Tag Archives: glee

Glee Season Two Preview: Empire State of Mime

To judge from the show’s brand new promo , Glee ‘s second season will also be a meditation on not-stopping-believing: The singers vie to attend nationals, which take place in New York City, and they’ve got the Jay-Z/Alicia Keys spunk and smiley lip-sync prowess to pull it off. Video after the jump.

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Glee Season Two Preview: Empire State of Mime

Media Bash Beck for Not Being Evangelical After Years of Bashing Evangelicals

The editors of the mainstream media must think we all have very short memories. Their latest schtick is to smear conservative talk show host Glenn Beck as a creepy Mormon who has no business influencing evangelicals. Aside from the disgusting hypocrisy of Mormon-baiting one minute and then bashing Islamophobia the next, these news outlets are also hoping you’ve forgotten about their recent smearing of evangelicals like Sarah Palin, John Hagee, and James Dobson. But hey, they shouldn’t be held accountable for their own religious bigotry on display in 2008. That was a whole two years ago, and anyway they had a Democrat messiah to protect. For a flashback at how low the media stooped then, let’s review an editorial cartoon shamelessly bashing Pentecostalism that appeared on the Washington Post’s website on September 18, 2008: This cartoon, which insults Pentecostalism as gobbledygook and portrays a God that spouts profanity, was so offensive Post ombudsman Deborah Howell was forced to admit “readers were right to complain.” And the bashing didn’t stop there. On September 5, a week after Palin’s acceptance speech with McCain’s campaign, tax-payer funded NPR claimed many Pentecostals view Iraq as “a holy war,” and then suggested the Alaska governor’s involvement in the church has “no doubt shaped her faith, and possibly, her view of world events.” Four days after that, CNN’s prime time show AC 360 asked if Palin’s colorful religion would “impact policy in Washington.” That same day saw CBSNews.com run an article that painted Pentecostalism in exotic tones, and then sincerely asked if Palin believed in separation of church and state. Not to be outdone, liberal website Salon.com brazenly posted the headline ” What’s the difference between Palin and Muslim fundamentalists? Lipstick .” That’s how much respect the media had for Christianity two years ago. Worse yet was Time magazine on October 9, 2008. Less than a month before the election, hard-hitting journalist Amy Sullivan wondered ” Does Sarah Palin Have a Pentecostal Problem? ” What followed was an entire article of unabashed religion-baiting: Palin’s religious background must initially have been seen as a positive to McCain campaign vetters, who assumed that her faith would appeal to the conservative base of the party that has always been suspicious of McCain. But ever since she joined the ticket in late August, the Alaska governor’s various religious affiliations have caused headaches. First came reports that her pastor at the nondenominational Wasilla Bible Church was connected to Jews for Jesus, an organization that seeks to convert Jews to Christianity. Prominent Jewish leaders, including the co-chair of McCain’s Jewish outreach effort, have since demanded to know whether Palin also believes that Jews must be converted. The Bible Church became an issue again when Katie Couric asked Palin about the church’s promotion of a program to help gays “overcome” their homosexuality. Note the subtle dig at the beginning – McCain chose Palin to appease the Republican party’s powerful base of evangelicals. That was another popular theme in the media then, and many news outlets exploited it for all it was worth. On August 15, 2008, Washington Post writer Krissah Williams Thompson bragged that “Bush’s unpopularity has been an embarrassment to the evangelicals who overwhelmingly voted for him.” Thompson went on to gush that McCain could “not afford to lose” the Christian vote and was forced into “fighting back” against Democrat advances on his base. On June 28, Newsweek’s Lisa Miller echoed the narrative that “for decades, right-wing kingmakers used their sway with voters to pick candidates and set a national agenda.” This was seen as the primary reason McCain picked Palin. Indeed, the Los Angeles Times claimed that Palin helped McCain get a clutch endorsement from James Dobson, which would translate into “millions of evangelicals” deciding their vote. Ah, harmless minister Dr. James Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family and one of the media’s favorite Christian punching-bags. When Dobson chatted with Palin during the election season, the Washington Post flippantly called him the “Christian Right leader” who ostensibly decided “how [his] God will be voting on election day.” It pained the media that devout Christians had such powerful influence on the Republican party. During the presidential primaries in January, ABC News lamented that “the Republican contest was essentially about one thing: religion.” Political commentators like Dobson, and vice presidential nominees like Palin, were too devout in their Christian beliefs and could not be trusted to handle policy decisions. When audio of President Obama’s pastor, Jeremiah Wright, broke into the national conversation, the media frantically compensated by attacking random pastors who endorsed McCain from a distance. On May 22, the Associated Press gleefully reported that McCain was forced to drop a routine endorsement from a church he’d never been a member of: McCain actively courted Hagee, who leads a megachurch with a congregation in the tens of thousands and has an even wider television audience. Former Republican presidential rivals also sought Hagee’s backing. The preacher has controversial views that were well-known before McCain accepted his endorsement at a news conference Feb. 27 in San Antonio shortly before the Texas presidential primary. Obama’s longtime membership in a controversial church was not to be taken seriously. But McCain accepting endorsements as he passed through Texas was an embarrassment. And yet suddenly, after so many years of complaining that conservatives were too evangelical, the media are worried that a new cultural leader, Glenn Beck, is not evangelical enough. NewsBuster Tim Graham recently caught the Washington Post asking if Mormons are really Christians. Yes, that Washington Post – the same paper that printed a disgusting cartoon about Pentecostal gibberish. Suddenly, we’re supposed to believe it cares about doctrinal purity among evangelicals. The New York Times on Monday printed an editorial from Ross Douthat that criticized Beck’s Mormonism for having too many “theological differences” from Dobson-esque Christianity. He went on to snicker that “neither serious evangelicals nor serious Mormons should be terribly enthused” about Restoring Honor. Serious evangelicals? Like who? Sarah Palin, who was branded a witch-hunter? John Hagee, who was repeatedly called “controversial” for months? What about that theocratic control freak James Dobson who gets to decide how God votes – is he a serious evangelical? If the media want to encourage evangelicals to follow respectable leaders, it would help if they identified evangelicals who are actually called respectable.

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Media Bash Beck for Not Being Evangelical After Years of Bashing Evangelicals

Jimmy Fallon, Betty White Earn Our Alternate Emmys

MTV News picks the truly award-worthy moments — and the massive fails. By Gil Kaufman Jimmy Fallon at the 2010 Emmy Awards Photo: Mathew Imaging/ Getty Images Sunday night’s Emmy Awards were full of unforgettable moments and thrilling first-time wins for the casts and brilliant minds behind “Modern Family,” “Breaking Bad” and “Glee.” But because there’s no Emmy Award for the Emmy broadcast itself, MTV News decided to sprinkle a bit more Hollywood pixie dust on Sunday night’s winners and losers with our own nods to the show highlights. Instant Viral-Video Hit : Host Jimmy Fallon didn’t knock it out of the park, but his opening musical tribute to “Glee,” set to the tune of Bruce Springsteen’s “Born to Run,” became an overnight viral hit. Social-Networking Fail : Fallon promised to take the Emmys into the future with some Twitter bits, but his introductions of presenters courtesy of viewer tweets fell flat nearly every time. Best Name That Totally Sounds Like It Was Made Up : Bucky Gunts. We were totally with comedian Ricky Gervais when he said he hoped the director of the opening ceremonies for the Vancouver Olympics with the vaguely porn-y sounding name would win his category. Worst Use of a Prop : Gervais provided many moments of hilarity during his time onstage (go back and listen to the Mel Gibson bit), but perhaps the night’s most awkward moment came after his rant about how, unlike at the Golden Globes, there’s no booze at the Emmys. He rectified that situation by sending waiters out into the audience with a variety of microbrews for the attendees. Things got a bit weird, though, when former “Friends” star Matthew Perry, who has spent time in rehab, had to politely decline a bottle of suds. Think It, But Don’t Say It Award : Definitely goes to three-time Emmy winner Edie Falco for joking after she won Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy for her role in “Nurse Betty”: “I’m not funny.” Guess who else doesn’t think you are? All of the other women in the category. Best Unexpected Cameo by the Subject of a TV Movie You’d Never Heard Of : Admit it, you got a bit misty when the spunky inspiration and namesake for “Temple Grandin” stood up during David Strathairn’s acceptance speech and showed off her lady rancher outfit and later took the stage with her Hollywood doppelg

Rating the 5 Most Shocking Emmy Reactions from Inside the Auditorium

The intrepid L.A. bureau of Movieline — meaning Kyle Buchanan and yours truly — attended the fancy Emmy show last night, and even liveblogged it. We were excited for a night of high-falutin’ good times and glamour (which is why I dressed like Kitty Carlisle), but the actual show was somehow better than expected, and it’s mostly because of five craycray Emmy moments that had the audience gasping, hacking, and stabbing strangers.

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Rating the 5 Most Shocking Emmy Reactions from Inside the Auditorium

Outrage: The Cast of Glee Does Not Get Soundtrack Royalties

Ryan Murphy and 20th Century Fox may be cashing in now that the Glee branding machine has gone into hyper drive (get your Macy’s clothing line, CDs, Wii games, greeting cards, board games, pens, notebooks, leather products, and more!) but when it comes to getting a cut of the show’s popular soundtracks, there are some notable people getting screwed.

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Outrage: The Cast of Glee Does Not Get Soundtrack Royalties

Lea Michele Emmy Awards dress 2010

Lea Michele arrives at the 62nd Primetime Emmy Awards Sunday, Aug. 29, 2010, in Los Angeles. When it came to her dress, it was a no-brainer for the best actress nominee – and birthday girl! “I love Oscar de la Renta and I love blue,” she says. “When I saw this, it was perfect!” Add on Lorraine Schwartz jewels and the Glee star, 24, looks every bit the Hollywood starlet. Prior to landing a part on “Glee,” Emmy-nominated actress Lea Michele was told she was “not pretty enough” for roles. “I was

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Lea Michele Emmy Awards dress 2010

On ABC and CBS, ‘Conservative’ Beck and Allies Countered by ‘Civil Rights Leaders’

Just as they did in the morning, on Friday night the broadcast network stories on Glenn Beck’s “Restoring Honor” rally in Washington, DC were pegged to left-wing complaints his event is scheduled for the 47th anniversary of Martin Luther King’s “I Have a Dream” speech, except the reporters refused to identify the ideology of Beck’s critics while showing no such reluctance to tag him and/or his allies. “The rally in Washington. Followers of conservative radio and TV host Glenn Beck already gathering in the capital,” fill-in anchor Erica Hill teased at the top of the CBS Evening News. “In Washington,” she introduced the subsequent story, “followers of conservative talk show host Glenn Beck are already gathering on the Washington mall for tomorrow’s rally…” Reporter Wyatt Andrews, however, refrained from labeling: “Critics, like the Reverend Al Sharpton, say that Beck, who has described the President as [Beck: “a racist”] and who has railed against government programs for the poor, has no business invoking Dr. King.” Over on ABC’s World News, Claire Shipman warned: “While the comedians poke gleefully at the ‘Beckapalooza,’ as [Jon] Stewart calls it, civil right leaders worry the day will be tarnished.” Yet seconds later she found it necessary to apply a label: “Martin Luther King’s niece, a conservative activist, will appear supporting Beck tomorrow, as will Sarah Palin.” (Katrina-obsessed NBC Nightly News didn’t cover Beck-Sharpton) In an earlier post, “ Labeling Contrast: Beck a ‘Controversial Conservative,’ Al Sharpton Just an ‘Activist ,’” Rich Noyes noted how ABC’s Good Morning America and NBC’s Today on Friday both identified Beck as “conservative” while failing to tag Sharpton. On CBS’s Early Show: Correspondent Whit Johnson labeled Beck a “controversial conservative,” event speaker Alveda King (a niece of Martin Luther King, Jr.) a “longtime advocate for conservative causes”… Yet talking about liberal rabble rouser and onetime Democratic presidential candidate Al Sharpton, Johnson offered no ideological labels or even a tag that Sharpton might be “controversial.” Instead, Sharpton’s event was described as a rally “hosted by civil rights leaders…”

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On ABC and CBS, ‘Conservative’ Beck and Allies Countered by ‘Civil Rights Leaders’

Jennifer Love Hewitt Trying to Hide Her Lazy Ass of the Day

Here are some pictures of Jennifer Love Hewitt trying to hide her fat ass and thick sloppy legs, but realizing that there’s really no purse big enough to pull it off, and she’d have to start carrying luggage, or a hockey bag filled with equipment, and it’s just a hell of a lot easier to accept her over-eating cuz it feels like she is getting hugged on the inside because she never gets hugged on the outside…as all her men abandon ship after realizing just how lazy, yet high maintenance, this slob is….

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Jennifer Love Hewitt Trying to Hide Her Lazy Ass of the Day

Lea Michele Riding a Bike of the Day

Watching girls ride bikes is only a turn on when they lock up said bike next to me when they run errands so that I can sniff the fucking seat. It’s part of the decision making process that goes into me choosing benches to sit on….partially cuz watching girls get off bikes in skirts means pussy flashing….but also because I like the warmth the seat gives off on my tongue…. Biking fetishes make sense to me. I think I may even have one…but this Glee shit is totally overrated, as is the main “hot” pussy on the show, mainly cuz it’s not all that hot, even on the bike…

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Lea Michele Riding a Bike of the Day

Conan Wins, and 4 Other Major Emmy Upsets to Watch Out For

Movieline was quick to recognize the most egregious Emmy nomination snubs last month, and in the same spirit, we feel it is our duty to prepare you for the five most surprising (yet entirely plausible) shake-ups that could occur at Sunday’s ceremony* and possibly incite someone to set fire to his or her office poll during your red carpet-themed viewing party. * Which, by the way, Movieline will be attending and live-blogging. The Emmy ceremony that is, not your party — but that sounds like fun too.

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Conan Wins, and 4 Other Major Emmy Upsets to Watch Out For