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‘American Idol’ Recap: Jacob Lusk, Paul McDonald Find The Soul Pocket

James Durbin and Pia Toscano also nailed their takes on Motown classics. By Gil Kaufman “American Idol” Final 11 Photo: FOX Producers promised to shake things up this year on “American Idol,” but they were back to their predictable old tricks on Wednesday night (March 23), when the top 11 singers once again dipped into the Motown bag for some golden oldies. It was a critical week for a number of reasons, not the least of which was the fact that it would decide season 10’s top 10, i.e., the handful of singers who will go out on the road with the “Idol” tour this summer. Some (Thia, Lauren, Paul) stormed back after tough weeks, while others cemented their frontrunner status (Pia, Jacob) and a few tripped up (Stefano, Haley). After squealing his way through Nirvana’s “Smells Like Teen Spirit” last week (and possibly scaring off his little-girl vote) Casey Abrams went for the big brass ring with Marvin Gaye’s “I Heard It Through the Grapevine.” He did some of his now-signature growling, mixing Gaye’s sweet soul with the swampy blues texture of the classic Creedence Clearwater Revival cover, pushing closer to the dreaded, white-soul belter territory blazed by “Idol” champ Taylor Hicks. “I think you’re the perfect entertainer,” Steven Tyler enthused. “Perfect pitch and perfect mix of crazy-ass out-of-control ego and that’s what makes an artist today.” Jennifer Lopez and Randy Jackson agreed, saying that Abrams has already carved his own totally unique lane. Trying to rebound from a rough week, the youngest singer in the contest, Thia Megia, 16, went with an uptempo number for once, Martha and the Vandellas’ “Heatwave.” Wearing a flirty, frilly pink skirt with a black bustier top, Megia showed an intriguing different side to her personality, a country/pop-ish tone with plenty of attitude, though she still sometimes comes off a bit cruise ship-y. Lopez loved seeing Megia let loose for once and encouraged her to dig even deeper and try to connect with her lyrics more, by acting if necessary. Randy was psyched to see her take a chance after a string of same-y ballads. With his gospel background, this should have been a slam-dunk week for Jacob Lusk. Choosing Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell’s legendary ballad “You’re All I Need to Get By,” Lusk leaned into the spare arrangement with a feathery contralto, hopping between his throaty and falsetto voices while putting on a divo-esque soul clinic of controlled runs. Tyler couldn’t contain himself, running up to hug Jacob and scream “hallelujah!” into the mic. The standing ovation inspired Jackson to say it was Lusk’s best performance yet, praising his easy way of leaning into the chorus and totally controlling the song by knowing when to give it all and when to hold back. “You know what was wrong with that performance?” he said. “Nothing!” The other 16-year-old, Lauren Alaina, dug into the Supremes’ classic “You Keep Me Hangin’ On.” Opening in a single spotlight and transforming the intro into a slow, soul kiss, Alaina once again tapped into her precocious charms and flirted with Jackson and sashayed all around the judges’ circle while singing a very good, sassy karaoke version of the disco-lite tune. “I don’t think you listen to anybody about anything and I like that about you,” Tyler said to his favorite Aerosmith fan, while Lopez praised L.A.’s flowy zebra-striped, floor-length skirt and neck-rolling attitude. Unlike Alaina, Stefano Langone grew up on Motown, though he chose not a classic, but the 1984 Lionel Richie schmaltz-fest “Hello.” Warned not to over-sing it, Langone gave it an odd operatic lilt, turning the tune into a Michael Buble-style, light FM show tune. She still thinks he’s a cutie with a good voice, but Lopez said the one-time wild card missed the emotion in the song and failed to connect, instead looking like he was trying too hard to perform. Giving some of her most coherent, cogent advice of the season, the multi-hyphenate judge said it’s critical for Langone to look at each song as an acting gig. “You sounded good, but there was no real connection,” Randy concurred. After hitting the bottom-three two weeks in a row, Haley Reinhart was hoping to avoid the walk of shame by singing Smokey Robinson & the Miracles’ “You Really Got a Hold on Me.” Her off-tempo, sissy strut version had the requisite soul mama growls and shouts, but the whole thing felt a bit awkward, shouty and Holiday Inn lounge. After a rough start, Randy said Reinhart’s Janis Joplin-esque growl and attitude brought it back around, giving them a glimpse of the singer they fell in love with. “I think you may have the most soulful voice of anybody in the competition,” J.Lo said, then amending that to just include the girls’ side. The singer facing the biggest challenge of the week was bullfrog-voiced country crooner Scotty McCreery. Though he didn’t grow up with Motown, he went with the Stevie Wonder version of “For Once in My Life.” Shockingly, he sang it with a twangy Glen Campbell vibe accompanied by a wheezing harmonica, acoustic guitar and giddyaup brushed snare beat. Tyler said Scotty Mac took a big chance and ripped it and Lopez agreed, saying Scotty made it his own, even if it wasn’t his strongest vocal performance. Either way, it’s those low notes he always throws in that continue to seal the deal for the judges and the audience. Motown week was no problem for Pia Toscano, who’s been singing the label’s songs her whole life alongside her dad. She chose the lesser-known Stevie Wonder hit “All in Love is Fair,” giving it the full diva treatment, complete with floor-length black gown, string section backing and a powerful series of crescendos delivered while standing nearly motionless behind the mic. Once again, Lopez said the vocals, beauty and feeling were all there and said Pia could have a Celine Dion-like career, but she needs to add more dynamic stage moves into her repertoire. And, c’mon girl, Randy pleaded, we get that you can sing ballads, but mix it up a bit, will ya! After a few seasons where singers frequently hid behind guitars and pianos, Paul McDonald busted out the first acoustic of the finals and did some picking and grinning on Smokey Robinson & the Miracles’ titanic “Tracks of My Tears.” Transforming the party tune into a down-home folk rocker, McDonald put on his best Rod Stewart rasp and remade the weeper as if he’d just written it before hitting the stage. Randy wasn’t sure where the song was going at first, but he loved the Stewart vibe and the soft, tender notes near the end. “Like Dylan, like Willie Nelson, your voice is that different,” Tyler said as Lopez referred to McD as the complete package in search of the right producer. She’s already proved her sick dancing skills, so Naima Adedapo’s decision to grab Martha and the Vandellas’ good time ditty “Dancing in the Streets” made perfect sense. Looking like she was having a blast, Naima worked the stage to the African percussion-tinged remake, mixing her strong, crisp vocals with an energized African dance breakdown at song’s end. For once Tyler was speechless, though he did inexplicably call the performance “E to the Z o twiddly dee,” blown away that she came up with the dance moves and the additional percussion. J.Lo said she got her first goose bumps of the night thanks to Naima’s stage savvy. The night’s pimp spot belonged to lone rocker James Durbin, who sang Wonder’s gritty urban anthem “Living for the City.” Busting out of the gate with his clean falsetto voice, Durbin strutted all over the stage and made the song a bit happier than the original, but managed to give it enough of his rock grit (and high screeches) to make it his own. Reduced to an “oh my Gawd”-ing valley girl, Jennifer was in awe of JD’s dance moves and vocals, admitting he left her speechless. Though it opened rough, Randy said James hit his stride during his dance-breakdown middle and brought it home with the Lambert-esque scream at the end. Thursday night’s results show will feature performances from season-three “Idol” finalist and Oscar winner Jennifer Hudson and country duo Sugarland. Who did you think nailed it on Motown night? Who blew it? Let us know in comments below! Don’t miss “Idol Party Live” every Thursday on MTV.com, following the “American Idol” results show, for analysis, celebrity guests and even some karaoke — get in the conversation by tweeting with the hashtag #idolparty ! In the meantime, get your “Idol” fix on MTV News’ “American Idol” page , where you’ll find all the latest news, interviews and opinions. Related Photos ‘American Idol’ Season 10 Performances

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‘American Idol’ Recap: Jacob Lusk, Paul McDonald Find The Soul Pocket

Spotted: Brangelina and All Six Kids!

The Jolie-Pitt family headed out to do some grocery shopping in their adopted home town of New Orleans, La., today. Brad, Ange and all six kids went! Brad Pitt is in the city working on his latest project Cogan’s Trade . Angelina, Maddox, Pax, Zahara, Shiloh, Knox and Vivienne came along for the ride. Mother, father and brood were all smiles on this lovely sunny day, even waving to admirers as they strolled to and from the market in plain sight of all: Quick, name every Brangelina offspring, left to right! Somewhere, Jennifer Aniston is feeling awfully lonely. [Photo: Fame Pictures]

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Spotted: Brangelina and All Six Kids!

Wyclef Jean shot in the hand

Haitian-American singer Wyclef Jean, whose bid for president ended with an August disqualification, speaks during a press conference in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in this Nov. 29, 2010 file photo. Joe Mignon, senior program director for Jean#39;s Yele Foundation, says Jean was shot in the hand after 11 p.m. local time Saturday March 19, 2011 in the city of Delmas, just outside Port-au-Prince. A spokesman for Wyclef Jean says the hip-hop star has been released from a hospital after being treated for

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Wyclef Jean shot in the hand

John Apacible dies at 38

John Apacible, 38, Enrique Rustia Apacible in real life, died on arrival at a nearby hospital. He expired from two gunshot wounds in the chest. Apacible#39;s mother Aurora said John#39;s 61-year-old uncle Armando Rustia had sent surrender feelers and may turn himself in soon, maybe even Sunday afternoon. Character actor John Apacible was shot dead following a supposed argument with his uncle in Cainta, Rizal before dawn Sunday, a radio report said. Radio dzBB#39;s Manny Vargas reported the in

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John Apacible dies at 38

Who Beat This Brooklyn Baby: Foster Mom Teyuanna, Or Her Teenage Boyfriend Kysheen, AKA “Killer”?

This little baby has a crushed spleen and broken ribs from a brutal beating he suffered Friday. So why have the police failed to charge anyone for the crime? Friday paramedics were called to a Brooklyn apartment to save the life of little 17-month-old Kymmell Oram. 32-year-old foster mother Teyuanna Cummings claims she found the baby struggling to breathe and coughing blood after she left her 19-year-old boyfriend to care for him. But her boyfriend was nowhere to be found for two days until yesterday, when he finally went to the police for questioning. “He walked in alone without a lawyer and he’s talking,” a police source said. Kysheen Oliver, whose nickname is “Killer,” hasn’t been charged. The 19-year-old was at the 75th Precinct stationhouse in East New York. Oliver had been on the lam for two days, with cops seeking to question him in the beating of Kymell Oram. The tyke’s foster mom, Teyuanna Cummings, pointed the finger at her much-younger boyfriend as she was grilled by police. “Now the blame game begins,” a police source said. Kymell suffered three broken ribs and a crushed spleen in a horrific attack that left him clinging to life at Brookdale University Hospital. Cummings has told police she left Kymell with her boyfriend so she could take two other foster kids to school. She called 911 after returning to her Fountain Ave. apartment and found the boy couldn’t breathe and was coughing up blood. The city’s Administration for Children’s Services has asked Family Court to put Cummings’ other foster kids in protective care. An ACS worker had paid a visit to Cummings’ apartment last month, but found nothing to suggest Kymell was in danger. The boyfriend’s name is KILLER! And they didn’t charge him. It gets worse… At least one employee from the city’s Administration for Children’s Services came to his foster mother’s East New York apartment, but saw nothing to suggest 17-month-old Kymell Oram might be in danger. “The apartment was in okay shape and there was food in the refrigerator,” a police source said. “Apparently that’s all they look at.” Neighbors said the suspected abuse was an open secret. One told the Daily News she saw Kymell more than once sitting alone crying in a hallway. “Sometimes when the baby was crying they would leave the baby outside the door,” Maribel Pejada said. “He would hit his head against the door trying to get in. It was awful.” Pejada heard the boy screaming Thursday morning. None of the neighbors ever called the police. As Kymell lay near death at Brookdale University Hospital yesterday – three ribs broken and his spleen crushed – police grilled 32-year-old Teyuanna Cummings. And they were looking to question her 19-year-old boyfriend, Kysheen Oliver, known in the neighborhood as ‘Killer.’ No one has been charged. Cops responding to Cummings’ 911 call just after 9 a.m. Thursday about a child with difficulty breathing were horrified by what they found on Fountain Ave. Kymell looked “like he was thrown against the wall on a daily basis” and was “covered with deep bruises,” sources said. “That boy is her pride and joy,” said the foster mom’s lifelong friend Michael, 40. “She loves him like you wouldn’t believe. I’ve never seen a more caring mother.” Michael said the little boy flatlined at the hospital, but the “good doctors were able to bring him back to life.” Police sources said the boy had tears around the anus that made investigators initially think he had been sodomized. “It is possible the injuries came from kicking the child like a ball,” one of the sources said. WHAT THE F*CK??? Anal tears? Kicking the child like a ball? Leaving him outside in the hallway to beat his head against the door? How is that not enough evidence to charge both of these muhfuggas???? Source Source 2

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Who Beat This Brooklyn Baby: Foster Mom Teyuanna, Or Her Teenage Boyfriend Kysheen, AKA “Killer”?

‘Limitless’: Five Secrets Revealed

Director Neil Burger takes us behind the scenes of Bradley Cooper and Robert De Niro’s new thriller. By Eric Ditzian Robert DeNiro and Bradley Cooper in “Limitless” Photo: Universal Pictures There is a scene midway through “Limitless” in which Abbie Cornish’s character is running through a park, attempting to escape a guy intent on gutting her like a fish. Unsure how to get away, she swallows a black-market drug called NZT — a little pill allowing her to access 100 percent of her mind — and scans the park for possible weapons: a pair of gardening sheers or a baseball bat, perhaps? Then she sees a little girl on ice skates off in the distance. Bingo! She races toward the rink as the evil dude gives chase, then picks up the girl and uses her ice skates to slice her enemy’s face. It’s a wackily kinetic scene in a thriller filled with such moments. The only problem for director Neil Burger was casting the girl to take part in the madness. “Luckily, the stunt people were completely game to offer up their child to be thrown through the air!” Burger laughed in a recent conversation with MTV News. And that, it turns out, is how Piper Brown, daughter of Jill Brown (whose stunt credits include “The Green Hornet” and “I Am Legend”), made her big-screen debut. “It was our first day of shooting, which is an insane way to begin,” Burger said. We had to do it in one day with 200 extras on the ice, plus the crew, and we’re just powering through everyone with cameras and cranes.” That’s just one of the untold stories behind the production of “Limitless” we picked up during a recent conversation with Burger. Before checking out the film, which hit theaters Friday (March 18), check out four more “Limitless” secrets revealed: Why Is NZT a Clear Pill? In creating a fictional drug for the big screen, Burger and his team could have gone in any direction. NZT could have been something you swallow or smoke or, heck, even something used as a suppository reminiscent of a troubling scene in “Trainspotting.” But following the book on which the movie is based, they stuck with a pill. What, however, would the pill that Bradley Cooper’s character gets hooked on look like? “Right up to the end, we were thinking about what this pill would be,” Burger explained. “Sometimes we thought it’d have these beveled edges or a different colored center, but it started to look like a hundred other things you’ve seen, from a Lifesaver to Skittles. Then we stumbled onto one that was clear, and I knew it was just perfect. It sums up exactly what it does for him.” What Exactly Does NZT Do? Though the story is based on a novel by Alan Glynn, it was up to Burger to “invent the rules of the drug,” as he put it. How does it affect Cooper’s Eddie Morra? What would happen if Eddie suddenly couldn’t get his fix? “I worked on it on my own, because I had to become an authority on it with the actors and crew,” he added. “It became that you don’t get high or wired or stoned. You were just clear and knew what to do and how to get it done.” Along those lines, Burger didn’t refer to any existing drugs, because there’s nothing on Earth like NZT. “I didn’t do research. I just decided what I wanted the drug to be. I wanted Eddie to become the perfect version of himself. I wanted him to remember everything he’s ever seen. It’s not that it makes him into Superman. It makes him fearless, and he’s able to access information instantaneously.” How Did They Pull Off Those Ultra-Long Zooming Shots? Often when Eddie is on NZT, the camera pushes through the cityscape in a long, seemingly continuous shot, pushing forward for miles without stop. It’s a very cool visual effect, one unlike we’ve ever seen. How the heck did they pull off what Burger calls “infinity zooms”? “I started looking at fractals,” he told us. “I liked the idea that each part they’re made up of is a mirror of the whole. And I looked at fractal zooms, where you push into the fractal, going from shape to shape, an Escher-like movement. That was how Eddie’s mind worked: these microcosms that mirrored a larger sense of the world. I wanted to bring that idea into the city and have it be like a fractal zoom. It was a great way to show how he perceived space and time. “So I had a very clear idea of how I wanted to do it, and nobody could figure out how to do it,” he explained. “I found a visual-effects company that finally figured it out — and it’s a bit of a secret, because it’s a new thing. We were able to move the camera through the city and then visually stitch it all together, but you can’t see where the seams are.” Why Did They Change Eddie’s Job From Copywriter to Novelist? In Glynn’s book, Eddie is a struggling copywriter. In the book, he’s a struggling novelist. Why was it important to change his job? “It was important to make him an artist with aspirations toward greatness, and it just wasn’t happening. A copywriter just wasn’t going to communicate that,” Burger said. “He had to have the big dream. We all want to be a rock star or a pro basketball player or Warren Buffet, but then when push comes to shove, we aren’t those things — we can’t be those things. He was just one more guy who had this big dream, and he couldn’t achieve it, even though he wanted to. NZT could let him achieve that dream, and then a whole lot more.” Check out everything we’ve got on “Limitless.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘Limitless’: Five Secrets Revealed

Manchester City vs Dynamo Kiev highlights 1:0

Dynamo Kiev#39;s Olexsandr Shovkovskyi (yellow) saves a shot on goal during their Europa League last 16, second leg soccer match against Manchester City at the City of Manchester Stadium in Manchester, northern England, March 17, 2011. Big-spending English giants Manchester City crashed out of the last 16 of the Europa League to Dynamo Kiev on Thursday, while there was also heartbreak for Paris Saint Germain at the hands of Benfica. Roberto Mancini#39;s City side, bank-rolled from Abu Dhabi

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Manchester City vs Dynamo Kiev highlights 1:0

US/UN Military Action In Libya Could Start As Early As Sunday

Now that Moammar Gadhafi has closed off the airspace around Libya and threatened to hit the people with a “final assault,” the U.N. has voted to take “all necessary means” to protect the people of Libya. The U.N. Security Council resolution was approved late Thursday with the backing of the United States, France and Britain, hours after Gadhafi vowed to launch a final assault and crush the nearly 5-week-old rebellion against him. President Barack Obama telephoned the leaders of Britain and France after the vote, the White House said. U.S. officials speaking after a closed-door briefing in Congress said the attempt to ground Gadhafi’s air force could begin by Sunday or Monday with the use of jet fighters, bombers and surveillance aircraft. The British Cabinet held an emergency meeting as British planes were expected to take part in the international military action. NATO envoys in Brussels also were considering next steps. Military experts cautioned that the consequences of such action are unpredictable. The former head of the British army, Richard Dannatt, said it was crucial to proceed cautiously “so we don’t get into the kind of situation that we got into in Iraq by not having a Plan B for the morning after.” But the Western powers faced pressure to act urgently after weeks spent deliberation over what to do about Gadhafi as his regime gained momentum. Gadhafi, calling in to Libyan television on Thursday, said his forces would “rescue” the people of Benghazi, the eastern Mediterranean port city that has become the de-facto rebel capital and staging ground. For those who resist, Gadhafi said, there would be “no mercy or compassion.” “This is your happy day, we will destroy your enemies,” he said, warning the people of Benghazi not to stand alongside the opposition. “Prepare for this moment to get rid of the traitors. Tomorrow we will show the world, to see if the city is one of traitors or heroes.” Gadhafi also pledged to respond harshly to U.N.-sponsored attacks in an interview with Portuguese television broadcast just before the vote. “If the world is crazy,” he said, “we will be crazy, too.” That should end any doubt you might have as to whether or not this dude is a nutjob. Libyan Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled Kaim struck a more conciliatory tone, offering to negotiate a cease-fire with the rebels. He welcomed the Security Council’s concern for the people of Libya but called on the world not to allow them to receive weapons. “If any countries do that, they will be inviting Libyans to kill each other,” he said. The civil unrest in Libya started a little over a month ago. And the death toll is somewhere between 150 or over 1,000 people, depending on whether you ask Gadhafi or the rebels. Source

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US/UN Military Action In Libya Could Start As Early As Sunday

Remembering a brave victim of Gaddafi’s thugs

http://www.youtube.com/v/_JG0cr0nACg

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The murder of Al-Jazeera cameramen, Ali Hassan Al Jaber – killed after a reporting team for the Arabic-language channel was ambushed by government forces near the town of Benghazi – has been mourned in Libya itself. A crowd gathered in the city’s main square to honor al-Jaber, a Qatari national. They waved Qatari flags and Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Antony Loewenstein Discovery Date : 13/03/2011 08:29 Number of articles : 2

Remembering a brave victim of Gaddafi’s thugs

Kapan earthquake Feb 2011

Members of Japan#39;s disaster relief team move through the destroyed CTV building in Christchurch, New Zealand , Thursday, Feb. 24, 2011 after the city was hit by a 6.3 magnitude earthquake Tuesday, Feb 22. The temblor collapsed buildings, caused extensive other damage and killed dozens of people in the city. World equities slid and the safe-haven yen steadied in volatile trade Friday after a huge earthquake in major economic power Japan, as dealers tracked a eurozone summit and unrest in the

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Kapan earthquake Feb 2011