Saturday, April 13, 2013

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: 'I Destroyed Everything That Could Possibly Lead Me To Do Anything Else'

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
'I Destroyed Everything That Could Possibly Lead Me To Do Anything Else'
Apr 13th 2013, 13:11

Alternative pop band Phoenix has made quite a name for itself. As if it's not already cool enough to be from Versailles, France, the four-member band has established itself as one of the most lively and fun concerts around. Full of energy and head-bopping beats, Phoenix fun translates perfectly into any language.

The band just nailed its second appearance on Saturday Night Live last week [see video above], was featured on Spotify in an 18-minute documentary chronicling a day in the members' lives, and has a new album coming out later this month, "Bankrupt!" The French crew has played Coachella before -- but this year the band is headlining -- and many are wondering what what might be up its sleeve.

The Huffington Post spoke with lead singer Thomas Mars a few days before Coachella and learned about recording in the Australian jungle, how he met wife Sofia Coppola and who he would put in charge of a mini-society.

HuffPost: This isn't your first Coachella rodeo. Are you excited to return as headliners?
Thomas Mars: We are nervous. Very excited, and nervous. We have played there twice before. When we played Coachella around our third album, it was the worst show we ever did, by far. Nothing worked. There was a little fire on stage. The keyboards didn't work. There were power issues. French voltage in the California desert didn't work.

I have a feeling you will not be encountering those problems this time at Coachella. You guys are headlining Saturday night –- pretty prime time real estate.
You never know. I think Coachella is becoming famous for these last-minute malfunctions [laughs]. It's wild in every sense of the word. The weather is wild, the preparation is wild. It's not an easy festival but it's really rewarding if you succeed.

How do you feel about Coachella being two weekends in a row? A lot of people are still cranky about the fact that they cloned the festival.
I am hoping that we can change it up. The idea is to make each weekend a different experience. It's an opportunity to play more songs, so from that perspective, I like it.

I was lucky enough to get an early copy of your new album 'Bankrupt!' and think it's great. I read that you guys locked yourselves away for two years to work on it. How prepared are you when you go into the studio to record?
We are totally unprepared. We go without anything in mind in the studio. We just go in a place that's soundproof and then we bring all of our own equipment. But we write everything -- the four of us. It's ridiculously communal. Democratic. When we hear the record we don't even remember who wrote what. I don't think we would do music otherwise. I don't think we are as good separately. We are okay, but we are not great. It's more about the chemistry of the four of us. I don't want to jinx it.

Did you always want to become a musician?
I didn't really realize it when I was a kid, but I destroyed everything that could possibly lead me to do anything else.

So it was a process of elimination ...
Yeah, exactly. And being stubborn.

One thing everyone says about Phoenix -- and I can personally attest to it as well -- is how fun you guys are live. It is always an awesome dance party. Do you have a favorite song to play live?
It changes all the time. Right now, my favorite is 'The Real Thing' because it's the one that I'm the most emotional about. The lyrics and just the fact that it's a slow song but it's a big wave of noise coming in and out. It was a hard one to practice and it's a hard one to get right. Some nights when we play it right, it's really satisfying.

You are set to perform on "Saturday Night Live" the weekend before Coachella. You guys have been on before. What was that like?
It's just the best. I don't know many TV shows, but it's certainly an incredible experience. Very emotional. The level of stress and the fact that it's live. You can see all that, but it's a show that has ultimate integrity and craftsmanship. It's almost like if civilization would end and you would keep the best of the best, you would want all these guys that are there to be a part of that mini-society.

I've heard that the hope for the new album was to do something more experimental. Can you tell me a little bit about that?
We started the album in the Australian jungle. We played a festival in Australia and the father of a friend is a percussionist for the Sydney Opera. He plays all these amazing instruments and he lives really far away from everything, out in the jungle. We went to record just anything with him and went there without any specific ideas. It was all very minimal but we ended up using a lot of it on this record.

I first heard your music on the 'Lost In Translation' soundtrack. Did you and Sofia Coppola [director and Mars' wife] already know each other, or is the movie the reason you met?
We met before 'Lost In Translation.' I sang on a song with Air for 'The Virgin Suicides' soundtrack called 'Playground Love.' It was the main theme from that movie. Air played three or four shows on the West Coast in the U.S. and I played in two of those show with them. That was when I met Sofia.

Are there any current bands that you are really into right now? Anyone you are hoping to see perform at the festival?
We are touring with a Canadian guy named Mac DeMarco and I love his music. I think it's very unique. You can hear his living room. It sounds like he's making the album in his living room. It's very charming. I love everything about it. My Bloody Valentine is another one that I have seen many times, but each time it's a madeleine for me, like the Proust madeleine. The ultimate the highest music emotional ratio that I can possibly have. It's physical. It's incredible.

And at the festival, it's hard to hear other bands because you're not always playing the same day as other bands. Also, when you play late at night, you have to be careful … it's temping. There are lots of bands I want to see. I have never seen New Order and I grew up loving their music.

Phoenix won the Grammy for Best Alternative Music Album in 2009. How much of a game-changer was that?
It doesn't seem like it changed anything directly (on the inside), but you can see that it does something to the people that are working with us. The people that believed in us and had invested their time in us. You could see that to them, it represented something important. And so it did for us, as well. For us, it was pretty exotic. And it's the only award we have ever won.

That won't last long.
It's the best one to win. I'm happy that it's that one [laughs]!

Check out HuffPost LA's complete coverage of Coachella 2013 here.

Click through photos and watch Phoenix videos below:

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Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: Jimmy Dawkins, Chicago Bluesman Of 'West Side Sound' Dies

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Jimmy Dawkins, Chicago Bluesman Of 'West Side Sound' Dies
Apr 13th 2013, 12:28

CHICAGO — Chicago bluesman Jimmy "Fast Fingers" Dawkins, known for his stellar guitar playing and mellow singing voice, has died. He was 76.

Delmark Records owner Bob Koester said Friday that Dawkins died Wednesday. The cause of death wasn't immediately known.

James Henry Dawkins was born in Tchula, Miss. An only child, Dawkins taught himself to play guitar before moving to Chicago in the 1950s.

Koester said Dawkins did not begin his music career immediately, working instead in a box factory before taking to Chicago's streets to play for tips. He formed a band in the 1960s and began working Chicago's blues clubs, gaining a reputation as an excellent side man and playing with such notables as Otis Rush and Buddy Guy.

Dawkins first album, "Fast Fingers," released on the Delmark label in 1969, boosted Dawkins' reputation, particularly in Europe and Japan, where he toured frequently.

"He didn't like his nickname," Koester said. "It gave the impression that he played only upbeat music."

Dawkins performed a style of music known as the West Side Chicago blues – a mellower sound that reflected his Mississippi roots, instead of the harder-edged sounds of the city's South Side.

"His voice was feathery, soft," Koester said. "He wasn't a shouter, which is unusual in blues." He noted blues singers had to shout to be heard in the early days because they didn't have amplifiers, and the affectation continues.

In addition to performing, Dawkins was a frequent contributor to Living Blues magazine.

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Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: Oklahoma Pulls Flaming Lips Song

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Oklahoma Pulls Flaming Lips Song
Apr 13th 2013, 13:04

OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma's governor has taken The Flaming Lips' "Do You Realize??" out of rotation, pulling the tune as the state's official rock song in a move her office says has more to do with priorities than musical taste.

Republican Mary Fallin passed on renewing an executive order that gave the Oklahoma rockers' song the designation when taking office in January 2011, the governor's office confirmed Friday. Fallin spokesman Alex Weintz said the governor had other more pressing priorities.

"When the governor was elected to office, we had a $500 million budget shortfall, we were in the middle of a recession, and we had a huge number of pardon and parole cases left over from the (former Gov. Brad) Henry administration," Weintz said. "As we were clearing our backlog, renewing executive orders and pursuing our priorities, addressing the state rock `n' roll song did not make the cut."

Fallin renewed dozens of executive orders when she took office, including some dating back to the 1950s.

Her predecessor, Henry, a Democrat, signed an executive order proclaiming "Do You Realize??" the official rock song for the state in 2009 after the Republican-controlled Oklahoma House rejected a resolution to do it.

At least one lawmaker at the time complained that a member of the band wore a T-shirt bearing a hammer and sickle, a symbol of communism, while visiting the state Capitol. Another said he was offended by lead singer Wayne Coyne's foul language when the rockers were honored at an event sponsored by Oklahoma City officials.

Telephone messages left Friday for The Flaming Lips' manager and agent were not immediately returned.

Almost 11,000 people picked "Do You Realize??" as their choice in a survey in which more than 21,000 people voted from a list of 10 songs selected by a panel of experts.

Rep. Joe Dorman said the move by Fallin, which he called a political one, was disappointing.

"I'm sure it's politically motivated to make her look more conservative," said Dorman, D-Rush Springs, who sponsored the resolution for the rock song three years ago. "The sad thing is it was done in fun to bring attention to Oklahoma's history of rock `n' roll.

"It's just a shame, because so many people voted in that survey, and it was just fun and lighthearted."

___

Sean Murphy can be reached at . www.twitter.com/apseanmurphy

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Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: Civil Case Jury Pool Grows

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Civil Case Jury Pool Grows
Apr 13th 2013, 13:06

LOS ANGELES — The pool of potential jurors to hear a case filed over Michael Jackson's death has grown to 104 people.

Attorneys and a judge concluded their second week of hardship screening on Friday.

In-person questioning of the panel will begin on Monday. It is expected to take multiple days for attorneys to select a panel of 12 jurors and several alternates to hear the case. Jurors must be available for 90 trial days.

The group of 103 has been given a 24-page questionnaire assessing their knowledge about the case.

The lawsuit was filed by Jackson's mother against concert giant AEG Live. The suit claims the promoter of Jackson's planned comeback concerts failed to properly investigate the doctor convicted of involuntary manslaughter for the singer's death.

AEG has denied all wrongdoing.

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Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: Binky Philips: Another Excerpt: I "Discover" CBGB and Open for The Ramones, May, 1975

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Binky Philips: Another Excerpt: I "Discover" CBGB and Open for The Ramones, May, 1975
Apr 13th 2013, 13:34

Here's another excerpt from my eBook on Rhino, My Life in the Ghost of Planets - The Story of a CBGB Almost-Was. It's doozy, too... in which my band, The Planets, is initiated into the brave new world of CBGB in the early Spring of 1975.

Here we go...

So, now, it was early December, 1974. The Planets had been thrown out of Coventry, the only club that would book us (one of the bouncers took offense when I tried to clock him with a mic stand in front of the whole audience). We basically had nowhere to perform. Now what?
One night, I was in a cab with two of the other Planets. It was about midnight. We'd wrapped up our rehearsal about 15 minutes earlier, pooled our money, and hence, the taxi instead of the subway.

We were sitting at a red light on the Bowery at Bleeker St.

Directly across from me was a quaint but spanking new snow-white half-circle awning with old carny-style lettering in red and black. "CBGB". Without thinking, I blurted out, "Look guys, a place we might be able to play." There was nothing but that enigmatic name, CBGB, that clicked, but click it did. Yet when December's mind-numbing holiday crap soon kicked into full gear I forgot all about CBGB.

Then, one day, it suddenly occurred to me that CBGB was the joint where those two bands, advertising with those postage-stamp-sized ads in the Clubs section of the Village Voice, were performing regularly: Television. The Ramones. CBGB. Oh, right!

Within a week, I was inside 315 The Bowery asking this bearded, folkie-looking older fella seated at the bar, if he knew who booked the place. He lazily jerked his thumb towards the back of the club. I stepped over the two fancy pedigree dogs sprawled at this woolly old lumberjack's feet and walked back toward the stage area. Standing between the trapezoid three-tier stage and the pool table was a stocky needing-a-shave curly-haired guy sipping a wickedly pungent-smelling drink, wearing impenetrable sunglasses, a blazer, and turtle- neck sweater. Actually elegant.

"That guy up front told me you book this club."

"Yeah?"

"Well, if you do, I'm Binky Philips and I have a band that does originals and I thought..."

"I'm Terry. Bring me a tape tomorrow. I'll be here."

With a wave of his hand, I was dismissed. Starving for gigs, I did as I was told.

The next evening, the natty Terry Ork was a bit friendlier when I handed him our three- song demo. "I'll listen and let you know. You're Binky, right? Okay, Binky, I'll call you." Again, dismissed.

About four days later, Terry, to my distinct surprise, did indeed call.

"Hey, I listened to your tape. Not bad. I can give your Planets the last weekend in May opening for The Ramones. Thursday, Friday, Saturday, two sets a night. The door is a 75/25 split and you have to provide the PA."

That's right, CBGB did not have a PA. Of course, I leapt at the offer. "Fine, load-in is at 6:30." Dismissed. Click.

The gig was a little over a month away. My band decided we'd ingratiate ourselves with management. So, for the weeks leading up to our show, we came down to CBGB and hung out several times.

Back then, the older folkie fella, who turned out to be the owner, Hilly Kristal, was serving food. I tried the burger first. Wow, pretty good! A week later, I decided to try "Hilly's Chili." It was fantastic! In fact, it was so good, I walked back to the kitchen to tell Hilly how much I liked it. He was standing there, in his red plaid wool coat, slowly stirring an industrial sized pot of the chili as if in a trance. And, with Hilly obviously oblivious, about a foot behind his right boot was a fresh and wet pile of dog shit, about the size and shape of half a cantaloupe. My gag reflex instantly hit fifth gear. Needless to say, my eating-at-CBGB-days came to an abrupt and permanent end. And, as I recall, the whole serving-food concept kind of disappeared not long after.

As our weekend with The Ramones drew near, I started getting nervous. Terry Ork's "You have to provide the PA" proviso was presenting a problem. The Planets didn't have a PA system. We didn't have a friend with a PA system. We didn't have the cash to rent a PA system. So, on the first day of our three-night gig, we got to CBGB early and set up my guitar amp, a Marshall/Hiwatt stack, with a 4x12 speaker cabinet sitting on little for-two tables on either side of the stage, with three on-loan mics plugged into an on- loan Technics four channel mixer the size of a toaster, and then into my Marshall 50 watt guitar amp. I was using our Tally's Fender Super Reverb for my Les Paul.

The first two Ramones to arrive were Johnny and Tommy wearing their uniform motorcycle jackets, white t-shirts, jeans blown out at the knees, and Chuck Taylor Cons.

"This is the PA?!?" blurted the instantly furious drummer, Tommy.

Guitarist Johnny wouldn't even acknowledge my presence. He just snorted with undisguised disgust and stomped past me.

Fu-uh-uh-uh-uck!

And now, oh man, here was that ultra-weird singer, walking in the door. I was convinced that we were screwed. We would not be on this bill after tonight.

I ran up to Joey Ramone, quickly introduced myself, told him that I'd recently heard his band's demo at an A&R guy's apartment and how much I loved it (I didn't tell him that everyone else at this record label exec's cocaine party hated them), and I that was really sorry but this was the only PA we could come up with, and I know that this sucks and... uh...

Joey smiled down at me (from his lanky 6'6" scarecrow frame) and said in this peculiar lilting voice, "Oh that [the Marshall stack PA] will do just fine."

Whew!

Dee Dee showed up last and never even noticed our band or the guitar amp substituting for a PA. Although at the end of the night he let me know that he "liked Power Pop a lot, too."

The Ramones were just starting to draw, and we'd hassled all our friends to attend, and so we played for nice sized crowd, maybe 75 people. To my great relief, we went down well.

At the end of our very first set that Thursday night, as I was walking off the stage, Joey Ramone, who'd been watching me leap around and windmill from the pool table area next to the stage, walked straight up to me and said, with a happy smile, "I'm a big Who fan, too!"

Our bonding was instant and forever. From that day forward, there was never a time that Joey wasn't friendly and happy to see me. A genuine sweetheart. Smart as shit, too!

And his band? Well, as someone who was there, the myth is justified. Onstage, in 1975, you had a band that had synthesized The New York Dolls and The Stooges and the Velvets, and unlike those three bands -- The Ramones' truly revolutionary wrinkle -- had gotten rid of the entire concept of lead guitar. And they really did do 11 or 12 songs in about 20 minutes.
"1234!" And... that ... was... that!

Everyone I ever turned onto The Ramones just loved them.

My favorite convert was my high school buddy, KISS's Paul Stanley. By the time CBGB was in full swing, KISS was already almost huge. One night, while Paul was off the road and back in New York for a minute, I dragged him down to a Ramones show at CBGB. Up 'til that point, he thought they were just a bad joke. Paul and I crawled up the ladder to the crow's nest lighting booth and from our above-the-crowd vantage point, within the first three minutes that they were blasting onstage, Paul had fallen in love with The Ramones, just like everyone else.

And no, much as I dug them, I didn't see the Punk Revolution erupting. I was standing way too close and just saw a really cool daring oddball band trying to land a record deal --- like the rest of us.

Regarding CBGB... The Planets were one of the first 15 or so bands to ever play there. After opening for Joey, Johnny, Tommy, and Dee Dee, our next two gigs were three-day weekends opening for Television. I wound up playing CBGB over 60 times.

Within a few months of our first show with The Ramones, Terry Ork left under vaguely negative circumstances and never returned. Owner Hilly Kristal took over the booking. There are some who feel he was clueless and lucky. This couldn't be further from the truth. He had an open mind, an open heart, and open ears. His slow, deep New York drawl and hungover demeanor could easily lull you into underestimating him.

But, aside from Mr. Ork's initial instigating involvement (and later, the savory and savvy assistance of Louise Parnassa-Staley), CBGB became the international institution it rightly was because of Hilly. Over the years, he became something of a surrogate father to me and many other musicians in New York.

On a regular basis, he'd amaze me with his insightful acumen. More than a few times, I would do a show, introduce some new songs in the set, and at the end of the night, as I was loading out my gear, Hilly, slumped at his desk by the front door, would sleepily say something like, "I liked the first new one you did tonight, especially the lyrics [yes, he'd listen to the words!], but the second one's chorus feels unfinished. You need to go back and work on that song, Binky." And... he'd be right!

So, now they're making a movie about CBGB with the wonderful Alan Rickman playing Hilly. No doubt it will be a fun flick filled with intentional and unintentional silliness.

I'm privileged to have experienced the real thing.

Coda: I was never tight with Tommy Ramone. But, for me, The Ramones Ramones Ramones was the original version with Tommy on drums. His style was never duplicated. Anyway, a few months before my Rhino book was released, I sent Tommy and his famous fan, Paul Stanley, my manuscript to see what they thought...

"Binky writes with the same infectious enthusiasm that drew me to him at The High School of Music and Art. We were the outcasts among outcasts. Ultimate fans in search of the ultimate dream; to be one with our heroes and share the glory, girls, and all the accoutrement to be reveled in as members of the Rock and Roll hierarchy. The Planets played with a reckless joy that was the heart, soul, and spirit of their founder and creative light, Binky. Almost too much of those qualities to ever stand the chance to survive and thrive. I'm thrilled that, in spite of what may never have quite happened for him, Binky remains a Fanboy at heart and still lights up at every memory tucked away in that file cabinet he calls his head."

- Paul Stanley, KISS singer/songwriter/guitarist

"Binky Philips and The Planets were one of the star bands of the original CBGB scene. They were already around when early 70's rock transitioned from Glam Rock into the Punk movement. There was a lot more variety at CBGB than people might now be aware of. The Planets were a great example of the virtuoso-led school of music, just one of the ingredients that made a night out at CBGB an eclectic event. Binky's story gives you a good view of what it was like to be in a band that was part of the inner- workings of the CBGB era."

- Tommy Ramone Erdelyi, Ramones drummer/producer

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Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: Psy Hopes His Music Will Unite North And South Korea

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Psy Hopes His Music Will Unite North And South Korea
Apr 13th 2013, 13:20

SEOUL, South Korea — South Korean rapper PSY says he hopes North Koreans will enjoy his new single even as tensions remain high on the Korean Peninsula.

PSY released his latest single, "Gentleman," in 119 countries on Friday, hoping to replicate the success of "Gangnam Style," the smash YouTube hit that made him an international star almost overnight last year. The choreography for "Gentleman" – including the "arrogant dance," as PSY called it – was unveiled at a concert in Seoul on Saturday before more than 50,000 fans. The music video has been uploaded onto YouTube.

PSY, whose real name is Park Jae-sang, said Saturday that he regretted the current tensions between the two Koreas. The situation has been grabbing global headlines, with North Korea becoming increasingly belligerent with war rumblings, leaving its neighbors wary of a possible missile test by Pyongyang.

"It's a tragedy. We are the only countries divided right now," PSY said at a news conference ahead of the concert.

North and South Korea, which are divided by heavily fortified borders, are technically still at war, with the 1950-53 Korean War ending with a cease-fire, not a peace treaty.

PSY said he hoped North Koreans would enjoy his new music. He said his job was to make all people, including North Koreans, laugh.

"Hopefully my `Gangnam Style,' my `Gentleman,' my music videos and my choreography ... they might enjoy them too," he said.

When the "Gangnam Style" video went viral last year, it spun legions of parodies. Even North Korea's government created a parody video of the hit, showing that the secretive country is well-versed in South Korean popular culture. North Korea used its "Gangnam Style" parody to criticize Park Geun-hye, then the presidential candidate for South Korea's ruling party. Park was inaugurated as South Korea's new president in February.

PSY's "Gangnam Style" video, featuring his much-mimicked horse-riding dance, made him one of the best-known Koreans in the world. It's the most watched video of all time on YouTube, gathering more than 1.5 billion views since its release in July.

PSY acknowledged that the massive success of "Gangnam Style" added to the pressure as he worked on his latest single, but he said he tried to remain true to himself and his Korean roots.

"I tried to find Korean words that people from any country can easily sing along," he said of "Gentleman," which contains lyrics both in English and Korean. PSY co-composed the music and wrote the lyrics, which poke fun at a self-claimed gentleman who enjoys his time at a dance club.

Audiences have questioned whether PSY will be a one-hit wonder known only for "Gangnam Style." But the South Korean musician, whose humble personality has endeared him to his fans at home since he made his debut more than a decade ago, shrugs off the skepticism.

"Whether or not a couple of my songs become a global hit, I've been doing this job for 12 years," PSY said. "I will bring more Korean dance moves and Korean songs overseas."

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Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: Guess Who?

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Guess Who?
Apr 13th 2013, 13:21

Known for his role as Deputy Marshall Raylan Givens on "Justified," Timothy Olyphant wasn't always immersed in the dramas of the Detroit mob.

Back in his college days at USC, Olyphant was an all-star swimmer on the L.A. campus' swim team. According to USC's website, he "swam for legendary Trojan coach Peter Daland. Current USC head coach Dave Salo was an assistant while Olyphant was swimming at Troy."

Check out swim team-era photos of Olyphant below:

timothy olyphant 1

timothy olyphant 2

timothy olyphant 3

timothy olyphant 4

Serving as both an executive producer and actor on the FX drama, Olyphant rarely has a dull career moment.

"I love my job as an actor, and obviously that's what I'm getting paid to do, but I feel that the real treat on this show is engaging and collaborating with Graham [Yost] and the rest of them," he told The Huffington Post. "It's very rare that you can be in a career for as long as I have, and still feel like you're constantly learning and coming at it from an almost childlike perspective. This show has afforded me that experience. I think that always as an actor, I don't want to overstep or pretend that I'm doing anything more than I'm doing."

It sure sounds like things are going well for Olyphant. But hey, at least if acting doesn't work out he's got a backup!

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Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: State Raked In $184 Million From Film Industry Boom

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
State Raked In $184 Million From Film Industry Boom
Apr 13th 2013, 13:27

Story by Chloe Riley, courtesy of DNAinfo Chicago

Film in Chicago is booming, generating a record $184 million in spending in 2012, Gov. Pat Quinn said Friday on the set of "Divergent," the largest feature film ever to be shot in the state.

"We have a world-class sound stage and studio right here. One of the very best in the United States, indeed the world," Quinn said at Cinespace Chicago Film Studios, 2621 W. 15th Place.

The film, starring Shailene Woodley and Kate Winslet, began filming at Cinespace in early April. The production is expected to spend more than $30 million in Illinois and create 1,000 jobs.

In 2011, Quinn signed a 10-year extension of the Illinois Film Tax Credit, which gives tax breaks to production companies that film in the state.

Read the whole story at DNAinfo.

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Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: Romeo And Juliet Are Back In New Adaptation

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Romeo And Juliet Are Back In New Adaptation
Apr 13th 2013, 13:56

The first trailer for the newest adaptation of "Romeo and Juliet" is now online, and there's plenty of ancient grudges, unclean civil hands, and death-marked love on display in this peek at the film.

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Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: Drake Slams Chris Brown & Finally Admits He Dated Rihanna

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Drake Slams Chris Brown & Finally Admits He Dated Rihanna
Apr 13th 2013, 14:20

The feud between Drake and Chris Brown continues after the Canadian rapper took some shots at his nemesis during an interview with East Village Radio on Friday.

MTV reports that the 26-year-old reluctantly addressed his on-going beef with Brown, before finally admitting to dating Rihanna, when he told "Keep It Thoro" host Elliot Wilson:

"Don't ask me sh*t about that man when I come up there and leave that man alone. Stop preying on his insecurities," Drake said referencing Brown.

"His insecurities are the fact that I make better music than him, that I'm more popping than him and that at one point in life the woman that he loves fell into my lap," he said, adding "I did what a real n***a would do and treated her with respect."

According to Billboard, Drake recently alluded to the rumored love triangle in his recent single "5AM in Toronto," in which he raps, "where you think she at when she ain't with ya."

And while we didn't exactly need anymore evidence that Drake and Brown's beef was over the "We Found Love" singer, the New York Daily news reported this week that Brown's bodyguard Patrick Strickland has filed a lawsuit against both rappers over the injuries he sustained at W.i.P. last June, claiming the fight broke out after Drake sent Brown a note state, "I'm f**king the love of your life."

Drake's most recent comments about Brown has likely provided more fuel to their feud, especially since the 23-year-old "Look At Me Now" singer just happened to tweet "Lol" right after Drake's interview aired:

Lol

— Chris Brown(@chrisbrown) April 13, 2013

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Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: Drew Barrymore's MAJOR Confession

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Drew Barrymore's MAJOR Confession
Apr 13th 2013, 13:48

Drew Barrymore isn't afraid to admit that motherhood is a little hairy.

The new mom -- who welcomed her first child, daughter Olive, in September -- recently got candid about pregnancy, revealing to In Touch magazine that her appearance has drastically changed since giving birth.

But it's not the curves she's worried about it's the ... facial hair!?

"I got a wonderful little goatee -- and it was red!" Barrymore, 38, who just launched her Flower Beauty cosmetics line, confessed to In Touch. "I also got hyperpigmentation on my cheeks."

Hmm, we wonder how her hubby Will Kopelman felt about all this ...

Still, Barrymore admits she dealt with her newfound facial issues by covering up with a little makeup.

"If I was going off to a desert island, concealer is the one thing I'd want to take. It's the only product that I couldn't make it without!" she shared with In Touch.

Don't forget the tweezers, Drew!

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Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: Jobs' Widow Helps Immigration Fight

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Jobs' Widow Helps Immigration Fight
Apr 13th 2013, 13:36

WASHINGTON -- The immigration overhaul pending before Congress is picking up more high-profile support as Apple co-founder Steve Jobs' widow, Laurene Powell Jobs, bankrolls a new documentary to promote the effort, directed by Academy Award-winner Davis Guggenheim.

Guggenheim directed Al Gore's film on global warming, "An Inconvenient Truth," and 2010's "Waiting for Superman," on the wretched state of the nation's public schools.

His new effort, "The Dream is Now," tells the stories of immigrant youths here illegally who are eager to succeed in America but can't because they lack legal status.

Jose is trained as a mechanical engineer, but working as a construction laborer because he can't get a job in his chosen profession.

Ola hopes to become a surgical oncologist, but fears deportation even as she pursues her studies.

The 30-minute film was screened at the Capitol for members of the House and Senate earlier this week and it will be shown on college campuses and elsewhere in coming weeks.

"My hope is that people will watch this film, it'll open their minds about what's really at stake in immigration reform," Guggenheim said in an interview with The Associated Press. "You see firsthand what happens if we don't fix this broken system we have."

Laurene Powell Jobs chairs Emerson Collective, a nonprofit that supports education reform and other efforts. Through her work in education she encountered youths here illegally who couldn't advance because of their status, and became interested in their stories, Guggenheim said.

The youths in the film would benefit from legislation called the DREAM Act because it would allow citizenship to people brought here in their youths who fulfill certain requirements. Congress has tried but failed to pass that measure but it's expected to be incorporated in a comprehensive immigration overhaul bill to be released next week by bipartisan Senate negotiators.

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Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: Rebel Wilson's Big Gig

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Rebel Wilson's Big Gig
Apr 13th 2013, 14:28

CULVER CITY, Calif. — Rebel Wilson sings, dances and summons laughs – and that's just in the opening moments of this weekend's MTV Movie Awards.

The Australian actress is hosting the show, and she's set to start the ceremony by singing solo.

Wilson and her co-stars from "Pitch Perfect" rehearsed a multi-genre opening medley Friday that features Wilson spoofing last year's films and spinning nunchucks.

Brittany Snow, Anna Camp and Skylar Astin, along with a troupe of gymnastic dancers, joined the first-time host at Sony Pictures Studios to run through four songs not featured in the film. MTV insists on keeping the titles a surprise until Sunday's show.

When the group finished rehearsing, Wilson thrust her fist toward the sky and shouted, "`Pitch Perfect' two!"

A sequel to the musical comedy has not been announced.

Wilson will be joined at the MTV Movie Awards by presenters such as Brad Pitt, Melissa McCarthy, Seth Rogen and Kerry Washington and performers including Selena Gomez. Jamie Foxx, Will Ferrell and Emma Watson will receive special awards at the ceremony, which will be broadcast live Sunday on MTV from 9-11 p.m. EDT.

___

Follow AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen on Twitter at . http://www.twitter.com/APSandy

___

Online:

http://www.mtv.com/ontv/movieawards/2013/

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Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com: Keri Russell Flaunts Abs In Bra-Top

Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Entertainment on HuffingtonPost.com
Keri Russell Flaunts Abs In Bra-Top
Apr 13th 2013, 14:36

Keri Russell flaunts her incredibly fit figure on the cover of Women's Health magazine's May issue, proving to moms everywhere that you can look ab-tastic after giving birth to two kids.

Donning a blue bra-top and tiny white shorts, the 37-year-old "Americans" star shows off her toned tummy and candidly reveals how easy it was to get it.

SCROLL FOR PHOTO

"One thing you would be surprised to learn about me [is] that I eat everything," Russell admits. "I am crazy for dessert. I eat everything."

"No one should be denied anything," she continues, "You should be able to have a little bit of everything, just don't eat the whole thing."

The former "Felicity" star -- who has two kids, son River, 5, and daughter Willa, 1, with hubby Shane Deary -- also confesses that she's not a fan of hardcore workouts, but believes long walks do the trick.

"Everyone should dance more. Everyone should walk more," Russell explains. "I mean that's one of the great things about living in Brooklyn and in New York, you get to eat a big rich fatty meal but then you can walk home."

Still, despite her exercise routine (and insane abs), Russell reveals she's finding it hard to keep her behind as perky as she'd like.

"I used to have a really good, plump butt. Ugh -- now my butt's gone," she shared. "I do wish I had my 25-year-old butt!"

Check out Keri's amazing Women's Health cover below:

keri russell hot

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Twitch: Things Get Bloody In Red Band Trailer For Kitamura's NO ONE LIVES

Twitch
Things Get Bloody In Red Band Trailer For Kitamura's NO ONE LIVES
Apr 13th 2013, 16:00

While I would never be particularly inclined to call Kitamura Ryuhei's No One Lives a particularly good film - and you can read my detailed thoughts here - it is not without its particular charms. And those charms mostly revolve around a series of elaborate and incredibly violent kill scenes. And the powers that be clearly know this and have cut their red band trailer for the film to emphasize exactly that.A ruthless criminal gang takes a young couple hostage and goes to ground in an abandoned house in the middle of nowhere. When the captive girl is killed, the tables are unexpectedly turned. The gang finds themselves outsmarted by an urbane and seasoned killer determined to ensure that no one lives. It's ridiculous stuff,...

[Read the whole post on twitchfilm.com...]

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Entertainment news - latimes.com: Review: Louis C.K. has some 'Oh My God' moments

Entertainment news - latimes.com
Headlines from latimes.com
thumbnail Review: Louis C.K. has some 'Oh My God' moments
Apr 13th 2013, 14:00

His HBO show starts slow, but his views of mortality are more funny and his fixation on 'horrible thoughts' still more so. Still, it's no 'Louie.'

It is heartening in a way that perhaps the biggest comic in America — in a sense of cultural import if not necessarily in income, though he is obviously doing well there too — is a doughy, bald man of 45. It's heartening both from the aspect of one's own advancing age and as notice that kids these days are not entirely consumed with things made in their own image.

Media files:
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Entertainment news - latimes.com: Ready to rave at Coachella — so long as there's shade and A/C

Entertainment news - latimes.com
Headlines from latimes.com
thumbnail Ready to rave at Coachella — so long as there's shade and A/C
Apr 13th 2013, 14:00

The festival's new Yuma tent, with a hardwood floor, cushy chairs and lower voltage, will provide electronic dance music for more mature tastes.

Sometimes even the most devoted ravers outgrow their fairy wings and neon bikinis.

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Entertainment news - latimes.com: UCLA's Celebration of Iranian Cinema an eclectic mix of films

Entertainment news - latimes.com
Headlines from latimes.com
thumbnail UCLA's Celebration of Iranian Cinema an eclectic mix of films
Apr 13th 2013, 14:00

Films by contemporary and veteran directors are on the lineup at the Film & Television Archive's salute to Iranian cinema.

UCLA Film & Television Archive's Celebration of Iranian Cinema showcases the work of such contemporary directors as Bahman Ghobadi ("Rhino Season"), Mani Haghighi ("Modest Reception") and Mohammad Shirvani ("Fat Shaker"), as well as paying homage to the country's veteran filmmakers.

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News: Watch: First Clip From 'Half Of A Yellow Sun' Starring Chiwetel Ejiofor & Thandie Newton

News
News from IndieWire
Watch: First Clip From 'Half Of A Yellow Sun' Starring Chiwetel Ejiofor & Thandie Newton
Apr 13th 2013, 14:01

Timed to coincide with the forthcoming release of "Americanah," the third novel from heavy-hitting Nigerian writer Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, the first look at the adaptation of her prize-winning second novel "Half of a Yellow Sun" has arrived, and a handsome fellow it is too. 

Featuring Thandie Newton and a bearded and dreamy-as-ever Chiwetel Ejiofor, the story follows a couple whose romance takes place against the background of the Nigeria-Biafra conflict. It's directed by first-timer Biyi Bandele, who may not have directed a film before, but comes with serious pedigree as a playwright, novelist and theatre director and is considered (along with Adichie) one of Nigeria's most important writers. Cinematographer John de Borman ("An Education," "The Full Monty") adds further credibility along with a supporting class that includes Anika Noni Rose ("The Princess and the Frog"), Genevieve Nnaji,  John Boyega ("Attack the Block") and Joseph Mawle ("Game of Thrones").

Precious little has been given away about the production so far but the presence of Ejiofor and Newton and the frankly stupendous excellence of the novel are reason enough to keep it on the radar. The clip suggests a pretty polished production and the epic qualities of the story bode well for the adaptation. A possible contender for a Cannes preview showing, expect more to emerge as Adichie hits the literary circuit hard next month for the U.S. release of her novel. Clip below (it starts about 30 seconds in). [Shadow & Act]

 

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