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Friday, October 21, 2011

Steven Seagal to go from Hollywood to border law enforcement (Reuters)

SAN ANTONIO (Reuters) – It's been said that what the world knows about the United States is what people see in Hollywood movies, and those perceptions could soon become reality in Texas.

Those who try to slip across the Rio Grande from Mexico into west Texas may find themselves arrested by newly sworn-in Hudspeth County Sheriff's Deputy and action film star Steven Seagal.

Seagal, currently starring in an A&E Network reality show detailing his experiences as a reserve deputy in New Orleans, contacted County Sheriff Arvin West about his interest in "patrolling the border", West said.

He was sworn in this week for the position in Hudspeth County, which runs along the Rio Grande east of El Paso, West added. Seagal, 59, could not be reached for comment.

"Mr. Seagal is not in this for the celebrity or publicity," West told Reuters. "He has a sincere passion for his country and he wants to do more to help. I think he will make a significant contribution to this office and to our community."

Seagal starred in big-budget films in the 1980s and early 1990s, earning a reputation as an action star in movies like "Above the Law" and "Under Siege."

In the last decade, he has appeared mainly in direct-to-DVD, low-budget films while working in law enforcement. His last role was as a corrupt Mexican drug lord in the Robert Rodriguez grindhouse flick "Machete."

After Seagal expressed interest in joining the Hudspeth County department, two members of the department traveled to Los Angeles to talk to the actor about his proposal and to make sure he was serious, said Rusty Fleming, a spokesman for the sheriff and one of the two who made the trip.

"We were very quick to find out that he was not doing this for publicity," Fleming said. "He wants to come down to the border and work and try to do his part."

Hudspeth County, population 3,400, is on the front lines of border issues ranging from illegal immigration to drug gangs. West once made headlines when he urged people who live in the county to buy a gun and "learn how to use it."

It was also in Hudspeth County that singer Willie Nelson was arrested on marijuana charges last fall. Two reality TV shows focusing on the border are being filmed in the county, Fleming said.

"He understands this issue that we have down here on the border," Fleming said of Seagal. "His help with his training and what he can help show our deputies and what he can show us here, I think he'll make a tremendous contribution."

West said he expected Seagal to report for duty in January and that the exact nature of his duties were still being worked out.

(Editing by Corrie MacLaggan and Cynthia Johnston)


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Thursday, October 20, 2011

Charlie Sheen: highest paid actor on TV, says Forbes (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – It was one of the most volatile periods of his career and personal life, but Charlie Sheen still cashed $40 million worth of checks from May 2010 to May 2011, making him the highest paid actor on TV during that time, reports Forbes.com.

Despite being fired from his "Two and a Half Men" job last March, he still earned $40 million from his work on the CBS sitcom.

As Forbes notes, Sheen's future earnings are up in the air. He won a $25 million settlement after filing a lawsuit against Warner Bros. and "Men" creator Chuck Lorre, and he'll continue to receive profits from "Two and a Half Men" syndication airings. But his upcoming project, a sitcom adaptation of the Adam Sandler/Jack Nicholson movie "Anger Management," has yet to find a network home.

The Forbes figures were compiled via discussions with producers, agents and attorneys, as well as other Hollywood insiders. The final figures include TV series salaries, as well as money earned via syndicates shows, movies and endorsements. They do not reflect taxes or agent and manager fees.

Five of Forbes' top 10 TV earners are no longer regularly employed on TV.

Ray Romano is number two on the list, earning $20 million for the time period, but his TNT dramedy, "Men of a Certain Age," was canceled after its second season. Romano continues to earn money from "Everybody Loves Raymond" in syndication.

Third on the list: Former "The Office" star Steve Carell, with $15 million. He was followed by "NCIS" star Mark Harmon, who earned $13 million.

"Two and a Half Men" co-star Jon Cryer and former "CSI" star Laurence Fishburne tied for fifth place on the list with $11 million each, followed by "Grey's Anatomy" star Patrick Dempsey, who earned $10 million; "The Mentalist" star Simon Baker with $9 million; and "House" star Hugh Laurie and former "Law & Order: SVU" star Chris Meloni, who tied with $9 million each.

In case you're wondering how the salary of Sheen's replacement, Ashton Kutcher, stacks up against Sheen's: In its annual "Who Earns What" issue in August, TV Guide reported Kutcher will earn $16.8 million for his first season on "Two and a Half Men."

That means he'll make at least $500,000 less -- per episode -- than Sheen.


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Prosecutors wrapping up Michael Jackson death case (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Prosecutors were close to wrapping up their case in the manslaughter trial of Michael Jackson's doctor after a top state witness on Thursday slammed the physician's treatment of the late pop star.

Prosecutors, who called their last witness on Thursday, claim that Dr. Conrad Murray was negligent in caring for Jackson and is responsible for his death, which medical examiners said resulted from an overdose of the powerful anesthetic propofol and sedatives.

Murray has admitted giving Jackson propofol on June 25, 2009, the day the singer died, but maintains he is innocent, and his attorneys have said Jackson gave himself an extra, fatal dose of the drug he called his "milk" due to insomnia.

Prosecution witness Dr. Nader Kamangar, a sleep medicine expert, said Murray was reckless to give Jackson infusions of propofol and sedatives to get the singer to sleep after a strenuous rehearsal for a series of concerts in London.

"Mr. Jackson was receiving very inappropriate therapy in the home setting, receiving very potent sedatives including propofol, midazolam and lorazepam without appropriate monitoring by Dr. Murray, and ultimately this cocktail was a recipe for disaster in a patient that had underlying dehydration," Kamangar said in Los Angeles Superior Court.

Several doctors have criticized Murray's decision to give Jackson propofol, which can stop a patient from breathing, at home where there was not enough medical staff or life-saving equipment on hand.

But under cross examination, Kamangar, who was among a number of witnesses to slam Murray's treatment of Jackson, said a reliance on the painkiller Demerol could have led to insomnia, which Murray was trying to treat.

Kamangar also said his review of Jackson's records showed the singer received Demerol from Beverly Hills dermatologist Dr. Arnold Klein. The defense wants to show Jackson was dependent on drugs to help him sleep and Murray was simply dealing with problems caused by other doctors.

In opening arguments three weeks ago, lead defense attorney Ed Chernoff told jurors that in the months before his death, Jackson visited Klein's office as many as two to three times a week. "Dr Arnold Klein addicted Michael Jackson to Demerol," Chernoff said at the time.

Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor has denied a defense request to call Klein as a witness, ruling his testimony would be insufficiently relevant. Klein could not be reached for comment on Thursday.

Prosecutors said on Thursday that Dr. Steven Shafer, an expert on propofol, would be their last of more than 30 witnesses. He testified briefly on Thursday and his testimony is to resume Monday.

Murray's attorneys told the judge they plan to call 22 witnesses, including two experts, and the defense could rest their case by the end of next week.

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Paul Simao)


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Army museum's morbid oddities resettled in Md. - The Associated Press

Army museum's morbid oddities resettled in Md.By DAVID DISHNEAU, Associated Press – 31 minutes ago 

SILVER SPRING, Md. (AP) — The bullet that killed Abraham Lincoln has a new home.

The lead ball and several fragments of the 16th president's skull are on display at the National Museum of Health and Medicine in Silver Spring.

So is a hairball from the stomach of a 12-year-old girl.

The museum opened in its new building Sept. 15 after moving from the former Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington.

It currently features exhibits on the Civil War and the human body. Spokesman Tim Clarke says the museum will close in January and reopen in May with its largest-ever display of objects to mark its 150th anniversary.

Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.


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Doctor's defense faces tough task in Jackson trial

Dr. Conrad Murray sits in court during his trial in the death of pop star Michael Jackson, in Los Angeles October 13, 2011. REUTERS/Robyn Beck/Pool

Dr. Conrad Murray sits in court during his trial in the death of pop star Michael Jackson, in Los Angeles October 13, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Robyn Beck/Pool

By Jill Serjeant

LOS ANGELES | Fri Oct 14, 2011 6:52pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The defense in the trial of Michael Jackson's doctor takes center stage next week with a major question still to be answered: will Dr. Conrad Murray take the witness stand?

After three weeks of often damaging evidence against the doctor accused of involuntary manslaughter in the singer's death, legal experts say Murray's version of events is riddled with inconsistencies.

And lead prosecutor David Walgren on Friday complained to the trial judge that his team was "dealing with an ever-changing defense."

Testifying comes with risks if Murray is unclear in telling jurors why he failed to have proper equipment on hand when Jackson died, and why he failed to disclose his use of the drug that ultimately caused Jackson's death.

"If I was defending, I would not put Murray on the witness stand. I think he would just get hammered," Beverly Hills defense attorney Mark McBride told Reuters.

Jackson died at age 50 of an overdose of the powerful anesthetic propofol and a cocktail of sedatives on June 25, 2009.

Prosecutors must convince the jury that Murray was so negligent in his care of the "Thriller" singer that it led to his death, just as he prepared for a series of London concerts. The doctor faces up to four years in prison if convicted.

Murray has admitted giving Jackson a small dose of propofol after the singer begged him for the anesthetic during a long, sleepless night. His defense says Jackson subsequently injected himself with an extra, fatal dose without Murray's knowledge.

"The trouble is there is no evidence whatsoever that Michael Jackson did that. There are no fingerprints. Unless they have something I am unaware of, it is just a theory," said Los Angeles criminal defense attorney Steve Kron.

Murray's team this week said it was abandoning a theory that Jackson swallowed the fatal dose of propofol. Attorney J. Michael Flanagan told the judge on Friday, outside the jury's presence, that the defense had determined in May that it was not a feasible scenario.

MANY HARD QUESTIONS

Murray's attorneys are expected to call about 22 witnesses starting next week after the prosecution rests its case, which could come as soon as Monday.

Defense witnesses are expected to include former patients of the cardiologist, medical experts and possibly Jackson's former hairdresser. They are likely to portray Murray as a kind and conscientious doctor and push claims Jackson was addicted to propofol and other drugs, making him a difficult patient.

But legal experts say the defense also must clarify why Murray apparently failed to tell ambulance or hospital staff he had given the singer propofol; why, as alleged, he tried to hide vials of the anesthetic when paramedics arrived to help Jackson; how long Murray was out of Jackson's bedroom that morning; and why he was using propofol -- normally used for patients undergoing surgery -- at all.

"We have yet to hear why Dr. Murray wasn't more careful," said Laurie Levenson, a former federal prosecutor.

Murray's two-hour interview with police, played for jurors in court last week, raised as many questions as answers. Indeed, Levenson said, it offered a "road map on how to try to impeach him" if prosecutors can cross-examine Murray.

"The only reason to put Dr. Murray on the stand is if his attorneys believe he will come off as very sympathetic. Traditionally, people like doctors and are reluctant to convict them," she said.

The police interview wasn't all bad news for the defense, Kron said. "The jury was able to hear Dr. Murray (talk) about how much he loved Michael Jackson ... and how he was doing all he could to wean him off (propofol). He sounded like a person with some compassion," Kron said.

Still, prosecution testimony, especially from two medical experts who slammed Murray's standards of care on six points, was "very, very damaging," McBride said.

"As much of a hard-nosed defense lawyer as I am, I am not optimistic about the intrepid doctor's chances," he said.

(Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Paul Simao)


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Steven Seagal to go from Hollywood to border law enforcement

Actor Steven Seagal (C) holds a Kazakh national dagger as he visits a nomadic civilization festival, part of the ''Astana'' action films festival, in Astana July 3, 2011. REUTERS/Mukhtar Kholdorbekov

Actor Steven Seagal (C) holds a Kazakh national dagger as he visits a nomadic civilization festival, part of the ''Astana'' action films festival, in Astana July 3, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Mukhtar Kholdorbekov

By Jim Forsyth

SAN ANTONIO | Fri Oct 14, 2011 8:18pm EDT

SAN ANTONIO (Reuters) - It's been said that what the world knows about the United States is what people see in Hollywood movies, and those perceptions could soon become reality in Texas.

Those who try to slip across the Rio Grande from Mexico into west Texas may find themselves arrested by newly sworn-in Hudspeth County Sheriff's Deputy and action film star Steven Seagal.

Seagal, currently starring in an A&E Network reality show detailing his experiences as a reserve deputy in New Orleans, contacted County Sheriff Arvin West about his interest in "patrolling the border", West said.

He was sworn in this week for the position in Hudspeth County, which runs along the Rio Grande east of El Paso, West added. Seagal, 59, could not be reached for comment.

"Mr. Seagal is not in this for the celebrity or publicity," West told Reuters. "He has a sincere passion for his country and he wants to do more to help. I think he will make a significant contribution to this office and to our community."

Seagal starred in big-budget films in the 1980s and early 1990s, earning a reputation as an action star in movies like "Above the Law" and "Under Siege."

In the last decade, he has appeared mainly in direct-to-DVD, low-budget films while working in law enforcement. His last role was as a corrupt Mexican drug lord in the Robert Rodriguez grindhouse flick "Machete."

After Seagal expressed interest in joining the Hudspeth County department, two members of the department traveled to Los Angeles to talk to the actor about his proposal and to make sure he was serious, said Rusty Fleming, a spokesman for the sheriff and one of the two who made the trip.

"We were very quick to find out that he was not doing this for publicity," Fleming said. "He wants to come down to the border and work and try to do his part."

Hudspeth County, population 3,400, is on the front lines of border issues ranging from illegal immigration to drug gangs. West once made headlines when he urged people who live in the county to buy a gun and "learn how to use it."

It was also in Hudspeth County that singer Willie Nelson was arrested on marijuana charges last fall. Two reality TV shows focusing on the border are being filmed in the county, Fleming said.

"He understands this issue that we have down here on the border," Fleming said of Seagal. "His help with his training and what he can help show our deputies and what he can show us here, I think he'll make a tremendous contribution."

West said he expected Seagal to report for duty in January and that the exact nature of his duties were still being worked out.

(Editing by Corrie MacLaggan and Cynthia Johnston)


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Lindsay Lohan checks in for community service at Red Cross - Daily Mail

By Eleanor Gower and Mike Larkin

Last updated at 3:08 PM on 15th October 2011

They are famed around the world for coming to the aid of people in need.

So it seems appropriate the American Red Cross are helping troubled actress Lindsay Lohan by allowing her to complete her community service.

The Herbie Fully Loaded star was snapped going into their office in Los Angeles to do some work yesterday after reportedly being booted off of her previous programme.

Cross purposes: Lindsay Lohan was pictured starting a new community service programme at the American Red Cross yesterday Cross purposes: Lindsay Lohan was pictured starting a new community service programme at the American Red Cross yesterday

Lindsay was allegedly 'kicked out' of the previous programme where she was supposed to be completing her community service.

The 25-year-old actress 'violated the rules several times,' according to TMZ.

It will be interesting to find out the judges reaction when she arrives at court on October 19 for her latest progress report.

But if the Mean Girls star is worried about her latest legal drama she was not letting it show when she headed to the Venice Ale House on Venice Beach, California.

Not bothered: Lindsay Lohan looked relaxed as she headed to lunch on Venice Beach

She looked decidedly relaxed as she enjoyed a lazy lunch with friends, including Denzel Washington's nephew Anthony.

Lohan was ordered to serve 360 hours at the Downtown Women's Center in Los Angeles back in May, as part of her probation deal after she entered a 'no contest' plea relating to allegations that she stole a $2,500 necklace from a Venice jewellers.

TMZ reports that the judge in the case required her to be 'reliable, non disruptive and serve at least four hours at a time.'

Hunger strikes: The star enjoyed a snack at the Venice Ale House Hunger strikes: The star enjoyed a snack at the Venice Ale House

But sources have informed the website that Lohan allegedly 'blew off' nine scheduled visits.

They also allege that when the actress did arrive, she would often leave after just one hour.

The same sources have reported that two weeks ago, the star was 'terminated' from the Women's Centre, because of the violations.

New friends: Lohan met up with Denzel Washington's nephew Anthony New friends: Lohan met up with Denzel Washington's nephew Anthony

TMZ reports that the Probation Department's volunteer department has now assigned her to a new community service programme at the Red Cross. 

The website reports that the number of community service hours Lohan has completed so far is 'unimpressive'.

Lohan is due to appear in court later this month, where she will face Judge Sautner about the matter.

Sentence: Lohan started her community service sessions in Downtown Los Angeles back in May Sentence: Lohan started her community service sessions  in Downtown Los Angeles back in May

Duties: Lohan is alleged to have been told her services were no longer required at the Downtown Women's Centre in Los Angeles Duties: Lohan is alleged to have been told her services were no longer required at the Downtown Women's Centre in Los Angeles

A source told RadarOnline.com: 'Lindsay has until mid-summer 2012 to complete the 460 hours.

'Judge Sautner is most likely going to be extremely upset that Lindsay has been kicked out of the DWC.

'It's anticipated that Sautner will again issue stern warnings, and tell her no excuses will be accepted.'



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Larry Hagman of 'Dallas' diagnosed with cancer (AP)

NEW YORK – Larry Hagman has been diagnosed with cancer.

The 80-year-old actor is famous for playing J.R. Ewing on "Dallas." In a statement Friday, he said: "As J.R. I could get away with anything — bribery, blackmail and adultery. But I got caught by cancer."

Hagman declined to specify what kind of cancer he's contracted, but said it's "a very common and treatable form." He plans to continue working on a new reboot of "Dallas" for TNT, which begins production Monday.

The new "Dallas" focuses on the Ewing offspring as they clash over the future of the family dynasty. The original prime-time soap opera aired on CBS from 1978 to 1991. Hagman underwent a liver transplant in the mid-1990s.

Said Hagman: "As we all know, you can't keep J.R. down!"


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Wednesday, October 19, 2011

O'Reilly, Letterman agree on Iraq and high-five (Reuters)

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) – Occasional adversaries Bill O'Reilly and David Letterman found something to agree on during O'Reilly's "Late Show" appearance Thursday -- and even agreed to high-five.

Even if they couldn't agree on why they should high-five.

After Letterman argued that the U.S. invasion of Iraq turned it into a "hotbed of terrorism," O'Reilly expressed regret that it took place.

"I think that that was something that should not have happened in hindsight... but I will say that I supported it because all the reportage was that Saddam Hussein did have these weapons," O'Reilly said.

Letterman decided the moment called for a high-five, standing up and holding out his hand as he cried, "Come on, Billy!"

O'Reilly refused, explaining, "I'm not high-fiving you on a war."

Letterman kept trying to coax him out of his seat, saying it was just because, "we're feelin' good and happy to see each other."

"We're having a good conversation, siddown," O'Reilly said.

The remark drew laughter and some loud "ohs" from the audience. After an awkward moment of silence -- in which Letterman remained standing -- O'Reilly relented.

It was a much friendlier exchange than some of the past ones between the oft-cranky talk show hosts. In 2009, Letterman told O'Reilly, "I think of you as a goon." In 2006, he told him, "About 60 percent of what you say is crap."

You can watch the clip here:

http://thewrap.com/tv/column-post/oreilly-letterman-agree-iraq-war-shouldnt-have-happened-then-high-five-31859


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Rupert Murdoch heckled at Calif. education forum (AP)

SAN FRANCISCO – Protesters from the Occupy Wall Street movement heckled News Corp. CEO Rupert Murdoch during a speech at an education forum Friday, accusing the media mogul of trying to profit from public education.

Activists repeatedly interrupted Murdoch as he gave a keynote speech at a downtown San Francisco hotel about how technology could help transform the nation's public education system.

"Equality in education, not privatization!" one woman shouted as security guards escorted her out of the ballroom of the Palace Hotel, which hosted the National Summit on Education Reform.

"Corporations own all the media in the world. Why should they not own all the education as well?" activist Joe Hill yelled sarcastically. Hill, who was dressed as the "Count" character from the TV show "Sesame Street," also was pushed out of the meeting room.

Murdoch appeared unfazed.

"It's OK, a little controversy makes everything more interesting," he said to audience applause before continuing his half-hour speech.

About half a dozen hecklers were escorted out of the hotel after they disrupted Murdoch's speech but said they were not arrested. They joined about two dozen protesters holding signs and chanting "Occupy Wall Street! Occupy Sesame Street!" outside the conference.

Speaking outside, Hill accused Murdoch and other corporate leaders of trying to "use the economic crisis to further privatize education and divert more public funds into private corporate interests."

Murdoch appeared as part of a two-day education forum sponsored by the Foundation for Excellence in Education, a group chaired by former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush. The organization champions school vouchers, charter schools, performance pay for teachers and digital learning.

"We need to tear down an education system designed for the 19th century and replace it with one suited for the 21st," Murdoch said during his morning address.

"You don't get change by plugging in computers at schools designed for the industrial age," Murdoch said. "You get it by developing technology that rewrites the rules of the game by centering learning around the learner."

Last year, News Corp. acquired Wireless Generation, a Brooklyn, N.Y.-based company that provides software and services to K-12 schools. In August, New York's comptroller rejected a $27 million contract with the educational technology company because of the phone-hacking scandal involving News Corp.'s British newspapers.

On Thursday afternoon, more than 100 protesters, mostly San Francisco teachers, picketed outside the hotel, protesting Murdoch's presence at the education conference.


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Busan film festival highlights politics, pizzazz

By Jonathan Hopfner

SEOUL | Fri Oct 14, 2011 1:57am EDT

SEOUL (Reuters) - Asia's most renowned film festival drew to a close in the South Korean port city of Busan on Friday, with films from new directors in Iran and the Philippines capturing its main prizes in an affirmation of the event's focus on emerging Asian talent.

"Nino," a portrait of the decline of a wealthy family by Filipino director Loy Arcenas, took home one of the festival's two "New Currents" prizes, which award $30,000 to outstanding films by novice Asian directors.

The other went to "Mourning," an alternately somber and comic road movie by Iran's Morteza Farshbaf.

A wealth of content from countries such as Iran and Myanmar made the nine-day festival a more politically charged event than in previous years.

Organizers issued a statement expressing "serious concern" about the recent arrest of six Iranian filmmakers on espionage charges, calling for their swift release.

Farshbaf welcomed the move, saying similar pressure had persuaded the Iranian government to release artists in the past.

"These (statements) are I think the only way that people can help, because if (filmmakers) speak about the situation we cannot work," he told Reuters this week.

"We have to wait for other people living in freer countries to express something about it."

Luc Besson and Michelle Yeoh, director and lead actress respectively of "The Lady," a biography of Myanmar democracy champion Aung San Suu Kyi that was another highlight of the festival, praised the Myanmar military regime's recent mass release of dissidents, calling it "joyful news."

Myanmar was also featured in "Return to Burma," one of the films that had been nominated for the New Currents prize, which incorporated footage shot secretly in the country by Myanmar-born, Taiwan-based director Midi Z.

This year's festival, the 16th, was also notable for a stunning new venue and was hailed by organizers as the most successful ever, with its 300-plus films drawing almost 200,000 theater visits. There were 89 world premiers.

The associated Asian Film Market, designed to link Asian filmmakers with global distributors and buyers, also racked up a record number of participants and screenings, organizers said.

Industry participants rated the event highly.

"The film industry is truly global and the (festival) brings a vast variety of quality international films to an eager audience," Mike Ellis, president, Asia-Pacific for the Motion Picture Association, told Reuters.

"The opportunity to meet leading filmmakers and discuss how to promote and protect the film industry could not be done in a more relaxing venue."

(Editing by Elaine Lies)


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Rick Ross hospitalized after suffering from second seizure - NME.com

October 15, 2011 15:01

Rapper in hospital after suffering two seizures in one day during flights

Rapper Rick Ross is reportedly in a stable condition in hospital after suffering from two seizures in one day (October 14).

According to TMZ, Ross – whose real name is William Leonard Roberts II – was hospitalized in Birmingham, Alabama after he lost mid-consciousness during a flight for the second time yesterday.

The hip-hop star had been scheduled to play a show at University of Memphis basketball event yesterday evening, but suffered a seizure while on board a flight from Fort Lauderdale, Florida. It was reported that he received CPR from a fellow passenger who was a doctor, and the plane was forced to make an emergency landing and return to Florida.

Ross was taken to hospital but appeared to have recovered after he posted a message on his Twitter account reading "Memphis here I come" and uploaded a video of himself boarding a new flight.

However, his second flight then made an unscheduled stop in Birmingham, Alabama after he suffered a second seizure while on board. A spokesperson for the airport confirmed that a private jet flying from Florida to Memphis had made an unscheduled landing at Birmingham, but was unable to provide any more information.

Meanwhile, University of Memphis basketball coach Josh Pastner told the audience at the event Ross had been scheduled to play: "On his way to Memphis, he had to make another emergency landing in Birmingham. He got really sick again, and they had to rush him to the emergency room."

According to TMZ, Ross is currently still in hospital receiving treatment but is said to be in a stable condition.

NEW! For the latest music videos and backstage interviews, check out our brand new sister site, NME Video.


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Hacker says was addicted to prying on celebrities (Reuters)

(Reuters) – The man charged with hacking the private e-mail accounts of Scarlett Johansson, Christina Aguilera and other celebrities apologized on Thursday, saying he became addicted to prying into their affairs.

But Christopher Chaney, 35, said he never intended to sell or release the information, which included nude photos that later made their way to the Internet.

"It started as curiosity and it turned into just being addicted to seeing behind the scenes of what was going on with these people you see on the big screen every day," Chaney told Fox television affiliate WAWS in Jacksonville, Florida.

"I was almost relieved months ago when they came in and took my computer...because I didn't know how to stop," he said.

Chaney was charged on Wednesday with 26 counts of cyber-related crimes against Hollywood celebrities after an 11-month FBI probe dubbed "Operation Hackerazzi."

Victims included "Iron Man 2" star Johansson, whose topless photo was leaked online in September, and "Black Swan" actress Mila Kunis, who was seen in a bubble bath.

Chaney said he couldn't remember who or when he started hacking but said his activities just "snowballed".

"I deeply apologize," he said. "I know what I did was probably one of the worst invasions of privacy someone could experience. I am not trying to escape what I did."

Chaney said he had no intention of selling the photos and information or releasing it to others, saying he had been approached by a third party but had given them nothing.

"I wasn't attempting to break into e-mails and get stuff to sell or purposefully put on the Internet...I never wanted to sell or release any images," he said in the interview.

Federal officials said on Wednesday that they had no information on whether Chaney profited from the hacking, but said the investigation, which identified more than 50 victims, remained open and others could be implicated.

Chaney faces up to 121 years in jail if convicted on all counts.

Investigators said there is no connection between Chaney and a hacking scandal involving one of the London newspapers owned by media giant News Corp.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)


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Foreign language Oscar brings 63 entrants (Reuters)

(Reuters) – Oscar organizers Thursday said they received entrants from 63 countries for this year's foreign language film award, including a first-time submission from New Zealand called "The Orator."

The Oscars, which are given out by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, are the world's top film honors, and being nominated for the foreign language award brings prestige that helps those movies lure audiences.

Among some of the more talked about foreign language titles already in 2011 are Polish entry "In Darkness," a Holocaust drama that played well at September's Toronto International Film Festival, and Spain's "Black Bread," which earlier this year won nine of its home country's top awards, the "Goyas."

The motion picture academy will narrow the list of 63 films to five nominees that will be named on January 24. The Oscars take place on February 26, at a gala ceremony in Los Angeles.

A full list of foreign language entrants can be found at the academy's website at http://www.oscars.org.

(Editing by Zorianna Kit)


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Tuesday, October 18, 2011

The naked truth: Stars are asking to be hacked (AP)

NEW YORK – Maybe it's not fair to blame the victim.

A victim like, say, Scarlett Johansson or Christina Aguilera, among the many celebrities whose racy "private" photos have been hacked and posted to the Internet for everyone to ogle. (Now don't pretend such photos have escaped your notice!)

What sort of person would engage in such predatory practices as those with which Christopher Chaney has been charged? The Jacksonville, Fla., man was arrested on Thursday as part of a yearlong investigation into celebrity hacking that authorities dubbed "Operation Hackerazzi." There were more than 50 victims in the case that also included Mila Kunis and Renee Olstead, authorities said.

U.S. Attorney Andre Birotte described those who engage in such activity as "scum" — scum preying upon such victims as Johansson, whose nude pictures were among those Chaney allegedly mined and put online.

Poor Scarlett.

On the other hand ... really?! What was going on in Johansson's pretty head when she, like so many, snapped candid self-portraits without figuring out that:

(a) She's a lovely woman.

(b) She's a famous woman.

(c) She's a highly marketable woman whose every move, clothed or unclothed, is of interest to a public salivating for details.

This sort of head-in-the-cloud narcissism (or is it head-in-the-iCloud?) fails to acknowledge that, more and more, people live in glass houses — especially famous people, whose houses are bigger and even more transparent than others.

So is it completely unreasonable to blame their neighbors (and, thanks to the Internet, all of us are neighbors) for taking a peek at otherwise forbidden sights when given the chance?

In simpler times, anyone would be slammed for watching a woman who displayed herself, undraped, in her bedroom window. Maybe this woman had an exhibitionist streak, but good manners dictated that the startled onlooker avert his eyes. To keep staring would brand him a voyeur, even a perv.

And for the certified Peeping Tom in simpler times, a pair of binoculars was needed. Today, all that's required is a search engine and celebrity cyber-hackers to supply it.

In this era of digital snooping, why would any celebrity delude himself or herself that his or her physical seclusion guarantees privacy? However high the walls surrounding one's property and however well-staffed one's security detail, why would any celebrity store nude photos on any electronic device that connects to the Internet — unless, of course, the celeb is a closet exhibitionist and secretly hopes the stuff will go viral.

No one needs to be as brazen a show-off as Anthony Weiner, the New York Congressman who was forced to resign last June after sending sexually explicit messages and photos of himself to women who were following him on Twitter. Even Johansson presumably knows better than to pull that stunt.

But she didn't know better than to leave ripe for the picking those photos of her in her birthday suit, as if to dare some hacker to share them with the world.

Sure, Johansson is one of many victims of cyber-hacking.

Maybe she was also asking for it.

___

EDITOR'S NOTE — Frazier Moore is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. He can be reached at fmoore(at)ap.org and at http://www.twitter.com/tvfrazier


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Emmy-winning costumer Ray Aghayan dies at 83 (AP)

LOS ANGELES – Ray Aghayan, an Emmy-winning costume designer who worked on more than a dozen Academy Award shows and the opening and closing ceremonies of the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, has died. He was 83.

A spokeswoman for the Costume Designers Guild tells the Los Angeles Times (http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_on_en_ot/storytext/us_obit_costume_designer/43257971/SIG=10mu78evr/*http://lat.ms/qS3W4g) that Aghayan died of natural causes on Monday at his Los Angeles home.

Aghayan designed costumes for Judy Garland, Barbra Streisand, Diana Ross and many other stars.

He and his lifetime partner, Bob Mackie, shared the first Emmy ever awarded for costume design in 1967. Aghayan went on to win two other Emmys.

He also was nominated for Oscars three times.

He is survived by Mackie.


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Dyan Cannon book recounts life with Cary Grant (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – It was a fairy tale romance that turned in to a stormy marriage, and now Dyan Cannon has chronicled her relationship with Hollywood legend Cary Grant in her new book, "Dear Cary: My Life with Cary Grant."

With an age difference of over 30 years, the duo had a magical courtship in the 1960s that eventually gave way to the dark side of Grant after they were engaged. Following three years of marriage and not long after the birth of their daughter Jennifer, the couple divorced and Cannon suffered a nervous breakdown.

Cannon, now in her early 70s, sat down with Reuters to talk about her former late husband and what she's learned about love over the years.

Q: Why focus the book just on your years with Cary?

A: "I've been offered so much money over the years to write a kiss and tell, which this is not. I wanted this to be a helpful book, an inspirational book. It's really about the little things that happen in our relationships that tear us asunder, so I felt people would benefit from most of this."

Q: Is there an underlying message you wanted to relay?

A: "One of the biggest messages is that it is wonderful to love and to serve and to give. It's wonderful to try and make people happy, but it's impossible to do so."

Q: What was the biggest challenge in writing this book?

A: "I know how people feel about Cary -- they love him. I didn't want people to lose the stars in their eyes about him. I wanted people to love him more at the end of this book than they did before. This book humanizes him. They'll understand what formed him. And I had such compassion for what formed him. But I also suffered a breakdown. So balancing all that was my biggest challenge."

Q: There must have been a lot of stories to sort through.

A: "I didn't know what to put in and what to leave out. The first (draft) was so out of balance. The second time around it started to take shape. The third time I thought, 'Maybe I've got it now.'"

Q: Cary was a big proponent of LSD use and wanted you to do it with him. But for you it was a disastrous experience. Do you think Cary had a drug problem?

A: "Absolutely not. With specificity, no. He thought LSD was his gateway to God, to peace, to that turmoil that wouldn't leave him alone. He thought it helped him, but I don't think it did. If it did, it gave him a peace that enabled him without being tormented 24 hours a day."

Q: Were you able to have a friendship after the divorce?

A: "We were polite."

Q: Was it hard getting your career back on track afterward? Did studio executives have to choose sides?

A: "Maybe some people for a moment. But Mike Frankovich was a good friend of Cary's. He was the head of Columbia Pictures and he chose me for 'Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice' (which earned Cannon an Oscar nomination). So no, not really."

Q: When Cary passed away in 1986 at the age of 82, did that affect you at all?

A: "I was amazed at how I mourned him. I couldn't believe how hammered I was by his death, how deeply I felt his loss. I loved him so dearly, but some of that love had to get pushed down through all the pain."

Q: Was he the greatest love of your life?

A: "I've known a lot of wonderful men. I've known a couple of jerks. And I think the best is yet to come (laughs). I do. Because I understand love now. That's why I can say I'm a whole, satisfied, complete woman. But up to now, I've certainly had no experience with anybody like I had with Cary. I loved him and he loved me. I was the only woman in the world that he trusted enough to have a baby with. That's a big deal to me."

Q: Your daughter, Jennifer, has a three year-old son, Cary Benjamin. Do you see traits of Cary in her or in little Cary?

A: "More with the grandchild. There's traits in Jennifer that remind me of Cary -- wonderful traits. But the little guy, he's something else!."

Q: Will you write another book to encompass all the other aspects of your life?

A: "I'm not sure about writing another book. I've had offers but writing a book is the hardest thing I've ever done. I'd like to write and perform a one-woman show with other people as a part of it. I've talked to a friend of mine, we're contemplating it and I've made a lot of notes. But as far as a second book about my career and things that happened to me? I'm not motivated to do that."

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)


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Reckless in Seduction, if Not Onstage - New York Times

But there is just as much of a chance that a newcomer to opera might be deferential in approaching the complex, much debated and ceaselessly produced masterpieces of the repertory. What else would explain the timidity of the Met’s new production of Mozart’s “Don Giovanni,” a quite traditional staging by the hot, innovative British theater director Michael Grandage in his Met debut, which opened on Thursday night?

The musical performance was excellent. Fabio Luisi, the Met’s recently appointed principal conductor, drew buoyant, nuanced and effortless playing from the orchestra and splendid singing from an impressive cast. He also provided nimble harpsichord accompaniments during the recitatives, which enhanced the organic shape and flow of the performance.

In fairness, it is perhaps premature to assess this production, since Mr. Grandage had to cope with the crisis of losing his Don Giovanni, Mariusz Kwiecien, during Monday’s dress rehearsal. A hearty young Polish baritone and a terrific actor, Mr. Kwiecien, who considers Don Giovanni his calling-card role, was scheduled to sing it for the first time at the Met in this production. During Monday’s dress rehearsal, however, he injured his back and was taken to the hospital for surgery on a herniated disc. (The Met announced on Friday that he would return to the role on Oct. 25, the fourth performance in the run.) On Monday his cover, Dwayne Croft, stepped right in and, from all reports, sang very well.

But the charismatic Swedish baritone Peter Mattei, an acclaimed Don Giovanni who will sing the role in a new production at La Scala in December, happened to be appearing in Rossini’s “Barbiere di Siviglia.” Mr. Mattei is becoming a Met star. So Mr. Gelb lifted him from “Barbiere” and asked him to sing Giovanni. For two days, instead of having time off, the cast attended emergency rehearsals where Mr. Mattei was worked into the concept and blocking. He performed on Thursday without having had a stage rehearsal with the orchestra. And he was superb, singing alternately with suave, seductive phrasing and menacing intensity. At 6-foot-4, he was lordly, cagey, heady with desire and glibly reckless.

Still, during weeks of rehearsals this production had been shaped around another Giovanni. It is impossible to know how much the last-minute casting shuffle affected Mr. Grandage’s intentions.

Though there is a place at the Met, of course, for traditional productions, there is nothing particularly gripping about Mr. Grandage’s work here. The set by Christopher Oram, in his company debut, consists mainly of a large, curved sliding wall with three tiers of balconies and slatted-wood doors. The effect is like that of those old Advent calendars that count down the days to Christmas: various doors open, and characters pop out.

During the “Catalog Aria,” as Leporello, Don Giovanni’s beleaguered servant, reports the astonishing tally of his boss’s conquests, the wall divides, and we see an inner curved wall of balconies, with groups of young women in every alcove: a human panorama of Giovanni’s lovers. It was an amusing and resonant, if not remarkable, touch.

The best use of the three-tiered back wall comes in the graveyard scene late in Act II. In the alcoves are rows of statues of ominous, gray-hooded men, including a huge statue of the Commendatore, the father of Donna Anna, who lost his life in a duel trying to rescue his daughter from Giovanni’s forced advances.

The period costumes, also by Mr. Oram, all in shades of russets, earthy browns and grays, are tasteful though a little dull. On its own terms, the production represents smart, clean, effective work. And by his strategic placement of characters and use of extras, Mr. Grandage helps to clarify this complex story.

But Mr. Gelb has pledged to bring the best in contemporary theatrical achievement to the Met. This does not mean that every production should be updated. Whatever its merits, though, Mr. Grandage’s “Don Giovanni” is not as striking, insightful and vivid as the sexy, modern production that Christopher Alden created for New York City Opera in 2009 (though who knows when or where audiences will see the Alden version again, now that City Opera is nomadic).

Of course, a director’s most important task in a production is helping the singers to develop their characters and become a team. This Mr. Grandage did very well.

The bass-baritone Luca Pisaroni was a dynamic Leporello, singing with a muscular voice, rich colorings and agility. Handsome and full of bluster, this youthful Leporello exuded resentment while bowing to his master’s commands. But for the accident of birth, Mr. Pisaroni’s Leporello would be the nobleman and lady-killer. And there was some intriguing sexual tension in Giovanni’s roughhousing with his servant.

Mr. Grandage breaks no new ground in his presentation of Donna Elvira as a noblewoman unhinged by her lingering desire for Giovanni. She first appears looking uptight in a fine, feathered hat, sneaking a shot of brandy from a flask. The soprano Barbara Frittoli brought welcome dignity to her portrayal, however, through her honest, ardent and soaring singing.

In her Met debut the striking Latvian soprano Marina Rebeka was a winning Donna Anna, singing with a clear, bright sound and cool intensity. As Don Ottavio, Donna Anna’s patient husband-in-waiting, the veteran tenor Ramón Vargas won big ovations from the audience for both of his arias: a mellifluous “Dalla sua pace,” and a neatly executed, elegant “Il mio tesoro.”

The rising German soprano Mojca Erdmann, in her Met debut, was a sweet-voiced and beguiling Zerlina, the country maiden engaged to the stalwart Masetto, here the hearty bass Joshua Bloom in an endearing performance.

In the final scene the strong bass Stefan Kocan as the Commendatore was suitably avenging as the singing statue who comes to bring Giovanni to justice (though Mr. Mattei towered over him). In this production’s one theatrically daring touch, real flames shoot up from the floor around Giovanni’s dinner table as we watch him descend into hell.

Still, that stage trick came too late to alter the impression of a production with no compelling point of view. This “Don Giovanni” almost makes you yearn for those new stagings where the creative team is booed on opening night. Mr. Grandage and his team received respectful applause.

“Don Giovanni” runs through Nov. 11 at the Metropolitan Opera, with additional performances in February and March; (212) 362-6000, metopera.org.


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Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon Split Up - Death and Taxes

Indie rock’s most iconic couple separate after 27 years of marriage.

According to SPIN, after 27 years of marriage (30 total as a couple), Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon have officially separated. Little more information is known as the couple have requested privacy on the matter.

The separation was officially announced via Matador Records, in a statement that read, “Musicians Kim Gordon and Thurston Moore, married in 1984, are announcing they have separated. Sonic Youth, with both Kim and Thurston involved, will proceed with its South American tour dates in November. Plans beyond that tour are uncertain.”

This is devastating news for the music world, and for the idea of true love in general, as Moore and Gordon for decades were a shining example of how the rock & roll couple works. They have one daughter, Coco Hayley Gordon Moore, born in 1994.

In addition to the November Sonic Youth dates, Moore will also be playing solo shows in November and December.

As I desperately try to awake from this bad dream, please enjoy the video for “Sacred Trickster,” from Sonic Youth’s most recent, but hopefully not final (shudder) album, “The Eternal.”


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Jackson's dermatologist says Murray fallout hurts (AP)

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. – Dr. Arnold Klein hovers over a 50-year-old woman, a syringe filled with the promise of youth in hand and a look of concentration on his face. At this moment he appears a contented man.

"Put me next to a patient, give me a needle and I'm really happy," he says. But all is not perfection for the dermatologist to the stars.

Klein and Conrad Murray were Michael Jackson's key physicians during the pop star's final weeks in June 2009. Murray is on trial for involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's drug-related death, while Klein, who treated Jackson for more than 25 years and called him "my best friend," was cleared of any wrongdoing by authorities.

Murray's defense team, however, is making Klein a part of the trial, claiming he fostered the singer's addiction to a medication, Demerol, and that it played a part in his death. No Demerol was found in Jackson's body.

The allegations, denied by Klein's attorney, reverberate painfully for the 66-year-old doctor whose patient list has boasted Elizabeth Taylor, Dolly Parton, Carrie Fisher and many more celebrities.

"I see stuff on the Internet and it hurts, because I don't like to be called a bad doctor," Klein said, referring to online news and chatter about the trial that enters its fourth week Monday.

"All I'm trying to do is be the best doctor I can," added the intense Klein, whose words spill out hurriedly and who often ends sentences with the entreaties "You understand?" or "You have to understand that."

Murray, who has pleaded innocent, is accused of failing to monitor Jackson as the singer received a fatal dose of propofol (Diprivan is the drug's commercial name) combined with a variety of other drugs including diazepam (Valium) and lorazepam (Ativan).

Jackson, on the brink of a comeback at age 50, had complained repeatedly of insomnia and his need for drugs to help him sleep as he got ready for a strenuous London concert schedule.

Despite Klein's anxiety over damage to his reputation, he says the fallout has been minimal. Media that sometimes camp outside his office have kept away certain high-profile patients, including "royal families from around the world, political dignitaries, people who don't want to deal with the paparazzi," Klein said.

But Hollywood's crowned heads, the actors and others who helped Klein build his practice and his fame, aren't so faint-hearted. Whether patients or friends, they are speaking up for him.

Carrie Fisher is both. The actress ("Star Wars") and writer ("Wishful Drinking," "Postcards From the Edge"), replied with a firm "no" when asked if she was uneasy hearing Klein's name invoked in the Murray case.

"Michael and Arnie had a really good relationship. ... It was a shame there was any focus brought (in the trial), because that became what everyone knew about" Klein, she said.

David Geffen, the prominent music and film executive who has long worked with Klein in the fight against AIDS, weighed in with a letter addressed "Dear Arnie" and written to be shared.

"In light of all that is being said about you in the press I was compelled to add my truths. I have never known a doctor who tries to know and learn everything as completely as you do, a doctor who has always been there for me," Geffen wrote.

Fisher contends that her own past prescription drug abuse, about which she has spoken and written, prove Klein's ethics. He never supplied her and, to the contrary, encouraged her to kick her habit, she said.

"If anyone would know, it would have been me," Fisher said with a rueful laugh. "He's not one of the doctors you would hit up for (drugs)."

Garo Ghazarian, Klein's lawyer, has called the defense claim that Klein contributed to Jackson's death "preposterous" and denied that Jackson was addicted to the Demerol used for pain relief "during medical procedures." (He did not detail them, and Klein declined to discuss issues directly related to the trial or whether it was affecting his private life.)

But lead defense attorney Ed Chernoff invoked Klein's name seven times during his opening statement and has referred to the dermatologist repeatedly throughout the trial. The defense, which is expected to begin presenting its side next week, sought to call Klein as a witness but was blocked by Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor, who ruled Klein's testimony was not relevant to the case.

Klein's medical specialty is the use of injectable drugs such as Botox and Restylane to ease wrinkles and sagging skin. It is a skill he pioneered and one that has made him a favorite in Hollywood, where youth and beauty are the currency of the land.

Fisher credits Klein with smoothing her face and restoring her confidence after weight loss took a toll. "He cares about what he does and he loves making people look better," she said. "It's like he's a painter, but the brush is the needle."

He doesn't limit his practice to the well-heeled or well-known. The middle-aged patient who was at the end of his needle recently was a woman who wanted, and got, a younger look for dating and business.

Klein has an international reputation, with patients from the Middle East and Europe trekking to California to see him. In a 2008 issue of Italian men's Vogue, L'uomo Vogue, an article on design leaders featured a dapper, ascot-wearing Klein as an architect of the face, alongside more traditional architecture masters including Frank Gehry.

Often dressed in black, Klein is fond of such eye-catching jewelry as his Rolex watch decorated with diamond-and-ruby lips, a gift he received from Cher. He looks ready to be cast in a movie about a flamboyant doctor's adventures among the stars.

Although he's long balanced the roles of medical heavyweight and prominent physician-about-town, he's now in difficult — but not unprecedented — territory. In 2004, he was sued by a Hollywood socialite who blamed Botox injections for disabling headaches. A jury found for him and the drug manufacturer.

Earlier this year, Klein sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and alleged in court papers that he lost at least $10 million to theft and fraud, blaming a former employee and others. A countersuit from the ex-employee denied the allegations and claimed, among other issues, that he had endured difficult working conditions.

Klein minimized the impact of the stated financial losses, saying the bankruptcy filing was based on "bad advice" and that he expects resolution soon. It appears to be the Murray trial, above all, that aggrieves him.

During the 2009 investigation into Jackson's death, federal drug agents checked into who was prescribing medications to the singer and examined the entertainer's interactions with at least seven doctors, including Klein. Federal drug agents raided a pharmacy in the Beverly Hills building where Klein previously practiced before clearing him in Jackson's death.

Klein clearly is in far different circumstances than Murray, who could end up behind bars and lose his medical license if convicted.

By contrast, Klein just moved into new offices around the corner from Rodeo Drove and above a posh restaurant, Villa Blanca, which is a haunt for "The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" circle.

His professional credentials remain intact. He is a professor of medicine and dermatology at the University of California, Los Angeles, which is home to the Arnold Klein chair in dermatology endowed by supporters in 2004. And he's a charity stalwart. Klein teamed with other physicians, Taylor and Geffen to form the respected American Foundation for AIDS Research, AmFAR, and he has supported other fundraising efforts targeting breast cancer and eye disease.

Dazzling mementoes and gifts are scattered around his hilltop Beverly Hills home, set in an exclusive neighborhood protected by gates and guards. There's a photo of Klein with Taylor and Jackson; Jackson-signed lithographs of five of the singer's album covers; and sculptures given to Klein by the King of Pop and his children.

A copy of the book "Elizabeth Taylor: My Love Affair With Jewelry" is inscribed with a mash note from the late actress: "My beloved Arnie, I love you more than I can tell. I feel you have saved my fading life. I love and thank you forever. Yours, Elizabeth."

The connection between Klein and Jackson went especially deep. Their friendship developed when Klein treated the singer for ailments including vitiligo — a patchy loss of skin pigmentation, which Klein said forced Jackson to lighten his complexion overall — and facial gauntness caused by weight loss, which can be filled out with Restalyne and other so-called injectables.

Debbie Rowe, who worked as Klein's nurse, married Jackson and bore two of his three offspring, Prince and Paris, before the couple divorced. Media reports alleging Klein to be the children's father through a sperm donation have been dismissed by the doctor, although sometimes coyly.

Jackson lived in one of Klein's homes for a time, and the pair partied with the likes of Taylor. Jackson's last Christmas, in 2008, was spent with his children, Klein, Fisher and a few others, Klein recalls.

The doctor is writing a book about the King of Pop. What Klein says he came to know about him: Jackson wasn't a drug addict but indulged in wine (he called it "Jesus juice"); was a prude and an innocent who wanted to live his childhood forever; and "wasn't adult enough to be sexual," contrary to the child molestation allegations Jackson faced.

Klein said he's been hurt both by the defense's portrayal of Jackson as a frail addict who contributed to his own death and by the allegation that Klein himself shares blame.

"Once you're famous or popular at any level, they'll attack you," he said.

It's unsurprising that Klein finds himself caught on the jagged edge of celebrity, a risk with prominent patients, observers said.

"You become part of that celebrity's tragedy or gossip. Their dirty laundry is aired and you're part of it, directly or indirectly," said Dr. Rahul K. Parikh, a San Francisco-area physician and writer who, in a 2009 Salon.com piece, criticized Klein for publicly discussing the late Jackson's medical history with then-CNN host Larry King. .

Mixing fame and medicine also is counterproductive, contends Dr. Mark Goulston, a psychiatrist and author ("Just Listen: Discover the Secret to Getting Through to Absolutely Anyone").

"The seduction of fame to a doctor can be tough to resist," said Goulston. "I also think it distracts the doctor from what he should be doing, which is to focus totally on the well-being of the patient."

But Klein said his patients and the quest for perfection, nothing else, are his obsession.

"I do this because of my level of doing it, you understand? The monetary thing is nice but it's really secondary to what I do," he said.

Could he have done something to save Jackson, his friend and patient?

"I don't know. How do you save a person?" Klein mused. "This tragedy is an example of how the rich and famous can get terrible medical care. It repeats itself and repeats itself. When people get famous, they get all the `yes people' around them."


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Monday, October 17, 2011

Doctor's defense faces tough task in Jackson trial (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – The defense in the trial of Michael Jackson's doctor takes center stage next week with a major question still to be answered: will Dr. Conrad Murray take the witness stand?

After three weeks of often damaging evidence against the doctor accused of involuntary manslaughter in the singer's death, legal experts say Murray's version of events is riddled with inconsistencies.

And lead prosecutor David Walgren on Friday complained to the trial judge that his team was "dealing with an ever-changing defense."

Testifying comes with risks if Murray is unclear in telling jurors why he failed to have proper equipment on hand when Jackson died, and why he failed to disclose his use of the drug that ultimately caused Jackson's death.

"If I was defending, I would not put Murray on the witness stand. I think he would just get hammered," Beverly Hills defense attorney Mark McBride told Reuters.

Jackson died at age 50 of an overdose of the powerful anesthetic propofol and a cocktail of sedatives on June 25, 2009.

Prosecutors must convince the jury that Murray was so negligent in his care of the "Thriller" singer that it led to his death, just as he prepared for a series of London concerts. The doctor faces up to four years in prison if convicted.

Murray has admitted giving Jackson a small dose of propofol after the singer begged him for the anesthetic during a long, sleepless night. His defense says Jackson subsequently injected himself with an extra, fatal dose without Murray's knowledge.

"The trouble is there is no evidence whatsoever that Michael Jackson did that. There are no fingerprints. Unless they have something I am unaware of, it is just a theory," said Los Angeles criminal defense attorney Steve Kron.

Murray's team this week said it was abandoning a theory that Jackson swallowed the fatal dose of propofol. Attorney J. Michael Flanagan told the judge on Friday, outside the jury's presence, that the defense had determined in May that it was not a feasible scenario.

MANY HARD QUESTIONS

Murray's attorneys are expected to call about 22 witnesses starting next week after the prosecution rests its case, which could come as soon as Monday.

Defense witnesses are expected to include former patients of the cardiologist, medical experts and possibly Jackson's former hairdresser. They are likely to portray Murray as a kind and conscientious doctor and push claims Jackson was addicted to propofol and other drugs, making him a difficult patient.

But legal experts say the defense also must clarify why Murray apparently failed to tell ambulance or hospital staff he had given the singer propofol; why, as alleged, he tried to hide vials of the anesthetic when paramedics arrived to help Jackson; how long Murray was out of Jackson's bedroom that morning; and why he was using propofol -- normally used for patients undergoing surgery -- at all.

"We have yet to hear why Dr. Murray wasn't more careful," said Laurie Levenson, a former federal prosecutor.

Murray's two-hour interview with police, played for jurors in court last week, raised as many questions as answers. Indeed, Levenson said, it offered a "road map on how to try to impeach him" if prosecutors can cross-examine Murray.

"The only reason to put Dr. Murray on the stand is if his attorneys believe he will come off as very sympathetic. Traditionally, people like doctors and are reluctant to convict them," she said.

The police interview wasn't all bad news for the defense, Kron said. "The jury was able to hear Dr. Murray (talk) about how much he loved Michael Jackson ... and how he was doing all he could to wean him off (propofol). He sounded like a person with some compassion," Kron said.

Still, prosecution testimony, especially from two medical experts who slammed Murray's standards of care on six points, was "very, very damaging," McBride said.

"As much of a hard-nosed defense lawyer as I am, I am not optimistic about the intrepid doctor's chances," he said.

(Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Paul Simao)


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Comedian Chris Tucker faces foreclosure on mansion (AP)

MONTVERDE, Fla. – Court records show comedian Chris Tucker is facing foreclosure on his multimillion-dollar mansion in central Florida.

Records show SunTrust Bank filed papers against the California resident with Lake County courts earlier this week.

According to documents, Tucker bought the 10,000-square-foot lakefront home for $6 million in 2007 — before the housing market crashed. The bank claims he still owes more than $4.4 million, but the county property appraiser has the home currently assessed at $1.6 million.

The Orlando Sentinel ( http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_en_mo/storytext/us_people_chris_tucker/43252842/SIG=10q5n6qdf/*http://thesent.nl/rlN398) reports that the house is located in the Bella Collina development, a 1,900-acre community overlooking lakes and a championship golf course.

Calls placed by The Associated Press to Tucker's Hollywood representatives seeking comment were not returned as of late Thursday night.

Tucker is best known for staring alongside Jackie Chan in three "Rush Hour" films. Other credits include "Friday," "Money Talks" and "The Fifth Element."

___

Information from: Orlando Sentinel, http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/ap/ap_en_mo/storytext/us_people_chris_tucker/43252842/SIG=110dejsv3/*http://www.orlandosentinel.com


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Kanye West, Maroon 5 to serenade lingerie models (AP)

By SAMANTHA CRITCHELL, AP Fashion Writer Samantha Critchell, Ap Fashion Writer – Fri Oct 14, 1:35 pm ET

NEW YORK – Top models Alessandra Ambrosio, Miranda Kerr and Doutzen Kroes will strut in the annual Victoria's Secret Fashion Show to live musical performances by Kanye West and Maroon 5.

The catwalk event, which also will include VS models Erin Heatherton, Candice Swanepoel, Lindsay Ellingson and Lily Aldridge, will be filmed on Nov. 9 for a televised special later in the month.

The Nov. 29 one-hour show on CBS will incorporate behind-the-scenes tidbits, model profiles and red-carpet interviews surrounding the much-hyped lingerie show. Of course, several models will step out in the elaborate wings that have become a signature of this runway, and one will wear the jewel-encrusted Fantasy Bra.

Last year, that honor went to Adriana Lima.

In 2007, West pulled out of a performance at the annual Victoria's Secret fashion show due to the sudden death of his mother after she underwent cosmetic surgery.

West has been a front-row regular at fashion shows for years, and earlier this month he debuted his own collection during Paris fashion week.


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Film looks at life of late spymaster William Colby

William Colby (R) and President Gerald Ford and his Cabinet and Colby Family are pictured in the Oval Office at the White House as Colby receives the National Security Medal in this 1976 handout photograph. REUTERS/First Run Features/Handout

1 of 2. William Colby (R) and President Gerald Ford and his Cabinet and Colby Family are pictured in the Oval Office at the White House as Colby receives the National Security Medal in this 1976 handout photograph.

Credit: Reuters/First Run Features/Handout

By Jordan Riefe

LOS ANGELES | Fri Oct 14, 2011 8:43pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - When the body of former CIA director William Colby was found underwater near his vacation home in Rockpoint, Maryland 15 years ago, no one suspected murder, but his son Carl Colby has never ruled it out.

Carl Colby's new film documentary, "The Man Nobody Knew: In Search of My Father, CIA Spymaster William Colby" opens in major U.S. cities this month and takes audiences on a journey through the life of a complicated man who helped shape Vietnam war strategy and was partly responsible for a major shake-up at the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.

In May 1996, Colby went missing for eight days. He had gone canoeing, and is believed to have fallen into the water and drowned or suffered hypothermia. The cause of death was always thought to be a heart attack, but there can be little doubt Colby made plenty of enemies over the years.

"You could say the best way to get rid of a body is to throw it in the water because you can't see any signs of abuse or injury," Carl told Reuters. "Everybody in our family always wore a life vest, so why would he not wear a life vest?"

In fact, Carl is not certain what to make of his father's death -- murder, suicide, accident or fate. Nor does he know what to make of his father's life -- hero, victim or villain.

But he went looking and the result is his documentary, for which he interviewed former U.S. government officials such as Donald Rumsfeld, Robert Gates and James Schlesinger, along with journalists like Seymour Hirsch and Bob Woodward.

In the 1960s William Colby, a CIA operative since World War II, oversaw the coup d'etat against Vietnamese President Diem and masterminded an anti-incursion strategy called the Phoenix Program to root out the Viet Cong in towns and villages.

Thousands of people were killed, but the program was singled out after the war by Viet Cong Commander Vo Nguyen Giap as being most effective. Today, Phoenix is a blueprint for other anti-insurgency campaigns.

"When it comes to the Diem murder, you start to think, 'Wow, he didn't just know about this, he may have been a part of this," Carl concludes about his father's role in the assassination of a man he called his friend.

SEPT. 11, CHURCH COMMITTEE

Carl Colby finally decided to make a movie about his father on September 11, 2001 after former Secretary of State James Baker traced the attack back to the Church Committee hearings of 1975 investigating abuses by the CIA, claiming it crippled the organization's ability to collect intelligence.

Williams Colby's testimony before the Church Committee became pivotal when he revealed the CIA's "family jewels," a series of clandestine and illegal activities such as secret prisons, warrantless wiretaps and assassination plots.

"He would come home and I'd say, 'You're spilling the beans! You're volunteering information they're not even asking you for!" remembers Carl. "He said, 'So they'll learn about these secrets. Place needs a housecleaning.' He ended up taking the heat and falling on his sword but he saved the agency."

"I felt a lot of respect for him around the times of the hearings because he was doing the unpopular thing and he was vilified," notes Carl. "The conservatives thought he's giving away the farm. The old boys hated him at the agency. He was sort of a man without a country."

In 1976, William Colby was replaced as CIA Director by George H.W. Bush. Among the first things Colby did was divorce his wife of 40 years, remarrying a few months later. Carl recalls a family member asking his father what was more important to him, his family or his career. "He didn't even bother to lie," laments the filmmaker.

Toward the end of his life, William Colby learned of an old friend found under a bridge suffering from Alzheimer's. "He said, 'that's never going to happen to me,'" remembers Carl. "One day you're just going to hear that I was walking on a goat path in the Greek islands and I fell to the sea."

Although questions still surround his father's death, Carl feels it was just as likely a case of suicide as murder. "He lost Vietnam, he lost his job, but I think he felt like he wanted to be the master of his destiny," Carl said. "He would have loved to just fade into the distance like the fog."

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)


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Leave me be, says Lohan, "I am working hard"

Actress Lindsay Lohan (R) sits in court with her lawyer Shawn Chapman Holley, during a compliance check to report her progress on 480 hours of community service she must do for shoplifting a necklace from a Venice jeweler, in Los Angeles, California July 21, 2011. REUTERS/Kevork Djansezian/Pool

Actress Lindsay Lohan (R) sits in court with her lawyer Shawn Chapman Holley, during a compliance check to report her progress on 480 hours of community service she must do for shoplifting a necklace from a Venice jeweler, in Los Angeles, California July 21, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Kevork Djansezian/Pool

LOS ANGELES | Fri Oct 14, 2011 7:35pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Actress Lindsay Lohan on Friday struck back at suggestions she was shirking tasks assigned to her under a court-ordered probation, saying the media speculation to that effect has "no truth" to it.

The reports surfaced only days ahead of a progress hearing on her probation and resulted from Lohan switching her community service program after missing sessions at a Los Angeles women's shelter. The change was confirmed by a court official who declined to discuss details.

Lohan, 25, was sentenced to 360 hours community service earlier this year as part of her sentence for stealing a gold necklace from a jewelry store. The "Mean Girls" actress also served 35 days under house arrest.

The judge in the case warned Lohan to take the requirements seriously and complete her community service on time. If not, she might violate probation and be sent back to jail.

Lohan has until May 2012 to complete the program and is due to return to court on October 19 for a progress meeting.

Los Angeles District Attorney's spokeswoman Jane Robison said Lohan was now working with the Red Cross after several missed visits at the women's shelter.

Celebrity website TMZ.com said Lohan repeatedly failed to show up at the women's center and when she did, she stayed less than the required four-hour session.

Lohan, whose once promising movie career has been derailed by multiple trips to jail and rehab since 2007, did not address the allegations in detail. But she responded on Twitter saying: "I am not to be made an example of anymore. I am working hard and fulfilling my obligations every single day, to the court as well as myself. If I travel, it's for work and it's been approved.

"...I'd appreciate it if people will just let me do what is asked of me, so that I can get my life back. Please ignore the reports which have no truth to them," she added.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)


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"Dallas" star Hagman reprises role in spite of cancer (Reuters)

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) -"Dallas" star Larry Hagman is battling cancer, but will still take part in TNT's reboot of the series, he announced Friday.

TV Guide first reported the 80 year-old actor's diagnosis. He said he will still play J.R. Ewing in the upcoming series while receiving treatment.

"As J.R. I could get away with anything -- bribery, blackmail and adultery," Hagman said in a statement. "But I got caught by cancer. I do want everyone to know that it is a very common and treatable form of cancer. I will be receiving treatment while working on the new Dallas series. I could not think of a better place to be than working on a show I love, with people I love. Besides, as we all know, you can't keep J.R. down!"

The series will also feature fellow "Dallas" veterans Patrick Duffy, who plays Bobby Ewing and Linda Gray's Sue Ellen Ewing.


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Sunday, October 16, 2011

Lawyer for Jackson doctor says key tactic dropped (AP)

By LINDA DEUTSCH, AP Special Correspondent Linda Deutsch, Ap Special Correspondent – Sat Oct 15, 3:56 am ET

LOS ANGELES – Dr. Conrad Murray's attorney says he knew months before the physician's trial that a theory that Michael Jackson drank a fatal dose of the anesthetic propofol would have to be abandoned.

Defense attorney J. Michael Flanagan made the statement Friday without the jury present.

Murray, who was not in court for the hearing, has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter in the June 2009 death of the superstar from an overdose of propofol.

The idea of Jackson orally giving himself the fatal dose was long touted by defense attorneys as a centerpiece of their case. Documents had been filed and arguments heard about studies on the issue.

The attorneys have even referred to a fruit juice jar found on Jackson's bedside table, suggesting he had taken the drug with juice.

Flanagan initially dropped the bombshell Wednesday that the defense was abandoning the strategy.

"We are not going to assert at any point in this trial that Michael Jackson at any time orally ingested propofol," said Flanagan, who revealed he had commissioned a study that concluded propofol would not be absorbed into the body when ingested.

But he did not say when the study had been done.

Prosecutors and the judge appeared stunned at the announcement

At Friday's hearing, on a day when testimony was not heard, Deputy District Attorney David Walgren told the judge, "We are dealing with an ever-changing defense. It was just a couple of days ago they abandoned oral propofol."

"Oh, your honor, that is not correct," Flanagan said.

"No?' Walgren asked incredulously.

"We abandoned oral propofol months ago," said Flanagan, saying they were swayed by a report from the leading expert on the drug, who is expected to testify for the prosecution next week.

He said Dr. Steven Shafer had questioned "the bioavailability of oral propofol," meaning whether it would be absorbed into the body if swallowed.

Flanagan said the defense decided to have its own study conducted and, "We determined back in May that bioavailability of oral propofol was not feasible."

Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor said he had never been advised in advance that the theory would be dropped. He said he would not be dealing with Walgren's claims of an ever-changing defense.

"I don't have to go there," he said. "It is what it is right now."

Flanagan's disclosure offered a backstage look at possible defense gamesmanship in leading prosecutors to prepare to answer a defense theory that would never be presented.

A defense attorney not involved in the case said it is not an ethical or legal obligation of the defense to keep the prosecution posted on its strategies.

"I don't personally see a violation," said attorney Thomas Mesereau Jr. "You're supposed to operate in good faith, but you don't have to tell them every little strategy you intend to employ ... . Maybe this defense team was debating whether to use the issue up to the end."

In opening statements, defense attorney Edward Chernoff told the jury he would allege that Jackson self-administered drugs but did not specifically mention oral ingestion of propofol.

In other developments, the prosecution said its last witness will be Shafer and his testimony could take a day. The defense said it would call 15 witnesses including police officers, experts and some character witnesses. Attorney Nareg Gourjian estimated that would consume the rest of next week.


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Dyan Cannon book recounts life with Cary Grant

Actress Dyan Cannon poses for a portrait at her home in West Hollywood, California October 12, 2011. It was a fairy tale romance that turned in to a stormy marriage, and now Dyan Cannon has chronicled her relationship with Hollywood legend Cary Grant in her new book, ''Dear Cary: My Life with Cary Grant.'' With an age difference of over 30 years, the duo had a magical courtship in the 1960s that eventually gave way to the dark side of Grant after they were engaged. Following three years of marriage and not long after the birth of their daughter Jennifer, the couple divorced and Cannon suffered a nervous breakdown. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni

1 of 3. Actress Dyan Cannon poses for a portrait at her home in West Hollywood, California October 12, 2011. It was a fairy tale romance that turned in to a stormy marriage, and now Dyan Cannon has chronicled her relationship with Hollywood legend Cary Grant in her new book, ''Dear Cary: My Life with Cary Grant.'' With an age difference of over 30 years, the duo had a magical courtship in the 1960s that eventually gave way to the dark side of Grant after they were engaged. Following three years of marriage and not long after the birth of their daughter Jennifer, the couple divorced and Cannon suffered a nervous breakdown.

Credit: Reuters/Mario Anzuoni

By Zorianna Kit

LOS ANGELES | Fri Oct 14, 2011 5:00pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - It was a fairy tale romance that turned in to a stormy marriage, and now Dyan Cannon has chronicled her relationship with Hollywood legend Cary Grant in her new book, "Dear Cary: My Life with Cary Grant."

With an age difference of over 30 years, the duo had a magical courtship in the 1960s that eventually gave way to the dark side of Grant after they were engaged. Following three years of marriage and not long after the birth of their daughter Jennifer, the couple divorced and Cannon suffered a nervous breakdown.

Cannon, now in her early 70s, sat down with Reuters to talk about her former late husband and what she's learned about love over the years.

Q: Why focus the book just on your years with Cary?

A: "I've been offered so much money over the years to write a kiss and tell, which this is not. I wanted this to be a helpful book, an inspirational book. It's really about the little things that happen in our relationships that tear us asunder, so I felt people would benefit from most of this."

Q: Is there an underlying message you wanted to relay?

A: "One of the biggest messages is that it is wonderful to love and to serve and to give. It's wonderful to try and make people happy, but it's impossible to do so."

Q: What was the biggest challenge in writing this book?

A: "I know how people feel about Cary -- they love him. I didn't want people to lose the stars in their eyes about him. I wanted people to love him more at the end of this book than they did before. This book humanizes him. They'll understand what formed him. And I had such compassion for what formed him. But I also suffered a breakdown. So balancing all that was my biggest challenge."

Q: There must have been a lot of stories to sort through.

A: "I didn't know what to put in and what to leave out. The first (draft) was so out of balance. The second time around it started to take shape. The third time I thought, 'Maybe I've got it now.'"

Q: Cary was a big proponent of LSD use and wanted you to do it with him. But for you it was a disastrous experience. Do you think Cary had a drug problem?

A: "Absolutely not. With specificity, no. He thought LSD was his gateway to God, to peace, to that turmoil that wouldn't leave him alone. He thought it helped him, but I don't think it did. If it did, it gave him a peace that enabled him without being tormented 24 hours a day."

Q: Were you able to have a friendship after the divorce?

A: "We were polite."

Q: Was it hard getting your career back on track afterward? Did studio executives have to choose sides?

A: "Maybe some people for a moment. But Mike Frankovich was a good friend of Cary's. He was the head of Columbia Pictures and he chose me for 'Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice' (which earned Cannon an Oscar nomination). So no, not really."

Q: When Cary passed away in 1986 at the age of 82, did that affect you at all?

A: "I was amazed at how I mourned him. I couldn't believe how hammered I was by his death, how deeply I felt his loss. I loved him so dearly, but some of that love had to get pushed down through all the pain."

Q: Was he the greatest love of your life?

A: "I've known a lot of wonderful men. I've known a couple of jerks. And I think the best is yet to come (laughs). I do. Because I understand love now. That's why I can say I'm a whole, satisfied, complete woman. But up to now, I've certainly had no experience with anybody like I had with Cary. I loved him and he loved me. I was the only woman in the world that he trusted enough to have a baby with. That's a big deal to me."

Q: Your daughter, Jennifer, has a three year-old son, Cary Benjamin. Do you see traits of Cary in her or in little Cary?

A: "More with the grandchild. There's traits in Jennifer that remind me of Cary -- wonderful traits. But the little guy, he's something else!."

Q: Will you write another book to encompass all the other aspects of your life?

A: "I'm not sure about writing another book. I've had offers but writing a book is the hardest thing I've ever done. I'd like to write and perform a one-woman show with other people as a part of it. I've talked to a friend of mine, we're contemplating it and I've made a lot of notes. But as far as a second book about my career and things that happened to me? I'm not motivated to do that."

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)


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Huge amount of star power can't save 'The Big Year' - Buffalo News

A knotty credit problem, to be sure.

The big star names are in a pyramid. Steve Martin’s is on top. Jack Black’s and Owen Wilson’s are directly underneath on an equal level. All, though, are given to you in the same frame.

And then come the utterly mind-boggling names in the rest of this cast list: Brian Dennehy, Dianne Weist, Anthony Anderson, JoBeth Williams, Kevin Pollak, Rashida Jones, Rosamund Pike, John Cleese, Joel McHale, Anjelica Huston, Jim Parsons, Tim Blake Nelson and on and on and on.

My God, you might say to yourself looking at this film’s credits. That’s certainly a lot of firepower for any comedy, let alone one on the subject of competitive birdwatching.

Which the movie is at great pains to tell us is called “birding” by its practitioners.

Who, it would seem, are absolutely the only ones who ought to be encouraged to see this movie.

I made it through an hour and 20 minutes of it before walking out in absolute bafflement why it was made at all, much less why it employed that truly phenomenal cast and the director, David Frankel no less, of “The Devil Wears Prada.”

Is Fox uber-boss Rupert Murdoch a “birder?” Is someone in his immediately family?

That would go a long way toward explaining why someone greenlighted Howard Franklin’s script from Mark Obmascik’s book about competitive and obsessive birding.

So, too, would it explain things if Martin were a birder and someone at Fox 2000 owed him a favor.

A very, very big favor.

Everything else about the preposterous making of this film is likely to remain more than a little mysterious. One learns from the IMDB website that, at some point, Dustin Hoffman and Steve Carell were attached to the project. One’s respect for them can’t help but rise sharply when you watch the film they wisely decided not to make.

It’s about three “birders” having what their kind call a “big year,” i. e., a year when they try to put eyes on as many different bird species as they can. The record is 732. It’s from a fellow named Bostick, played by Wilson.

Can the characters played by Martin and Black beat that record?

When a young girl wants to know why birdwatching has become a competition, her mother replies, “They’re men. If they stop competing, they die.”

And that’s a line that is neither a) true, nor b) funny. But then, even the most indulgent members of the audience will find it difficult to laugh all through this movie. (Sample wisecrack: Black’s character explaining why he’s obsessed with “birding:” “The birdseed endorsements are huge.” And that’s one of the better lines.)

Will a female outsider take the competitive prize — the fresh-faced lovely played by Jones, perhaps?

A better question: Can anyone who wandered in innocently, as I did — a fan of Martin, Black and Wilson — happily make it through to the very end of this movie?

Well, I couldn’t. As for you “birders” out there, by all means, see if your luck is better.

 -----

“The Big Year”

1 star out of 4

Starring Steve Martin, Jack Black and Owen Wilson. 100 minutes. Rated PG for language and some sensuality. Opened Friday in area theaters.

jsimon@buffnews.comnull


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Leave me be, says Lohan, "I am working hard" (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Actress Lindsay Lohan on Friday struck back at suggestions she was shirking tasks assigned to her under a court-ordered probation, saying the media speculation to that effect has "no truth" to it.

The reports surfaced only days ahead of a progress hearing on her probation and resulted from Lohan switching her community service program after missing sessions at a Los Angeles women's shelter. The change was confirmed by a court official who declined to discuss details.

Lohan, 25, was sentenced to 360 hours community service earlier this year as part of her sentence for stealing a gold necklace from a jewelry store. The "Mean Girls" actress also served 35 days under house arrest.

The judge in the case warned Lohan to take the requirements seriously and complete her community service on time. If not, she might violate probation and be sent back to jail.

Lohan has until May 2012 to complete the program and is due to return to court on October 19 for a progress meeting.

Los Angeles District Attorney's spokeswoman Jane Robison said Lohan was now working with the Red Cross after several missed visits at the women's shelter.

Celebrity website TMZ.com said Lohan repeatedly failed to show up at the women's center and when she did, she stayed less than the required four-hour session.

Lohan, whose once promising movie career has been derailed by multiple trips to jail and rehab since 2007, did not address the allegations in detail. But she responded on Twitter saying: "I am not to be made an example of anymore. I am working hard and fulfilling my obligations every single day, to the court as well as myself. If I travel, it's for work and it's been approved.

"...I'd appreciate it if people will just let me do what is asked of me, so that I can get my life back. Please ignore the reports which have no truth to them," she added.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)


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'Jersey Shore' recap: il Gattopardo - Entertainment Weekly

Image credit: MTV

INNOCENTS ABROAD Team Meatball, shown here in the middle of a 24-hour Saturday night

It seems inconceivable that the Jersey Shore cast could possibly hate Florence so much. Sure, none of them really speak Italian. Sure, it's impossible to get a decent tan. Sure, Snooki killed a cop. But we have to keep some perspective here, viewers. These people were flown out to one of the great old cities of the Western World, were given a lavish villa with a fizzy hot tub and a pigeon-friendly smoker's porch, were expressly instructed by their MTV overseers to do nothing but have fun, fun, fun, fun. And yet, as we consider the penultimate episode of this season, we have to reach one simple, scientific conclusion: Fun is what they are not having.

After some early luck with the Low Self-Esteem Twins, the local population has proven immune to the cast's smushworthy charms. The housemates have, slowly but surely, turned away from the outside world. Like an aging family of aristocrats fearful of the changing world outside, they've been forced to huddle together in semi-incestuous pansexuality. Deena and Snooki tried to strangle each other with their tongues. Pauly and Vinny have declared their eternal love-bond. J-Woww and Sammi have become friends, and Sammi and Ronnie have somehow maintained a healthy relationship for weeks now. When you consider the general animosity between those three people in season 3, the only possible conclusion is that they have decided to make peace before the world comes to an end.

This whole weird fourth season doesn't seem to have been too fun for the viewers, either. Ratings have declined pretty steadily since the anti-climactic Sitch/Ronnie scuffle. MTV appears to be cutting their losses, ending the season with next week's 12th episode. (Seasons 2 and 3 both had 13 episodes.) When the gang celebrated their last Sunday dinner on last night's episode, Pauly D tried gamely to put a happy spin on their Florentine misadventure: "I had some of the best days of my life out here." Absolutely no one agreed with those sentiments. Vinny summed up the general feeling: "I'm glad we're leaving."

There's a real sense that the cast of Jersey Shore tried to defeat Florence. And they lost. Just look at how Deena and Snooki decided to spend their last Saturday morning in the city: Dancing on the top of an empty bar at 11 AM. Deena taught a local girl how to Jersey Turnpike. The local girl looked terrified. It was like watching the last survivor of a dying alien race try to teach a human captive how to speak the alien language, except that all of the alien language's vowel sounds involved cuca flashing. "We're not gonna half-ass this!" screamed the Meatballs. "We're gonna drink all day, we're gonna drink all night!"

That turned out to be a conservative estimate. Team Meatball was on a tear; when everyone else wanted to go home, they insisted on keeping the party going at Central. But the natives were restless. Some young Italian lads started dancing all up on Shnookums, which she didn't appreciate. "Back up! Don't touch me!" she screamed. The Meatballs fled to the bar seeking sanctuary. The bartender threw ice at them. "Oh, cause that was mature!" said Snooki, who proceeded to maturely push every bottle off the bar. She to be carried away by a man in a black T-shirt, her four orange limbs writhing in the air, like an orange overturned turtle.

NEXT: A family recipe for an old-fashioned Cuca Burn


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