Tag Archives: arthur

Lawrence Taylor at Arraignment — I’m No Rapist

Filed under: Lawrence Taylor , TMZ Sports , Celebrity Justice NFL legend Lawrence Taylor just plead not guilty in New York to five counts: rape, criminal sexual act, sexual abuse, endangering the welfare of a child, and patronizing a prostitute. Outside of court, Taylor’s attorney Arthur Aidala said there was’t a… Read more

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Lawrence Taylor at Arraignment — I’m No Rapist

Lawrence Taylor: Why I’m Not Guilty — Live

Lawrence Taylor just pled not guilty to felony rape. We’re expecting Taylor’s lawyer, Arthur Aidala, to walk out and explain why he believes his client can beat the rap. We’ll be live streaming. // Read more

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Lawrence Taylor: Why I’m Not Guilty — Live

Betty White, Marc Cherry, Mandy Moore and More Thank Rue McClanahan for Being a Friend

TV icon Rue McClanahan sadly succumbed to a massive stroke this morning, but she leaves in her wake laughs, love and a legacy most actors can only dream of. “Rue was a close and dear…

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Betty White, Marc Cherry, Mandy Moore and More Thank Rue McClanahan for Being a Friend

Golden Girls’ Rue McClanahan Dies

The Golden Girls has lost is lustiest member. Rue McClanahan, who earned an Emmy as the man-crazed Blanche Devereaux on the beloved sitcom classic, died early this morning of what her manager…

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Golden Girls’ Rue McClanahan Dies

Helen Mirren to Play Nanny to Russell Brand

Unkempt up-and-comer Russell Brand has been attached to a remake of the Dudley Moore comedy Arthur for quite a while, and now he’s found a scene partner. Helen Mirren will be stepping into the role played by John Gielgud in the 1981 original, only now the character has been reconceived as Arthur’s longtime nanny. Producers originally went after Meryl Streep for the part, but hey, there’s still time for her to play the love interest. [ THR ]

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Helen Mirren to Play Nanny to Russell Brand

Meet the Generation That Will Save or Destroy the New York Times [Dynasties]

The only way the New York Times can escape the clutches of a Mexican billionaire is by successfully instituting a paywall. Who has it chosen to manage this treacherous path? The publisher’s nephew. He used to run a DJ school. The Times is a publicly traded company, but the heirs of its modern founder Adolph Ochs and his son-in-law, Arthur Hays Sulzberger, own the voting shares. And in an effort to inculcate all the far-flung cousins—there are 27 fifth-generation descendants of Sulzberger—with a sense of responsibility for the newspaper and its various holdings, the New York Times Company likes to rotate them through the place from time to time. The company’s latest proxy statement , released earlier this week, brought news of yet two more Sulzberger cousins signing up for duty at the mother ship—in this job market, no less! And one of them was particularly momentous: Thirty-three-year-old David Perpich , nephew to Times publisher Arthur “Pinch” Sulzberger Jr., who is himself son to his predecessor Arthur “Punch” Sulzberger, who was himself son to his predecessor Arthur Hays Sulzberger, has been hired as the executive director of paid products at NYTimes.com just as the site prepares to wring desperately needed money out of its 17 million monthly users by limiting the number of stories they can read without subscribing . So here’s a handy guide to what Perpich—as well as his various kinsman and -women spread throughout the New York Times Company—brings to the table. David Perpich, 33, fifth generation Perpich’s claim to fame is his role in helping run the Scratch DJ Academy, a rigorous institution of higher learning co-founded by Jam Master Jay that offers an ” incredible opportunity for amateur and aspiring music enthusiasts to learn how to DJ, from mixing and blending, to scratching and beat juggling .” Among Perpich’s duties at the Academy was “handling all marketing initiatives,” and he was really good at it: He managed to get the school mentioned a whopping nine times in the paper his family owns ! After leaving academia around 2007, according to this excellent 2008 New York rundown of the Sulzberger clan , Perpich briefly entertained an offer to join the family business, but he turned it down in favor of a technology consulting gig at Booz Allen. For whatever reason, that didn’t work out, so he figured he’d head over to his uncle’s shop and shepherd the most crucial business initiative that the Times has ever undertaken. He’s up for it, though: He’s a digital wizard who’s thoroughly mastered Twitter , having limited his posts to one heartbreaking online memorial for Michael Jackson made all the more moving by its singularity: Samuel Dolnick , 30, fifth generation Also reported in the most recent proxy statement was the hiring of Samuel Dolnick, the grandson of Arthur Sulzberger’s sister Ruth Holmberg (who herself served as the publisher of the Chattanooga Times ). Dolnick, who previously toiled as a reporter for the Associated Press, was hired at the Newspaper Guild Minimum staff reporter’s salary of $90,500 in September, and has been writing for the Metro desk. According to the New York Observer , Dolnick is no dilettante: His AP gig took him to New Delhi, and before that, he interned at the Village Voice under the estimable Wayne Barrett. He’s settled down in New York for the new gig, having just purchased a home in Brooklyn with a $300,000 mortgage at the discount-window interest rate of .57% from his grandmother, according to New York real estate records. A. G. Sulzberger, 30, fifth generation Arthur G. Sulzberger, Pinch’s son, joined the paper last March, also at the Guild minimum salary, and since then he’s been cold huntin’ snipers , writing about bus stops and light bulbs for the Metro desk, and fending off obscene propositions from Gawker readers . Before that he wrote for the Portland Oregonian . Rachel B. Golden, 31, fifth generation Rachel is the daughter of Michael Golden , Holmberg’s son and vice chairman of the Times Company. She makes a cool $82,136 as a marketing associate for the Times web site, where she’s responsible for promoting the Style, T, and Travel sections . James Dryfoos , 45, fifth generation Dryfoos, the grandson of Arthur Sulzberger’s sister Marian, is a systems analyst for the Times Company, where he analyzes systems for $144,673 a year. He married a lady named Reagan Rexrode and is a homebrew enthusiast . Michael Greenspon , 40, fifth generation Also a grandson of Marian’s, Greenspon is, according to New York , “quietly competent but not an obvious candidate to lead the paper.” He’s a project manager in strategic planning and served last year as the interem general manager of the New York Times News Service, which laid of some 25 to 30 people in November . He makes $176,961 a year. Michael Golden, 61, fourth generation Golden, father to Rachel and son of Ruth, is Arthur Sulzberger Jr.’s chief rival in the family. He’s currently vice chairman after a stint in Paris as the publisher of the International Herald Tribune , which the Times Company wrestled away from the Washington Post Company in 2002. Golden shepherded the company’s move from its old Times Square headquarters to a bright shiny new $500 million building, which worked out like this: The old building was flipped at a $350 million profit three years after the Times sold it, and the Times started selling off pieces of the new building for cash two years after it was built . For this he made $1.8 million last year. Arthur O. Sulzberger, Jr., 59 Arthur is the publisher of the New York Times . He makes $5.1 million, and is primarily occupied with insuring that none of the aforementioned fifth-generation Sulzbergers have jobs in five years. SPECIAL BONUS HIDDEN SULZBERGER: New York ‘s look at the Sulzberger clan noted that a “spokesperson for the Times said there are two additional fifth-generation descendents, but they have never appeared as beneficiaries in the company’s SEC filings.” We’ve found one of them: In addition to providing a mortgage to Dolnick, Holmberg is also listed in New York real estate records as having made a $265,000 loan to a Sharon Skettini of Brooklyn. And according to public databases, Skettini once shared an address in Arizona with Ruth’s son Stephen Golden, a lawyer in Tucson. Skettini appears to have once been employed as a literary agent for Sterling Lord Literistic , a New York agency, but she’s not currently listed on the firm’s site. She doesn’t appear to have any public relationship with the Times .

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Meet the Generation That Will Save or Destroy the New York Times [Dynasties]

Liev Schreiber to the Rescue!

Filed under: Nurse! Liev Schreiber rushed to the aid of a fan in the audience during his performance of Arthur Miller’s “A View From the Bridge” in New York City last night. According to a witness, a woman in the audience started screaming for help during the play. When … Permalink

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Liev Schreiber to the Rescue!

Jon & Kate Plus DIVORCED

Filed under: Dirty Divorces , Jon & Kate , Exclusives TMZ has learned … It’s official — Jon & Kate Gosselin are divorced.Judge Arthur Tilson has signed the final papers, making Jon and Kate officially single.Mark Momjian, Kate’s lawyer, tells TMZ, under the agreement, “Our client will continue to … Permalink

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Jon & Kate Plus DIVORCED

Merlin 1:10

I believe we have discussed previously how much I hate episodes that do virtually nothing to further the plot, especially when it’s close to the end of the season.  Granted, I have no idea how many episodes are in this season, but I’m pretty sure it’s close enough to the end that this kind of episode doesn’t have good timing. This is not to say that I didn’t find it to be an entertaining episode, it was actually not bad.  Plenty of action, people getting away from Uther, girls fighting with swords (aka one of my favorite things).  It just didn’t do much for the plot.  We didn’t need to go back to Merlin’s home village and see the kind of life he used to lead, the people he lived with, his mom. And of course we had to have the obligatory “magic is bad news bears” lecture, but this time from Arthur!  Fortunately, one of Merlin’s now dead friends took the credit for the awful magic that saved the people’s lives, so Merlin wasn’t found out.  But it’s kind of disappointing that for all Arthur thinks Uther’s policies are bad, he is anti magic and doesn’t even have an explanation.

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Merlin 1:10

Merlin 1:11

This episode also did nothing to further the overall plot, but oddly enough, I didn’t have a problem with it.  I wish I could explain why this is, but I don’t have a reason.  I’m simply okay with it this time around. In this episode, Arthur kills a unicorn while on a hunting trip and Camelot is now suffering from a curse – the crops are dying, there’s no water, people will soon die too.  My first thought: Was it Starbeam?! To lift the curse, Arthur must pass a series of tests from the keeper of the unicorns.  He passes the first one, where he lets a thief go instead of turning him over to Uther to be executed.  Then fails the second one where the same thief insults his pride and honor, they get in a sword fight, and Arthur kills him.  Cept the thief turned out to be fake and just all part of Arthur’s tests. The final test is ultimately that Arthur has to prove he is pure of heart, like a unicorn is.  He drinks poison to save Merlin’s life, and is presumably dead.  But it turns out it’s just a sleeping drought and he’s not really dead, the mere act of his sacrifice is enough to lift the curse

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Merlin 1:11