Tag Archives: blue

Taylor Lautner Talks Werewolf Vs. Vampire Fights On ‘Letterman’

‘It’d be a tough call. [Werewolves are] very strong. We are very fast,’ Lautner said on ‘Late Show With David Letterman.’ By Eric Ditzian Taylor Lautner on “The Late Show with David Letterman” Thursday Photo: CBS “Eclipse” has been tearing up the multiplex for days, but that doesn’t mean the vampire film’s stars get a break from their appearance-a-minute publicity duties. Ashley Greene, Nikki Reed and Xavier Samuel have already jetted across the pond for the London premiere , and the cast is expected to pop up at random surprise appearances across the U.S. throughout the weekend. Lucky for Taylor Lautner, then, that the “Late Show With David Letterman” actually tapes in the afternoon, so perhaps the 18-year-old was able to get a decent night’s sleep before the hectic weekend schedule shifts into gear. Wearing a fitted gray suit, Lautner chatted with the talk-show host about his persistent onscreen shirtlessness, who would win in a fight between a vampire and a werewolf, and how he got started in the business. About that last topic of conversation, thank the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers. “[My karate instructor] was actually the blue Power Ranger for a year,” Lautner laughed. The Ranger-turned-teacher encouraged Lautner to start auditioning, which led to a few commercials and then the decision to move the entire Lautner family from Michigan to Los Angeles when he was 11. He soon landed a starring role in “The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl in 3-D.” And now, of course, he’s the proudly shirtless Jacob in the “Twilight” movies. But when Dave wanted to know if Jacob could take down Edward Cullen in a fight, Lautner wouldn’t take the bait. “It’d be a tough call,” he said. “[Werewolves are] very strong. We are very fast. We work as a pack. That’s kind of our thing.” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse.” For young Hollywood news, fashion and “Twilight” updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com . Related Photos The Evolution Of: Taylor Lautner Highlights From The ‘Eclipse’ Cast’s Talk Show Tour ‘The Twilight Saga: Eclipse’

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Taylor Lautner Talks Werewolf Vs. Vampire Fights On ‘Letterman’

Oil blankets Pensacola Beach

PHOTO: Kevin Reed’s dad taught him to swim at Pensacola Beach. It’s here that he taught his own son. “This will never be the same,” he says. PENSACOLA BEACH, FLORIDA The tide came in Tuesday night, under a moon almost full, and when the sun came up and the water retreated there it was: a broken band of oil about 5 feet wide and 8 miles long. It looked like tobacco spit and smelled foreign, and it pooled in yesterday's footprints as far as you could see. State officials called it the worst show of crude on shore from the gusher 120 miles away. As word spread, the people of Pensacola Beach walked to the black band to take a look, to take photographs, to be sure this wasn't some apocalyptic dream. They poured over the dunes all day, on pilgrimages to bear witness. Here came Courtney Laczko, 16, who has been coming to the beach almost every morning since school let out because she knew the days were numbered “It's actually really here,” she kept saying. She thought about the dolphins and how she used to pretend they were a happy little family. She thought about the time her mom wasn't working and she took the kids to the beach every day. “It was always the prettiest beach around here. You can't say that anymore.” Here came Kathy Allen, 15, a native. She thought about that night in November, after the homecoming dance, when a boy named Dakota leaned in and kissed her lips, her first ever, and how the stars seemed so bright and sparkly. Here came Stef Ackerman, 22, who learned to fish here and surf here. He walked to the oil and squatted and ran his finger up under his sunglasses. He thought about all those journeys to the beach with his dad to watch the Blue Angels zing down the shoreline and about that fishing trip when his older brother came home from war. How they talked and fished all day. This? He doesn't know how to process it. “I don't know what to do,” he said. “I don't know if anybody knows what to do.” Four buses of cleanup men showed up. Bulldozers rolled onto the white sand. Men with shovels scooped black onto plastic sheets and fed them to the dozers. Gov. Charlie Crist came, too, with his people, to the same beach where a week ago he walked and talked with President Barack Obama. He was expecting scattered tar balls, not this. “It's pretty ugly,” he said. “It's worse than I expected,” said Mike Sole, secretary of Florida's Department of Environmental Protection. “What do we do now?” asked Morgan White, 15, who has a scar on her hip from skimboarding on this water. “This is what we do. We wake up and we come here.” Up the road, a sign flashed: OIL ON BEACH. The bulldozers beeped. News crews gathered. If the beach is church, Wednesday felt like a funeral. Kevin Reed, 36, who learned to swim here and taught his own son, right here, how to swim, walked to the oil and cried. “I can't help it,” he said. “This just kills me. It feels like somebody just ripped my heart out. I knew it was going to be bad. I didn't know it was going to be like this.” He looked back at the band. He noticed there were no birds. “It's damn near biblical.” http://www.tampabay.com/news/environment/article1104604.ece added by: julesrs007

MSNBC Panel Not Impressed By Obama Speech

On a special edition of Tuesday’s Countdown show on MSNBC which aired after President Obama address to the nation, the panel of Keith Olbermann, Chris Matthews and Howard Fineman were not impressed by the President’s speech, as the group complained that it was not “specific” enough and lacked details. Matthews complained that in the Obama administration, “meritocracy is going too far,” and asserted that it was “ludicrous” that the President had mentioned that Energy Secretary Carol Browner has a Nobal Prize. Matthews: Well, I thought a couple of things were surprising to me. Why does he continue to say that the secretary of energy has a Nobel Prize? I mean, it`s almost gotten ludicrous. We have Carol Browner do it again tonight. I know I`ve mocked him for doing it, saying I`d barf if he did it one more time. But it`s not important. This meritocracy is going too far. This I`m the new guy here, the head the MMS. I`m not sure whether these degrees are going to help or these awards from overseas. Below is a transcript of the relevant portion of the Tuesday, June 15, Countdown show on MSNBC:  KEITH OLBERMANN: Chris, I`m going to start with you. Maybe I missed something. I thought it was a great speech if you`ve been on another planet for the last 57 days. But was that what was needed tonight? Did he shoot really low? CHRIS MATTHEWS: Well, I thought there was a bit of news there and I don`t whether it`s optimistic beyond belief, which is, in the coming days or weeks, these efforts should capture up to 90 percent of the oil leaking out of the well. Well, that`s the first I`ve heard of that. In coming days, we`re going to have this thing capped. We`re going to effectively solve the problem? Secondly, he didn`t mention what power he has as chief executive of the country to make them understand they need to put this escrow account in third party hands. Is he going to litigate? Is he going to file an amicus brief with class action suit? Wait seven years for this to happen? Or is he really going to demand it to happen? He said, I can ask them to do this. I`m amazed he just says he has that power. We`ll see. And as for the energy bill, I think you hit on something important there. Cap and trade passed the House. It hasn`t gotten anywhere in the Senate. And one reason it has gotten there is, remember how he jump- lined for immigration after Harry Reid for a while there? He had the bill in the queue. He pushed this aside for immigration, knowing he wasn`t going to be able to get immigration through, or even come with an I.D. card as part of a comprehensive solution. And then he pushed it aside and then he put it back in line again. It`s not clear. Now, the hard part of this is the heavy-lifting of energy transition. He said we have to accelerate this thing, accelerate the transition to renewables. That is the hardest thing in the world. That`s what broke Jimmy Carter. That`s what Ronald Reagan took a buy on completely. And Bill Clinton didn`t do anything. It`s the hardest thing in the world. He`s saying, I`m going to do it, and then no more information. OLBERMANN: Nothing. Nothing specific. Nothing specific at all. MATTHEWS: The best you can do, if you do it, and the question: Is he going to do it this year? Is there going to be a bill that goes from cap and trade to something like Lugar? Is there a particular direction he`s going in? He didn`t tell us. OLBERMANN: But he didn`t even say the Senate needs to pass the bill that`s already on the table. MATTHEWS: Well, at least something. You need to go to conference. OLBERMANN: Howard, I got the feeling, Howard, that the president would have said, hey, I was as surprised by this as you were. He talked about how he had approved the expansion of the offshore drilling and said he`d been assured everything was going to go all right. And then he had the analogy, which many people expected would be more contemporary about 9/11, was instead about World War II. And he said something I found just extraordinary, it`s nice- speechifying. But let me read it again. “Our determination to fight for the America we want for our children, even if we`re unsure exactly what that looks like, even if we don`t yet know precisely how we`re going to get there, we know we`ll get there.” It`s nice, but again, how? Where was the “how” in this speech when the nation is crying out for how? HOWARD FINEMAN, MSNBC POLITICAL ANALYST: Yes. you said he aimed too low. I don`t think he was specific enough, Keith. You talked about the energy bill. The fact is that Harry Reid has told him there aren`t 60 votes in the Senate to get beyond a filibuster with cap and trade. That`s the detail of it. But beyond that, I think the American people, both in the Gulf and everywhere else, wanted to know more how this was going. Somewhere between earlier today and tonight, this went from being a war and all about an assault on the Gulf to an epidemic. That`s one thing that I thought was interesting. The commander-in-chief thing was lost. And I thought it was, he had to confess but in a way didn`t confess enough. Why he had approved offshore oil drilling and he had accepted these assurances? Who were these assurances from? Who were they from? Now, if you connected the dots between that paragraph and the one below where he said the MMS was a disaster and a mess, you might get a little bit of an idea why that it happened. I think this is a war. I think he was commander-in-chief or should have been commander-in-chief tonight. I think, just, if he`s going to make the analogy to World War II, it should have been like Franklin Roosevelt explaining exactly what was happening in Europe, where Patton was going, where the troops were going, what the losses were, what the advances were, what the troop`s strengths were. Tell everybody. They` been watching television for the last 59 days. They want to know how we`re doing. OLBERMANN: Right. Even if we don`t know precisely how we`re going to get there we know we`ll get there. There wasn`t any specificity to it. FINEMAN: Yes. OLBERMANN: I`m going to revise my remark, Chris. I don`t think he aimed low. I don`t think he aimed at all about this. It`s startling to have heard this, isn`t it? MATTHEWS: Well, I thought a couple of things were surprising to me. Why does he continue to say that the secretary of energy has a Nobel Prize? I mean, it`s almost gotten ludicrous. We have Carol Browner do it again tonight. I know I`ve mocked him for doing it, saying I`d barf if he did it one more time. But it`s not important. This meritocracy is going too far. This I`m the new guy here, the head the MMS. I`m not sure whether these degrees are going to help or these awards from overseas. I think it`s interesting. We have a blue ribbon panel now that`s going to look in to what went wrong. Can`t we move a little quicker than that, than to name a commission? That`s what they`ve done here. Another commission and another guy mentioned — they mentioned for having a Nobel Prize. I think there`s a lot of meritocracy, a lot of blue ribbon talk here. References — you know what they don`t refer to, his cabinet. Now, this is cabinet government like I`ve never seen before. I asked Admiral Allen the other day, “Who do you work for?” Because there`s been concern in the Gulf as to the lack of a clear-cut chain of command, like the president of the United States, Rahm Emanuel, cabinet does what they`re told. Now, I asked Allen, “Who do you work for?” Well, he says, “I work for Janet Napolitano over at homeland security and then she sort of reports to the president.” And go — wait a minute, isn`t the president calling the shots here? And here he was delineating everybody`s job like Admiral Allen and he`s got this Nobel Prize guy and then he`s got this blue-ribbon panel. I don`t sense executive command. And I thought that was the purpose of this speech tonight, command and control. I`m calling the shots. My name is Barack Obama. I`m the boss. I`m telling people what to do. I didn`t get that clarity. And I think that command and control, a phrase that`s made, worked its way around the White House is essential here. He must be chief executive. He can no longer be Vatican observer or intellectual, or a guy calling in experts, or naming commissioners or whatever. I think he`s, or citing people for their Nobel prizes, I think he has to be the boss. And he never mentioned here anything beyond BP, like, aren`t there other oil companies that could help clean up this mess? You know, we`ve had Hofmeister on, the former Shell executive, saying you`ve got to get all these tankers in there, all these people out there skimming. I don`t sense this as a real national effort yet.

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MSNBC Panel Not Impressed By Obama Speech

Grand opening 2010 Fifa World Cup South Africa

By Jonathan Stevenson BBC Sport in Johannesburg South Africa is preparing for the start of the biggest football tournament on earth, the World Cup, which gets under way on Friday in Johannesburg. It is the 19th staging of the showpiece event and will be the first time it has taken place in the continent of Africa. Johannesburg’s 94,000-capacity Soccer City hosts the opening ceremony, with the first game getting under way at 1500 BST when South Africa face Mexico. Former president Nelson Mandela, 91, is set to attend part of the festivities. He will be present on Friday, but will not attend the entire opening game as his family are worried about the state of his health. There are a few moments that define a nation’s history… we stand on the threshold of one as we draw closer and closer to Friday, 11 June Jacob Zuma South Africa president The World Cup kicks off with a 40-minute opening ceremony at Soccer City starting at 1300 BST. American R’n’B star R Kelly is one of 1,581 performers ahead of the game between the hosts and Mexico at 1500 BST. The global TV audience for the tournament will be made up of viewers in more than 215 countries and will run into hundreds of millions. South Africa president Jacob Zuma and Archbishop Desmond Tutu are also expected to be at Soccer City, the newly refurbished stadium designed to look like a calabash, an African cooking pot. Mandela’s World Cup message “South Africa has come alive, and will never be the same after this World Cup,” said Zuma, who hailed Mandela’s role in securing the right to host the finals back in May 2004. “Nelson Mandela worked hard so that we could win the right to host this tournament. We dedicate the World Cup to him. “There are a few moments that define a nation’s history. We stand on the threshold of one as we draw closer and closer to Friday, 11 June, when the World Cup officially begins.” The festivities begin in earnest on Thursday, with Shakira among the artists at a pre-tournament concert in Soweto from 1900 BST that is expected to draw 30,000 fans. The Colombian pop star will perform the official World Cup song Waka Waka and will be joined by a cast of international stars, including the Black Eyed Peas and Alicia Keys, alongside African stars Amadou & Mariam and Hugh Masekela. Since it was chosen as the first African host of the World Cup in 2004, South Africa has spent about 40bn rand (£3.55bn) on stadiums, transport infrastructure and upgrading airports. The tournament, which is made up of 32 nations, could add as much as 0.5% to the country’s GDP in 2010 and will bring in an estimated 370,000 foreign visitors. Danny Jordaan, chief executive of the local organising committee, said: “For me it will be a dream come true. It’s a great moment in the World Cup’s 80-year history. “People said no African country could ever deliver this event. But we are showing that we can’t just match what others have done but that we can do even better. Now the doubters are the believers.” As well as the iconic Soccer City – the biggest stadium in Africa – nine other venues will stage World Cup matches across the country, including Ellis Park, which is also in Johannesburg. Cape Town, Pretoria, Polokwane, Rustenburg, Bloemfontein, Port Elizabeth, Durban and Nelspruit will host matches, too. There are 64 games in total, with the final taking place at Soccer City on Sunday, 11 July. There have been concerns about ticketing policy and security in the run-up to the tournament. Fifa has come under fire for the way tickets have been distributed, with critics claiming its preferred method of making tickets available online excluded many locals who did not have an internet connection. However, football’s world governing body has made a number of tickets exclusively available to South Africans and announced on Wednesday that 97% of the 3.1m tickets had been sold, allaying fears of empty stadiums. As for security, there have been concerns about the safety of fans, media and players travelling to South Africa. Sixteen people – including two police officers – were injured at a stampede ahead of a World Cup warm-up match on Sunday between Nigeria and North Korea outside Makhulong Stadium in the township of Tembisa near Johannesburg. And journalists from China, Spain and Portugal were targeted in two separate armed robberies in and around Johannesburg on Monday and Wednesday. This competition will prove that South Africa, and the African continent in general, is capable of organising an event of this magnitude Fifa president Sepp Blatter However, Fifa president Sepp Blatter insists the World Cup will be a success. “Everywhere, one can feel, I hope, that this World Cup is very special, the first on African soil,” he said. “We find ourselves in a position of indescribable anticipation. “More importantly, this competition will prove that South Africa, and the African continent in general, is capable of organising an event of this magnitude.” England are among the favourites in South Africa and Fabio Capello’s men get their Group C campaign under way against the United States in Rustenburg on Saturday. Defending champions Italy start on Monday with a match against Paraguay, Brazil face North Korea in their first game on Tuesday and Euro 2008 winners Spain start their bid for a first World Cup win by taking on Switzerland on Wednesday. South Africa have never progressed beyond the group stage at the World Cup, though they have only taken part in two previous tournaments, in 1998 and 2002. They are managed by Brazilian Carlos Alberto Parreira, who led his home nation to victory at the 1994 World Cup in the United States and will be coaching at a record sixth tournament. Some of the world’s best players will be on display in South Africa, among them Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo and Wayne Rooney. But some big names will be missing because of injury, such as England duo Rio Ferdinand and David Beckham, Germany skipper Michael Ballack and Ghana midfielder Michael Essien. Didier Drogba – an icon in African sport – fractured his elbow in a recent friendly against Japan, but is hopeful of playing a part in the Ivory Coast’s campaign. Source BBC.co. 2010 World Cup Blog for the Fans

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Grand opening 2010 Fifa World Cup South Africa

D-day 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa

South Africa’s World Cup flows over In one of the largest displays of national spirit ever seen in the country, South Africans took to the streets at midday on Wednesday in a massive display of support for the home team as a proud nation let the world know just what kind of tournament Africa’s first World Cup will be. Around Johannesburg the crowds were there to welcome the national side, Bafana Bafana, who were travelling in an open-top bus, at every turn they made on their way from their hotel in Sandton to their training ground at Wits University. In Durban, Cape Town, Port Elizabeth and the other host cities, the atmosphere was no less electric as World Cup fever spread quickly, signalled by the distinct drone of the vuvuzela. Celebrating the spirit of the nation “I’m here to support Bafana Bafana and to get behind my country,” said Johannesburg resident Zeyn Tilly. “It feels amazing to be here, it is the first time in my life I have seen this unity in South Africa. The atmosphere is just electric.” For Tilly, this is the start of a fun-filled six weeks. “You can have no idea how incredible this is for me. I just want it to go as slow as possible so that I can enjoy every minute. This tournament is about more than just football.” For Joseph Mabea, Wednesday’s street parade was about celebrating the spirit of the country. “I am a huge Bafana fan,” Mabea said over the din of the vuvuzelas. “I have seen the passion in them, and I want them to know I am with them all the way.” Mabea has a ticket for the opening match, and the atmosphere of the parade is only getting him more excited. “I will be there, and I can’t wait. Seeing such a match live, no longer on the television, is amazing for me. The feeling here is amazing, I am running short of words. I wish this could happen more often, I wish this could be my life, showing how united we are as a nation.” Support for the national side has been growing in recent weeks, both as a result of the proximity of the tournament and due to their recent performances on the pitch. “This is a great team,” said another Joburger, Muhammed Moosa. “Twelve unbeaten games – they are just great, and they will do us proud.” Many businesses allowed their staff to come and join the party in the streets, adding a huge number of people to the midday festivities. ‘Thank you, Bafana, for making us one’ Laughing with friends as she tried to blow her vuvuzela, Leanne Toffie said she wanted to show her passion for her national side. “To be here, united with my fellow South Africans in support of Bafana Bafana – it is just an amazing feeling, seeing the country united as one.” Nicholas Ndlovu, fully clad in a Bafana Bafana supporters’ uniform complete with makarapa, vuvuzela, overalls and glasses, said: “It feels like I am in heaven coming into a crowd of people like this, it makes me so proud. Thank you, Bafana, for making us one.” Many tourists are in Cape Town for the World Cup, and it did not take long for them to get in on the act and also try and blow a vuvuzela. Pablo Ezeqiel Perez Murua from Argentina and his family are staying at a guest house in Plattekloof. They came to explore Cape Town for the day, and were pleasantly surprised at the outburst of patriotism. “Cape Town is a wonderful city, the people are friendly and very patriotic,” Murua said. “I have also bought a trumpet [vuvuzela] and will blow it at our first game against Korea. Deon Malan, who happened upon the scenes of celebration while walking through the city on his way to meet friends at a restaurant, said: “Walking down Long Street [in Cape Town] was incredible. People were standing on balconies overlooking the street while outside people were congregating in groups blowing their vuvuzelas. “It was the first time that I can really remember seeing all South Africans united in such a way,” said Malan. “It was so overwhelming.” Source: 2010 Fifa World Cup South Africa Organising Committee 2010 World Cup Blog for the Fans

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D-day 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa

Today is the day all South Africans have been waiting for.

WORLD CLASS: Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban will host various World Cup matches. PHOTO: Thuli Dlamini STUNNING: Soccer FANS at Peter Mokaba stadium in Limpopo PHOTO: ELIJAR MUSHIANA SPLENDID: green Point Stadium in Cape Town. PHOTO: SIMON MATHEBULA All our host cities and their stadiums are ready. Fan transport and fan parks are prepared and ready for the big day. Bafana Bafana has been scoring goals and today the games begin. Bafana has had 12 consecutive wins. More than 500million people in the world are going to bring their attention to South Africa and we will not disappoint. Today Bafana Bafana takes on Mexico in the month-long tournament. Local Organising Committee chief executive Danny Jordaan yesterday said today “is going to be an incredible day”. “South Africans are late believers but once they believe, they are fanatical believers. Of course our team has increased our ability to believe,” he said. He likened the run-up to the 2010 Soccer World Cup to the struggle against apartheid, joking that his next career move might be to the post office. “Then the prison doors opened and he (Mandela) walked out … and we thought, what are we going to do next? I think I will look for a smaller job now … like a job in the post office. I think I’ve seen enough struggle.” Jordaan said during the country’s key historic moments the rest of the world – and some South Africans – always seemed to expect the worst of South Africa. “You see the headlines: “Race war’, ‘Bloodshed’, ‘Chaos’, ‘Plan B’, ‘Don’t do it’, ‘It’s not going to happen’,” Jordaan said. The recent successes of Bafana Bafana, whose tour on a party bus to Sandton in Johannesburg on Wednesday drew tens of thousands of fans on to the streets, played a big role in South Africa’s new-found optimism. “Of course our team has increased our ability to believe,” said Jordaan, referring to the 12 consecutive wins. To top the journey off, he said, he really would like to see Nelson Mandela at Soccer City during the opening this afternoon. “Nelson Mandela is 92 years old … he himself wants to be there. Whether he stays five minutes or the whole match is really not our decision. “As things stand now, there is a very, very great chance that, in fact, he’ll be there because he wants to be there. How long he will stay, that is really his decision. But we’ll just be happy if he shows his face,” Jordaan said. He said that Mandela had been the symbol of unity for a democratic South Africa, whose citizens saw racial barriers being torn down in the run-up to the Cup, especially when the Blue Bulls rugby team trekked to Soweto for the Super 14 finals . “ Today was set to become a pivotal day in South Africa and Africa’s history . It is a psychological barrier that has been crossed … it’s an assertion of who we are as Africans and what we can deliver.” Source – Sowetan.com 2010 World Cup Blog for the Fans

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Today is the day all South Africans have been waiting for.

The Spyder III, Is a Real Life Lightsaber

Built with the blue-laser diode of a dismantled Casio Green Slim projector, the $200 Spyder III is the world's most powerful portable laser. It can permanently blind you and set your skin—or anything else, really—on fire almost instantly. The diodes in Casio's new mercury-free Green Slim projectors apparently allow for unprecedentedly powerful portable lasers, and Wicked Lasers has gleefully harvested them for the 1 Watt Spyder III. Comparing it to the $2000 Sonar, the company's reigning portable laser powerhouse, Wicked Lasers explains that the blue Spyder III laser is 2000 times brighter to the human eye, and, at $200, 1/10th the price. http://gizmodo.com/5560206/the-spyder-iii-pro-arctic-is-a-real-life-lightsaber added by: pjacobs51

A Jazzy Wedding for Glee’s Jane Lynch

Jane Lynch married Lara Embry Monday in Massachusetts (PEOPLE.com) — It looks like Jane Lynch has something to be extra Gleeful about. Although the actress hasn't made an official announcement, the Blue Heron restaurant in Sunderland, Massachusetts, reports that Lynch, 49, married psychologist Lara Embry in a small ceremony on Memorial Day. “There were no celebrities or recognizable faces there,” restaurant co-owner Deborah Snow tells PEOPLE. “Lara's daughter was there, along with close, close friends of the couple. It was small, warm, intimate and very sweet. You could feel the love and friendship amongst the group.” After Monday's ceremony, in which a friend of Lynch's thanked the State of Massachusetts for being welcoming to gay and lesbian couples, the newlyweds and their 19 guests enjoyed a reception featuring a four-piece jazz combo. Hors d'oeuvres included oysters, lobster triangles, Japanese crab salad, seared scallop with apple reduction and artichoke fritters with lemon aioli. For the main course: beet salad, striped bass with lemon buerre blanc, truffle mushroom salad, pan-seared breast of duck with duck confit, and herb salad. The reception concluded around 10 p.m. with cheese plates and a house-made cake filled with chocolate mousse, vanilla butter cream and fresh strawberries. Lynch and Embry have been engaged since November. Showing a soft spot not often exhibited by her character Sue Sylvester, Lynch gushed to PEOPLE earlier this year: “It's just the greatest thrill in the world to find somebody that you want to be with every day.” added by: EthicalVegan

Jane Lynch Marries Girlfriend Lara Embry in Intimate Wedding

HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Jane Lynch is experiencing wedding bliss. The 49-year-old Glee star married her girlfriend, Lara Embry, on Memorial Day at the Blue Heron restaurant in Massachusetts, American

Dennis Hopper: A True Hollywood Original

Actor had so many diverse roles — from ‘Rebel Without a Cause’ to ‘Easy Rider’ to ‘Blue Velvet’ — that none is truly definitive. By Adam Rosenberg with Jem Aswad Dennis Hopper Photo: Evan Agostini/ImageDirect In Hollywood history, a mere handful of stars have had careers that reached the peaks, the depths, the diversity and the longevity of Dennis Hopper’s. The legendary — and legendarily rebellious — actor died of prostate cancer early Saturday (May 29) at the age of 74. Indeed, Hopper’s signature roles were so different from each other — and so widely separated by years over his nearly six-decade-long career — that it’s difficult to choose one as definitive. Some might single out the teen who appeared with James Dean in 1955’s “Rebel Without A Cause.” Others recall the nitrous-oxide-huffing psychopath Frank Booth, villain of David Lynch’s classic 1986 thriller, “Blue Velvet.” Hopper played another memorable villain (who meets a memorable end) in 1994’s “Speed.” Yet he will probably be remembered best for “Easy Rider,” the 1969 counterculture touchstone that he co-wrote, directed and starred in, as the scruffy, motorcycle-riding drug dealer Billy. The young Hopper made his debut in a pair of James Dean films, “Rebel” and “Giant” (1956). The 24-year-old Dean and 18-year-old Hopper became friends, and the older actor’s sudden death in 1955 shook Hopper to the point that he staged a days-long, one-man revolt on the set of Henry Hathaway’s “From Hell to Texas.” Hopper went on to have notable appearances in “Cool Hand Luke” (1967) as well as “The Sons of Katie Elder” (1965) and “True Grit” (1969), both of which starred John Wayne. Yet the success of “Easy Rider,” in which he starred with Peter Fonda and a young Jack Nicholson, took him on a sharp upward turn, as the film raked in enormous profits and reinvented Hopper’s career. It was a success he quickly squandered with the disastrous follow-up, 1971’s “The Last Movie,” which so fraught with trouble, substance abuse and erratic behavior that Hopper was effectively blackballed from the movie industry in the years that followed. He did appear in a number of films over the ensuing years — “Mad Dog Morgan” (1976), “Tracks” (1977) and most memorably Francis Ford Coppola’s “Apocalypse Now,” channeling his trademark manic energy into a wild portrayal of a frazzled Vietnam-stationed photojournalist. While he continued to struggle with substance abuse, his acting career revived with acclaimed performances in “Out of the Blue” (1980 — which he also directed), “Rumble Fish” (1983) and “The Osterman Weekend” (1983) — and he was re-established as a major star with his leading role in Lynch’s “Blue Velvet” (1986); he became sober at around the same time. In 1986 he also starred with Gene Hackman in David Anspaugh’s “Hoosiers,” a performance that earned him a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award nomination. Hopper continued to turn in memorable performances and features for the remainder of his career. He was the villainous mad bomber in the blockbuster “Speed” (1994), also starring Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock. He directed 1988’s “Colors” and received an Emmy nomination for his performance in HBO Films’ “Paris Trout” (1991). Equally memorable are two of his more panned roles, in campy cult classics “Super Mario Bros.” (1993) and “Waterworld” (1995). Hopper’s most recent film appearance was in Isabel Coixet’s 2008 film “Elegy,” with Sir Ben Kingsley, Penelope Cruz and Debbie Harry, although his voice will be heard in the animated “Alpha and Omega,” which comes out in September. Hopper also put in a significant amount of time on television, with more than 100 appearances on a diverse range of programs, including “Gunsmoke,” “Bonanza,” “The Twilight Zone,” “The Big Valley,” “The Rifleman,” “Combat!,” “E-Ring,” “Crash,” “24” and, most recently, as himself on HBO’s “Entourage.” A legendary actor and an unforgettable character, Dennis Hopper was perhaps above all a true Hollywood original. Related Photos Dennis Hopper: A Life In Photos

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Dennis Hopper: A True Hollywood Original