Tag Archives: chase

REVIEW: Kitschy Taken 2 Ups The Xenophobia With Subpar Bad Dad Fantasy

Taken 2 grabs everything that was surprisingly enjoyable about the original film and batters it into the ground like… Liam Neeson beating up an Albanian human trafficking ring. The brute charm that the 2008  Taken  found in portraying the Irish Oscar-nominee as an ultra-competent badass has withered to kitsch, and what’s left is tinged with even more xenophobia and weird paternal wish-fulfillment. Worse, the directing reins have been handed from greater Luc Besson protégé Pierre Morel to the lesser (but, granted, more awesomely named) Olivier Megaton, of  Transporter 3 and Columbiana , and he slashes the action sequences to such incoherent bits that half the fights could have been shot on a sound stage thousands of miles from any star and chopped in after the fact. Why are we watching this again? Ah, yes, novelty. It is still a kick, though with rapidly diminishing returns, to see Neeson as the tersely tough CIA operative turned security contractor Bryan Mills. Bryan’s relentless when it comes to destroying bad guys but pure pudding when it comes his apparently still teenage daughter Kim ( Maggie Grace , who at 29 isn’t entirely believable as a kid still working on getting her drivers license) and ex-wife Lenore (Famke Janssen). Bryan isn’t fazed by the prospect of facing down a gang of Balkan toughs, but learning that his little girl has a boyfriend and didn’t tell him about it leaves him stricken. Lenore and the man she remarried are separated, and Bryan gallantly offers to fly her and their daughter to Istanbul, where he’ll meet them after completing a short job, unknowingly making them all targets for the relatives of the men he killed in the last movie, led by Murad Krasniqi (Croatian Serb actor Rade Serbedzija, the go-to choice for playing sinister Eastern Europeans). Whatever the structure of this criminal ring, it’s a family business and they have great contacts, seeing as members of the local police force and staffers at the luxury hotel at which Bryan and his family are staying are in the mafiosos’ pockets. When the Albanians come to take our not-so-helpless Americans — twist! — it’s Bryan and Lenore who end up getting captured, with the former growling his “Listen to me carefully” instructions to Kim as she attempts to come to her parents’ rescue. Taken 2  is dumb and as discardable as a box of cheap tourist trinkets, and its fights go so disappointingly easy the film’s end arrives almost arbitrarily. Like its predecessor, it’s also colored with some ugly American panic — ironic, given the international cast and crew involved in making it. The world abroad is filled with foreigners who can’t wait to grab your virginal blonde daughters or take unwarranted revenge for what was an elaborately violent but, you know, totally justifiable act of familial defense. Even before Bryan cottons to the fact that people are out to get them, he sternly forbids his daughter from wandering out of the hotel while he and Lenore take a private car to the market for lunch. Later, Bryan has Kim set off grenades in the middle of the city in order to use the sound to figure out how far she is from where he’s being held. If you’re visiting a foreign city, it’s best to have as little contact with it as possible — but committing acts of sizable destruction is apparently fine in service of your fellow travelers. Taken 2,  which packs in an improbable car chase through the narrow streets of an old neighborhood and a oddly anticlimactic fist fight sequence in a Turkish bath, is ultimately a simplistic bad dad fantasy about a guy getting to righteously defend his family against the masses who are eager to do them harm. Bryan may have let his old job take him away from his wife and daughter, but now he gets to make up for being an absentee father by defending them against all comers, guns a-blazing. Unruffled and an expert on everything, he guides the grateful, whimpering women in his life to safety and in exchange gets to lecture the tribal head of the gangsters about how he needs to just accept the fact that the son is dead and deserved his fate. The film doesn’t make too much of the detail that Murad and his men are Muslim, but does suggest, in moments like the one just described, that there’s no reasoning with them. Taken 2 has the unfortunate bad timing of choosing for its action movie explosion playground a country currently experiencing some serious real-world tensions with neighboring Syria. But its sense of Americans-in-a-foreign-land entitlement is nonspecific enough that this isn’t particularly uncomfortable — it’s so broad, in fact, that it approaches but never quite embraces self-parody. If this is what producer/writer Luc Besson thinks audiences are looking for these days, he has a low opinion of people indeed. God help us if he turns out to be right. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Kitschy Taken 2 Ups The Xenophobia With Subpar Bad Dad Fantasy

Phoenix Mayor Steps Up And Lives Off Of Foodstamps For A Week!

Can a politician really relate in just one week? Phoenix Mayor Greg Stanton tried to step out of his comfort zone and see what it’s like to live off of $29 a week through the states SNAP Program …and the man didn’t cheat once! Claiming to have lost a few lbs due to lack of food, he’s passionate about fixing the low level of poverty in his state. Arizona has more than 1.1 million folks on food assistance and the US has more than 46 million that are accounted for. This week I joined staff and board members from the Arizona Community Action Association (ACAA), the Valley of the Sun United Way and others in the community in the week-long SNAP Experience when we’ll limit total food purchases to the weekly budget of a typical SNAP participant: $4.16 a day. That’s about $29 a week for one person and $97 a week for a family of four. The SNAP Experience, through which participants also will be asked to blog about its impact, is scheduled Sept. 15-21. September is Hunger Awareness Month. With American poverty levels approaching the highest levels since 1965, 1.1 million Arizonans rely on SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly food stamps) to feed their families. Identifying, in a concrete way, with struggling families is an important exercise for any leader. By walking in the shoes of those who depend on the SNAP program, I certainly feel like I’ve gained critical perspective as a policymaker. From a broader perspective, I’m starting to think about all the other challenges families on food stamps (SNAP) must face at the same time they are stretching their food benefit. Census data in 2010 showed Arizona had the second highest poverty rate in the nation with 21.2% of its citizens living in poverty. The national figure was 14.3 percent. We’ve improved since then, but we’re still in the 10-poorest states category. Worse, women raising children alone here aren’t doing well. More than 45% of mothers raising children by themselves are in poverty. That’s why turning this economy around is so important. The best “program” for any struggling family is a job that pays a living wage. That’s what I’m focusing on for every Phoenix family. We’re going to give the Mayor credit for making the effort and spreading awareness on the issue. If every politician was required to do this, do you think we’d see more efforts and less b*tching about the needy, struggling, low-to middle-income classes? Images via facebook/shutterstock

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Phoenix Mayor Steps Up And Lives Off Of Foodstamps For A Week!

Fair And Balanced On Blast: Fox Accidentally Airs Fugitive Suicide Live On National Television

Fox News Airs Man Committing Suicide On Live Television The folks over at FoxNews are in deep isht after a live fugitive chase that was being broadcast nationwide took a turn for the worst when the fleeting man fatally shot himself in the head while the cameras were rolling. via Huffington Post Authorities still haven’t released the identity of a man who fatally shot himself in the head on live national television at the end of a high-speed carjacking chase that began in Phoenix and ended close to the California border. Fox News was covering the chase that began about midday Friday using a live helicopter shot from Phoenix affiliate KSAZ-TV. The man driving a copper-colored four-door sedan stopped, ran into the desert and placed a handgun to his head and fired. Phoenix police spokesperson Sgt. Tommy Thompson said the man allegedly stole a car from a couple at gunpoint outside a Phoenix restaurant just before 11 a.m. MST. Fox News anchor Shepard Smith told viewers that the video was supposed to be on a 10-second delay so it could be cut off from airing if something went awry. Smith was narrating the video and clearly had his doubts about what was being shown from the moment the man stopped the car. “This scares me,” he said. “You wait for the end of these things and you worry about how they may end up,” he said. “This makes me a little nervous, I got to tell you. A little nervous.” After the man shot himself, Fox’s picture quickly cut to Smith, who was shouting “get off, get off, get off, get off.” Smith apologized repeatedly following the commercial break. “That didn’t belong on TV. We took every precaution we knew how to take to keep that from being on TV and I personally apologize to you that that happened,” he said. “We really messed up, and we’re all very sorry,” Smith said. Wow. The risks of airing live coverage are always high. Image via FoxNews

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Fair And Balanced On Blast: Fox Accidentally Airs Fugitive Suicide Live On National Television

Ain’t Isht Bolitics: Desperate Romney GOP Folk Attacking Obama’s Mother Claiming This Guy Is Obama’s Real Dad

Tea Party Members Drag Obama’s Mother In Smear Campaign SMH. These folks have now reached an all time low in the Obama smear campaign…. Via The Daily Beast: For a while now, pictures purporting to show Obama’s mother, Stanley Ann Dunham, modeling in 1950s bondage and fetish porn have been floating around the darker corners of the Internet. Now, though, they’ve made their way into a pseudo-documentary, Joel Gilbert’s Dreams From My Real Father, which is being mailed to voters in swing states, promoted by several Tea Party groups and by at least one high-level Republican. At the same time, Dinesh D’Souza’s latest book, Obama’s America—the first of all his works to hit the top spot on The New York Times bestseller list—has a chapter essentially calling Dunham a fat slore. If Obama is reelected, it’s hard to imagine where the right goes from here. It’s tempting to ignore Dreams From My Real Father because it’s so preposterous. The movie claims that Obama’s actual father was the poet and left-wing activist Frank Marshall Davis, who Dunham met through her father, who was a CIA agent merely posing as a furniture salesman. “My election was not a sudden political phenomenon,” says the narrator, speaking as if he were Obama reading his autobiography. “It was the culmination of an American socialist movement that my real father, Frank Marshall Davis, nurtured in Chicago and Hawaii, and has been quietly infiltrating the U.S. economy, universities, and media for decades.” D’Souza argues that part of the reason Ann Dunham sent Obama to live with her parents in Hawaii was so she could pursue affairs with Indonesian men. “Ann’s sexual adventuring may seem a little surprising in view of the fact that she was a large woman who kept getting larger,” he writes. On the next page, he continues, “Learning about Ann’s sexual adventures in Indonesia, I realized how wrong I had been to consider Barack Obama Sr. the playboy … Ann … was the real playgirl, and despite all her reservations about power, she was using her American background and economic and social power to purchase the romantic attention of third-world men.” Wow. Really?? SMH at these clowns.

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Ain’t Isht Bolitics: Desperate Romney GOP Folk Attacking Obama’s Mother Claiming This Guy Is Obama’s Real Dad

On the 12th September 2012 my dream finally came true and I met…

On the 12th September 2012 my dream finally came true and I met Justin Bieber. For the last 3 and a half years I have been supporting Justin, but somehow I just never got the chance to meet him. We did try. We went everywhere, we slept outside his hotels, we camped for days just to try and see him but nothing ever happened. Then about 3 weeks ago there was a rumor going around that  Justin was doing a UK book signing. My friends and I were like freaking out  cause we seriously needed wristbands. Then WHSmith tweeted they were going on sale the next day at 10. When the wristbands went on sale, my computer froze and yeah.. I was crying and freaking out. At about 11am my best friend called me and was crying because she managed to get 2 wristbands.  I was so happy! The day came and we live 4 hours away from London so we had to get the coach down there, it took like 5 hours. We were freaking out because we were so happy. We finally arrived in London and my other friends were lost so we had to go and meet them but luckily we found out Justin was staying like 30 seconds from there. We found his hotel and then we were standing outside for hours. We met some amazing people outside, you know who you are girls woo! Kenny comes out and was calming everyone down, then suddenly Justin just comes out like telling everyone to stay behind the barrier but no-one did so he went back inside. Then take 2. Justin came out again and then everyone stayed behind the barrier and listened. He came over to our side first. I was like “Hi Justin can I have a picture please?” He put his arm round my waist and we took a picture. Then his car went and we chased after it for like 10 minutes, it was so funny! He was like waving to us and stuff. Then it was time to go to the book signing. We found the secret location and we queued for another couple of hours. Finally we were going in. I saw Kenny again and I had a chat with him (I love this man so much, he’s so kind seriously) Then I’m walking up to the table where Justin was and he did this massive smile. He was like “Hey,” so then I said “You have done so much for my over the past 3 years.” Then he was like, “Thank you so much I love you” and then winked at me. I ALMOST DIED!  Then he gave me my book and I just cried so much after that. It was definitely the best day of life. I never ever ever thought in a million years the would happen but ‘Never say never’ for real, I stick by that. Dreams do come true. -@BecciBieber1 See the article here: On the 12th September 2012 my dream finally came true and I met…

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On the 12th September 2012 my dream finally came true and I met…

Judge Sides With James Cameron In Avatar Copyright Case; Philip Seymour Hoffman To Direct Ezekiel Moss: Biz Break

Also in Tuesday morning’s round-up of news briefs, Charlie Kaufman has turned to crowd funding (seemingly quite successfully) for a stop motion animation project. Richard Gere ‘s Arbitrage is set to open a Middle Eastern film festival. And Park Chan-wook is set to direct a Corsican mafia story. Judge Rules James Cameron & Fox Did Not Interfere with Copyright for Avatar A U.S. district court said that Avatar did not infringe on the copyright of a screenwriter’s novel, Bats and Butterflies . The court said the novel is a “children’s story with a simple protagonist,” while Avatar is a “more complex story about a conflicted protagonist,” Deadline reports . Philip Seymour Hoffman to Direct Supernatural Drama Ezekiel Moss The script, written by Keith Bunin, which appeared on the 2011 Black List revolves around a mysterious stranger with the power to speak with the dead. He arrives in a small Nebraska town, transforming the lives of the people there including a widow and her young son, THR reports . Charlie Kaufman Stop Motion Project Turns to Crowd Funding Kaufman and his producing partners are using crowd funding source Kickstarter for their adaptation of a play, Anomalisa and have raised $406,237 for its production in 60 days. “We want to make Anomalisa without the interference of the typical big studio process,” said a pitch video, Deadline reports . Arbitrage to Open Abu Dhabi Film Festival The Richard Gere starrer, which open to initial box office success in the U.S. in limited release last weekend will open the Abu Dhabi Film Festival. Gere and co-star Nate Parker are expected to attend the screening of the film set against the backdrop of hedge fund manipulation. The festival in the United Arab Emirates takes place October 11 – 20, THR reports . Park Chan-wook to Direct Corsica 72 Park Chan-wook ( I’m a Cyborg, But That’s OK ) will direct from the script that made the 2009 Black List. Set on the French island of Corsica in 1972, the story revolves around two friends heading in two different directions. One toward the a life in the mafia while the other toward a simpler life with his sweetheart. But when the Corsican mob kills the latter’s brother, the two enter a blood feud that leads to a final showdown, Variety reports .

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Judge Sides With James Cameron In Avatar Copyright Case; Philip Seymour Hoffman To Direct Ezekiel Moss: Biz Break

‘My Mother Was Nuts’ Book Excerpt: How Robert De Niro, Not Tom Hanks, Almost Starred In Penny Marshall’s ‘Big’

Actress and funny lady Penny Marshall made her name in television ( Laverne & Shirley ) before making an unexpected leap into directing with 1986’s Jumpin’ Jack Flash . But it was her sophomore feature, a fantasy about a boy transformed into a 30-year-old by a wish, that launched a career behind the camera — and made her the first woman director to gross $100 million. But as Marshall tells it in her wry, vivid memoir My Mother Was Nuts , everyone in Hollywood had passed on Big , Tom Hanks included — until, that is, an unlikely actor threw his hat into the ring: Robert De Niro . Marshall recalls the struggle to cast Big ‘s leading man — and the names who went out for the part, from Sean Penn to Gary Busey to John Travolta (“at the time he was box office poison”), in Movieline’s exclusive excerpt from My Mother Was Nuts . In the release (in stores today) the 69-year-old Marshall writes her life story, from her childhood growing up in the Bronx alongside sister Ronny and brother Garry, to her introduction to Hollywood and famous friends, colleagues, and lovers including John Belushi, Carrie Fisher, Rob Reiner, Art Garfunkel, Joe Pesci, Steven Spielberg, and many of the brightest talents of New Hollywood, to her successful second career directing films like Big , Awakenings , and A League Of Their Own . Stay tuned for Movieline’s exclusive interview with Marshall. ===== Jim Brooks and I both had offices on the Fox lot and one day while I was in post-production on Jumpin’ Jack Flash he came into my office and put a script on my desk. “This is your next movie,” he said. It was Big . What he didn’t tell me was that everyone in the world had turned it down. From Chuck Shyer to Steven Spielberg. Because I didn’t read the trades or follow the business, I had no idea. Nor did I know there were three similar movies in the works: Like Father, Like Son ; Vice Versa ; and an Italian version. But Jim was a mentor and friend. He knew that I had liked directing and making things up. He also knew that I wanted to do it again. I was grateful for his help because I probably wouldn’t have known how to look for a project on my own. Luckily I didn’t have to. I read the draft and liked the story. Twelve-year-old Josh Baskin can’t get the girl he likes; she’s interested in an older boy who can drive. He wishes he were bigger and wakes up the next morning as a thirty-year-old. He gets a job at FAO Schwarz, rises up the corporate ladder, and becomes the object of affection of a beautiful executive. It was a theme that everyone could identify with: When I’m big I’m gonna . . . To make the high concept work, I wanted it to be real and believable. The biggest challenge would be casting the lead. I went straight to the three big box-office stars at the time: Tom Hanks, Kevin Costner, and Dennis Quaid. All of them passed. Everyone passed. I tried a different approach. I looked for the kid who would be Josh’s best friend, and I picked Jared Rushton. He had the most spunk of those I saw. He worked well as I brought in actors, including Sean Penn, who was terrific but too young, and Andy Garcia, who was also great, though one of the studio executives said, “We don’t want to spend eighteen million on a kid who grows up to be Puerto Rican.” That was how they talked. “He’s Cuban,” I said. I also read Gary Busey, who had the energy of a child, but I didn’t think he could pull off playing an adult. John Travolta was dying to do it, but at the time he was box office poison and the studio didn’t want him. I started to get worried. Despite not having a lead actor, we were in pre-production in New York. I met with Robert Greenhut, one of our executive producers. This was our first film together. He was a slick line producer who had come up through the ranks and done all of Woody Allen’s films. He had excellent ideas, and he turned into an ally and confidant when I decided to take my search for a lead actor in a different direction. I went to Robert De Niro. Bobby — or Bobby D. as I called him — was in the middle of making The Untouchables , playing Al Capone. Although I knew he didn’t ordinarily read other material when he was in the middle of a project, I called him anyway. That’s where I’m not at all shy or hesitant. I will call anyone. What’s the worst they can say? “Bobby, there’s a script,” I said. “I want you to read it, see if you like it.” I got him the material and called him back. “Did you read it?” “Yeah.” “What do you think? “I like it.” It turned out that he wanted to make a commercial film. He had done all of Marty Scorsese’s movies, but hadn’t broken out in a film the whole family could watch. I told Jim and Scott Rudin, who was running production at the studio, that De Niro was interested. They were surprised and somewhat intrigued. They were also skeptical. Besides having a hard time envisioning him in the role, they’d heard stories about him. They told me to get him to commit. The way they said it was like a challenge. I called Bobby. “What do I tell them when they ask me?” I asked. “Do you want to do it or not? I’ve got to give them an answer.” “Yeah, tell them I’ll do it,” he said. I hung up. I had Bobby. I told Jim and Scott, and I guess word spread. The next day I flew to Los Angeles to go to an event celebrating Paramount’s seventy-fifth anniversary and posed for a photo with everyone who ever worked at the studio. Word had spread about Bobby D. and a handful of actors who had turned me down, including Kevin Costner, now asked about Big . Bobby had given me validity. As work began on the script, Bobby told me to look at his movies and tell him what I wanted and didn’t want. What I wanted was the energy he had in Mean Streets in the scene when he was first in the bar and coming out around the car. That’s exactly what I got when he came to my house one day. I got him on tape with Jared. They skateboarded, shot baskets, and rode bicycles in my driveway. Bobby doesn’t give you much until the cameras are on. Jared yelled, “Come on, De Niro. Move it!” It was exciting. I didn’t know exactly where the process was leading, in terms of the script, but it was moving in a good direction. I would have paid to see Bobby dance on piano keys. Barry didn’t want Bobby, though. I said, “Counter me.” He said, “How about Warren Beatty?” To me, Warren was the same as De Niro, but different. He had already done something similar in Heaven Can Wait. But the two of us had dinner in New York and then we went up to my apartment. I asked if he would listen to me if I directed him. In the nicest way, he said no. Well, that was thrilling. Why bother? At least Warren was being honest. That’s all I ever ask. Just tell me the truth. I’ll deal with it. But I can’t deal unless I know the truth. Bobby was taken aback when I told him the studio had wanted me to meet with Warren. It’s never easy to hear that you aren’t someone’s top choice, even at his level. But that was only a small part of what became an even bigger problem. An article came out in the papers about how much money Chevy Chase, John Candy, and other people were paid for movies, and all were getting a hell of a lot more than Fox was going to pay Bobby. To be blunt, they were going to pay him shit and they weren’t budging. They just didn’t want him. Jim Brooks suggested I give Bobby my salary. I offered. Bobby didn’t want it. “We’re working together,” he said. “You and me, you know? I’ll take Jim’s.” However, he had second thoughts and called the next day. Apologetic, he explained he couldn’t do the movie anymore. He’d be too angry. I understood. But now I was back to square one. Sort of. Excerpted from “My Mother Was Nuts” by Penny Marshall. ©2012 by Penny Marshall. To be published by Amazon Publishing/New Harvest September 2012. All Rights Reserved. My Mother Was Nuts is available today in stores and on Amazon . Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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‘My Mother Was Nuts’ Book Excerpt: How Robert De Niro, Not Tom Hanks, Almost Starred In Penny Marshall’s ‘Big’

Justin Bieber – As Long As You Love Me (Cover by Tim Samuelson)

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www.facebook.com Click the link above to “like” and connect with me on my facebook band page www.reverbnation.com Click the link above to visit my online store where you can purchase my new album “True” Download my album on itunes at: itunes.apple.com Download my album at amazon.com: www.amazon.com This is a cover song called “As Long As You Love Me” by “Justin Bieber” http://www.youtube.com/v/IblE117VpaQ?version=3&f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Original post: Justin Bieber – As Long As You Love Me (Cover by Tim Samuelson)

Justin Bieber – As Long As You Love Me (Cover by Tim Samuelson)

On August 30th WHSmiths confirmed that Justin would be doing a…

On August 30th WHSmiths confirmed that Justin would be doing a Book Signing in London. The next day wristbands went on sale at 10am  (the website crashed in 2 minutes. Power of the Beliebers) and luckily after trying for almost an hour, I purchased a wristband! The next couple of days flew by and finally the day came, September 12, 2012! I was on my way to the train station tweeting on my phone when all of a sudden I got a mention saying ‘Congrats on the RT!’ so I went onto Justin’s Twitter page and saw that he RT’d me , so then I start freaking out! After the train journey, I finally arrived in London and went straight to the “secret location” where the book signing was being held. Once I got to the venue I saw at least 200 people queuing up already. I joined the queue. The line started to move slowly and after around an hour of waiting, I finally got inside and got given a copy of Just Getting Started. I walked into the hall and saw a stage with a black curtain drawn and loads of Beliebers sitting on the floor reading through the book. Whilst waiting in line for Justin to come I was on my phone on Twitter and all of a sudden I see that Justin has RT’d me again…like seriously? I was in line waiting to meet him and he RT’d me twice in the space of a couple hours . Could my day get any better? Fast forward to 2 hours later. All of a sudden everyone starts screaming! I look up and see Moshe walking off the stage and then all of a sudden Alfredo walks past the stage! Then around 5 minutes later we all see this pink/red sleeve behind the curtain, Justin. Everyone starts screaming “Justin” and then he was teasing all of us by popping his head out of the curtain, he then ran across stage and waved to everyone. After about 30 minutes the line started to move really quick and before I knew it I was walking up the steps and behind the curtain. When I first entered, I saw Kenny and then I moved forward and I finally saw Justin! I walked up to him and gave him a Believe Wristband and he smiled at me then signed my book. Then I had to move on! I sneakily managed to film Justin whilst signing my book (Camera’s or Phones were not allowed but i managed to hide my phone in my pocket) After I walked outside it finally hit me that I just met Justin. I’m so grateful I was able to meet him in person finally and that memory will stick with me forever. I cant express how blessed I am for all of this to happen. From the RT’s on Twitter to meeting him in person. Don’t give up on meeting him or getting noticed by him because it’ll eventually happen as Justin says Never Say Never and Believe. -Pippa @UKBieberDay See more here: On August 30th WHSmiths confirmed that Justin would be doing a…

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On August 30th WHSmiths confirmed that Justin would be doing a…

Ever since I joined Twitter in June 2009, I always told myself I…

Ever since I joined Twitter in June 2009, I always told myself I would meet this one boy from Stratford and his crew but, I never believed it. I constantly saw tweets from my followers saying they had met Justin and the crew and I literally crumbled! But through the months (and years), some of the crew started following, re-tweeting and tweeting me. Kenny followed me a few months ago whilst Mama Jan tweeted me in 2010. But I wanted nothing more than for Justin to follow me (which I’m still waiting for!) but at least he’s retweeted me! When Justin said he was coming back to the UK to do a book signing , I knew I had to go! On 30th August 2012, I woke up at 9:30am with a tweet from one of my followers asking me if I was going to the signing and at first, I had no idea about it!! I jumped out of bed straight away and went onto the website to purchase my wristband and after 1 hour of trying, I finally bagged myself one! When the day of the signing came, I was so hyped and as soon as I got there, the nerves started kicking in! When Justin came out on stage, I was so excited! I smiled so big when I saw him, Alfredo and Kenny onstage and I couldn’t wait to meet them!! After waiting for at least an hour, it was finally my turn to meet Justin! I had a little conversation with Kenny before I got to him and he even gave me a cuddle before I left! Alfredo said ‘Hey!’ to me and as soon as I got to Justin, I’d never seen someone smile so wide!! When I got to the table, Justin said ‘How are you gorgeous?’ which made the butterflies in my stomach flutter even more! We had a tiny conversation and before I left, I made him pinky promise me he’d read my letter and follow me and to my surprise, he grabbed my little finger and pinky swore with me! Never in a million years would I have thought I’d be meeting Justin and I’ll always remember this day! (12/09/12) This sounds super cheesy but for all those beliebers out there that haven’t had the chance to meet him yet, NEVER SAY NEVER! -@danielleelovato Read the rest here: Ever since I joined Twitter in June 2009, I always told myself I…

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Ever since I joined Twitter in June 2009, I always told myself I…