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30 Seconds To Mars’ Jared Leto Clears Up ‘Hurricane’ Controversy

Short film wasn’t banned on MTV, contrary to reports. By James Montgomery 30 Seconds to Mars’ Jared Leto in “Hurricane” Photo: EMI On Sunday, hours before 30 Seconds to Mars’ long-awaited “Hurricane” short film was set to premiere on MTV and MTV.com, Jared Leto took to his blog to post a lengthy list of “issues” an unnamed network had with the mini-movie. The list was as detailed as it was long (sample entry: “09:17 — Woman’s finger running over other woman’s bottom in G-String and touching anus — COMPLETELY RESTRICTED”), but the point Leto was making was pretty clear. And just in case it wasn’t, he spelled it out in the title of his blog post: ” ‘Hurricane’ Banned From Television.” That led to several reports stating that MTV had banned the “Hurricane” clip, which, as it turns out, wasn’t actually true. In fact, the letter he posted on his blog wasn’t even from MTV, as he explained Wednesday (December 1) in an e-mail to MTV News. “The standards notes I posted are not from MTV USA, they are from another channel entirely. One of MANY, actually, that sent long lists of what was required to be censored in order to secure air time around the world,” he wrote. “MTV’s list was actually rather light compared to others. MOST channels around the world flat out restricted us completely from any ‘daytime play’ at all, relegating the film to graveyard-shift viewing only.” That said, “Hurricane” was pulled from MTV’s on-air rotation subsequent to its premiere, but, as Leto put it, not because the network had banned the film. Rather, as he said in a separate phone interview with MTV News, “There are some edits that need to be made … there is some footage that remained in the cut that was, I guess, overlooked.” In a statement to MTV News, a spokesperson for MTV added that the channel would return “Hurricane” to its on-air lineup once the edit had been made. “Contrary to various erroneous reports, the video has not been banned from MTV,” the statement read. “The video is currently available on MTV.com and will return to on-air rotation shortly.” For his part, Leto remains rather mystified about the entire thing. To hear him tell it, there’s nothing in “Hurricane” that’s particularly controversial, and he never intended for the video to stir up this much outrage. “I never set out to make a controversial film. I didn’t set out to make a film that would get banned — as it has — from several networks around the world, and restricted to nighttime broadcast,” he said. “I didn’t really have those things in mind, I really just set out on this journey and followed my creative instinct to tell the truth. “I think with a piece of work like this, this all becomes part of the process — whether it’s a song or a show or a film — it all brings us on this journey, and, this just happens to be part of the journey of ‘Hurricane,’ this controversial, banned little film,” he added. “I didn’t expect all this to happen, but it’s a good thing that it happens, only because of the conversation that it may provoke, about these sort of things, and looking at art and creative expression and weighing that against protecting the viewers from the exhibition of certain behaviors.” Have you watched “Hurricane” yet? Share your reviews in the comments! Related Artists 30 Seconds To Mars

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30 Seconds To Mars’ Jared Leto Clears Up ‘Hurricane’ Controversy

Renee Bargh Photo

24-year-old Renee Bargh is not only a TV host, but a pop star in her own right. She attended an Australian performing arts college, and after graduating, she joined the singing group Girlband, who had two successful singles down under before they split up in 2007. Australian television personality Renee Bargh is Sports Illustrated#39;s Lovely Lady of the day, but she#39;s not just a pretty face. Bargh has made a name for herself on Australia#39;s Channel V, but most recently she worked as a spe

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Renee Bargh Photo

Thye Hua Kwan photo

One of the performances at the Thye Hua Kwan Moral Society TV charity show. The programme also featured clips of Thye Hua Kwan#39;s beneficiaries produced by MediaCorp artistes. Thye Hua Kwan Moral Society held its charity show on MediaCorp#39;s Channel 8 on Sunday night. Viewers can call in to make donations, with S$5 being the minimum amount. At the end of the programme, the show raised S$4,065,673, exceeding its initial target of S$3.7 million. More than 260,000 viewers called in to don

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Thye Hua Kwan photo

Lone Star’s Jon Voight Calls Time Anti-Semitic

Fox is marketing their new buzz-y new series Lone Star in increasingly mysterious ways. Jon Voight — who plays Lone Star ‘s patriarch — appeared on the Fox News Channel show Huckabee over the weekend and laid into Time Magazine because of a recent cover story titled, ” Why Israel Doesn’t Care About Peace .” Wondered Voight: “Who are the anti-Semites who are running Time Magazine ?” Lone Star , premiering on Fox next week! [ THR ]

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Lone Star’s Jon Voight Calls Time Anti-Semitic

Discovery Channel hostage situation

The Discovery Channel building, site of a hostage situation, is seen in Silver Spring, Md, Wednesday, Sept. 1, 2010. Police shot and killed a man upset with the Discovery Channel network#39;s programming who took two employees and a security officer hostage at the company#39;s headquarters officials said. A hostage situation that began around 1 p.m. in the Maryland offices of the Discovery Channel ended with gunfire late today when police shot and killed eco-crusader James Lee, age 43, freei

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Discovery Channel hostage situation

Discovery Channel hostage 2010

An armored police vehicle drives through the area near the Discovery Channel headquarters building during a hostage situation in Silver Spring, Maryland September 1, 2010. Police shot a gunman who had taken three people hostage at Discovery Channel#39;s headquarters on Wednesday, ending a tense four-hour standoff near Washington. A gunman fired several shots and took at least one person hostage Wednesday at the Discovery Channel headquarters near Washington, media reports said, quoting police w

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Discovery Channel hostage 2010

Hostage Situation at the Discovery Channel HQ (BREAKING NEWS)

(CNN) — A man believed to be armed took at least one hostage Wednesday at the headquarters of the Discovery Channel in Silver Spring, Maryland, police said. Montgomery County police received a call at about 1 p.m. of a man with a gun and possible explosives, said police spokeswoman Angela Cruz. The call came from One Discovery Place, the channel's headquarters. The area has been evacuated, Cruz said. A SWAT team and additional resources are responding, said Montgomery County police Cpl. Dan Friz. He is in the lobby area, Friz said. Authorities were trying to get in touch with him. It appears the man has some kind of explosive device, Friz said. Fire marshals with explosives experience were assisting. http://www.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/09/01/maryland.discovery.channel/index.html?eref=m… added by: existentialist

Watch Psych Season 5 Episode 7 – Ferry Tale

Watch Psych S5E7: Ferry Tale Gus and Shawn goes helping out a prison guard get a hold of some inmates who has escaped and have gotten into a ferryboat going to the Channel Islands. The latest installment of Psych which is entitled “Ferry Tale” is the

Spitzer Boosters at Boston Globe Hail Client #9 Show As Sign of CNN’s Stand for ‘Traditional News Values’

Why is The Boston Globe sucking up to CNN? In an unsigned staff editorial on Tuesday , the Globe warned TV critics to “back off” CNN for hiring “fresher voices” like Eliot Spitzer, the disgraced ex-Governor of New York and pseudo-conservative Kathleen Parker. They strangely claimed that somehow Spitzer won’t be partisan, but he will be “candid” — like in his political career?? He’s “forever marred” by his transactional sex, but also a superior host because of it?  Yes, Spitzer will forever be marred by his use of prostitutes, but the demise of his political career has freed him up to be far more candid than the average moonlighting politico. Parker, a voice of common-sense conservatism, is notable for her willingness to break with the GOP herd; in 2008, she wrote that Sarah Palin lacked important qualifications for national office. Another Crossfire this won’t be: Spitzer and Parker will probably be unpredictable and sometimes contrarian. They might even agree on some things — an entirely welcome development. Throwing ideological chum to the partisan masses will always draw ratings, but it rarely leaves viewers better informed. Anyone who thinks Client #9 isn’t going to be a partisan Democrat isn’t watching his recent TV appearances, attacking the GOP as the “party of nihilism.” But the Globe mourns how Fox News and MSNBC are ruining the political culture, while CNN is a PBS-style oasis by comparison: The fate of CNN is of more than casual interest, because it is the lone holdout on cable news promising in-depth reporting and non-ideological analysis. Its rivals, Fox and MSNBC, have chosen to preach to the converted, fueling a culture of outrage and denunciation. Their effects on American political dialogue have been widely noted, and widely condemned. CNN is the best hope for a revival of traditional news values on cable . This is a weird stance coming from the Boston Globe, better known for partisanship that traditional objectivity. Please recall Brent Baker on the April 2009 column by Peter S. Canellos, the paper’s Washington bureau chief, titled ‘ In a Stroke of Brilliance, Obama Defies Easy Caricature .’ A year ago, Baker found an article lamenting anti-Obamacare protesters in “ Foes’ decibels replace debate on healthcare: Protesters’ yells at meetings frustrate Democrats’ push .” Reporter Lisa Wangsness rued: “This summer, the Rockwellian ideal of neighbors gathering to discuss community issues in a neighborly way is gone, replaced by quarrelsome masses hollering questions downloaded from activist websites”. The Globe also loves ABC’s new choice of Christiane Amanpour and her new America-bashing internationalist version of “This Week” on Sunday mornings:  Broadcast TV is far less culpable for the coarsening of public dialogue, but like all media, it has some ingrained bad habits of its own. The broadcast equivalent of the highly ideological cable host is the super-inside political reporter — someone who betrays no opinions but reliably relates the Beltway consensus. It’s a useful perspective, but a limited, almost willfully stunted one.Thus, it was a breath of fresh air to see Christiane Amanpour, the legendary foreign correspondent, move into the anchor chair of ABC’s “This Week,’’ single-handedly broadening the perspective of the Sunday-morning interview shows. Of course, she, too, was swatted down by some capital critics, led by Tom Shales of The Washington Post, for lacking the proper political chops. Spitzer, Parker, and Amanpour represent a legitimate attempt by TV news executives to sell substance and offer fresh perspectives. More than just ratings are riding on their success.

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Spitzer Boosters at Boston Globe Hail Client #9 Show As Sign of CNN’s Stand for ‘Traditional News Values’

Variety Columnist Accuses FNC of Racial Motivations, Provides Zero Quotes from Actual Programming

Variety Magazine TV critic Brian Lowry – formerly a reporter for NPR and the Los Angeles Times – surely was not a member of JournoList. But he sure writes like he was. Lowry took a page directly out of the Spencer Ackerman Guide to Dubious Racism Accusations in his most recent column , claiming the Fox News Channel caters to racial fear and resentment to sell its brand. Lowry provided no examples to back up his claims. He did not give voice to any opposing views. The only evidence he offered to back up his accusations were quotes from “thoughtful conservative” (read: not-so-conservative conservative) David Frum and liberal Washington Post blogger Greg Sargent. In true JournoLista fashion, Lowry cited Fox’s coverage of the New Black Panther scandal at the Justice Department as evidence of the channel’s attempts to “delegitimize Obama” by stoking racial fears. Just as Ackerman advocated with the Jeremiah Wright scandal, Lowry cried racism in order to avoid any actual discussion of this administration’s strange affinity for racialist radicals – or any of Fox’s actual coverage of the scandal. Networks cater to all kinds of demographics. But overlooked amid recent hand-wringing over racial politics and the separate debate over whether Fox News merited a front-row White House briefing room upgrade is the main ingredient in the channel’s stew: fear. With Barack Obama’s election, Fox has carved out a near-exclusive TV niche, while having plenty of company in radio: catering to those agitated (consciously or otherwise) by having an African-American in the White House. Yet a broader secret of its success — preying upon anxiety in general — hasn’t really changed since the Sept. 11 terror attacks. As the original home of the “news alerts” (which usually aren’t alerting us to breaking news), Fox News under CEO Roger Ailes has been adept at tapping into deep-seated concerns. And in order to powerfully connect with core viewers, it’s not enough to disagree with President Obama’s policies; rather, they must be couched as an existential threat to U.S. society. Lowry goes on to single out Glenn Beck (of course), and to cite a couple of commentators who he apparently considers experts on Fox’s alleged “fear and racism” strategy. Thoughtful conservative commentators have cited the dangers in such overheated rhetoric. Former Bush speechwriter David Frum has become one of the most articulate, writing after passage of healthcare reform, “Conservative talkers on Fox and talkradiohad whipped the Republican voting base into such a frenzy that deal-making was rendered impossible. How do you negotiate with somebody who wants to murder your grandmother? Or — more exactly — with somebody whom your voters have been persuaded to believe wants to murder their grandmother?” Frum added that talk hosts operate “responsibility-free” — playing a different game than Republican politicians, since perpetuating frustration and outrage boosts their ratings… For all the invectives hurled at Bill Clinton and George W. Bush in the three-cable-news-network era (which didn’t begin, unbelievably, until halfway through Clinton’s presidency), the most egregious attempts to delegitimize Obama are both distinct and not particularly subtle. The latest theme — illustrated by Fox’s crusade regarding the New Black Panther Party — hinges on fear of racial bias where whites are the aggrieved party. As the Washington Post’s Greg Sargent noted, Fox’s eagerness to “drive the media narrative … simply has no equivalent on the left.” Still, the most ruthless liberals — those more committed to partisan advantage than accuracy — have inevitably drawn lessons by observing, and will retaliate whenever Republicans regain power. Since its inception, Fox has emulated the “If it bleeds, it leads” mindset of local news, garnishing its presentation with snazzier graphics and more urgent production values. The canny post-Sept. 11 adaptation has been, “If it scares, it airs.” As mentioned above, David Frum is of course presented as the “even some conservatives don’t like Fox” commentator. And of course Lowry things Frum is “thoughtful” – if he were more conservative, he wouldn’t be deserving of that label. Frum is not given space to criticize Fox because he’s thoughtful. He’s thoughtful because he criticizes Fox. As for Sargent, Lowry readers who don’t know the WaPo blogger are left without any indication of his political leanings. Lowry presented Sargent as a media critic noting what he claims is a simple reality, but did not mention that the blogger is on the opposite end of the political spectrum from Fox’s prime time talkers. So Lowry’s only substantiation for his sweeping theories about the root of Fox’s success comes from a left-wing blogger, and a conservative who makes a living ripping on other conservatives. And Lowry has the temerity to criticize Fox’s journalistic practices.

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Variety Columnist Accuses FNC of Racial Motivations, Provides Zero Quotes from Actual Programming