Welcome to the Last Look, where we round up the Style scraps that didn’t make it to our news page this week. Click through and catch up on what else happened since Monday!
Read more: Slidepollajax, Style News
Welcome to the Last Look, where we round up the Style scraps that didn’t make it to our news page this week. Click through and catch up on what else happened since Monday!
Read more: Slidepollajax, Style News
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Posted in Fashion
Welcome to the Last Look, where we round up the Style scraps that didn’t make it to our news page this week. Click through and catch up on what else happened since Monday!
Read more: Slidepollajax, Style News
Comments Off on Last Look: Style News You Might Have Missed (PHOTOS, POLL)
Posted in Fashion
AP – Standup comic Robert Schimmel, a frequent guest on Howard Stern’s radio show, has died after suffering serious injuries in a car accident. He was 60.
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Posted in Film Festivals
As David Poland correctly predicted just a week ago, Lionsgate has moved the newest Tyler Perry film, For Colored Girls, from its original January 14th, 2011 slot into the heart of the awards season. It will now open wide on November 5th, which is incidentally the same weekend that Precious (which Tyler Perry and Oprah Winfrey put their names on after the fact to insure a Lionsgate distribution) debuted in limited release, wracking up a record $108,000 per each of its eighteen screens. The film is a change of pace for Perry, as it is the first time that he is directing a film based on a prior source, the 1975 Ntozake Shange play For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf. The play itself is a collection of twenty poems dealing with various social issues (rape, abortion, etc) that are performed by seven women known only by a color (‘Lady in Blue’, etc). The cast is pretty huge, and includes a handful of Perry veterans (Kimberly Elise, Janet Jackson, etc), along with Whoopi Goldberg, Kerry Washington, Loretta Devine, Phylicia Rashad, and Thandie Newton making their debut in the Tyler Perry sandbox. To be blunt, nothing would make me happier than seeing a Perry film as a possible Oscar contender.
He’s the only mainstream filmmaker outside of Clint Eastwood who consistently makes adult dramas. I can’t defend Madea Goes to Jail or Why Did I Get Married Too? (the last five minutes of that sequel contains the biggest ‘shoot yourself in the foot’ ending since Spanglish), but he has solid work on his filmography. I Can Do Bad All By Myself is a low-key and engaging musical drama, and Angela Basset and Lance Gross are stunningly good in Meet the Browns. All of his films, both good (The Family That Preys) and bad (Diary of a Mad Black Woman, which he did not direct) boast fine performances by underemployed actors of color. Viola Davis is terrific in Madea Goes to Jail, and Daddy’s Little Girls contains the first leading theatrical role for Idris Elba, as well as a fine supporting performance from Louis Gossett Jr. And anyone who consistently casts Cicily Tyson gets a gold star just for that. There are any number of undervalued black actors who I’d love to see stretching their (melo)dramatic muscles in Atlanta (cough-Tony Todd-cough), and I’d love to see Eddie Murphy try dramatic acting again in an environment where he wasn’t the biggest star on the set.
I contend that The Family That Preys, a dark and morally complicated family drama with great work from Alfre Woodard and Kathy Bates, would have been a serious contender had Perry been a more respected name at that point and/or it hadn’t been written off as a ‘black film’. I’m not saying it’s a masterpiece, but it’s a damn good melodrama with several ‘Oscar bait elements’. It’s also better than several of the actual Oscar contenders from 2008 (The Reader, Revolutionary Road, etc). It’s easily Perry’s best, most complicated, and satisfying picture yet, so of course, it’s his lowest-grossing film. All of his films certainly have problems (racial and class stereotypes, the need to swing for the fences in his comic work, making light of genuinely unpleasant behavior, etc), but he is growing as a filmmaker and his flawed stories are almost always ones worth telling and worth watching, especially as so few mainstream filmmakers are making old-fashioned melodramas. And for all the talk about his religious leanings, his films are firmly rooted in the Veggie Tales brand of Christianity, preaching compassion, forgiveness, and empathy over divisive social issues. We’ll see if critics of the future hold Perry to the same esteem that we hold Douglas Sirk today.
If Tyler Perry the fine director of actors has truly made the most out of the opportunity to work with a writer who doesn’t have Tyler Perry’s flaws, than we may be in for a real treat on November 5th.
Read more: The Academy Awards, The Oscars, Tyler Perry, Tyler Perry Oscar?, Entertainment News
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Posted in Film Festivals
His fiercely confrontational cartoons made him one of the leading political provocateurs of the second half of the 20th century and helped push the Times to national prominence.
His fiercely confrontational cartoons made him one of the leading political provocateurs of the second half of the 20th century and helped push the Times to national prominence.
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Posted in Events Los Angeles
Firefighters were gaining the upper hand Saturday night on a 10-acre fire in Yorba Linda that initially threatened homes but is now controlled, according to Orange County Fire Authority Captain Greg McKeown.
The fire was reported at about 7:50 p.m. in a residential neighborhood in the hills of Yorba Linda bordering Chino Hills State Park.
Initially, about 100 firefighters fought the blaze, but as of 9:50 p.m., the blaze had calmed and about 40 firefighters had been released.
The cause of the fire was still under investigation.
–Jessica Garrison
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Posted in Events Los Angeles
ON THE GULF OF MEXICO — A crane hoisted a key piece of oil spill evidence to the surface of the Gulf of Mexico on Saturday, giving investigators their first chance to personally scrutinize the blowout preventer, the massive piece of equipment that failed to stop the gusher four months ago.
It took 29 1/2 hours to lift the 50-foot, 300-ton blowout preventer from a mile beneath the sea to the surface. The five-story high device breached the water’s surface at 6:54 p.m. CDT, and looked largely intact with black stains on the yellow metal.
Read more: Nasa, Bp, Oil Spill, Blowout Preventer, Deepwater Horizon, Fbi, Gulf of Mexico, Gulf Oil Spill, Transocean, Oil Well, Green News
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Posted in Tech News
It’s a little too hot to send people, but NASA plans to send a spacecraft to the sun by 2018.
As part of their Solar Probe Plus mission, the spacecraft will orbit in the sun’s outer atmosphere, constantly sampling the environment and testing for radiation.The main goals are to discover why the sun’s atmosphere is hotter than its surface, and what causes “solar winds” that affect the rest of the solar system.
Read more: Sun Mission, Sun, Nasa, NASA Sun, Solar Mission, Solar Probe Plus, Sun Probe, Solar Probe, Technology News
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Posted in Tech News
Three women sat side-by-side in the first row of coach. The woman by the window read a Kindle. The woman on the aisle read an iPad. The woman in the middle read a plain old book.
Two out of three travelers prefer digital reading.
(Admittedly, my sample is small. But hang with me…)
One of travel’s great pleasures is time to read — long, luxurious stretches sitting in airports, on trains, airplanes, on the beach, if you’re lucky. Reading is what makes flying tolerable, allowing you to check out of the whole claustrophobic scene around you and enter another world of your choosing. I consider reading a necessary component of travel.
I’m no Luddite. I have discovered the pleasure of podcasts on airplanes, and fervently hope that when WiFi becomes standard on flights I will have the strength of character to resist it.
But I’m no early adopter either. So while I’ll probably succumb to the the digital reader eventually, for now, I’m still a book girl.
And yes, I am saddened by what appears to be the inevitable passing of analog books, for many reasons, including because it will mean the end of accidental books — those books we find left behind in airports, take off the bookshelves of rented beach cottages, pick from the rack of second-hand English-language books in foreign shops. Accidental books are books we might not have chosen given unlimited choice, but also don’t mind reading when they fall in our path.
I like leaving books and magazines behind on trips — in airports, on park benches, in hotel rooms. On a trip through several Alpine nations, I left my copy of Wally Lamb’s She’s Come Undone in a park in Switzerland, found someone else’s copy (or was it mine, traveling on a tighter schedule?) on a bench in Austria a few days later. I left Postcards by Annie Proulx in the Portland, Oregon airport, then felt guilty because it was such a depressing book. Would it spoil someone’s holiday?
I reread Lolita because it was all that appealed to me among the yellowed collection on a rickety rack in a small grocery store on a Greek island. (I don’t remember which; we were sailing with friends and one little yachters’ port town looked a lot like the next.) I read Everyone Worth Knowing by Lauren Weisberger because a someone I met on a trip was done with it and passed it along. I preferred Weisberger’s first book, Devil Wears Prada, which I found in a hotel library. And I liked Hypocrite in a Pouffy White Dress by Susan Jane Gilman more than I expected after taking a shot on it when I found it, and little else that appealed, in an airport newsstand.
I have tried to picture how this sort of serendipity could translate to the digital age, but I can’t see it. Accidental books will fade away like so many things that are being eclipsed by new technology: happening upon interesting stories as you page through a newspaper, nostalgia for people in our past who now are eternally in our present via Facebook, the intimacy of handwritten letters.
Books are bulky. They’re heavy. They take up a lot of space. With a digital reader, you can carry hundreds of books everywhere you go. But you have to choose all those books, one at a time — no more surprises. And when you are done, your books become no more than useless bits and bytes. Unless, of course, you would like to leave your Kindle on an airplane seat for me to find.
Read more: Kindle, Lolita, Reading, Luggage, Airports, Wally Lamb, Readers, Facebook, Devil Wears Prada, Digital Age, Annie Proulx, Vacation, Books, Digital Books, Nostalgia, Flying, Ipad, Books News
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Posted in Tech News
The explosive growth in bottled water use by Americans, and indeed, much of the rest of the world, is due to many factors, including both unfounded and legitimate concerns about tap water, disappearing water fountains from our public spaces, misleading and false advertising, and a desire to emulate our famous (and infamous) public figures. We used to drink 1 gallon of bottled water a year, on average. Now it is nearly 30 gallons a year per person. These issues are all addressed in the book Bottled and Sold: The Story Behind Our Obsession with Bottled Water, along with the serious environmental and energy consequences of our bottled water use.
More and more, we are seeing celebrities drinking bottled water, carrying bottled water in public, or even hawking bottled water for a fee. It is hard to miss the huge advertising blitz with Jennifer Aniston for Smart Water, in a deal that is no doubt worth millions to her (I’ve heard one million, I’ve heard four million, I’ve heard stock options: does anyone actually know? A million dollars will drill more than 300 water wells in Africa).
Celebrities live in a different world, where they come to expect special treatment. Perhaps the weirdest expression of this is seen in the bottled water demands in contracts and riders that celebrities require when they perform, or speak, or otherwise appear in public. We’ve all heard about the recent demands of Sarah Palin for two bottles of “unopened still water” with “bendable straws” (on top of her demand for a specific kind of private jet on top of her $75,000 plus speaker fee). She’s not the only politician to be picky about bottled water. As Vice President, Dick Cheney insisted on 4-6 bottles of water in his room, along with two bottles of “Sparkling water (Calistoga or Perrier)” if his wife accompanied him. Of course, Cheney also required that “All televisions [in his hotel rooms] tuned to FOX News…” lest he accidently see other sources of news and information. Senator John Kerry wanted his bottled water “uncarbonated. Poland Spring preferred. No Evian.”
But there are lots more strange demands (thanks to the Smoking Gun for collecting and displaying a great collection of celebrity contracts and demands):
During his 2003 Poodle Hat Tour “Weird Al” Yankovic demanded bottled water in his dressing room but insisted that it NOT be Dasani water. In contrast, Kelly Clarkson insists that her water BE Dasani (though her band apparently wants Fiji Water).
AC/DC asked for both Evian and spring water (in addition to 3 oxygen tanks and 3 masks).
Mary J. Blige insists on Fiji water “absolutely, positively must be FIJI” at room temperature.
As part of the flight arrangements for Tiger Woods and his wife Elin Nordegren in 2004, the contract specified “Mr. Tiger Woods drinks liter bottles of Evian cold… Ms. Nordegren drinks Fiji room temperature…”
Christina Aguilera wants Arrowhead, along with L’Occitane vanilla-scented candles with matches, 4 black bath towels, and Veuve Clicquot champagne.
For a while, Madonna insisted on having bottles of special Kabbalah water at her photo shoots and appearances. She may still.
Other celebrity bottled water demands? Clay Aiken (“anything but Evian”); Brooks and Dunn (“spring water for the local crew; Evian or Napa…iced down for the artists”); Kris Allen (20 bottles of “SmartWater…No Dasani or Aquafina”); the Jonas Brothers (“6 bottles Vitaminwater (yellow, red, orange)”); Mariah Carey (mineral water so she and her dog can bath in it. Oh, and she also wants bendy straws); Britney Spear’s 2000 tour insisted on dozens of bottles of Evian, though in 2005 she went through a Kabbalah phase when Madonna switched from Evian to Kabbalah.
And there are even some efforts by a few celebrities to be, at least a little, environmentally sensitive: In 2008, Pearl Jam asked for bottled water, but “preferably ETHOS water, no Aquafina, Dasani, or Evian.” Ethos Water is sold by Starbucks and some of the profits are given to help fund drinking water projects in developing countries. Sheryl Crow, who tries hard to be green, insisting on recyclable, biodegradable, and organic stuff, asks for backstage “watering stations,” with water that “must be sourced from a local spring water vendor,” though she also asks for Perrier water, owned by Nestle.
We want to know what celebrities are doing, who they are dating, and even what water they are drinking. And we want to imitate them: do what they do, eat what they eat, drink what they drink. If we’re going to look up to them as role models at all, wouldn’t it be nice if they were good ones?
Peter Gleick
Pacific Institute
Read more: "Weird Al" Yankovic, Britney Spears, Fiji Water, Madonna, Kelly Clarkson, Bottled and Sold: The Story Behind Our Obsession With Bottled Water, Dick Cheney, Sheryl Crow, Evian, Pearl Jam, Jennifer Aniston, John Kerry, Mariah Carey, Sarah Palin, Tiger Woods, Elin Nordegren, Christina Aguilera, Aquafina, Dasani, Bottled Water, Green News
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Posted in Pop Culture