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

Kelly Clarkson ties the knot with Brandon Blackstock

Tuesday, 22 October 2013

She tweeted the news.

Kelly Clarkson is celebrating a big moment!

The singer married fiancé Brandon Blackstock Sunday, and she reported the happy news on Twitter Monday afternoon. Clarkson also shared an adorable picture of Blackstock planting a sweet kiss on her head. And she looks stunning in her long-sleeve lace wedding dress by Temperley (she tweeted thanks to the designer).

The ceremony took place at Blackberry Farm in Walland, Tenn.

Clarkson had said in August that the two had scrapped their big wedding plans because of their busy schedules, instead opting to elope. It seems like they stuck with the low-key plan.

The Stronger singer, 31, is now stepmom to music-exec Blackstock's two children.

Horror abuse of child stars

A famous 1980s child star has published a tell-all book about the sexual abuse he suffered at the hands of older men in Hollywood, warning parents of the underground horrors of the child actor industry. 

Corey Feldman appeared in movies Stand By Me, The Lost Boys, Gremlins and The Goonies.

He recalls in his new book, Coreyography, how he and fellow child star Corey Haim were told by adults they trusted in the industry that it was normal for older men and young boys to have sexual relations.

Feldman first met Haim on the set of The Lost Boys when they were just 14: they soon realised they were both being abused by Hollywood power players.

Feldman reports that Haim told him he had been sodomised when "innocent and ambitious" and just 14 by an older male on the set of the 1986 film, Lucas.

This man who abused Haim now "walks around, one of the most successful people in the entertainment industry, still making money hand over fist," Feldman writes in the book.

Feldman said he sought out adult role models at work due to a dysfunctional home life, with his mother dying his hair blonde at age four and torturing him about his weight, the Daily Mail reported. He was his family's breadwinner at age seven. 

These 'role models' took advantage of their power: Feldman says he was abused by an assistant hired by his father when he was in his early teens. He says the man, who was in his early 20s, took him out on the town and gave him a cocktail of pills.

He writes that the man he refers to as "Ron" put a hand on his thigh and ended up having oral sex with the "petrified" and "revolted" Feldman that night. 

The relationship with Ron lasted several years, but Feldman also formed relationships with other men during this time, many of whom turned out to be paedophiles.

In one especially sad moment in the book, which is being released on October 28, Feldman reflects on a picture taken at his 15th birthday of him and Haim with five older men - he says all five men were paedophiles, and all of them had abused them.

"Slowly, over a period of many years I would begin to realise that many of the people I had surrounded myself with were monsters," he writes of his early career in Coreyography.

The two child actors went on to make nine films together, they also partied heavily, their increasingly damaging antics driven by the horrors of their abuse.

Feldman developed a dependence on drugs after discovering his mother's cocaine stash, and snorted 3.5 grams every two days, before later moving onto heroin.

Haim's dependency was even worse - relapsing several times before dying of pneumonia in 2010 aged just 38.

Feldman relapsed in 1995, but he said since then he's been clean. He now works on low-budget horror films and, with ex-wife Playboy model Susie Sprague,  has a 9-year-old son - who he will not be encouraging into child acting.

"People always ask me about life after childhood stardom. What would I say to parents of children in the industry?' he writes.

"My only advice, honestly, is to get these kids out of Hollywood and let them lead normal lives."

Feldman says Michael Jackson was one of the few people who treated him with respect. As a teenager desperate for normalcy, Feldman called Jackson, who he had been introduced to by Steven Spielberg.

"I was shattered, disgusted, devastated. I needed some normalcy in my life. So, I called Michael Jackson," he recalls.

"Michael Jackson's world, crazy as it sounds, had become my happy place. Being with Michael brought me back to my innocence. When I was with Michael, it was like being 10 years old again."

He insists in the book that Jackson never abused him or tried to touch him sexually.

Carol Burnett receives Mark Twain Prize for comedy

Monday, 21 October 2013

US comedian Carol Burnett has been honoured with the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor.

Dame Julie Andrews, Tony Bennett and Tina Fey were among those who performed in her honour at the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts on Sunday.

Burnett's variety show began in the 1960s and ran for 11 years, averaging 30 million viewers a week.

"This is very encouraging... it was a long time in coming," Burnett joked as she accepted the prize.

She added: "I understand because there are so many people funnier than I am, especially here in Washington.

"With any luck, they'll soon get voted out, and I'll still have the Mark Twain Prize."

Tarzan yell
Fey - creator and star of 30 Rock - applauded Burnett, 80, for opening doors for other female comedians. When Burnett first launched her own show, a TV executive told her the genre was "a man's game".

"You mean so much to me," Fey said.

"I love you in a way that is just shy of creepy," she joked.

Burnett got her first break when she was talent-spotted by bookers for the Ed Sullivan Show.

She then landed a role on Broadway and began to appear on The Garry Moore Show.

This led to Burnett signing a 10-year contract with CBS to do guest slots on sitcoms and perform in one TV special a year.

She launched the Carol Burnett Show in 1967, with guest stars including Lucille Ball, Jimmy Stewart and Ronald Reagan.

It won 22 Emmy awards. Burnett was best known for her "Tarzan" yell and for ending each show by tugging her ear, which was a personal message to her grandmother.

Tim Conway, one of Burnett's co-stars on her show, joked that he now spends his time travelling around the US for Burnett to receive awards.

"Thank you for being such a friend, such a generous person, not with salary, but generous."

Gravity Soars to Third Consecutive Box Office Victory

Sir Isaac Newton was right: there is no stopping Gravity.

The Sandra Bullock-anchored drama finished first at the box office once again this week, sailing past the $170 million mark after just 17 days in release.

The movie is now the tenth highest-grossing domestic film of 2010 and should easily clear $250 million in the U.S. before its run is over. Globally, Gravity has already earned $284.8 million.

Elsewhere, Captain Phillips grossed $17.3 million and sat once again in second place, while mixed Carrie reviews may contributed to a disappointing opening for this horror remake.

It only averaged $5,385 per theater and came in third.

The presence of Sylvester Stallone and Arnold Schwarznegger, meanwhile, was not enough to make movie goers forget about the mostly negative Escape Plan reviews, as that film tanked.

Here is a look at the top five overall:

Gravity: $31 million
Captain Phillips: $17.3 million
Carrie: $17 million
Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2: $10.1 million
Escape Plan: $9.8 million

Kim Kardashian's Hair Transformations

Only one other part of Kim Kardashian's anatomy elicits as much online chatter as her hair.

The naturally brunette beauty is currently blonde, has gone red twice and has sported bangs and cornrows -- though not at the same time.

Her latest transformation follows the birth of her first child, North West, with boyfriend Kanye West. Since early September, Kardashian has been sporting the lighter locks.

It's not the first time, she's gone blonde. Click through for a quick look back at some of Kim Kardashian's hair transformations.

'Walking Dead' inspires new convention in Atlanta

Cable TV's "The Walking Dead" has inspired a new convention, a podcast, and a one-man play.

The podcast and Atlanta-based convention are the creations of Eric Nordhoff and James Frazier, also known as the "Walker Stalkers" because of a road trip they made last fall from Nashville, Tenn., to Georgia to see the AMC show being filmed.

The convention, Walker Stalker Con, is expected to draw 10,000 or more participants when it's held early next month, Nordhoff said.

"The Walking Dead" characters battle zombies known as "walkers" in the streets of downtown Atlanta and in forests, small towns and a prison south of the city.

The convention will feature appearances by some of the show's actors, including Norman Reedus, who slays walkers with a crossbow as Daryl Dixon; Andrew Lincoln, who plays Sheriff Rick Grimes, and Lauren Cohan, also known as Maggie Greene on the show.

The series returned for its fourth season this month with its biggest audience ever. The 16.1 million people who watched the Oct. 13 series premier shattered the show's previous record of 12.4 million, the Nielsen company said.

Nordhoff and Frazier are neighbors in suburban Nashville, and had gathered every Sunday in Frazier's basement to watch "The Walking Dead." They'd heard talk of a big day of filming in Senoia, the town south of Atlanta where much of the show is produced, so they got up before sunrise and made the trip to Georgia.

"It was our dream day," recalls Nordhoff, 42.

"We got to meet I think eight members of the cast," he recalls. "Somebody called us the `Walker Stalkers' when we were there."

The two decided to develop a podcast that has become popular with fans of the show. The podcast features discussions of many aspects of the show's storyline and interviews with people behind the scenes, such as special effects makeup expert and show producer Greg Nicotero.

In April, Nordhoff and Frazier came up with the idea of holding the convention, which will take place Nov. 1-3.

The show has also inspired one of its actors to stage a one-man play.

Robert "IronE" Singleton, who played "T-Dog" in the first three seasons of the show, will portray 18 characters in "Blindsided by the Walking Dead," which tells the story of how he grew up in the Perry Homes housing project during Atlanta's crack cocaine epidemic before he found work as an actor.

A key scene of "The Walking Dead" was filmed on a downtown Atlanta rooftop just a few miles from the project, where violence was ever-present during Singleton's childhood and teenage years.

"Blindsided by the Walking Dead" is a work of drama, comedy, dance, spoken word and rap. Its characters include a thug, a crack addict, Richard III from Shakespeare, God and Singleton's deceased mother.

"I think it could inspire people and save lives," said the 38-year-old actor, who also will take part in a panel discussion during the convention.

"It's about embracing truth and love through everything you do."

The Walking Dead Watch: “Infected”

In TV, there are some “cold opens” that signal a shift in a show’s direction or tone or character. We saw that last week with the first minute of The Walking Dead’s season 4 premiere. We met farmer Rick and saw his ambivalence when he found a pistol buried in the ground. This opening scene presaged a major shift in two ways: (1) that post-Governor life in the prison had become so tranquil that lawman Rick could contemplate a semblance of order to his makeshift farm, and (2) that years of leading people fighting for survival had taken such a toll on a once-fearless warrior that he had gone the extra step to renounce weapons in hopes he could give his son a more normal existence.

The cold open from this season’s second episode, “Infected,” falls into another category: the mystery set-up, a scene that show us just enough to know thing are going to be really bad. The tight shot of a live rat illuminated only by flashlight, being fed through the fence to a waiting walker tells us we have a saboteur. Who is this person? And for what reasons could he or she even have for these actions?

“Infected” doesn’t answer those questions. The enemy-within plot is one that will play out over more episodes. But we did see the disastrous effects of those actions when a zombie horde nearly breached the outer wall of the prison. In a smart, and devastating, moment of cunning, Rick managed to lure the horde away by sacrificing the livestock he’s worked to cultivate. But more on that in a minute, first we have to address the emergence of the “woggers.”

The second part of last night’s opener played out through the classic horror-movie technique that goes something like this: the bad things you see are really bad; the bad things you don’t see—but that you know are there—are terrifying. Steven Spielberg used camera shots over and through dark water to create some of the scariest scenes in Jaws. The times we didn’t see the shark were far more frightening than the scenes where we did. As we followed Karen through the shower room, we knew that the zombie Patrick was in there somewhere. The tension mounted as she heard something and pulled aside a shower curtain to find nothing there (okay, that was kind of cliché, but it still worked pretty well).

But there was something there, and zombie Patrick almost chose Karen’s room before moving on to attack someone else, a nameless newcomer who was sacrificed to the zombie gods (because he happened to snore.) There seemed to be something different about zombie Patrick—how quickly he moved, how he attacked his first victim by biting him in the throat so he couldn’t scream—that suggests he’s no ordinary walker. For now, until we can come up with a more scientific name (please suggest some below), I’m calling this new breed of zombies the woggers: they’re faster than walkers, but they don’t quite jog; they move at a walk-jog—a “wog.” We saw from Patrick’s first victim that they look a little different, with more brightly colored eyes. After he rose from his bunk (with his guts spilling out all over the floor—a nice gory touch) he was the first zombie other than Patrick to attack people, not just to devour them as victims, but to leave enough intact so they join the wogger ranks in decent fighting shape.

When our group first faced the woggers in cellblock D, all hell broke loose. Woggers were intermingled with civilians; some were bitten and some were fine. They managed to get the security situation under control before turning to the question of how it all happened. Hershel (with a new cast member who seems to be a doctor), correctly traced the epidemic back to Patrick and realized he died of some kind of infection. Where did it come from? How did it spread? Does it create a new, more lethal version of zombie? To quote my favorite movie, The Big Lebowski, “Well, Dude, we just don’t know.”

And we probably won’t find out for some time. The infection narrative looks like it’s going to be a long play, and we didn’t get many clues from the closing scene. Poor Tyrese, just trying to bring his girlfriend flowers finds carnage and a blood trail through the bowels of the prison. He finds Karen’s charred body in a back courtyard, identifying her by her bracelet. Did she turn into a zombie just by being exposed to the disease? Who made the call to have her body burned? We’ll need to wait another long week to find out.

And now for a hail of bullets:

Zombie Kill Report: Dozens upon dozens, again boosted by the exterminations along the fence line. The fight in cell block D was sufficiently bloody with a smashing head stomp and plenty of walkers dispatched by Daryl’s crossbow. We even see Rick get back in the action with a very small pocket knife.

The Return of the King: Speaking of Rick, our fearless leader is back. But it wasn’t a pleasant journey. When the zombie horde nearly overruns a section of the fence, he quickly realizes they can’t kill their way out of the situation. The scene in which he sacrifices his pigs is powerful, not because we care about pigs, but because of the intense emotions that play across Andrew Lincoln’s face. Particularly devastating is his expression when he slices open the runt of the litter—we see the death of Rick’s dream of a tranquil life. In the end, he puts back on the gun, ready to roll into battle once more.

Michonne’s Tender Side: Before the season started, we said we wanted to see more character development out of Michonne. We got, through a few jokes, a little bit of that last week—in episode 2, we see a whole new side of the show’s greatest warrior. When Beth hands baby Judith to Michonne to hold for a second, Michonne breaks down. Earlier, Beth had asked why there was a name for someone who loses a husband (widow) or a child who loses his parents (orphan), but no name for someone who loses a child. We didn’t need to be told that Michonne once had a child that she lost. The scene—and a great performance by Danai Gurira—says it all.

And Carol’s Dark Side: I don’t know whether I’m impressed or worried about Carol, but I am surprised. Teaching kids to use knives in self-defense is one thing; encouraging a little girl to stab her father in the head before he turns into a zombie is quite another. Have the years of survival and struggle forced Carol to abandon her humanity to this degree? It seems a bit sudden, and she backtracks somewhat at episode’s end when she put a flower behind Lizzie’s ear. Maybe that’s the last we’ve seen of stone cold Carol—and, if so, then good riddance. Carol has more than proven her toughness and strength over the years, and she doesn’t need to act like a hardass who’s completely devoid of all feelings. There’s enough nastiness in The Walking Dead universe; let Carol be one of the good ones.

What did you think of last night’s episode? Are the new zombies really Woggers, or was I accidentally watching the episode at a higher speed? Weigh in below.

Justin Bieber's fan spends USD 100,000 to look like him

A fan of pop star Justin Bieber, has spent about USD 100,000 in plastic surgeries to look more like the singer.

The 33-year-old fan, Toby Sheldon, is a songwriter, who lives in Los Angeles. He has done several procedures such as hair transplants, face fillers, a chin reduction and eyelid surgery so that he looks more like the 19-year-old 'Baby' hitmaker, reported Huffington Post.

"Once Justin shot to fame his face was everywhere and all I kept thinking when I saw his picture was, 'I want to look like him'," Sheldon said.

"It took three transplants and a total of USD 21,000 to accurately lower my hair line, close off my temples and grow back my bangs," he added.

Sheldon, who admitted that he had phobia of ageing, added, "By using Justin's charming baby face as my inspiration, I've been able to restructure my entire look to maintain a much more youthful appearance through plastic surgery.

"I didn't necessarily listen to his music or fawn over him as a celebrity, but his face was just so flawless every change I made was modelled after him," he said.

Following USD 21,000-worth of hair procedure, he underwent other procedures to his lips and face, with most recently getting a three-part smile surgery which cost about USD 30,000.

Robert Redford talks about his career-defining performance in ‘All Is Lost’

Saturday, 19 October 2013

There are moments while talking with Robert Redford when you can see that 1970s sex symbol peeking through from a weathered 77-year-old face — starting when he rises from a couch in a New York publicist’s office, looking amazingly fit in jeans, white T-shirt and cordovan cowboy boots. Settling in for a brief interview, one’s tempted to lean across the coffee table and tuck back a lock of his thick, only slightly graying hair, just like Barbra Streisand did in “The Way We Were.” This smile is still straight out of “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.” The voice as seductive as it was in “All the President’s Men” or “Three Days of the Condor.”

In case it isn’t obvious, in other words, Redford’s still got it. And anyone needing proof of that fact will be convinced by his newest movie, a man-against-nature thriller called “All Is Lost” in which he plays a nameless character whose sailboat runs afoul of a shipping container in the Indian Ocean. The film, written and directed by J.C. Chandor (“Margin Call”) chronicles his week-long attempt to keep his boat afloat and stay alive. And Redford thoroughly dominates the drama, in which he’s the sole star and in which he utters just a few words of dialogue, putting his body through moments of watery peril, hopelessness and existential terror.

For the 106-minute running time of “All Is Lost,” Redford delivers something of a master class in the art of screen acting, using his prime instrument — his body — to deliver a galvanizing, physically grueling, deeply emotional performance that would be electrifying coming from someone half his age. The fact that it’s Redford up there, battling the elements, refusing to go gently, embodying the hopes, fears, desires and recriminations of the generation of which he’s been so emblematic, makes “All Is Lost” not just thrilling, but profound.

On this rainy day in New York, Redford bears not a trace of the stresses he went through making “All Is Lost,” which was filmed in the same Baja, Calif., water tanks as “Titanic.” He’s even getting used to the idea that the movie is a success — a fact that first dawned on him at the Cannes Film Festival, where he saw it for the first time at a gala black-tie premiere. “I had not seen anything,” he says. “I had not looked at the monitor between takes, I didn’t go to dailies, I took myself out of that. So when the lights came down I didn’t know what to expect.” He was prepared for the worst, he recalls. “And when it went the other way, I just didn’t know what to do with it. I did not know how to behave.”

It’s entirely in keeping with Redford’s wary, often ambivalent relationship with success that he didn’t quite know what to make of his latest one. This is a man who came to New York in the 1950s in order to be a painter, and instead found himself drawn — despite his inborn shyness and California-bred contempt for shallow movie culture — to acting. A man who, when stardom began to find him in the 1960s, responded by buying up land in Utah, the better to retreat from it. The man who, when he saw the studio culture changing in the 1980s, didn’t “lean in,” but built his own nonprofit institute, where he could nurture filmmakers interested in making the small, independent, often subversive films he himself produced whenever the system would let him. This is the man whose watchwords have always been: At the height of your greatest success, always go back to zero.

“That’s right,” Redford says today. “Be careful of success, it has a dark side.” In a way, “All Is Lost” is a product of the success of the Sundance Institute and Sundance Film Festival, which Redford spent most of the 1980s and 1990s building and protecting, at the expense of his own acting and directing career. “Yeah, I got off my stride a bit with my own work,” he admits. “I kind of woke up and said, wait a second, I need to go back to what it is that I do.”

Now he’s restoring the balance. Last spring, he directed and starred in the political thriller “The Company You Keep.” He has revived longstanding plans to direct and star in the adaptation of Bill Bryson’s book “A Walk in the Woods,” and next year he’ll appear in the comic-book action-adventure “Captain America: The Winter Soldier.” With “All Is Lost,” however, he has tackled something deeper and more challenging on any level, aesthetic or physical.

“Its purity is what attracted me,” he says of Chandor’s script. “It was very bold, I was attracted by that. There’s no dialogue, I was attracted by that. It was not going to have a lot of special effects. Even though we were going to be filming in tanks, it was going to be real rain and wind. It was a very pure experience that I felt had gone missing [in movies]. It was a chance for me to be a part of going back to that.”

It was also a chance for Redford finally to work with one of the hundreds of promising young filmmakers who got their start at Sundance, a roll call that includes names like Soderbergh, Linklater and Tarantino. When Chandor’s film “Margin Call” made its debut at the festival in 2011, he handed Redford the script for “All Is Lost” (which, with no dialogue, amounted to 30-some pages). “J.C. is the first and only filmmaker of all the ones I’ve supported who’s ever asked me to be in a film!” Redford says, adding that the reason for the reticence is “anybody’s guess.” (He has since agreed to star in “The Old Man and the Gun,” with Sundance alum David Lowery at the helm.)

It took the actor 10 minutes to say yes to “All Is Lost.” At that point, he says, he wanted to put himself entirely in the service of a director, with no second guessing or kibitzing. “I just want to be an actor,” he recalls telling Chandor. “I’ll put myself in your hands, and let’s go. There was not one moment where I thought about directing. I never gave him any pointers, we never discussed it, because I trusted him.”

Chandor notes that Redford had just finished post-production work on “The Company You Keep” when he showed up on the “All Is Lost” set. The minute he arrived, that last project — as well as Sundance and environmental causes and Redford’s activism in the arts — melted away. “I think he really enjoyed, after all those years of trying to wear all those different hats, just absolutely closing off and becoming a pure actor again,” Chandor says.

The word “pure” comes up a lot when discussing “All Is Lost,” and rightfully so: It is pure visual storytelling at its most compelling and an example of pure screen acting at its most physical and expressive. Redford did as many of his own stunts as possible, and when it became clear that he could handle them, Chandor began to see how far he could push his leading man, who in turn rose to nearly every challenge. Aching, wet, cold and bone-tired every night, the actor resorted to a time-honored cure: “Tequila,” he says with a laugh. “I’m proud of [the movie] because it’s a total performance. But it did take its toll.”

“All Is Lost” represents another kind of purity for Redford, one that he thought he left behind when he gave up painting for acting, one that he re-discovered when he began directing in the 1980s, but that he rarely found as an ambivalent actor-for-hire for studios that just wanted him to look good and little else. For the first time in decades, the movie star Redford was never comfortable being and the artist he thought he’d left behind have fused, in a film that works as vehicle and spectacle, but that’s also risky, rigorous and deeply meaningful.

“I don’t know how to express it, I don’t know how to describe it, but I agree with you,” he says softly. “Something seems to be coming together.”

'Brooklyn Nine-Nine' gets post-Super Bowl slot

Fox's cop comedy Brooklyn Nine-Nine is expanding its precinct.

The freshman series, starring Andy Samberg and Andre Braugher, has been extended for a full season of 22 episodes, the network announced Friday. And it's been given another vote of confidence: A berth, along with New Girl, behind Super Bowl XLVII on Feb. 2.

"It's exciting to see that both critics and fans love Brooklyn Nine-Nine as much as we do," says Fox chairman Kevin Reilly in a statement announcing the extension. "With Andy and Andre out in front of this incredible ensemble, it feels like this show is going to be around for a long time."

The show could use some more of those fans: Its averaging just under 5 million viewers on Tuesdays this season. But Fox research shows that when video on demand, DVR playback and streaming are counted, the premiere episode (which aired Sept. 17) has amassed 14.6 million viewers.

Also Friday, CBS announced full-season extensions of comedies The Crazy Ones, The Millers and Mom. Typically, new shows get 13-episode orders; in success (or lack of failure), networks add nine more episodes to fill out (with repeats) a full TV season.

'12 Years' Records Enslavement, But How Does The Story End?

There's a true American saga on screens this weekend.

Twelve Years a Slave tells the story of Solomon Northup. He was an African-American musician from New York — a free man, until he was kidnapped and sold into slavery. After an unlikely rescue, he returned home and wrote a memoir, first published a 160 years ago.

But the end of Northup's story is an unsolved mystery that has confounded historians for years.

A Story Brought To Life

Northup was drugged, kidnapped and sold into slavery not far from the National Mall in 1841. What is now the Federal Aviation Administration headquarters was once the site of "a slave pen within the very shadow of the Capitol," as Northup described it in his book, which he dedicated to writer David Wilson.

Carol Wilson, a history professor at Maryland's Washington College, has studied hundreds of documented kidnappings of African-Americans before the Civil War. She says Northup's story is unique.

"First of all, that he could spend over a decade in slavery and then still get out — but also that he wrote an account, and it's really one of the most valuable narratives of a slave that we have because he experienced slavery as a free person," she says.

This kind of documentation is rare, says John Ridley, who wrote and produced the new film adaptation of Twelve Years a Slave.


"Even though we think we've seen every slave narrative, the reality is that very few of these stories have really ever been told and brought to life," he says.

The film is a visceral portrayal of the brutality of slavery — so is the book.

"When he's being whipped, you feel it. When he triumphs over something, or pulls a fast one on his owner, you're there with him, too," says Clifford Brown, who teaches at Union College in New York and has co-authored the new biography Solomon Northup: The Complete Story of the Author of Twelve Years a Slave.

He says Northup's return home in 1853 made headlines. His memoir was published later that year.

His Final Request

After the book came out, Northup hit the lecture circuit, produced to unsuccessful stage plays about his experience and sued his kidnappers. There is also some evidence that he helped fugitive slaves escape through the Underground Railroad.

But by the end of the Civil War, Northup had disappeared from the public record.

"We know where his son is buried. We know where his father is buried. But we don't know where he's buried. It's a mystery," Brown says.

Brown and his co-authors, David Fiske and Rachel Seligman, have tried to solve that mystery for almost two decades. They've visited graveyards and combed through old death notices. They've even spoken with Northup's descendants, including Clayton Adams, Northup's great-great-great-grandson.

Adams shared a copy of Northup's book with his wife, India, when they were dating.

"I told her, 'I have this one book here that was very interesting and based on a true story,' " he says. After a few days, Adams' wife finished the book – and then learned that she was dating one of the author's descendants.

"I think I was just in awe that, you know, I knew someone that could actually have their history documented, which unfortunately, a lot of African-Americans don't have," she says.

Adams says he wishes he knew how the story of Northup ended. "It still is open. It's not closed," he says.

Adams describes reading the last words of Northup's book as heartbreaking; "I hope henceforward to lead an upright though lowly life, and rest at last in the church yard where my father sleeps," Northup wrote.

"So after all of that ordeal, his last request in his book, the last line is that he just wished when he dies he could lay right next to the grave of his father," Adams says.

He says the line still haunts him "every time I read it or think about it."

Captain Phillips: Excellent is the word

The story of modern-day piracy made headlines in early April 2009: how just four Somali pirates armed with machine guns boarded the Maersk Alabama, and held it to ransom off the coast of Africa. The container ship, manned by Captain Richard Phillips and 20 crew members, had on board hundreds of tonnes of cargo but not a single weapon.

Director Paul Greengrass’ powerful film Captain Phillips is based on the eventual book about the event, A Captain’s Duty: Somali Pirates, Navy SEALs, and Dangerous Days at Sea.

The film opens with a shorthand but effective look into the lives of the adversaries who will meet aboard the Maersk Alabama — on one hand is veteran Captain Phillips, a caring family man at home who runs a tight ship at work; on the other, are the impoverished, disempowered Somalis who have little to lose when handed machine guns, motorboats and a plan to board a western ship.

Greengrass keeps the action going; we move very swiftly to the Captain boarding the ship, carrying out a security drill and the Somalis attacking. The director’s handheld camera technique — used to such good effect in the two Bourne films — gives immediacy and plausibility to the situation.

As do his intelligent casting choices — actors who say everything that needs to be said, just by showing up on screen, whether it’s Max Martini as the SEAL Commander or Tom Hanks as Captain Phillips. While not a particular Hanks fan, he does exude dependability, decency and the heroism inherent in everyman, seemingly just by playing himself.


And then there’s Barkhad Abdi, a Somali-born immigrant to America who plays Muse, the unofficial leader among the four Somalis. The actor in his debut role scorches the screen with his ravaged frame and razor sharp cheekbones; the force of his personality forces you to acknowledge both his desperate hunger and an odd sense of compassion.

Greengrass finds clever solutions to the essential problem of telling a story whose outcomes are known — he gives you detail, but more importantly, another perspective. The crew members are seen eating full breakfasts on board the ship whose cargo included food aid for African countries. By contrast, all that the four Somalis are ever seen consuming is khat, the plant said to generate excitement and depress appetite.

Provocative visual imbalances are set up, such as the might of the American Navy looming up high against the miniscule lifeboat carrying the Somalis and their hostage.

The film does not condone the act of piracy, but it does make you think about the choices open to the Somalis in a land where basic survival is the aspirational goal. We are asked to reconsider the roles of attacker and victim in today’s globalised world.

Recent news stories have questioned the portrayal of the filmic Captain Phillips; his real-life crew members have alleged that his heroism is a lie. While this may disappoint many, it should not detract from the excellence of Greengrass’ film, which is contemporary thriller, political statement and documentary all rolled into a satisfying and gripping whole.

Genre: Drama

Director: Paul Greengrass

Cast: Tom Hanks, Barkhad Abdi, Max Martini

Storyline: Gripping dramatisation of the true-life story of how four Somalis pirates boarded an American cargo ship in April 2009.

Bottomline: Everything that recent instalments of Pirates of the Caribbean are not. And then some.

Keywords: Captain Phillips, Captain Phillips movie review, Tom Hanks

Naughty Naughty! Kim Kardashian drives while chatting on her mobile.. after Kanye West tells her 'no more plastic surgery'

The distraction of a newborn baby may have been the reason why Kim Kardashian forgot that driving while on your phone is now illegal.

The reality star was seen chatting on her mobile in Los Angeles, while behind the wheel of her Mercedes-Benz G63, even though under California state law it is prohibited.

But while Kim might be breaking the rules here, she will be in for a serious strip down if she goes against partner Kanye West, who has reportedly banned her from getting anymore plastic surgery.

According to Radar Online, West has told his baby mama that she is not allowed to get any cosmetic procedures after his own mother died while under the plastic surgeon's knife.

'Kim was certain that she wanted to have surgery after giving birth because she wanted a head start on losing her baby weight,” the source explains. 

Kardashian was reportedly getting ready for liposuction treatment, but was forced to cancel the appointment after Kanye learnt of her plans.


'He really flipped out,' the source continued. 'Kanye told Kim in no uncertain terms that she needed to put her baby and her life first.
'He got pretty emotional because he really didn’t want her going through that kind of major surgery. He’s still traumatized from his mom’s death.'

Kanye's mother Donda passed away in 2007 at the age of 58 caused by 'multiple post-operative factors' from a liposuction and breast-reduction surgery.

'Kanye was devastated by her passing and it’s made him extremely protective of those he loves,' the source explains. 'He really put his foot down and told Kim the surgery ban is a condition of being with him.'

To lose the weight, instead Kim has stuck to the Atkins Diet whereby she has gone without all carbohydrates since giving birth to her first child North.

Earlier this week she tweeted a picture of her post-pregnancy body, showing off her slimmed down curves in a white swimsuit after a reported 70lb weight loss.

Reader poll - Best new Eminem song: 'Rap God,' 'Berzerk' or 'Survival'?

Tuesday, 15 October 2013

DETROIT, MI - Eminem has released three new songs in the past couple of months that are all expected to be featured on his new album, "The Marshall Mathers LP 2."

The album is slated for a Nov. 5 release and has what appears to be an impressive 16-song tracklist that includes features from Rihanna, Kendrick Lamar and Skylar Grey.

Songs already released: "Rap God," "Berzerk" and "Survival." MLive Detroit wants to know in the reader poll below your favorite song of the three.
The best Eminem song: 'Rap God,' 'Berzerk' or 'Survival?

If you haven't heard all three songs or need to listen to each again, check out the YouTube players below.
"Rap God"

Dancing With the Stars Elimination Shocker: Find Out Who Went Home!

Sometimes even a perfect sore won't save you in the Dancing With the Stars ballroom.

It may only be the fifth week of ABC's acclaimed dancing competition, but we've already be witnessed our first jaw-dropping elimination of the season. It was a night filled with heartfelt revelations as the dancing hopefuls threw their emotions into their performances to celebrate this week's theme: The most memorable year of your life.

Despite earning the very first ten of the season, America's lack of votes booted a fiery frontrunner out of the competition. This is why you need to vote people! We caught up with the devastated dancer following tonight's broadcast to find out their reactions to the early cut.

This week's eliminated celebrity is…

Can you believe it?! The songtress shimmied her heart out tonight in an energy-packed cha-cha set to CeeLo Green's "Forget You." Milian's dance was dedicated to all the ladies out there who don't need a cheating husband in their lives. You tell' em girl!

In fact, the performance was so fantastic that it prompted head judge Len Goodman to award the "Dip It Low" singer with season 17's coveted first ten of the season. Unfortunately judges' high scores were not enough to make up for last week's lack of votes from those watching at home and Milian was booted from the competition.


We caught up with Milian following tonight's elimination shocker and the dancer revealed that she is just as shocked by the elimination as viewers were. "Honestly I didn't think it was going to be me. I thought that because we had such a great performance tonight that the score it was really going to help us out but you know how it is."

Milian explains that she is disappointed in America's lack of participation. The Voice correspondent says, "The votes are something that really needs to be worked on on this show. People think that someone is okay after they watch the show but they're not okay. You have to vote! You have to help keep them on the show."

Despite an early elimination, Milian says she is glad that she was able to open up about her past struggles through her performance tonight. "It's scary kind of opening myself back up to those wounds and kind of opening up myself up to the world and being vulnerable, but I'm really proud of myself that I just let it go and it was handled very tastefully," she shares.

Like Charlie Hunnam, Dakota Johnson Having "Tough" Time With Fifty Shades of Grey Fame, Source Says

Charlie Hunnam may not be the only person uncomfortable with all the attention he's received because of Fifty Shades of Grey.

A source tells me Dakota Johnson is also feeling the pressure.

"Dakota is having a very hard time dealing with all the press," the source said. "When she first got the role, it was way too much for her."

The source said that Johnson went from being a virtual unknown to someone "everyone wants a piece of."

"It's been tough," the source said. A rep for Johnson declined to comment for this story.

As we all know by now, Hunnam, 33, dropped out of playing Christian Grey in the movie adaptation of the sex-filled book just this past weekend.

"The filmmakers of Fifty Shades of Grey and Charlie Hunnam have agreed to find another male lead given Hunnam's immersive TV schedule which is not allowing him time to adequately prepare for the role of Christian Grey," Universal Pictures and Focus Features said in a joint statement obtained by E! News. (E! Online is a member of the NBCUniversal family.)


However, sources have since told E! News that the spotlight may be the real reason.

"More than anything he hates attention and being in Fifty Shades of Grey would force him to do lots of media," one source said. "That's really not his thing. Charlie doesn't want to be massively famous. Plus, he hates conforming and being told what to do. This role would force him to have to be something he is not."

Hunnam told E! News in September, "It's a big responsibility."

Johnson is the daughter of Melanie Griffith and Don Johnson. The 24-year-old actress had a small part in Social Network and most recently costarred on the Fox comedy series, Ben and Kate.

"My beautiful child Dakota has been chosen to play Anna Steele in 50 Shades!!! Look out world!" Griffith tweeted when her daughter landed the role. "Here she comes!!! #proudmama."

Sandra Bullock Performs Sugarhill Gang's 'Rapper's Delight': Watch

Sandra Bullock is proving she's more than an A-list actress -- she also could be a rap star.

The Gravity star recently appeared on The Jonathan Ross Show in the U.K., where she copped to "knowing a lot" of the lyrics of Sugarhill Gang's single, "Rapper's Delight." She shared that she learned the lyrics to the 1979 hit song in order to impress a high school crush.

"I liked this guy in high school, and I was like, 'Next time I go to that dance, I'm going to know every word, and I'll make sure he sees me lip-syncing it," the 49-year-old actress told host Jonathan Ross. "'And I'm going to catch his eye, and I'm gonna say the words, and he's going to like me.' And sadly, it worked."


After going back and forth with Ross, Bullock agreed to perform the single and said, jokingly, "If I'm going to humiliate myself, I need some beats. I need some beats, yo!"

"Gravity," which stars Bullock opposite George Clooney, was released Oct. 4.

Watch Bullock's rap game below.

Sean Lowe And Catherine Giudici Will Tie The Knot On TV In January

Big news for these "Bachelor" stars!

Sean Lowe and Catherine Giudici revealed that they will be getting married on TV. The engaged couple announced their wedding date on "Good Morning America" this morning (Oct. 14), explaining that they have decided to broadcast their special day on ABC, Jan. 26, 2014.

For the first time in the show's history, the wedding will take place live.

"Hopefully everything goes smoothly," Lowe said on "GMA." "'The Bachelor' is such a cool experience because people at home feel like they know us and they're invested in our relationship. We have no problem sharing the actual wedding with everyone who has been with us so far."

Lowe, 29, proposed to Giudici, 27, on the finale of Season 17 of "The Bachelor" in March, choosing her over runner-up Lindsay Yenter.

"I just want it to be fun and show our love," Giudici explained of the wedding. "We want some traditional type of ceremony that just kind of unifies us and then have a big party afterwards."

The pair recently celebrated their impending nuptials with a lavish engagement party in Giudici's hometown of Seattle.

Madonna: I was raped at knifepoint

Saturday, 5 October 2013

Madonna has detailed how she was raped at knifepoint on the roof of a building when she first moved to New York.

The Michigan-born singer moved to New York in 1978. And in an article for Harper's Bazaar she wrote: "New York wasn't everything I thought it would be. It did not welcome me with open arms."

She added: "The first year, I was held up at gunpoint. Raped on the roof of a building I was dragged up to with a knife in my back, and had my apartment broken into three times. I don't know why; I had nothing of value after they took my radio the first time."

Madonna, who had just turned 20 at the time of the attack, wrote that she found New York a daunting place.

"I felt like a warrior plunging my way through the crowds to survive," she said, telling how she posed nude for art classes to pay her rent while trying to become a professional dancer.

She also writes about her conversion to the Kabbalah faith, writing "what the teacher was saying blew my mind."

"I began to search for meaning and a real sense of purpose in life. I wanted to be a mother, but I realised that just because I was a freedom fighter didn't mean I was qualified to raise a child. I decided I needed to have a spiritual life. That's when I discovered Kabbalah," she said.


She said that she was surprised by the public response to her new-found faith.

"Now, you would think that studying the mystical interpretation of the Old Testament and trying to understand the secrets of the universe was a harmless thing to do. I wasn't hurting anybody. Just going to class, taking notes in my spiral notebook, contemplating my future. I was actually trying to become a better person.

"For some reason, that made people nervous," she said. She said that she is now studying the Koran, believing that it is important to study all the holy books.

The singer also details moving to England and how she struggled to understand the UK.

"I didn't understand that there was still a class system. I didn't understand pub culture. I didn't understand that being openly ambitious was frowned upon," she writes.

"Once again I felt alone. But I stuck it out and I found my way, and I grew to love English wit, Georgian architecture, sticky toffee pudding, and the English countryside. There is nothing more beautiful than the English countryside."

The 55-year-old also said that she was taken aback by her decision to adopt two children from Malawi, calling the outrage "a real low point in my life."

"Trying to save a child's life was not something I thought I would be punished for," she wrote.

"I decided that I had an embarrassment of riches and that there were too many children in the world without parents or families to love them.

"I applied to an international adoption agency and went through all the bureaucracy, testing, and waiting that everyone else goes through when they adopt.

"As fate would have it, in the middle of this process a woman reached out to me from a small country in Africa called Malawi, and told me about the millions of children orphaned by Aids."

Madonna currently lives in New York with her four children – Lourdes, 16, whose father is Madonna's former personal trainer Carlos Leon; Rocco, 13, her son from her marriage to Guy Ritchie, and her two adopted children David Banda, eight, and Mercy James, seven.

Naya Rivera Engaged To Big Sean

Naya Rivera is headed down the aisle!

A rep for the actress/singer confirmed to Access Hollywood that the “Glee” star – who just dropped her new single, “Sorry” – is set to marry the rap star, whose real name is Sean Michael Anderson.

On Thursday, the 26-year-old hit the red carpet at Latina magazine’s “Hollywood Hot List” party, where she showed off her beautiful engagement ring.

During her recent visit to Access Hollywood Live, Naya opened up about how social media played a part in the beginning of their relationship.

“I had followed him [on Twitter] and he sent me a little message like, ‘I’m a fan.’ I Tweeted that I followed him, I was trying to get his attention,” she said at the time. “We went to dinner and the rest is history.”

And when Billy Bush and Kit Hoover asked if she saw a marriage in the future with the rap star, the actress was quick to answer, “Absolutely!”

Naya and Big Sean have been together for six months.

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