Tag Archives: burton

Push Snowboarding

http://www.youtube.com/v/1y8nMUAUeKM

See the original post:

National Push Snowboarding is an open snowboarding innovations platform. By combining the technical expertise of both Nokia and Burton, they’re creating a kit capable of providing insights into what’s happening both physically and mentally to snowboarders – making visible what until now has been invisible. The project is a collaboration between Nokia, Burton, snowboarders and developers worldwide…. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Denver Egotist Discovery Date : 17/03/2011 17:58 Number of articles : 2

Push Snowboarding

‘That’s So Raven’ Star — Handcuffed By Police

Filed under: Celebrity Justice , Tyrone Burton , Paparazzi Photo Tyrone Burton — who starred in ” That’s So Raven ” and ” The Parent ‘Hood ” — was handcuffed this afternoon in L.A. on suspicion of hocking bootleg DVDs … TMZ has learned. Burton was selling the discs on a sidewalk in Hollywood when cops busted him… Read more

Originally posted here:
‘That’s So Raven’ Star — Handcuffed By Police

Tim Burton Has A Big 2010 Thanks To ‘Alice In Wonderland,’ MOMA Exhibit

And that’s why the veteran director is one of the entertainers we’re most thankful for this year. By Kara Warner, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Tim Burton Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/ Getty Images In Hollywood, the land of superlatives and flagrant puffery, the term “visionary” is thrown about too casually and bestowed upon flash-in-the-pan acts that all too often come and go with the change of seasons. However, one artist for whom the descriptor is fitting, whose films truly transport audiences to other dimensions and offer a childlike sense of wonder, is director Tim Burton. And this year, thanks to “Alice in Wonderland,” which brought in an estimated $1 billion at the box office ($334 million domestic, $690 million international) in addition to 20-plus years of unique and exciting filmmaking, Burton is one of the folks in the entertainment world for whom we’re most thankful. As part of MTV’s Thankful Week, we had the pleasure of chatting with Burton about the stress and eventual success of “Alice,” if we’ll be seeing a sequel or a musical adaptation on the Great White Way and a few hints about upcoming projects. MTV : Tim, every year here at MTV News, we select a few people we’re most thankful for. And you’ve had quite a year with the phenomenal success of “Alice in Wonderland” and a retrospective at New York’s Museum of Modern Art . Tim Burton : Wow. Well, that’s quite an honor. Thank you. MTV : Did it feel like this year was a special one? Burton : Yeah, it was interesting. The MOMA show was very special, and then going to the Cannes film festival and “Alice” — it was a lot of stuff going on. It was a special year for me, definitely. MTV : Were you a little more reflective than usual with the MOMA show? Burton : Yeah, I think so. It kind of forced me to look at myself, which I don’t do very often. I even avoid mirrors as I walk by them. It was a bit of a surprise in a good way. It did make me more reflective. You know, as you go on in life, there are less and less surprises — especially nice surprises, so it’s really, really great to feel surprised in a good way. MTV : We spoke a few times when you were working on “Alice,” and frankly, you seemed stressed. Burton : I was really stressed. We were doing music to no images. It was terrifying. In a weird way, it was quite exciting too, because you never know with a film what it’s going to turn out to be. But this was just an extreme, extreme version of that. MTV : How did you feel about the 3-D debate that came with the film? Some criticized the conversion to 3-D you used. Burton : Right, yeah, but that was kind of a funny argument because the thing is, we’ll shoot what? It’s not like we were doing motion-capture or we had sets. There was nothing to shoot. We planned for it. It was kind of a created argument in a way. Everybody likes to have a celebrity death match. Who will win? Things have more shades to it than that. MTV : Right, because a lot of it became about you and James Cameron’s different approaches to 3-D. Burton : Yeah. They’re doing “Titanic” in 3-D . What, they’re going to go back and shoot it in 3-D? No. They’re going to do the same thing we did. MTV : Is Disney putting the pressure on for a sequel for “Alice”? Burton : No, they haven’t, which was smart of them. They saw that it was kind of its own thing. They didn’t push for it at all, which I thought was really amazing, and smart, and right. MTV : And you are content to leave the story where it is? Because you do leave an opening at the end … Burton : Yeah, but that’s what the material does to me, it leaves it open for you. It’s kind of like dreams. It leaves it open, as it should, for interpretation. It’s like I got a lot of pressure to do a sequel to “Nightmare [Before Christmas],” and I just didn’t want to do that, because some movies should just be left alone. I think it keeps their kind of spirit intact in a way. MTV : There’s been talk about adapting “Alice” into a Broadway show. Are you involved in that? Burton : I’m talking to them about that just because there was a seedling of an idea that I thought was interesting. I don’t know how far it will go, but it’s something. I’ve always kind of wanted to do something live onstage. I’m just going to explore it and see what happens. MTV : It sounds like you’ll be shooting “Dark Shadows” with Johnny Depp soon? Burton : Yeah, I’m working on the script, and, you know, it’s been kind of a long time coming, but I think I’m getting a script that I like. I don’t really like talking, because I’m not really sure what’s happening yet, but I’m excited about it. I think, yes, finally for me, it’s getting to be the right tone. MTV : Have you and Johnny talked specifically about his take on Barnabas Collins, the vampire at the center of the series? Burton : Yeah, we’ve been talking about it. I mean, he’s finishing up another movie, but we’ve had a couple of really good meetings. Yeah, you know, I’m excited. MTV : Have you started shooting “Frankenweenie” ? Burton : We just started a couple of shots. It ‘s good. We’ve got a pretty low budget, but I’m excited about it. We’ve got a couple of shots that are done. Yeah, it’s just starting. It’s great. Thanksgiving is a time for taking stock, expressing gratitude and, most importantly, overeating. We at MTV News have been gorging all year at movie theaters, so it’s about time we looked back and gave thanks to our favorite actors and filmmakers of 2010. Enjoy exclusive interviews with our winners all week long. Check out everything we’ve got on “Alice in Wonderland.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

Read more:
Tim Burton Has A Big 2010 Thanks To ‘Alice In Wonderland,’ MOMA Exhibit

Even Bugs Have Personality

Individual insects and bugs may all look alike to human eyes, but each and every one is unique and possesses its own personality, suggests new research that also helps to explain how personality arises in virtually all organisms. Some individual bugs, like humans, turn out to be shy, while others are very forceful, determined the study, published in the latest Proceedings of the Royal Society B. “Boldness, explorativeness, activity and aggressiveness are the main personality traits usually measured because these connect to each other and appear together,” lead author Eniko Gyuris told Discovery News. What makes a bug bold or shy? Gyuris explains the traits manifest themselves a bit differently in insects. “Boldness — whether they are shier or braver — could be defined, for example, as to how quickly they start after an alarm, or how soon they come out of their refuge,” added Gyuris, a member of the Behavioral Ecology Research Group at the University of Debrecen. “Explorativeness could be measured in another context, namely in which they have the opportunity to discover a new environment with novel objects.” Gyuris and his team conducted personality tests on short-winged and long-winged firebugs, a common insect that's known for its striking red and black coloration. The researchers collected these bugs from wild populations in Debrecen, Hungary, and put them through a barrage of different situations. In one experiment, an individual firebug was placed in a covered vial that was moved to a small, lit circular arena. Four colored plugs made of gum were arranged on the arena's floor to serve as objects for each bug to explore. The scientists then tapped the vial and removed the cover, noting how long it took for the insect to leave its protective container and explore its new surroundings. The researchers also shook the bugs out of their vials and into the arena. The scientists recorded how many objects each firebug explored, how fast the bug moved, how long it took to reach the wall of the arena, and more. All experiments were repeated four times per bug. Each individual firebug behaved in a unique manner that was consistent across all of the experiments. If a particular bug was classified as bold and brave, it acted that way under a variety of circumstances. The same held true for more tentative, less aggressive firebugs. Females tended to show more extreme reactions, with long-winged firebugs acting bolder than short-winged ones. The scientists believe their findings carry over to other bugs and animals, with genes, gender, life experiences, environmental conditions and other factors shaping personality. “I think nearly every individual — insects and other organisms alike — has his or her own personality, with the possible exception of the ones living in very specific and stable habitats for a long time, like a cave, for example, as they may not need to behave in different ways among conspecifics,” Gyuris explained. Raine Kortet, a University of Helsinki researcher, and colleague Ann Hedrick discovered that personalities are all over the chart for field crickets, particularly among males. Some are veritable daredevils, while others are passive and guarded. Kortet and Hedrick concluded that “more aggressive males are also more active in general, and possibly less cautious towards predation risk.” Prior research by Kortet also found that dominant male crickets are more attractive to females, with dominance possibly tied to better immune defense and certain beneficial genes. But boldness isn't always better. “Some traits can be beneficial in one context” but not in another, Gyuris indicated. A brazen male bug that may be hearty and popular with females due to boldness, for example, could display aggressive behavior around an annoyed human and get squished in the process. added by: Almibry

Big Fish

Paste links along with your text http://www.bite.ca/bitedaily/2010/09/big-fish/ Is this what Tim Burton had in mind? added by: Geoffiroth

Homeless Woman Killed by Police Cruiser While Sleeping in Park | End Homelessness | Change.org

A Cincinnati woman died last week after she was run over while sleeping in Washington Park. The driver? A respected police officer with a jacket full of recommendations for his work in the park system. Officer Marty Polk was on a routine daytime patrol when he ran over Joann Burton with a police cruiser. Officer Polk drove off the park service route onto the grass, running over Burton as she slept under blankets between the trees. Officer Polk stopped after he realized he'd hit something and called an ambulance when Burton began screaming, “Someone ran over my legs!” Burton later died at the hospital, leaving behind a husband, five children and several grandchildren. Burton's husband has asked why a trained police officer would drive on grass in a public park. Others wonder how someone could fail to see a person lying in a pile of blankets at noon. The Cincinnati police department has said it's not standard procedure to drive through grass, though it's “not unusual.” Officer Polk underwent standard drug and alcohol testing after the accident but the results have not yet been released and the investigation is ongoing. Officer Polk had received extensive praise from local business owners over the years. Other than a minor traffic accident (on the road, not on the grass) twenty years ago, his record was excellent and he's never had a disciplinary problem. He's been placed on paid leave during the investigation. A vigil has already been held in the park by Burton's friends and family. The Cincinnati Homeless Coalition has also hired a lawyer to represent Burton's family's interests. Adding another layer of tragedy to the story is that park residents have said Officer Polk was nice, friendly and treated them with respect. No one has suggested that Polk intentionally hit Burton or meant to harm anyone. Which makes us ask: how could an officer with a great reputation and a good relationship with the park's homeless community be so fatally unaware? added by: toyotabedzrock

US OPEN 2010 (ride snowboards)

Ride Snowboard riders: Brennen Swanson, Tyler Anderson, and Sotty Pike riding at the 2010 Burton US Open.

More here:
US OPEN 2010 (ride snowboards)

On DVD: Tim Burton Goes Trippy But Tame with Alice in Wonderland

I tend to think ambitious film versions of Alice in Wonderland get produced when there is otherwise a serious lack of good dope: There were only a few trifling TV maladaptions in the ’60s, when military-grade hallucinogens were available on every college-town street corner. Today, it’s almost impossible to find trip-worthy pharms anywhere, and so we get the most gratuitously outrageous Alice yet, crafted as another tchotchke in Tim Burton’s wonder cabinet, and warpingly digital from the top to the bottom of every frame. The movie practically breaks its back trying to deliver an old-fashioned lysergic buzz, and the effort is most of what you walk away admiring. Honestly, Burton’s Wonderland looks like a mashup of Hogwarts, Oz, Middle Earth, DisneyWorld, FAO Schwartz and 300’s Thermopylae — nothing has been left out.

See the original post:
On DVD: Tim Burton Goes Trippy But Tame with Alice in Wonderland

Monkey Ghosts Rule Cannes: Uncle Boonmee Takes Palme d’Or

As perhaps the quietest Cannes Film Festival in recent memory came to a close on Sunday, jury president Tim Burton and his colleagues sorted through 19 selections and handed out awards at the Palais du Festival — and Movieline nailed it .

Read the original post:
Monkey Ghosts Rule Cannes: Uncle Boonmee Takes Palme d’Or

Burtonmania!

When you’re hot, you’re hot, and Tim Burton is pretty damned hot. With his $875 million-grossing Alice in Wonderland not too far in the background, the Museum of Modern Art announced today that its just-closed Burton exhibition was MoMA’s third-biggest ever, with 810,500 visitors in five months — a figure trailing only retrospectives of Picasso and Matisse. And you can’t even attribute it to 3-D ticket inflation! Amazing. [ NYT ]

See the original post:
Burtonmania!