Tag Archives: fiction

WaPo Predicts Glenn Beck’s Dangerous New Novel May Become Handbook for Terrorists

You don’t have to be a fan of Glenn Beck’s moonlighting as a fiction writer to be a little stunned at the audacity of The Washington Post today. Post book editor Steven Levingston mocks the prose of Beck’s new novel The Overton Window on the front of Tuesday’s Style section, including its patriotic character Molly Ross proclaiming “”There’s nothing I wouldn’t give up to defend my country…No matter how hard it might be, there’s nothing that’s in my power that I wouldn’t do.” But then he suggests Beck will inspire the next Oklahoma City-style terrorist act:   The danger of books like this is that radical readers may take the story’s fiction for fact, or interpret the fiction — which Beck encourages — as a reflection of a reality that they must fend off by any means necessary. “The Overton Window” risks falling into the tradition of other anti-government novels such as “The Turner Diaries” by William L. Pierce, which became a handbook of extremists and inspired Timothy McVeigh to blow up the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1995. As Beck tells his soldiers in the voice of Noah: “Put up or shut up . . . go hard or go home. Freedom is the rare exception . . . not the rule, and if you want it you’ve got to do your part to keep it.” I have not read the book, but I doubt it’s a racist manifesto like “The Turner Diaries.” Levingston’s quotations here don’t exactly suggest his characters are saying “let’s blow up a federal building with an ammonia bomb.” Levingston has a blog on the Post website called Political Bookworm. Last month, he publicized two leftist authors of the book “Over the Cliff: How the Obama Election Drove the American Right Insane.” 

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WaPo Predicts Glenn Beck’s Dangerous New Novel May Become Handbook for Terrorists

From Models to Miniatures; 3D colorization!

I have MY favorites,….but if you like RPG/Comics/Science Fiction toys, models, and sculpture, you will probably want to browse through it all. This painter has a real affection for his subject matter,…is having FUN,…and it shows. ———modelpainter.com Link to the toy store– http://www.modelpainter.com/gallery.html http://www.modelpainter.com/images/639_The_Barbarian_Bust_12.jpg added by: remanns

Japan Loves Justin Bieber

Justin Bieber continues his quest for world domination by making an appearance at a signing event at the Tower Records in Shinjuku, Tokyo. Tower Records still exists?

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Japan Loves Justin Bieber

Baby On The Way!

Hollywood couple John Travolta and Kelly Preston have some big news, they’re having a baby! The Pulp Fiction star made the announcement on his official website saying that his 47-year-old wife is indeed pregnant and due in the autumn. John and Kelly knew this would be one secret too impossible to keep and in a statement said: ‘We want to be the first to share this great news with everyone that we are expecting a new addition to our family.’ The little bundle of joy will be the couple’s third together- they already have a daughter Ella- while their 16-year-old son Jett, who suffered from the rare Kawasaki disease, died last year. The official due date has yet to be revealed but Preston is said to be about three months along.

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Baby On The Way!

‘Dancing With The Stars’ Recap: Kate Gosselin ‘Has No Motivation’

Nicole Scherzinger’s ‘Pretty Woman’ tango, however, earns high praise on ‘movie night.’ By Kelley L. Carter Kate Gosselin and Tony Dovolani Photo: ABC The drama was upped Monday night on “Dancing With the Stars.” Of course, comedy, music and action were in the mix too, given that the theme was “movie night,” and the celebs were shimmying and doing the splits to tunes heard in popular films. Comedian Niecy Nash and Louis Van Amstel, who wanted to come back strong after flatlining on the rumba last week, were up first. The duo performed the jive from “La Bamba,” and at a practice before the dance, Nash joked, “I’m looking forward to shaking things I didn’t even realize I had.” She ended her performance with a big kiss on judge Len Goodman’s forehead, but that did nothing to help boost her score. The judges thought the performance lacked the necessary sharpness that should be present at this stage of the game. “You got your personality into that dance, which is great,” Goodman said. “There should have been more bounce in your feet. There was plenty of bounce in your bazookas, but we wanted it more in your feet.” Still, he thought the approach to her dance was great and an improvement. “On behalf of thick girls everywhere, y’all need to vote for me. I’m tired and I’m hungry. That was a lot,” Nash joked. Score: 18 out of 30. Chad Ochocinco and Cheryl Burke hoped to build on the momentum of last week’s touchdown performance, dancing a quickstep to “Jungle Book” track, “Bear Necessities.” The judges thought the football player lost the refinement and control that he pulled off the week earlier, saying that the hold and frame were terrible. “It’s very unnerving,” Carrie Ann Inaba said. “What was lacking most was the body contact.” Score: 18. ESPN reporter Erin Andrews and Maksim Chmerkovskiy took a page from “Pulp Fiction” and channeled their inner John Travolta and Uma Thurman. Goodman said it was a tough routine, though they coped with it really well. “This is your best timing, ever,” Bruno Tonioli observed. Score: 22. Jake Pavelka started his dance with partner Chelsie Hightower with his pants on the ground as an homage to Tom Cruise in “Risky Business.” The couple did what the judges thought was an animated and fun cha-cha to Bob Seger’s big hit “Old Time Rock and Roll.” “You got the guts, so you better enjoy the glory. I loved that dance; the whole package,” Inaba said. Score: 23. Pamela Anderson and Damian Whitewood picked Dolly Parton’s “9 to 5” flick and tune for their quickstep and impressed the judges. “Every week you’re in character right through the dance. You never lose it,” Tonioli said. Inaba suggested that Anderson was so entertaining that she should consider performing on Broadway. “There’s something about you that is fascinating to watch,” Inaba told her. Score: 21. Kate Gosselin and Tony Dovolani did the foxtrot to “Don’t You Forget About Me” from “The Breakfast Club.” Gosselin’s partner was frustrated with her leading up to Monday night’s show. “Kate has no motivation, and I have to push her every week,” Dovolani said. The judges also weren’t thrilled. “There is some sort of grace that is developing,” Inaba said. “I give you a lot of credit for that. But when I watch you dance, it’s kind of like the Charlie Brown teacher. It never becomes a formed sentence or a formed move.” Goodman agreed, saying, “It wasn’t really a dance, it was a stroll. It had an elegance about it, but you’ve got to dance out more.” They were this week’s low scorers, with a 15. Pussycat Doll Nicole Scherzinger and Derek Hough danced a tango to “Pretty Woman,” and collected the night’s highest marks from the judges. “Well, Nicole, that for me was your best dance and the best dance of the season so far,” Goodman said. Tonioli called them the two players at the top of the game. “The lines were incredible,” Inaba said. “You could have taken a snapshot and it would have been art; beautiful.” Score: 29. Olympian Evan Lysacek and his partner Anna Trebunskaya took on the rumba to music from “Armageddon.” The judges found their moves sophisticated and Lysacek’s hip action fluid. “This had artistry. It had musicality. You got the hip action going. I thought you did a great job, Evan,” Goodman said. Score: 27. What did you think of last night’s “Dancing With the Stars”? Share your reviews in the comments below. Related Photos The 2010 Cast Of ‘Dancing With The Stars’ Related Artists Nicole Scherzinger

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‘Dancing With The Stars’ Recap: Kate Gosselin ‘Has No Motivation’

Now You Can Smell Like Bruce Willis

Hollywood actor Bruce Willis is set to launch his own fragrance, according to US reports. Willis, 55, is best known for his tough-guy movies such as Die Hard and Pulp Fiction, but he is now said to have signed a deal with the German cosmetics brand LR Health & Beauty Systems. According to Women’s Wear Daily , the scent is coming in July in North, South and Latin America, as well as China, Japan and India. It is not known when the fragrance will launch elsewhere around the world. His ex-wife Demi Moore was recently announced as the face of Helena Rubenstein’s perfume “Wanted”

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Now You Can Smell Like Bruce Willis

Add Quentin Tarantino’s Vega Brothers to the List of Movies That Are Never. Gonna. Happen.

And now an addendum to yesterday’s hot-button item cataloging movies you keep hearing about but which are Never. Gonna. Happen: Today it’s The Vega Brothers , the long-rumored Quentin Tarantino prequel explaining just how Vic (Michael Madsen) and Vincent (John Travolta) developed into the hardened sibling criminals we know and love from Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction , Considering the respective 18- and 16-year-gaps between those films and today, however, a new approach is required. And guess what? Tarantino has it! Or so says Madsen in a video after the jump.

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Add Quentin Tarantino’s Vega Brothers to the List of Movies That Are Never. Gonna. Happen.

Answers We Want From The Next Episode Of Lost: "The Package"

Every few episodes, Lost fans seem to be asking themselves if there’s a way the writers can top themselves. “LA X” seemed like a high point (but it was also the season opener). Then, there was “The Substitute.” After that, there was last week’s superb, mythology-focused “Ab Aeterno.” It’s an exciting to be complaining about an endless stream of fantastic storytelling, but I’m happy to ask the writers to set an even higher bar for themselves as we enter the latter half of the final season of Lost . Here’s what we’re anticipating and theorizing from tonight’s episode of Lost : “The Package.” Joseph Baxter, Who Asked Man In Black To Bring Back Billy Mays: “You aren’t the only one who’s lost something, my friend. The Devil betrayed me. He took my body, my humanity.” – Man in Black I think the ghost of Obi-Wan said it best: “What I told you was true… from a certain point of view.” Since Smokey’s little lament with Ben in “LA X,” we’ve been aware of his status as a prisoner. However, in his original scheme to manipulate Richard, we got to see the pure desperation in his character. At one point, he was even begging Jacob to let him leave. That Jacob is keeping him there is certainly no delusion. Yet his “issues” (as Jacob once called it) with Man in Black seem to stem from a single incident that happened a long, long time ago, which has set each of their roles on the Island. What MIB told Richard about Jacob being the Devil may be true…”from a certain point of view.” Conversely, when Jacob would essentially imply that MIB was something of a similar vein, it may also be true…”from a certain point of view.” The duty of being MIB’s Island warden is one that Jacob has apparently taken on or inherited, yet we still don’t exactly know why. “She said you have to stop the Man in Black. You have to stop him from leaving the island. Because if you don’t, we all go to hell.” – Hurley While many people walked away from “Ab Aeterno” with the certainty that MIB was pure evil, I’m still somewhat of a holdout. He seems more akin to a character you see in a virus or plague movie who has contracted the sickness been quarantined. The desire to escape that place may be understandable, but is also selfish. Would escaping help your chances for survival? Nope, but it’s rooted in some primal, irrational instinct to survive. What might support this point of view is the continuous usage of themes like “the sickness” and quarantining material and people inside the Swan hatch. If Desmond was saving the world by pushing the button, then he would have to remain protected from “the sickness.” In this case, that would seemingly be an irrational fatalism towards an end that would lead to destruction. That’s the path that MIB/Smokey has been on and it seems to be the one that Sayid chose. “That man who sent you to kill me believes that everyone is corruptible because it’s in their very nature to sin. I bring people here to prove him wrong. And when they get here, their past doesn’t matter.” – Jacob Jacob once told Ben, “you have a choice.” As we would later learn, MIB’s scheme to manipulate Ben to kill Jacob, was pretty much a carbon copy of the one he tried long ago with Richard. Sure, the variables were different, but in the end, he found out what motivation and fears drove Ben and used them in the exact same way to send him over to the four-toed statue with some bad intentions. MIB has essentially the same scheme going with just about everyone who’s ever found themselves in his camp — Claire, Sayid, Sawyer, and the remnants of the Others. It’s as if the formulaic approach to his dealings reflects his “it always ends the same” philosophy. By putting people through the same basic ringer, he may be continuing his attempts to prove himself right about the innate corruptibility he believes exists in all. *** That’s what happened . Here’s what we hope goes down tonight: 1) Now that Richard has experienced his Isabella epiphany, this seems to be the episode where the Lost ies on the beach are going to regroup and reassess their plans. Does he now have the answers that he previously thought he didn’t? How, exactly does one fight a Smoke Monster? A giant vacuum cleaner? Will that pouch full of Jacob’s ashes that Ilana is clutching serve as a kind of kryptonite? At this point, we at least need to know what our heroes have in store for their nemesis. 2) We see from the previews that MIB appears to be working one of his tired “I can bring so-and-so back” deals on Sun regarding a reunion with Jin. We should point out she already has confirmation via Miles that Jin is indeed alive. He’s not promising an amazing feat like bringing him back from the dead, but is essentially holding Jin hostage. Kind of boring, Smokey. Might this be “Team Jacob’s” chance to plant a mole over on the other team? 3) I assume we’re going to learn how Jin wound up bound inside that freezer. (Were Keamy and his boys about to go all Pulp Fiction on him?) To be honest, the sideways Kwons have been rather uneventful and we haven’t been given a real reason to care why he wound up there. Hopefully tonight, we’ll get a reason to care, and that reason will move the overall sideways storyline forward. Patrick Klepek, Desperately Hoping His Lost End-Game Theory Holds Up: 1) There is a constant across almost every season of Lost : the beginning is great, the middle is slow and the end is amazing. We’re in the period where Lost might have to tread some water as it builds towards the finale, but I’m hopeful the amount of loose threads Lost needs to tie up will force the writers out of that unfortunate habit. It hasn’t been as much of an issue since the finale date was decided during the middle of season three, but as much as I’ve been waiting for an episode reuniting Jin and Sun, I’m starting to tire of the flash sideways bits, too. If there was another season of Lost ahead, I’d be less anxious. After “Ab Aeterno,” however, the pace is set. 2) I’ve seen Lost fans coming up with numerous theories to explain the appearance of a ship off the shore of the Island at the end of season five, where there was no storm in sight, and Richard Alpert’s origin story, which clearly demonstrates a torrential downpour that wrecked the boat. The official Lost podcast, hosted by producers and writers Damon Lindelof and Carlton Cuse, said the ships were one and the same and the sudden appearance of a storm will be explained or addressed sometime in the future. Storms are an Island constant, apparently. 3) What the heck do Jacob and the Man in Black do when no one’s on the Island? Also, Jacob has proven to be one hell of a manipulator. I don’t believe anything he told Richard. At this point in the story, it’s impossible to tell who’s good, who’s bad and who’s just spinning lies. Andrew Pfister, The Man in Plaid: “Walkabout” “The Constant” “Ab Aeterno” There you have the three best Lost episodes of all time. (“Expose” and “Dr. Linus” are #4 and #5, respectively.) I knew we were in for greatness when they suddenly changed up the editing style as they introduced Richard’s flashback, and while it was great to finally get some answers regarding Richard’s long, long life (as well as finding out how the statue was destroyed), I felt that the real meat of the episode was seeing “the cycle” in action, with Man in Black taking out the Black Rock’s captain the same way he took out poor Greg Grunberg, Oceanic 815’s captain, back in the pilot episode. This obviously wasn’t the first iteration of the cycle, as MIB told Richard he’s been around for much longer before the Black Rock ran aground. But it may have been his first attempt at exploiting the loophole to kill Jacob. Here’s the timeline I’m thinking of: For however many years, Jacob & MIB have their moral chess match using the people Jacob brings to the Island. At some point, MIB recognizes the futility of it all, gets bored because he keeps “winning,” and starts to think of ways to get off and use his Island powers for mainland evil. Jacob & MIB have their chat on the beach at the end of season 5. A ship (not the Black Rock) approaches with the statue intact. It’s here where MIB first tells Jacob that the whole thing is pointless, and he wants to end it by killing him. They both know “the rules,” so MIB announces his intention of finding a loophole. The Black Rock arrives, takes out the statue, and the events of “Ab Aeterno” occur. It’s here where MIB attempts to use the loophole for the first time. The loophole being someone else has to do it, and they have to want to do it, which our own Ben Linus finally does at the end of last season. Smokey using the image of Isabella to manipulate Richard is the same tactic he used against Ben with the image of Alex telling him to obey “John Locke.” It turns out he had the right tactic, he just needed it to be as convincing as possible. But the thing I found most curious was Jacob and MIB’s canyon chat at the end of “Ab Aeterno”: Jacob: “I’ll see you around.” MIB: “Sooner than you think.” (One question, though: How did “Ricardo,” his Canary Island name, turn into “Ricardes?”) As far as tonight’s Jin & Sun episode is concerned, here’s what I think we’ll see: Jin & Sun reuinte, we all get a little emotional, and that storyline ends. Their flash-sideways moral choice will likely have to do with Jin’s dedication to his job and to his woman, which will then reflect in Island time as whether they join up with Team Smokey or Team Jack – i.e., them making that ultimate decision as a couple. The random person they’ll encounter in the flash sideways will be, oh…I don’t know, let’s say Locke’s con man father. Or Paolo. We will be teased early again about who’s in the locked room on Widmore’s sub (it’s Desmond and Penny), and then that will be revealed as the end-of-episode “shocker” (it’s Desmond and Penny). Sayid gets even crazier, Claire gets a little more sane.

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Answers We Want From The Next Episode Of Lost: "The Package"

New Apple iPhone Rumors: Fact or Fiction? Today on The Loop!

Sure, the Apple iPad is coming out this Saturday…but let’s talk about all the rumors swirling over the next generation iPhone 4G, including features like a front facing camera, multi-tasking on the OS 4 and coverage from Verizon or Sprint. It all sounds too good to be true! Today, Chris Hardwick talks to Jason Chen from Gizmodo about what’s really going on in the iPhone rumor mill on The Loop . Tune in tonight at 7:00pm on Attack of the Show to learn more about it.

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New Apple iPhone Rumors: Fact or Fiction? Today on The Loop!

Lady Gaga’s ‘Telephone’ Video: A Pop-Culture Cheat Sheet

From Batman to Quentin Tarantino, we analyze every influence on the epic clip. By James Montgomery and Eric Ditzian Lady Gaga and Beyonc