As promised, Rozay debuts the video for Rich Forever‘s “High Definition,” featuring sexy females and cameos from Wale, Pharrell, and Timbaland. Up next is the video for “Party Heart.” Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : mostly junkfood Discovery Date : 21/02/2012 20:56 Number of articles : 2
As promised, Rozay debuts the video for Rich Forever‘s “High Definition,” featuring sexy females and cameos from Wale, Pharrell, and Timbaland. Up next is the video for “Party Heart.” Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : mostly junkfood Discovery Date : 21/02/2012 20:56 Number of articles : 2
Filed under: Activism , Arts and Culture , Learning , Asia , Video , Ecotourism Visualtraveling – ‘Holy Cow’ from Patrik Wallner on Vimeo . Visualtraveling created this ten minute film piece titled ‘Holy Cow’ with footage from travels centered around skateboarding in South Asia . The documented journey took place over the course of a month. This video features, primarily, awesome shots of skateboarders… Broadcasting platform : Vimeo Source : Gadling Discovery Date : 22/02/2012 01:16 Number of articles : 2
Filed under: Activism , Arts and Culture , Learning , Asia , Video , Ecotourism Visualtraveling – ‘Holy Cow’ from Patrik Wallner on Vimeo . Visualtraveling created this ten minute film piece titled ‘Holy Cow’ with footage from travels centered around skateboarding in South Asia . The documented journey took place over the course of a month. This video features, primarily, awesome shots of skateboarders… Broadcasting platform : Vimeo Source : Gadling Discovery Date : 22/02/2012 01:16 Number of articles : 2
Filed under: Activism , Arts and Culture , Learning , Asia , Video , Ecotourism Visualtraveling – ‘Holy Cow’ from Patrik Wallner on Vimeo . Visualtraveling created this ten minute film piece titled ‘Holy Cow’ with footage from travels centered around skateboarding in South Asia . The documented journey took place over the course of a month. This video features, primarily, awesome shots of skateboarders… Broadcasting platform : Vimeo Source : Gadling Discovery Date : 22/02/2012 01:16 Number of articles : 2
As a former resident of Atlanta, along with her husband Bobby Brown, we join the rest of the world in mourning the loss of Whitney Houston , a one-of-kind voice and unbelievable talent. Whitney and Bobby lived in Atlanta for several years and were a visible presence in the city in the mid-2000′s. Much of Bobby’s Bravo reality show, “Being Bobby Brown” was filmed in Atlanta and featured Whitney prominently. Several celebrity ATL residents, past and present, took to Twitter to express their feelings about the loss of Whitney Houston. Check out tweets from Usher, Chilli and T Boz of TLC, Monica, Ciara, LA Reid and Hot 107.9′s own DJ Drama, among others: RELATED: Hot 107.9 Remembers Whitney Houston Ft. Twista [EXCLUSIVE] Whitney Houston May Have Died From Combination Of Xanax & Alcohol [REPORT] Jennifer Hudson Sings Whitney Houston’s “I Will Always Love You” At Grammys [VIDEO] New Edition On Whitney Houston’s Death: “We Are Shocked And Saddened” Bobby Declares Love For Whitney On Stage [VIDEO] Whitney Houston Found Underwater In Bathtub [UPDATE] Whitney Houston’s Last Interview [VIDEO] Whitney Houston Dead At 48 [BREAKING NEWS]
In 1988, Public Enemy’s “Night Of The Living Baseheads” was one of the most vocal indictments of crack cocaine use ever heard on record. The haunting video was the real life version of Michael Jackson’s “Thriller” with zombie-like “baseheads” dragging themselves about. Pop Culture Moment #1: Chappelle’s Show Premieres What many fans at the time didn’t know was that Public Enemy member Flavor Flav was a user of the deadly freebase drug. In fact, Flavor Flav told TheUrbandaily in an interview in 2011 that he thought the song was actually written about him. “It was kind of difficult doing the video to that song because I felt that Chuck was talking about me,” he revealed. “…I took it personally because of a guilty conscience. Because I was doing it…at the time that we wrote the record.” RELATED POSTS: FACT OF THE DAY: Michael Clarke Duncan Is A Vegetarian FACT OF THE DAY: Drake’s High School Ambition Was To Break Dance FACT OF THE DAY: Nas Was Born In Brooklyn
We’ve come to the point where hand-drawn animation almost seems like a forgotten art, lost in the gaudy shuffle of motion-capture slickness a la The Adventures of Tintin and the sleek technical sophistication of pictures like Rango and Kung-Fu Panda 2 . That’s why it’s such a glorious relief to greet the arrival of an old-school -– but very grown-up — animated picture like Fernando Trueba, Javier Mariscal and Tono Errando’s Chico & Rita , a romance that opens in late-1940s Cuba and uses a thumbnail history of midcentury Latin jazz as its backdrop. It’s gorgeous to look at — the images are stylized and detailed at once, as fluent in capturing the movement of human bodies as they are in portraying the luxe deco excitement of ‘50s Havana, New York and Las Vegas. And the story, sultry and bittersweet, is bracingly adult: This is the kind of sophisticated storytelling you rarely get even in live-action movies these days, full of unexpected turns and unruly human complications. There is also, of course, the music, much of it performed by Cuban jazz pianist, bandleader and composer Bebo Valdés, whose own life provided the rough inspiration for the film. Chico & Rita is the story of aspiring jazz pianist Chico (voiced by Emar Xor Oña) who meets the woman of his dreams one evening in a Havana club. Rita (Limara Meneses) is a singer, and Chico falls hard both for her voice and for her knockout figure, but he comes on too strong for her liking — she immediately brands him a country boy. Before long, though, they’ve tumbled into bed and into an on-again, off-again affair as well as a professional partnership. Together, with the help of Chico’s pal and manager, the charming, level-headed Ramón (Mario Guerra), they win a talent contest and embark on a blazing career as a duo, complete with a hit record. But Rita is lured away to New York with big dreams of success, and though she wants Chico to accompany her, a misunderstanding separates them. Chico eventually does make his way to New York on his own, where he slips into divey basement clubs to bask in the presence of his idols, people like Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. (Their cartoon versions are wonderful and charmingly accurate, even if Parker is drawn playing a tenor and not an alto.) There, Chico also joins the ranks of other Latin artists like Chano Pozo and Machito, performers who made their way to New York and met with quick and explosive fame during the midcentury Latin jazz craze. Chico and Rita’s careers occasionally intertwine, only to once again veer off into separate corners. The plot doesn’t follow the standard rags-to-riches template (though it wouldn’t be a liability if it did). Instead, the story — the script is by Trueba and Ignacio Martinez de Pisón — treads softly but boldly into unexpected places, touching upon, for example, the fast living and violent death of Chano Pozo, and giving some sense of what the Jim Crow laws of the pre-Civil Rights-era South meant for black jazz musicians. Trueba is the director of the 1992 Belle Epoch; he also made the 2000 Latin jazz documentary Calle 54 , the development of which brought Valdés to his attention. (Like so many musicians of his generation — and like so many from his culture — Valdés had, by the 1990s, lapsed into obscurity: He was forced out of Cuba after the revolution and moved to Sweden, where, years later, he was rediscovered playing piano in a Stockholm restaurant.) Calle 54 also marked the beginning of Trueba’s professional partnership with Spanish artist and graphic designer Mariscal. (Mariscal designed Cobi, the half-bear, half-possum mascot of the 1992 Barcelona Olympics.) Together with animator Errando, Trueba and Mariscal worked out the look and feel of the film, reconstructing a vision of the vibrant, long-lost 1950s Havana (with the help of archival photographs kept by the city government) and re-creating a grayish, bustling ‘50s New York whose chief source of color is an aural one — in the movie’s vision, it’s a place where the music flows from basement clubs like a life-giving river. The music in Chico & Rita is just as vital as the visuals are: When Chico sits down at the piano, it’s Valdés’s notes that stream out, leaping and shimmering like trout in a stream. Idania Valdés (no relation to Bebo) provides Rita’s singing voice, luminous and smoky at once. The music that these characters make, separately and together, is as much a part of them as their own blood, and the drawing in Chico & Rita captures that essence: Just after their first meeting, Chico takes Rita to a bar that’s been closed for the evening and sits at the piano, ready to prove himself to her. She likes what she hears and begins to dance — her yellow dress swirls around her legs, her swiveling hips. Chico keeps playing, but he can’t, of course, keep his eyes on the keys. How do you portray something as delicate as a sexual frisson in a cartoon? Somehow, Chico & Rita pulls it off. The picture has a seductive, casual eroticism. Chico & Rita – which was released in Europe last year but is only just now appearing in the United States — has been nominated for an Academy Award, in a category that has snubbed much more lavish features like Cars 2 and Rio ; a recent Hollywood Reporter article suggested that we may be seeing a backlash against motion-capture and other kinds of computer animation. ( Chico & Rita is mostly hand-drawn, though it does use some computer imaging.) There may be no need to draw such a stark dividing line in the sand: Computer animation certainly has its uses and benefits, and the spirit of any piece of animation depends so much on the guiding sensibility behind it, anyway. But Chico & Rita is organic and vital in a way that it might not be had it been fully composed on computer screens. There’s so much depth and warmth in both the story and in the drawing: This is animation that implies movement instead of merely showing it. It also keeps the spirit of this one particular branch of the jazz canon burning in its heart. Chico & Rita may, in its deceptive simplicity, be the wave of the future. At the very least, it’s something to be grateful for in the present, a picture that conjures new life out of old grooves. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
‘The fact that Ferris is a cultural phenomenon and representative of something is cool,’ Tom Jacobson tells MTV News. By Eric Ditzian Matthew Broderick in his Honda CR-V commercial Photo: Honda Even if you aren’t a football fan, there’s no way you could’ve pulled a Cameron Frye after last night’s and claimed, as the “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” curmudgeon famously did, that you didn’t see anything good all day. That’s because two and a half decades after writer/director John Hughes introduced us to the coolest high school kid who ever lived, Matthew Broderick returned during the big game for a “Ferris”-inspired Honda commercial that had the actor once again pointing out that life moves pretty fast, so you should look around every once in a while or you’ll miss it. Life, then, is all about surprises. Who would’ve thought that, after Hughes died in 2009 , we’d ever see some fresh “Ferris” action? Certainly not the film’s producer, Tom Jacobson, who was utterly taken by surprise when a teaser for the ad popped up online ahead of the Bowl . Shortly before the game kicked off, MTV News called Jacobson to get his take on the spot, what Hughes would make of it and whether we’ll ever get an actual “Ferris Bueller” sequel. MTV : So what’s your take on the new ad? Tom Jacobson : I think it’s fantastic. The fact that Ferris is a cultural phenomenon and representative of something is cool. I thought it was very well-done. Todd Phillips [who directed the ad] did a really good job. Matthew was great. When the first thing was released, with him just opening the window, it was the same voice. It was the same reading as Ferris 26 years ago. MTV : It was eerily similar. Jacobson : He’s a good actor. Clearly it’s part of him, and that’s why he was so good in the first one. It’s interesting, because the movie is 26 years old this June, and everyone still knows who Ferris is. Even kids know who Ferris is. It’s not generational. I have a 14-year-old son, and last year, when he was in seventh grade, they had a school sleepover thing and the movie they showed was “Ferris Bueller.” All the teachers and all the administration, they were the ones raised on “Ferris Bueller.” MTV : Did you know the commercial was coming? Jacobson : I didn’t know it was coming, and I was surprised. At first, I was like, “What?” Everybody was calling me, and my kids were sending me these links, like, “Dad, did you see this?” I looked it up and loved it. MTV : That was just the teaser? Jacobson : Yeah, just the 15-second thing. MTV : So what were you thinking? Did you think they were making a sequel? Jacobson : I was just a consumer. There was all this Internet rumor about, “What’s this for? Is there a ‘Ferris 2′?” So I did my own calling around and found out pretty quickly it was a car commercial. I actually spoke to Matthew on Monday and Tuesday and told him he did a great job. I emailed him and said it’s amazing how many emails I’ve got about this. And he said the same thing and his BlackBerry was blowing up and it’s amazing how the movie resonates after all these years. MTV : When you saw the full commercial, was there one moment or reference that you thought was particularly cool? Jacobson : It was more the imagery. The way it was framed. And Matthew playing himself. That was very clever and postmodern. MTV : What do think John Hughes would make of this? Ferris Bueller doing a car commercial for the Super Bowl? Jacobson : I can’t really speak for what he would think. He was very protective of his material. It’s unique stuff that he created. I don’t know how he would feel. It’s always a question about how artists feel about their material promoting something else. I’m proud it’s part of the culture. I’ll separate it from the product side of it and the fact that someone bought the rights to sell something else. MTV : Is this ad the closest we’re ever going to get to seeing a “Ferris Bueller” sequel? Jacobson : There are a lot of people involved in that decision. We’ve never tried it before. John never wanted to do it. MTV : Why do you think the film still resonates? Jacobson : I think there’s a very simple sentiment in the movie, which he repeats at the end: Life moves pretty fast, and if you don’t stop and look around, it’ll pass you by. It’s one of those Confucius sayings that the whole movie emblemizes. It’s even truer now. The world moves so fast. It’s true for grownups. And there’s the magic on John Hughes’ execution — the fairy-tale nature of it. Why do fairy tales last for a thousand years? Why does the myth of Ulysses last for 2,000 years? Because they’re mythological journeys, and John made one of those. That’s Ferris’ journey. Check out everything we’ve got on “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .
There’s nothing Keria Knightley (secretly) loves more than donning an uncomfortable historical undergarment and getting the borscht beat out of her. How do we know? Just check out her over-the-top histrionics as she’s getting spanked in A Dangerous Method (2011). The lady doth protest too much…or perhaps is trying a bit too hard for that Oscar nod. Sorry, Keira! Anyway, our partners in peep over at Egotastic! have gotten their sticky little hands on some screen caps of the nip-slip filled scene, which you can use to indulge whatever sort of fixation tickles your subconscious fancy. Spanking it to a spanking scene…what would Freud say? Check out the rest of the set over at Egotastic! , and check out the breast of Keira Knightley right here at MrSkin.com!