” got the most noms (8) the musical was left out of the Best Picture category.

“Babel,” “The Departed,” “Letters from Iwo Jima,” “Little Miss Sunshine” and “The Queen” were nominated for every Hollywood producer’s dream award for the 2007 version of the Academy Awards.

Even after snagging a Golden Globe, the academy snubbed the Motown muscial.

The surprise flick of the awards season has to be the indy phenom, “Little Miss Sunshine,” which received an impressive four major noms: supporting actor, supporting actress, screenplay and picture. The comedy is now in position to be this year’s “Crash.”

The questions on everyone’s lips are, “Will Al Gore accept the Best Documentary award for “An Inconvenient Truth” and “What will he do when the music starts playing.?”
The 79th Annual Academy Awards are scheduled to be presented Feb. 25. Ellen DeGeneres will host the ABC telecast.

Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt’s Homespun Holiday

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies & Entertainment, Social and Politics, gossip on January 10, 2007 at 9:13 am


Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt’s recent vacation stands in stark contrast to the impoverished third-world countries they’ve been championing of late.

The power couple reportedly arrived at the 170-acre Caneel Bay resort in the Caribbean “with 97 pieces of luggage and a whole entourage,” a source told the New York Post.

Angelina, Brad, the kids, nannies and staff were apparently ensconced in a five-bedroom, $8,000-a-night beachfront villa that was once the private get away of Laurance Rockefeller, the developer of the Virgin Islands destination.

Now Jolie is blasting Madonna for what she calls an illegal adoption.

In an interview with Gala, a French magazine, Jolie said, “Madonna knew the situation in Malawi, where he [Baby David]was born. It’s a country where there is no real legal framework for adoption.”

The “Tomb Raider” star added, “Personally, I prefer to stay on the right side of the law. I would never take a child away from a place where adoption is illegal.”

Wonder who the public will side with–the Pop Royal or the African Queen.

Al Gore Gets the Lindsay Lohan Brush-off

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies, Movies & Entertainment, News and politics, Politics, Social and Politics, celebrity, entertainment, gossip on January 9, 2007 at 7:20 pm

 

Last month Lindsay Lohan met former veep and Oscar contender Al Gore at a posh Beverly Hills event.

A short time later Lohan reportedly sent a typo-riddled e-mail to her friends and attorneys indicating that she was seeking help with her image from the much-ballyhooed Alpha-male.                 

“Al Gore will help me. He came up to me last night and said he would be very happy to have a conversation with me. If he is willing to help me, let’s find out,” the e-mail read.

A Gore rep told “Access Hollywood,” “I can confirm for you that Mr. Gore has only met Ms. Lohan once, very briefly, at the GQ Men of the Year dinner last week. There were hundreds of other guests.”

However, apparently after promising she’d be there, Lohan blew off a personal invitation to an event that the inventor of the Internet was hosting.

Gore, a regular now on the Hollywood scene, hosted a December 2006 Tinseltown event called “Seeds of Tolerance,” which honored liberal documentary filmmakers.

The Left Coast Report guesses that now that Lohan has dissed the nation’s top pseudo-scientist, she’ll have to rely on the unadorned advice of Britney Spears.

Madonna Accused of Bribing Adoption Official

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies, Movies & Entertainment, Music, News and politics, Social and Politics, Star Celebrity Gossip!, celebrity, entertainment, gossip on January 8, 2007 at 8:20 am

Suspicions surrounding the Malawian baby adoption of Madonna are being fueled further by reports that a government official who was working for the ministry that handled the case is now living and going to school in Britain on the pop singer’s dime.

Four months before she was granted temporary custody of Baby David, according to the London Daily Mail, Madonna reportedly committed to pay for Willard Manjolo’s living expenses and tuition fees, which were thought to be about 39,000 U.S. dollars.

Manjolo started college at Swansea University a month before Madonna left Malawi with her new baby boy.

Justin Dzodzi, a prominent attorney in the impoverished African nation, has gone on record as saying that Madonna’s financial support of Manjolo “could be construed as payment for the adoption.”

Dzodzi is among those who seek to challenge the adoption in court. Purportedly, he fully intends to bring these new facts to the attention of the Malawian judges.

“The entire circumstances surrounding the case need to be re-examined and this latest disclosure is something we would wish to bring before the courts,” Dzodzi said.

As for Manjolo, he claims that he was not involved in the adoption process and has never met the singer.

“It is unfortunate if people use their wealth to manipulate events, but I don’t think it happened in this case. Her application was considered on merit,” Manjolo said.

BitTorrent in Bed with Hollywood

In Entertainment and Media, Movies, Movies & Entertainment, entertainment on December 9, 2006 at 2:18 pm


Since 2001, one of the best ways to distribute big computer files on the Internet, such as feature films, television videos and the like, is through BitTorrent.

But the company’s efficient peer-to-peer technology has also been associated with illegal downloading of copyrighted material; in other words, piracy.

In a move that stands in sharp contrast to the litigious approach taken with Napster, BitTorrent recently announced a lineup of partnerships with Hollywood entertainment firms including 20th Century Fox, Lionsgate, MTV Networks (Comedy Central, Nickelodeon, Nicktoons Network, SpikeTV, The N, TV Land and VH1) and Paramount to post movies and TV shows on BitTorrent.com.

The studios and the Motion Picture Association of America have come to the wise conclusion that piracy is not going away. They need to work with companies like BitTorrent to provide better quality with legitimate content in order to stem the illegal tide rather than sue tech-savvy teens.

Hey Madonna, How About Some Help for These Guys!

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies, Movies & Entertainment, Music, News and politics, Politics, Social and Politics, Star Celebrity Gossip!, celebrity, entertainment, gossip on November 30, 2006 at 5:02 pm

A recent comment:

“My name is Rev. Dr. Mercy Wood; I am a co-Founder of Wood World Missions

Wood World Missions is a Christian Non- profit, charity missions Ministry worldwide. Based in the UK. We don’t only preach the word but demonstrate it with practical support to the poor and needy. For the last 13yrs we have been assisting many needy people with our own funds, until 2000 when we officially registered with Charity Commission. Registration No: 108400.
I have been going to Malawi for the last 3yrs helping orphans in the north of Malawi. We have donated a clean water for a village of 200. Build centres for pre school for the orphans, etc.

I have been trying to build a free primary school which will take care for the orphans.
I was trying to raise £7,500 to complete a whole primary school + play area, this is proven difficulties.
There are many Orphans, who have no one at all.
So far we have about 120 orphans living in different villages which we care for.

Hope we get help.”

www.woodworldmissions.org

Gloria Allred’s Got a Brand New Target

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, News and politics, Politics, Star Celebrity Gossip!, celebrity, entertainment, gossip on November 30, 2006 at 4:58 pm

Gloria Allred always seems to be attached to a highly publicized news story.

Knowing that there are no genuine lawsuit possibilities raised by the facts of this case, Allred has come up with a creative way to seek money for the two men who were directly insulted by Michael Richards’ racist outburst.

Allred has insisted to the media that Cosmo Kramer’s alter ego meet with her clients, Frank McBride and Kyle Doss, in front of a retired judge to apologize and allow the judge to decide on compensation.

Allred claims that concerning her clients, Richards “went after them,” “singled them out,” “taunted them,” and “did it in a closed room where they were captive.”

Anyone held captive in today’s comedy club’s deserves some big bucks.

Maybe this lawsuit should be called a crass action.

Glen Beck Clicks and Kicks

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, News and politics, Politics, Social and Politics, Trackback, celebrity, entertainment, gossip on November 20, 2006 at 8:52 pm

CNN Headline News has finally gotten some traction in the ratings with Glen Beck’s expose of the radical strain of Isalm. It’s outlined on Samantha Burns site.

A.P.: Colombian rebels want Denzel Washington, Oliver Stone, Michael Moore to help negotiate with government

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies, Movies & Entertainment, News and politics, Politics, Social and Politics, Star Celebrity Gossip!, celebrity, entertainment, gossip on November 10, 2006 at 12:48 pm

Marcia Cross Wants Her Trash Back

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies, Movies & Entertainment, Star Celebrity Gossip!, celebrity, entertainment, gossip on November 8, 2006 at 6:31 pm

Celebrities have to be careful about what they discard.

“Collectors” routinely search through dumpsters of the famous, hoping to find some treasures among the trash.

“Desperate Housewives”’s Marcia Cross is desperate to have her trash remover return some pictures to her that she had placed in the round file.

A man who was hired to haul away some refuse reportedly found over 200 pictures of Cross, some of which captured the actress enjoying an outdoor shower.

The actress’s attorneys are threatening to file a lawsuit. They’ve indicated that Cross tossed the photos by mistake.

But an agent for the trash collector is asserting the venerable legal doctrine of “Finders Keepers.”

Cross recently got married and is pregnant with twins.

‘Borat’ Confounds Hollywood Experts

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies, Movies & Entertainment, Star Celebrity Gossip!, celebrity, entertainment, gossip on November 6, 2006 at 9:18 am

 

 

As Sacha Baron Cohen’s Kazakhstani alter ego Borat would say, “My movie is bringing glorious takings of much American dollars at box office.”

 

According to the studio estimates of 20th Century Fox, “Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan” took in $26.4 million during its opening weekend, mystifying experts and beating the highly favored Disney flick “The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause,” which stars Tim Allen.

 

“Santa Clause” ended up in second place with a $20 million take.

 

Another film that was supposed to beat “Borat” is Paramount-DreamWorks’ animated comedy “Flushed Away,” which features the voices of Hugh Jackman and Kate Winslet, but the movie landed in the number three spot with $19.1 million.

 

Theaters were jam-packed with “Borat” fans because “Borat” was released in only 837 theaters, a reflection of execs’ low expectations for the comedy. 

In stark contrast “Santa Clause” and “Flushed Away” were on 3,458 screens and 3,707 screens, respectively. 

“Borat” averaged $31,511 per theater while “Santa” and “Flushed” averaged less than $6000 per screen.

Needless to say, Fox plans on increasing the number of “Borat” screens ASAP.

 

Why the success for the highly satirical comedy? 

 

The Internet has been buzzing with feedback on the flick with most of the comments indicating that throughout the movie audiences were in hysterics.

Disney Sticks with Mel Gibson

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies, Movies & Entertainment, Star Celebrity Gossip!, celebrity, entertainment, gossip on November 5, 2006 at 4:26 pm

Disney Sticks with Mel Gibson

The Walt Disney Company has indicated its firm support for Mel Gibson’s upcoming epic, “Apocalypto.”

Disney execs undoubtedly saw what I did when viewing the movie, which Gibson co-wrote, produced and directed.

It’s a highly entertaining film that’s part “Road Warrior,” part “Braveheart,” with a highly original setting and story.

The movie will have audience appeal, particularly in the coveted 18 to 25 age group.

The suits at Disney see the potential of “Apocalypto” overcoming the recent coverage of the DUI charge and anti-Semitic remarks, which Gibson apologized for and explained on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

Disney spokesman Dennis Rice told Reuters, “If it’s a good movie, people are going to see it. … One of the great things about Mel Gibson is that he is a great filmmaker and he has a proven track record.”

Paul Dergarabedian, president of Exhibitor Relations for Disney, acknowledged that controversy will be a factor in marketing the Gibson film.

“I don’t know how that cannot be a factor,” Dergarabedian said. “His personality has come into play … but if it’s a good movie that will hold it in good stead.”

Celebrity War in Missouri

In Blogroll, Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, celebrity, entertainment on October 25, 2006 at 9:35 am

Michael J. Fox can’t shill for big biotech without being opposed this time….

Chris Matthews to Be ‘Miss America’ Judge

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, News and politics, Politics, Social and Politics, Star Celebrity Gossip!, entertainment on October 23, 2006 at 11:00 am

Cable hosts are displaying their versatility.  

CNN’s “360” host Anderson Cooper previously starred on “The Mole.” MSNBC’s “Tucker” host Tucker Carlson recently boogied down on “Dancing with the Stars.”

Now MSNBC’s hyperventilating “Hardball” host Chris Matthews will reportedly have a judging role in one of the nation’s most renowned beauty pageants. 

Matthews will have to ask the really tough questions in the assignment he’s reportedly accepted.

In January 2007 he will scrutinize contestants as they vie to become Miss America. 

Matthews, who also recently appeared in Robin Williams’ film “Man of the Year,” is one of six judges who have been hired by the Miss America Organization to help decide which woman will wear the crown. 

Matthews will be seated alongside choreographer Debbie Allen, actress Delta Burke and Miss America 1981 Susan Powell.

Christian Dad Not Told Truth about Madonna

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Movies & Entertainment, Music, News and politics, Politics, Social and Politics, Star Celebrity Gossip!, entertainment on October 17, 2006 at 8:05 am

Dressed in dirt-stained pants and a black denim jacket, a 31-year-old man waited at the High Court in Lilongwe, the capital of Malawi, to meet the woman who would take his baby son away.

 

Yohane Banda had previously suffered the loss of his 28-year-old wife, Marita, a week after little David was born.

 

The baby was reportedly offered up for adoption without his father’s knowledge. David’s photo, along with pictures of 12 other “suitable” male infants, had been e-mailed to famed pop princess Madonna.

It is clear from Yohane’s statements that he was unaware of the famous celebrity who wished to become his son’s mother. In an interview with the London Daily Mail, Yohane explained that September 30, 2006 was the first time the idea of adoption had been brought to his attention. Two officials from Malawi’s Ministry of Gender and Child Welfare had come to his village to tell him that “a white foreigner had seen a picture of David and liked him very much.”

 

Yohane is a committed Christian. When his wife was alive they sang together in the local church choir.

 

Yohane was unfamiliar with Madonna’s music, image and, more importantly, her Kabbalah faith. Instead he was told that she was “a very nice Christian lady,” a description that is grossly inconsistent with a performance segment of Madonna’s concert tour in which she dons a crown of thorns and “crucifies” herself on stage.

 

Told that the wealthy white lady offered a better life for his son, Yohane explained, “At first I wasn’t very sure. I asked if it meant that I would never see him again. They said I would be sent pictures and when David was older he would be able to visit the village. My family and I agreed that this was a very good opportunity for David to get an education and grow up healthy.”

 

Adding to his misfortune, Yohane is illiterate. He was unable to read the nine-page document delivered by retired minister Reverend Thompson Chipeta, which was written in English and granted permission for the adoption. Chipeta manages the Home Of Hope Orphan Care Centre in a nearby town.

 

David had been in the orphanage since his mother passed away. Yohane’s hope was that one day his son would return to live at home.

 

“I was scared he would die like my other children so I took him where he could be looked after properly. I felt very sore in my heart, but I could think of no other way,” Yohane said.

 

For the past nine months Yohane has routinely ridden his bicycle 25 miles to see his only surviving offspring. “I wanted him to know that I was his father, that I love him very much. He is my only child still living and I think of him as a gift from God.”

 

“He will always be in my heart. I hate to see him leave Malawi but I have come to accept the loss,” Yohane said.

 

Sources told the Mail that after landing in Malawi Madonna rushed to see her chosen one. She immediately moved David and his nanny into a private room. She reportedly said that he had lovely hair and skin. “Oh he’s beautiful I just adore him,” Madonna said.

 

The emphasis on the baby’s looks was reflected in the material girl’s statements to Yohane when she finally met the baby’s father at the courthouse.

 

“Your son is very beautiful and he makes me very happy. I promise to take very good care of him,” Madonna told Yohane.

 

Generally, under Malawian law, non-residents are prohibited from adopting. In a move that suggests celebrity preferential treatment, Malawi’s High Court issued a ruling that allowed Madonna and filmmaker husband Guy Ritchie to take custody of the baby.

 

Yohane’s family members have written a letter to the orphanage requesting that David not be taken out of the country by a “rich white donor” and that he be raised with a knowledge of Malawian culture.

 

Madonna has not yet visited the one-year-old’s homeland village.

 

On behalf of dozens of non-governmental organizations, Eye of the Child, a child advocacy group in Malawi, has gone as far as filing the necessary papers to seek an injunction to stop Madonna from adopting the boy.

 

Serious questions about the adoption deserve a response, if merely on a human level.

 

-Knowing that David’s father is a committed Christian, why wasn’t Madonna’s commitment to the Kabbalah faith disclosed to him?

 

-Could not Madonna have chosen to adopt one of the hundreds of thousands of other parentless infants throughout the world who await a loving home?

 

-Is it in good conscience to separate a child from his natural father when within your means you have the ability to provide the resources that would allow the infant to remain with his father?

 

-What is in the best interest of Baby David and what action would be more truly born of love?

 

Tax the Celebrity Rich

In Celebrities, Celebrity News, Culture, Entertainment and Media, Hollywood, Music, News and politics, Politics, entertainment on October 9, 2006 at 9:02 am

We’re all familiar with the Democrat mantra “Tax the Rich.”

Perhaps the time has come to adopt a new slogan, “Tax the Celebrity Rich.”

If put into motion, the tax plan could raise a lot of dough and possibly even reform some really bad behavior.

Let’s take a look at the way some of Hollywood’s Most Pampered have recently been conducting themselves in public.

After warming up with a nasty Nicole Richie co-star feud, Paris Hilton apparently revealed some Tanya Harding tendencies at a posh Hollywood nightspot.

“The Simple Life” actress reportedly got into a physical altercation with former Playboy Playmate and “Dancing With the Stars” contestant Shanna Moakler.

According to the hamburger-hawking Hilton, Moakler insulted her and then punched her in the mouth.

But Moakler claimed that she was actually shoved into the heiress and that Hilton’s ex, Stavros Niarchos, twisted her wrists and then proceeded to use her body as a shot glass, dousing her with a drink.

Recently, on two separate occasions, Avril Lavigne expressed her dissatisfaction with celebrity photojournalists by spitting on them.

The most recent incident occurred as Lavigne was leaving a celebrity hangout and a paparazzo tried to get some pics.

Beckoning one of the photographers, Lavigne reportedly said, “Hey f*****, come here,” and then spat on him.

The rock singer has apologized for offending her fans but not for offending the photographers at which she hurled lugies.

Earlier in the year, Brandon Davis, grandson and presumed heir to oil magnate Marvin Davis and then-pal of Paris Hilton, rattled off a laundry list of invectives at actress Lindsay Lohan, another one of Hilton’s bicker mates. The potty-mouthed patter was caught on camera.

After he finished smearing Lohan, who had been publicly feuding with actress Hillary Duff, Davis landed a knockout punch. He whacked Lohan in the wallet.

“She’s worth about $7 million, which means she’s really poor,” Davis said.

A propriety vacuum exists, in part, because of the manner in which current tabloid faves are covered by the press. Celebs who act the most reprehensible get the most attention from the entertainment media, thereby encouraging more of the rotten behavior.

You have to admit, the behavior is very taxing. So why not assess it for some needed revenue?

A nice hefty tax bill might be just the solution for modifying the impudent and ill-mannered behavior of our errant celebrity youth.

Ellen DeGeneres to Host Oscars

In Entertainment and Media on September 7, 2006 at 7:47 pm

ABC Caves to Political Pressure

In Entertainment and Media, News and politics on September 7, 2006 at 1:17 pm

Madeleine Albright and Sandy Berger Attack ABC Miniseries

In Entertainment and Media, News and politics on September 7, 2006 at 6:37 am