What’s steeplechase exactly? We’re not sure. (Wikipedia says it’s some sort of obstacle race–whatever.) With all that women’s water polo and beach volleyball to watch, we missed that one during the London Olympics. Regardless, we applaud Columbian steeplechase racer Angela Figueroa , who made up for her lackluster performance at the 2012 Games by raising some steeples of her own in a nude photo shoot for SoHo Magazine . We must say, it’s very considerate of Angela to promote aerobic fitness this way. Our pulses are certainly pounding right now… See more nudes of Olympic steeplechase racer Angela Figueroa after the jump!
Decades after making a name for herself as reporter and film critic at the New York Herald Tribune , New York Magazine , and the Today show, trailblazing journalist Judith Crist died Tuesday in Manhattan, confirms the New York Times . Crist additionally wrote for TV Guide , Saturday Review , Gourmet and Ladies’ Home Journal during her career, which included a longtime stint as professor of journalism at Columbia and a cameo in Woody Allen’s Stardust Memories . After the jump, watch an interview with Crist filmed in May, on her 90th birthday, in which the spry critic took a look back at her fruitful career. Speaking with Columbia J-school deans Sree Sreenivasan and Melanie Huff in May, Crist expressed her delight at making it to the year 2000, let alone 2012, with an infectious energy and wit. “The most enjoyable part of living a long time is that it happens so quickly,” she said. “I have to stop and think, ‘My word, it’s a long time.’ When I think of all the things that have changed, I don’t look back because I’ve had a wonderful life and so I’ve got nothing to bitch about.” The critic whom Roger Ebert, Tweeting today , referred to as “a tigress with high standards and great influence,” famously eviscerated then-celeb couple Liz Taylor and Richard Burton in her review of 1963’s Cleopatra . Scathing and thoughtful in good measure, Crist’s gloriously epic 1,700-word review is viewable in full on the Columbia website, and caps with one of her more famous critical nuggets: A painstaking attention to tiny details makes it all too obvious that nothing has been spared on the sets and costumes. There are indeed some beautiful and impressive photographic effects, with transitions made by having faded frescoes slowly brighten into a live scene or a scene free and dim into a fresco. But the sets themselves never create an illusion of permanence. The cardboard and paint are there. Even in their most dramatic moment, when Cleopatra and Antony are slapping each other around in her tomb, one’s most immediate image is of Miss Taylor and Mr. Burton having it out in the Egyptian Wing of the Metropolitan Museum. All is monumental – but the people are not. The mountain of notoriety has produced a mouse. Crist’s passing prompted many of her former students to take to Twitter in praise of their onetime professor. “As a former student, I paid to be in her critical crosshairs. Not fun, but 4ever instructive,” Tweeted Fast Company’s Jennifer Vilaga, while New York Times reporter Christine Haughney called Crist “one of the toughest and best professors I ever had.” “I think that journalism is in a state of flux, just as all our means of communication right now are,” Crist said in her May 2012 interview, included below. “But to me the intense curiosity that is basically journalism … a journalist’s own curiosity about why we do this the way we do it and so on, I think that’s perpetually with us.” “I still believe in the written word, I’m very old-fashioned in that respect, and I stick to it… to me, the written word is the one that counts and it’s the one that endures. Which is sort of stick-in-the-mud, but I don’t mind. The mud’s pretty good. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
British singer premieres the first entry in his humorous take on the Olympic exclusively on MTV News. By Jocelyn Vena Olly Murs Photo: Columbia Records
Remember Shame ? The NC-17 one featuring Michael Fassbender as a sex addict, Carey Mulligan as his off-kilter sister, a couple of notorious ” late-night lovers ” and a thriving awards-season profile that imploded a month ago like a dying star, seemingly having taken the film with it? Right, that one. Now, as per the rules of the cosmos and/or art-house schemes in Columbia, S.C., that star has finally exploded back into consciousness in perhaps the best way possible. The flier pictured above was spotted in and around Columbia over the holiday weekend, urging local moviegoers to avoid the “den of sin” known as the Nickelodeon Theater. The 75-seat venue had finally booked Shame for a run, and without the benefit of a sustained Oscar campaign for erstwhile front-runner Fassbender , the fliers seemed to play right into the hands of Nickelodeon management. Too good to be true? WLTX Channel 19 is on the scene ! (Sorry in advance about the commercial.) The Onion would be proud. Sort of. Anyway, nicely played, Andy Smith! [ WLTX via Pullquote ]
Watch two Columbia Journalism School students demonstrate their comprehension of j-school primer The Elements of Style, by William Strunk, Jr. & E. B. White, in rap form. We can only assume this is part of the application process for a job at Ben Smith’s “Now With 100% More Reporting!” BuzzFeed. Sample lyric: Split infinitive Never definitive Sounds unintelligent Dumb and inelegant. Just say it like… Broadcasting platform : Vimeo Source : The New York Observer Discovery Date : 15/12/2011 21:19 Number of articles : 3