Showing posts with label Entertainment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Entertainment. Show all posts

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Does 'American Idol' have lady problems?

Does 'American Idol' have lady problems?

The elimination of front-runner Pia Toscano on "American Idol" has sent shockwaves through the audience.


(CNN) -- It would be so easy to blame the teenage girls.

Check out the studio audience of "American Idol," and you will see throngs of them waving signs and screaming for their favorite contestants. They are the ones who rushed the stage Wednesday night after contestant Scotty McCreery sang an Elvis Presley song to hug him and tug on his clothes.

But were the teen female fans, with their faster-than-lightning voting fingers, to blame for the shockingly early ouster of front-runner Pia Toscano on Thursday night?

Maybe.

"The overwhelming skewing of the males lasting much longer than the females over the past couple of seasons is definitely there, and not just with the teen girls, but the older women who get really wrapped up in the show, too," said Jim Cantiello, who covers 'Idol' for MTV.

"A lot of fans and 'Idol' bloggers have done their own independent research and have noted that once texting became a big thing on 'Idol,' a lot of the females were going earlier."

The landscape is certainly looking bleak this season for the female contestants.

Of the five contestants voted off so far this season, all have been women: Ashthon Jones, Karen Rodriguez, Naima Adedapo, Thia Megia and Toscano [Casey Abrams received the lowest number of votes during the Top 11, but the judges used their one-per-season save to keep him on the show].

That leaves only two females in the Top 8 and six males.

Richard Rushfield, author of "American Idol: The Untold Story," said the show absolutely has a strong female base of fans.

"Every piece of evidence says that the 'Idol' electorate is overwhelmingly female, and women don't seem to vote for women on 'American Idol," he said. "This season has been enormous, but it's been the case every year for about four years now that the 'Idol' voting has turned into this sort of popularity contest of your favorite cute boy."

Adedapo addressed that phenomena after she and Megia were cut last week during a double elimination resulting from the judges using their save the week before for contestant Abrams.

"When it comes down to it, the reality is that more than 50 percent of the audience is little teenage girls, and once they get a crush, we're done," Adedapo told The Hollywood Reporter.

It's hard to nail down how females factored into the voting because of the veil of secrecy that covers the competition.

Fox steadfastly refuses to release voting figures, though host Ryan Seacrest will often trumpet the total millions of votes received overall in a given week.

Brian Mansfield, who blogs about the show for USA Today, said Seacrest's silence this week on the totals led him to believe that the voting totals were down and when that occurs "weird things can happen."

Mansfield said he doesn't buy into the lack of women voting for Toscano as the reason for her shocking exit, which elicited boos from the audience and a social-networking explosion of disbelief. He said he believes it is more complex than simply a lack of girl power.

"As I think back to what my readers typically said about Pia, I saw a lot of respect for her, but I didn't necessarily see a lot love for her," Mansfield said. "I think everybody pretty much assumed that she would be in the Top 3, but most of them had another favorite."

Cantiello, Rushfield and Mansfield all pointed out the judges are also culpable in Toscano being sent home as they praised her stellar singing voice each week without hammering home her lack of stage presence until it was too late.

Mansfield said the lack of judge Simon Cowell -- who went to start "Idol" competitor "The X Factor" -- also left a void in terms of a strong opinion that fans could choose to even embrace or reject in their voting.

"The judges this year are taking a completely different approach in that they are trying to nurture everybody and give that constructive criticism that a lot of the hard-core viewers of the show have said that they wanted," Mansfield said.

"The problem is that the judges' real function historically is that they don't do a whole lot for the performers; they are there to be a guide to the voters, and that's not the new function that this new panel is taking."

Glenn Gamboa has been covering "Idol" for Newsday since the show began 10 seasons ago and said Toscano's strength -- an amazing set of pipes and poise -- may have also been her downfall.

"She kind of projected the air of 'I'm really good and I'm going to be fine,' " Gamboa said. "People were like, 'OK, then I am going to vote for someone else who I think is in trouble.' "

While the theories as to why abound, one thing is for sure: So much buzz over the shocker might be a good thing for the competition seeking to return to the astronomical ratings of yesteryear.

Writing for Forbes, Cover Awards editorial director Mark Pasetsky said, "While 'American Idol' appears to have lost one of its top contestants of the season, Pia Toscano, the reality show certainly won't lose out in the ratings department thanks to all of the attention her departure is receiving in the Twitterverse."

iReporter shocked by 'Idol' results

Even two former "Idol" contestants who were themselves victims of early elimination expressed disbelief.

"I can not believe they just eliminated Pia! ReAlly..????," Tweeted Jennifer Hudson whose seventh-place finish the third season still has fans crying foul. "Long as she walked away with that voice she will be alright !! Just hate to see talent like that go!"

Rocker Chris Daughtry finished fourth in season five despite being favored to win and Tweeted "What the crap!!?? I thought Pia was THE best singer on the show this year!"

MTV's Cantiello said Toscano's departure could go either way in the ratings with fans tuning in and voting to ensure their favorite stays or some deciding that since the "best singer" is gone there's no need.

Still, the show was a wonder this week in terms of buzz, Cantiello said.

" 'Idol' needed a big moment," he said. "I think the Casey Abrams save was a good kick-start, and this is just going to make it all the more interesting."

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Australian illustrator wins children's book award

Australian illustrator wins children's book award

Melbourne author and illustrator Shaun Tan has won a prestigious award for children's literature.

Tan also won an Oscar in February for best animated short film for The Lost Thing. 

Tan has been awarded Sweden's Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award, which is named after the Swedish creator of Pippi Longstocking.

The prize amounts to 5 million kroner ($765,000), making it the world's richest for the genre.

Tan also won an Oscar in February for best animated short film for The Lost Thing.

He says the latest award is an unexpected bonus.

"If you've been labouring over something for a long enough time, you're so focused on the creative side of things that all the practical concerns become somewhat secondary to that, they're just a supporting framework," he said.

"This is fantastic because it means that ultimately I'll have more time to do my own creative work by having that financial assistance."

Tan has illustrated more than 20 books, including The Rabbits (1998), The Red Tree (2001), The Arrival (2006) and Tales from Outer Suburbia (2008).

Astrid Lindgren award jury praised Tan as a "masterly visual storyteller, pointing the way ahead to new possibilities for picture books."

"His pictorial worlds constitute a separate universe where nothing is self-evident and anything is possible."

Australian author Sonya Hartnett won the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award in 2008.

Monday, March 28, 2011

Arcade Fire win quartet of Junos

Arcade Fire win quartet of Junos

Canadian rockers Arcade Fire have won four prizes at the Junos this weekend as Canada's leading music awards event celebrated its 40th anniversary.

Arcade Fire also enjoyed success at the Brits and the Grammys


The Montreal-based outfit were named group of the year and won album of the year for their third disc The Suburbs.

The band - who had been nominated in five categories - also won songwriter of the year and best alternative album.

"We're truly overwhelmed," said band member Richard Reed Parry at the gala, held in Toronto on Sunday night.

Arcade Fire won two Brit awards in January and were further feted in February at the Grammys, where The Suburbs was named album of the year.

Canadian teen sensation Justin Bieber received a brace of Junos, winning pop album of the year and a fan choice award.

"I want to thank everybody so much for believing in me," said the 17-year-old video message.

"Most of all, I want to thank my mom for raising me in Canada."

Young and Twain were among other award recipients at the Toronto event

Bieber's fortunes contrasted with those of Toronto native Drake, who had led the field this year with six nominations.

Despite hosting the event, however, the 24-year-old rapper went home empty-handed.

Elsewhere, veteran artist Neil Young was named artist of the year and received two additional prizes.

"It's just totally incomprehensible that I'm here," the 65-year-old told the audience. "But it's a great honour- I really appreciate it."

The evening also saw country star Shania Twain inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame.

"This is just a very beautiful moment for me," said the 45-year-old Ontarian. "I'm really so proud of Canada's talent."

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Jackman sets sights on Bollywood

Jackman sets sights on Bollywood

Hugh Jackman gyrated to a song-and-dance sequence with Indian megastar Shah Rukh Khan (Getty Images: Kevork Djansezian)

Hollywood heartthrob Hugh Jackman says he is keen to work in Bollywood - and gyrated to a song-and-dance sequence with Indian megastar Shah Rukh Khan to prove it.

The Australian-born actor danced with Khan in Mumbai at the close of Asia's largest entertainment convention, where they shared centre stage with Bollywood producer Karan Johar.

Jackman, star of the X-Men movies, said that while few Americans may have seen a Bollywood film, "they all know about your film industry".

"Indian cinema is growing every year. I hope to do a Bollywood movie some day," Jackman told a packed audience.

Jackman and Khan said that India's film industry had changed in recent years, with large foreign film studios such as Disney, Paramount, Fox and Warner distributing and producing films in India.

"Movies like Monsoon Wedding and Oscar-winner Slumdog Millionaire have enhanced India's image further," said Jackman, who is touring India with his wife Deborra-Lee Furness.

News Corp top executive James Murdoch, who also attended the conference on Wednesday, called India's media industry a "sleeping tiger" as a report forecast the sector would double its revenues to nearly $30 billion by 2015.

The report by consultancy firm KPMG said India's media and entertainment industry grew 11 per cent in 2010 to post revenues of 652 billion rupees ($14.5 billion).

India's media industry has bounced back from the global financial downturn but experts say foreign investment in radio, direct-to-home and print media companies is relatively low, compared with developed countries.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Wyclef Jean grazed by bullet in Haiti

Wyclef Jean grazed by bullet in Haiti

Wyclef Jean is treated at a hospital in Port-au-Prince on Sunday. The photo was taken by Jean's former Fugees bandmate Pras Michel, who is also Haitian and in the country for the presidential run-off election.

American hip-hop performer Wyclef Jean had a close encounter with gunfire in the Haitian capital this weekend, escaping with a bullet graze on a hand.

The Haitian-American singer told The Associated Press he stepped out of his car in the Delmas section of Port-au-Prince late Saturday night to make a phone call when he heard gunshots. He said he then noticed blood on his shirt and sneakers.

"I heard 'blow, blow, blow,' and I just looked at my [right] hand," said Jean, who was with a driver and Haitian hip-hop singer FanFan at the time.

The 41-year-old performer said he was treated by a doctor and is taking antibiotics. He added he didn't know who had fired or whether the shots had been aimed at him.

Jean didn't talk to police about the incident, Haitian police Chief Mario Andresol said later Sunday.

Jean is in the country for the presidential runoff vote. The musician has been in Haiti for the past few weeks campaigning for Michel (Sweet Micky) Martelly.

"Wyclef's commitment to his native country and to his people is unparalleled. He is therefore undeterred by this incident," his spokeswoman, Cindy Tanenbaum, told E! online on Sunday.

The former Fugees rapper and music producer had planned to run for the presidency himself but was left off the electoral council's list of eligible candidates last August

He did not meet the residency requirement of having lived in Haiti for five years. Jean runs his own non-profit foundation, YĆ©le Haiti, as well.

Haitians are casting ballots in the second round of the presidential election as well as selecting seven senators and 77 members of the Chamber of Deputies.

Two presidential candidates are in the running: Martelly, 50, a musician who has never held public office, and Mirlande Manigat, 70, a university administrator and former first lady.

Final results are expected in April.

Friday, March 4, 2011

"For Colored Girls", Perry win big at Image Awards

"For Colored Girls", Perry win big at Image Awards


Writer, director, producer and actor Tyler Perry arrives at premiere of "I Can Do …

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Director and writer Tyler Perry was the big winner at the NAACP's Image Awards on Friday, winning top awards for his movie "For Colored Girls" and best TV comedy series trophy for "Tyler Perry's House of Payne."

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is the oldest U.S. civil rights organization and has given out Image awards for 42 years to honor people of color in film, television, music and literature.

Perry, 41, one of the most prolific African-Americans in the U.S. entertainment industry, was the man behind wins for comedy actor David Mann in the TV show "Tyler Perry's Meet the Browns," and Kimberly Elise for her supporting role in "For Colored Girls."

"For Colored Girls" brought a best movie and best director statue for Perry, who is also a producer, actor and playwright. The movie, based on the play by Ntozake Shange "For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When The Rainbow is Enuf" is based on poems about the lives of women.

"I wanted to take this iconic work and introduce it to people who had never heard of it. ... There is nothing like having nine strong black women holding you up," Perry said, referring to a cast that included Whoopi Goldberg and Janet Jackson.

Oscar-winner Halle Berry added another trophy to her collection, this time for her best actress performance as a woman with a multiple personalities in "Frankie & Alice."

"If it were not for the NAACP, a little girl like me would not have had wind beneath her wings in a small town in Ohio," she said. "I have never been more proud to be a black woman."

Denzel Washington won the best actor Image Award for the action movie "The Book of Eli."

Willow Smith, the 10 year-old daughter of actors Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith, won the best new music artist award, beating out popular rivals Bruno Mars and rapper Nicki Minaj.

Smith's first single, "Whip My Hair," reached No. 11 on the Billboard Hot 100 charts in late 2010.

Former Secretary of State Colin Powell received the NAACP President's Award for special achievement in public service, earning a standing ovation.

Powell, the first African-American chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, paid tribute to the work of the NAACP in advancing civil rights since its foundation in 1909, but said there was more to be done.

"We still have youngsters who are in desperate straits, who need education, who need health care. ... (They) have to be given a sense of expectation," he said.

"Even though we have come so far, we will need the NAACP for another 100 years, or until the work is done."

The TV category saw honors for medical drama "Grey's Anatomy," while Vanessa Williams won the best actress Image Award for "Desperate Housewives" and "Modern Family" star Sofia Vergara took home the best supporting comedy actress award.

Promises Kept, Promises Broken: Inside Hollywood's Preeminent Rehab Center

Promises Kept, Promises Broken: Inside Hollywood's Preeminent Rehab Center


Rehab: for anyone familiar with the celebrity news cycle of the past ten years or so, it brings to mind images of bucolic California landscapes, Dr. Drew Pinsky's solemn stare, Lindsay Lohan on horseback, and, especially lately, Charlie Sheen.

Sheen and rehab go back more than two decades. Since his first stint in 1990, the 45-year-old actor has been in and out of treatment centers four times. Now, watching him tear through interview after interview, spewing nonsensical lines and leering at the world like it's the one with the problem, it's hard not to wonder: "What is this guy on?"

For those versed in addiction, the more pertinent question is what he's not on: a course of treatment that could right him and his family.

Sheen shunned traditional rehab after "bangin' seven-gram rocks" during a January bender and landing in the hospital. While he said he cured his substance abuse issues "with my mind" at the Mulholland Estates mansion he calls Sober Valley Lodge, addiction specialists at Promises' Malibu, Calif. facility, where Sheen completed a round of rehab in 1998 after overdosing on cocaine, question the actor's ability to tame temptation on his own.

"If the addict doesn't stop the behavior, there's no way to get through to them," said David Sack, a clinical psychiatrist who is CEO of Promises Treatment Centers. "If someone is downing five shots of vodka before they go into a psychotherapy session, that session is meaningless. If they're doing lines of coke or picking up hookers and then going into a therapy session, there's a question of how much value that therapy can have. So, to me, the idea that someone with multiple levels of problems would be treated at home seems like a long shot."

ABCNews.com recently toured the grounds of Promises' centers in Malibu and Los Angeles to get a sense of how celebrities like Sheen -- and Lohan, Britney Spears, Robert Downey Jr., Matthew Perry, Ben Affleck, and Christian Slater, all Promises alumni -- undergo rehab. Scratch out any visions of heated-floor bungalows and unlimited sea-salt scrubs: with dorm-like rooms, shared bathrooms, and 6:45 a.m. wake-up calls, Promises resembles a boot-camp more than a spa retreat.


Hard work happens here. While Malibu's ambiance makes the place more posh than the homely-by-comparison L.A. branch, both share similar daily schedules of exercise, multiple therapy sessions, Alcoholics Anonymous counseling, and meditation. The first days of detox are grueling. Clients cannot leave the grounds of either facility without supervision. They eat their meals en masse, comfort-food staples like pot roast and gumbo. Use of cell phones and the Internet is restricted at best.

The main difference between Promises Malibu and Promises L.A.:

"The clients tend to be older there," said Jason Levine, executive director of the L.A. center. "They tend to be masters of the universe or well-known people or people who have money -- here, you tend to get the children of those people or the middle-class types."


The main house of Promises' Malibu facility. 

 Neither program is exactly cheap, though. Promises L.A. charges $34,500 for its 90-day program -- 30 days on the L.A. campus and 60 days in outpatient treatment or sober living, where fees can be up to $1,000 per month. The cost for Malibu's traditional 31-day-program ("31 because we want our clients to leave here with 30 days of sobriety," Sack said) starts at $55,000 and goes up to $90,000 depending on special accommodations a client might request, like bringing a dog, wanting a single room as opposed to a double, or extending their time on site.

According to Sack, cultivating a comfortable environment -- Malibu's campus boasts hot tubs, sun decks and heated pools -- is crucial to attracting and treating clients of means.

"If you have people with needs who are highly successful, they're going to want to go to a place that's like what they know," said Sack. "When you tell people, 'We're going to put you in this institutional type of treatment,' you basically give them reasons not to come."

There is one accommodation Promises refuses to offer celebrities: the rehab pictorial. Lohan famously invited OK! magazine photographers to snap her riding horseback, doing yoga poses and reading from an AA tome when she checked in to Utah's Cirque Lodge treatment center in 2007.

"We never allow media to photograph any of our clients while they're in active treatment," Sack said. "We view that people are here to be treated and any interaction with media during the treatment phase is disruptive."

To that end, to ward off paparazzi and curious passersby, both Promises facilities boast no signage indicating who or where they are. L.A.'s two buildings are offset from a residential road. Malibu's campus is near the top of a precarious uphill climb. These aren't places that invite attention.

Danny Bonaduce, a Promises alum and current detractor, said of the Malibu facility, "I remember thinking that if this place had a bar, it would be fantastic." 

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Bieber's lock of hair sells on Ebay for $40k

Bieber's lock of hair sells on Ebay for $40k



Justin Bieber should grow his hair out for another round of trimming - surely there's another charity that could use the kind of cash a lock of his hair goes for.

Ellen DeGeneres tweeted that all she wanted for her birthday was world peace and a lock of Bieber's hair, and the now 17-year-old star came through, swinging by DeGeneres' daytime talk show in February to deliver the belated gift.

The duo teamed up to turn the present into a fundraiser for The Gentle Barn, a nonprofit organization that rescues abused farm animals. DeGeneres auctioned the lock of hair on Ebay beginning February 23, and the final bid came in today at $40,668.

The bidder will receive the lock of Bieber's hair enclosed in a Plexiglas box signed by the Bieb himself, as well as a letter of authenticity signed by DeGeneres. According to one of DeGeneres' tweets, the winner will also get to come on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" when Bieber's a guest.

Of course, 100 percent of the proceeds are going to The Gentle Barn.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Furtado donates $1M from Gadhafi gig

A message on Nelly Furtado's Twitter account referenced the Victoria-born singer performing a 45-minute show for the Gadhafi clan in Italy in 2007. (Twitter)


Furtado donates $1M from Gadhafi gig

Nelly Furtado is the latest recording artist to come under scrutiny for having performed for members of the Gadhafi family.

A post on the Canadian pop star's Twitter account notes she gave a private show for the family of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi four years ago.

"In 2007, I was paid $1 million by the [Gadhafi] clan to play a 45-minute show for guests at a hotel in Italy," reads the tweet, posted early Monday morning.

"I am going to donate this [money]."

A representative of Universal Music, Furtado's label, confirmed Monday afternoon that the Victoria-born singer wrote the short, online missive.

As the Arab world's recent wave of anti-government uprisings swept into Libya, Gadhafi ordered security forces to crack down on protesters, in an attempt to retain power.

Canada, the U.S., the U.K., the European Union and the UN Security Council have slapped sanctions on the country, once considered an ally of the West.



In the face of Gadhafi's actions, some have questioned performers from the West who have given private shows for the dictator's family in recent years.

News emerged in January 2010 that BeyoncƩ had performed at a lavish New Year's party hosted by one of Gadhafi's sons on the Caribbean island of St. Barts.

Meanwhile, recent leaked diplomatic cables obtained by WikiLeaks note that a year earlier, Mariah Carey received $1 million US to sing four songs at the 2009 edition of the holiday party.

It's not unusual for musicians to take corporate and private gigs. Inevitably, some come under fire for performing for controversial hosts.

"Private events like this happen all the time. I think most [artists] aren't really used to ever thinking about the source of the money.... In most cases, there isn't anything quite so obvious to be thought about," David T. Viecelli, agent for Arcade Fire and other acts, told CBC News on Monday.

"A lot was known about Gadhafi and his politics, so I think maybe somewhere in the chain of their decision-making process, there should have been some consideration for what it meant to take money from people like that, to sort of tacitly endorse what Moammar Gadhafi and his family are known for."
Richie gig kept under wraps

Lionel Richie, who has a large following in the Arab world, performed for Gadhafi himself in 2006. The singer visited Libya on the 20th anniversary of U.S. air strikes against the country, made in retaliation for the 1986 Berlin nightclub bombing.

Richie received $5 million US for performing at a purported peace concert and at a Gadhafi family wedding, according to journalist Rich Poplak, author of The Sheik's Batmobile: In Pursuit of American Pop Culture in the Muslim World.

"It was very, very hard to chase down the story," Poplak told CBC News. "Lionel Richie made very small mention of it in a GQ article.

"I actually went to Libya to chase down what I could about the concert. Nobody would speak about it.… I eventually did get some off-the-record information."

With the recent bloody crackdown against Libyan citizens, people are now calling on artists to pay more attention to ethical considerations and the track record of those they're performing for.

"Personally, I think it's disgusting," Poplak said. "There's this huge moral disconnect for these stars, who often have these foundations sponsoring youth in trouble or cancer and all that, but they're accepting large amounts of money from very, very dodgy men.

"It's very different taking money from a corporation than from a dictator like Gadhafi. There's no surprise about who this guy was."
Donating fee

Furtado's decision to make a charitable donation for the same amount that she was paid for the performance, however, has the support of both Poplak (who called it a "lovely gesture") and Viecelli.

"That's the right thing to be doing now," Viecelli said.

"She should think carefully about who she donates that money to, so that it has some real relevance to the issue at hand ... and I hope that everybody else who has, you know, earned money in a similar way is right now making their plans to do the same thing."

Sunday, February 27, 2011

The Razzies name 'The Last Airbender' the worst movie of 2010

Actor Noah Ringer attends the premiere of "The Last Airbender" at Alice Tully Hall on June 30, 2010 in New York City

The Razzies name 'The Last Airbender' the worst movie of 2010

Los Angeles (CNN) -- The night before Hollywood gathers to honor its best Sunday, Razzie voters sifted through what they dubbed the cinematic rubble and (dis)honored "The Last Airbender" as the worst movie of 2010.

The M. Night Shyamalan action-flick, which was panned by critics upon its release last year, won (or should that be 'lost'?) for Worst Director, Worst Picture, Worst Screenplay, Worst Supporting Actor and a new category -- Worst Eye-gouging Misuse of 3-D.

The other movie that took home multiple gold spray-painted statuettes Saturday night was "Sex and the City 2" for Worst Screen Ensemble and Worst Actress -- presented jointly to the four leading ladies: Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall, Cynthia Nixon and Kristen Davis.

The Razzies -- or the Golden Raspberry Awards -- are decided by 637 voters in the United States and 17 countries, according to its website. It began in 1980 as "a logical antidote to Tinsel Town's annual glut of self-congratulatory awards," it says.

Actors and actresses who are nominated rarely attend the ceremony, though Sandra Bullock attended last year to pick up her award for her performance in the box office bomb "All About Steve." The next night, she took home the Best Actress honor at the Academy Awards for her role in "The Blind Side."

Held this year at Hollywood's Barnsdall Gallery Theatre, here is a list of the 2010 "winners":

Worst Picture: "The Last Airbender"

Worst Actor: Ashton Kutcher for both "Killers" and "Valentine's Day."

Worst Actress: Sarah Jessica Parker, Kim Cattrall, Cynthia Nixon and Kristen Davis for "Sex and the City 2"

Worst Supporting Actor: Jackson Rathbone for "The Last Airbender" and "Twilight Saga: Eclipse" (the other most-nominated title of the year)

Worst Supporting Actress: Jessica Alba for "The Killer Inside Me," "Little Fockers," "Machete" and "Valentine's Day"

Worst Eye-gouging Misuse of 3-D: "The Last Airbender"

Worst Screen Couple or Ensemble: The cast of "Sex and the City 2"

Worst Director: M. Night Shyamalan

Worst Screenplay: "The Last Airbender"

Worst Prequel, Remake, Rip-Off or Sequel: "Sex and the City 2"

Singer Shakira: Latinos in US will have 'justice'



Singer Shakira: Latinos in US will have 'justice'

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Colombian singer Shakira was honored Saturday by Harvard University for her artistic and humanitarian work. She later said some U.S. states' proposed anti-immigrant legislation goes against her foundation's efforts to provide education to poor people around the world.

The Grammy Award-winning singer, however, said Latino immigrants in the U.S. facing various anti-immigrant bills will have "justice" as public awareness about their plight grows.

"Justice will come. I'm sure," Shakira told The Associated Press after the award ceremony. "Wherever there is ... a kid, who could be the son or the daughter of a Latino immigrant, who cannot attend a school in the United States of America, that kid should be a concern to all of us and our responsibility."

Shakira made the comments in an interview when asked about proposed measures in Arizona and elsewhere targeting illegal immigrants. A bill in Arizona, for example, would bar illegal immigrants from attending public schools, living in public housing or driving. Another bill seeks to deny citizenship to children born in the U.S. if their parents are illegal immigrants.

"I believe we should never think less of the Latino community because it's a productive force in this country," Shakira told the AP.

The singer, born Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll, was awarded the "2011 Artist of the Year" from the Harvard Foundation, the university's center for intercultural arts and science initiatives.

Foundation director S. Allen Counter said Shakira, who has sold more than 50 million albums worldwide, was honored for her "distinguished history of creativity," as well as for her charitable contributions.

Previous winners of the Harvard award include Sharon Stone, Will Smith, Jackie Chan and Herbie Hancock.

Shakira said she was humbled by the award and the student performances at the ceremony. "As I entered the premises today, I had to call my mom and say, 'Hey mom. Guess what? I got into Harvard'," said Shakira, who took a history class in 2008 at UCLA.

After accepting the award, she challenged Harvard students to do more to improve education in developing countries. "Not everyone can study at Harvard University," she said. "But everyone, wherever they live, whatever their background, deserves a chance to make the most of his or her potential" through education.

She said that applied to poor children in Bangladesh or immigrants in the United States. "And as a child of the developing world, it is my duty to use this voice in every way I can to promote the message about the power of education to change lives," she said.

Shakira founded the Barefoot Foundation at the age of 18 to provide education and nutrition to children in impoverished areas of Colombia. She also is a Unicef Goodwill Ambassador.

Howard Buffett, 56, son of billionaire investor Warren Buffett and board member of the Barefoot Foundation, said he and Shakira have plans to work on educational projects in parts of the world ravaged by war and natural disasters.

"I think she brings credibility, particularly because of her background," Buffett said. "She's pretty focused on education."

Black Swan wins best picture at Spirit Awards

Natalie Portman accepts the best actress award for Black Swan at the Spirit Awards on Saturday in Santa Monica, Calif. (Chris Pizzello/Associated Press)

Black Swan wins best picture at Spirit Awards

The ballet thriller Black Swan has won best picture at the Spirit Awards honouring independent film, along with awards for best actress for Natalie Portman and director for Darren Aronofsky.

James Franco was picked as best actor for the survival story 127 hours, while the Ozarks crime story Winter's Bone earned both supporting-acting prizes, for John Hawkes and Dale Dickey.

All three films are up for best picture at Sunday's Academy Awards, where Portman is considered the favourite to win the best-actress Oscar and Franco is a co-host.

With plenty of overlap among nominees at the Oscars, the Spirit Awards are a warmup for Hollywood's biggest party.

The British monarch saga The King's Speech, the best-picture front-runner at the Oscars, won the prize for best foreign film at the Spirit Awards, handed out Saturday in Santa Monica, Calif.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Charlie Sheen: I'm returning to work despite shutdown

Chuck Lorre, left, and Charlie Sheen attend the ceremony honoring Lorre with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame March 12, 2009. (Credit: Getty)

Charlie Sheen: I'm returning to work despite shutdown

Chuck Lorre, left, and Charlie Sheen attend the ceremony honoring Lorre with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame March 12, 2009. (Credit: Getty)

(CBS) In the continuing saga that is Charlie Sheen, the actor tells "Good Morning America" that he'll show up for work even though CBS pulled the plug on production for "Two and Half Men" for the rest of the season.


In recent interviews, Sheen has claimed that he's completely clean after entering rehab in his home.


Sheen communicated with "GMA" Friday via text message, in which he called show co-creator Chuck Lorre a "loser" and a "clown."


"Two and a Half Men" has been on hiatus since Sheen ended up in the hospital in January. After a rant-filled interview with Alex Jones on Thursday, CBS and Warner Bros. Television halted production of the series for the rest of the season.


Sheen hasn't said specifically why Lorre has been at the receiving end of the actor's vitriol in the past couple days, but there's speculation that it has something to do with a vanity card that aired at the end of the Feb. 14 episode of "Two and a Half Men."


Lorre uses the space to air his opinion on a multitude of topics. The card after that episode reads, "I exercise regularly. I eat moderate amounts of healthy food. I make sure to get plenty of rest. I see my doctor once a year and my dentist twice a year. I floss every night. I've had chest x-rays, cardio stress tests, EKG's and colonoscopies. I see a psychologist and have a variety of hobbies to reduce stress. I don't drink. I don't smoke. I don't do drugs. I don't have crazy, reckless sex with strangers.


"If Charlie Sheen outlives me, I'm gonna be really pissed."


Lorre has since stopped writing personal messages on the vanity cards and replaced his notes with pictures of his body parts, including his elbow and a knuckle.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Sir Anthony Hopkins to showcase talent as a composer

Sir Anthony Hopkins will present several of his original scores plus a brand new piece in concert at St David's Hall

Sir Anthony Hopkins to showcase talent as a composer

Oscar-winning actor Sir Anthony Hopkins will showcase his lesser known talent as a composer at an exclusive concert in Cardiff this summer.

Hopkins, 73, from Port Talbot, will present several of his original scores, including music from his own movies August and Slipstream, plus a brand new piece in concert at St David's Hall.

He will also appear onstage talking about his music and creative process with concert producer Tommy Pearson.

The Cardiff date is part of a UK tour.

At the concert, Sir Anthony will present a plus a brand new piece written for the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra (CBSO).

The orchestra, conducted by Michael Seal, will also play music from some of the actor's best-known movies, including Shadowlands, Remains Of The Day and Silence Of The Lambs.

'Absolutely thrilling'

Sir Anthony said: "I am immensely happy to be working with the CBSO to bring my compositions to the UK for the first time.

"There are themes and passages in these pieces that have been several decades in the making and to bring them all vividly to life with one of the great symphony orchestras of the world is absolutely thrilling."

Concert producer Tommy Pearson said it was "an honour" to work with the star.

"We all know his work in movies of course but Tony is also a fine composer and I know his music means a lot to him personally.

"We're all looking forward to discovering a new dimension to a world-famous legend."

Tickets go on sale on Friday for the 24 July concert St David's Hall concert.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Carrie Underwood - Carrie Underwood Remains Banned From Ottawa Radio Station

Carrie Underwood - Country singer Carrie Underwood may be loved in Nashville but not so much in Ottawa, Canada.


Carrie Underwood - Carrie Underwood Remains Banned From Ottawa Radio Station

Carrie Underwood - Country singer Carrie Underwood may be loved in Nashville but not so much in Ottawa, Canada.

The country singer who's married to former Canadian hockey player Mike Fisher is not receiving much love from her husband's home town. Fisher was recently traded to the Nashville Predators from the Ottawa Senators, so naturally Ottawa radio station Kiss 105.3 is banning all Carrie Underwood songs - the station has yet to retract it's extreme decision!

The radio station called it a "betrayal to our community," adding he was “lured away from Ottawa by a country-music superstar."

"I heard about it right away and Carrie heard about it and she was extremely disappointed and frustrated," Mike Fisher told the Vancouver Sun. "I think they meant it as a joke that really wasn't funny."

He added, "Yeah, they're not a country music station and I don't know if it was for attention or not, but obviously Carrie had nothing to do with the move or the trade or anything, so to imply something like that was just wrong.”

Perhaps singer and actress Hilary Duff would like a trade; the actress recently revealed she was envious of Underwood's husband trade and wishes her NHL husband would receive a trade closer to home as well.

Is it really just coincidental that Mike Fisher was traded to the hometown of his wife Carrie Underwood?

Jennifer Aniston - Jennifer Aniston Debuts New Short Cut




Jennifer Aniston - Jennifer Aniston Debuts New Short Cut

Jennifer Aniston - Has actress Jennifer Aniston finally moved away the beloved "Rachel"? It is worthy to note that Aniston was recently quoted saying, "I think it was the ugliest haircut I've ever seen! Jennifer who debut a new shorter hairstyle while in Madrid promoting her new film "Just Go With It" is years away from her Rachel character in "Friends" but the actress still makes news with her hairstyles.

People reports,

Jennifer Aniston has bid goodbye to the long layers that have been her signature look for years and chopped her hair into a shoulder-length bob. The actress stepped out at a Madrid photocall for her new movie "Just Go With It" rocking a sexy, tousled take on the cut. This newest cut, however, marks a hairstyle milestone as she brings the length above her collarbone.

Jennifer Aniston wasn't the only one to surprise fans with a new look, Justin Bieber also chopped his locks down. What do you think of Jennifer Aniston's bob style?

Ben Elton's Australian comedy series axed

In the 1980s Elton became a leading figure in British comedy


Ben Elton's Australian comedy series axed

British comic Ben Elton's new show in Australia has been axed after three episodes, it has been announced.

Live from Planet Earth, a combination of stand-up and sketch broadcast entirely live, was originally commissioned for six episodes.

"We are all very proud of the show but unfortunately it has not found the audience we had hoped for," a spokesman for the Nine Network said.

Elton's spokesperson was not immediately available for comment.

''Comedy is always risky, and live comedy is the riskiest of all,'' Nine's director of television Michael Healy told The Sydney Herald newspaper.

The show's debut episode attracted an average audience of 455,000 viewers and ratings have continued to drop, the newspaper reported.

In the 1980s, stand up comedian Elton became a leading figure in British comedy after creating successful shows such as The Young Ones and Blackadder.

He went on to write several books and more recently wrote the West End musicals We Will Rock You and Love Never Dies.

Catherine Zeta Jones receives CBE from Prince Charles




Catherine Zeta Jones receives CBE from Prince Charles

Welsh actress Catherine Zeta Jones has been made a CBE by Prince Charles at Buckingham Palace.

The 41-year-old Oscar-winner was recognised for services to the film industry and to charity in last year's Queen's Birthday Honours.

Zeta Jones was accompanied by her husband, US actor Michael Douglas, and their children Dylan and Carys.

The former Darling Buds of May star has appeared in such films as Chicago, Traffic and The Mask of Zorro.

When the announcement of the award was made last summer, the actress said she was "absolutely thrilled".

"As a British subject I feel incredibly proud," she continued. "At the same time it is overwhelming and humbling."

Her husband Douglas, who was diagnosed with throat cancer last year, announced in January that his tumour is gone and he is beating the disease.

Veteran actor Burt Kwouk, best known for his Kato role in the Pink Panther films, received an OBE at Thursday's investiture ceremony.

The 80-year-old actor appeared in three James Bond films and was most recently seen in BBC sitcom Last of the Summer Wine.

Sir Paul McCartney to write ballet score

Sir Paul McCartney said he has found writing the music "challenging"


Sir Paul McCartney to write ballet score

Musician Sir Paul McCartney is to write his first original orchestral score for a ballet performance.

The former Beatle is collaborating with the New York City Ballet company (NYCB) on Ocean's Kingdom.

"I am always interested in new directions that I haven't worked in before, so I became very excited about the idea," Sir Paul said.

The production's world premiere will take place on 22 September. More performances will be announced later.

In an interview with The New York Times, the 68-year-old said the show was a love story based in two fantastic worlds - the "pure" ocean kingdom, and the earth kingdom with its "sort of baddies".

He explained that when earth meets water, love happens, and "you'll have to see whether the couple make it".

He added: "The sheer athleticism is the most astounding thing. It's like a meeting of the Olympic games and art, and I find that fascinating and challenging for me, to see what can be done."

Sir Paul was asked to consider the collaboration after meeting NYCB's ballet master-in-chief Peter Martins at the School of American Ballet's Winter Gala last year.

"Like the rest of my generation, I grew up being a huge fan of The Beatles so I was thrilled to meet him," said Martins.

"After I got to know him a bit, and knowing of his great love of composing classical music, I asked if he might be interested in doing something for New York City Ballet, and I am ecstatic that he has agreed to write a score for us."

The 50-minute production will consist of more than 40 dancers.

In 1991, Sir Paul wrote the Liverpool Oratorio with Carl Davis for the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra's 150th anniversary.

Since then he has released Standing Stone, Working Classical and 2006's Ecce Cor Meum (Behold My Heart).

Dolly Parton poses in combat boots as part of campaign to support troops



Dolly Parton poses in combat boots as part of campaign to support troops

Country icon Dolly Parton is trading in her sequin gowns and high heels to pose in a pair of sequin cargo pants and combat boots to support America’s troops with grassroots organization The Boot Campaign.

“So many people, regular folks and celebrities, send out love and sincere thanks to you for keeping us safe and fighting for our freedom. Let me add to that loving list. Thank you from the bottom of my country heart. I will always love you,” Parton said in a statement on the organization’s site.

The Boot Girls want Americans to put the boots on to “symbolically walk in the shoes of our military men and women to remember their service and sacrifice.”


 The Boot Campaign is an initiative started by the “Boot Girls,” five women from Texas who decided to start the organization after being inspired by retired Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell.

In 2009, the group asked celebrities at a benefit concert to pose in combat boots for an online photo gallery used to rally support for troops. Since then, countless celebs, athletes and politicians have posed in the photos, including names like Texas Governor Ricky Perry, Troy Aikman, Nolan Ryan, George Jones and Gretchen Wilson.

Proceeds from the campaign’s boots go toward veteran charities.