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MTV Spoofs You Must See Again, How to Get Longer Lashes, and CFDA Nominees React: The Best of PopSugar TV This Week!

Featuring: Prabal Gurung | Jonah Hill | Russell Brand There was a great deal happening on PopSugar TV this week -??we sat down with the always-unpredictable Russell Brand as he promoted Get Him to the Greek . Buzz weighed in on the film in their Watch, Pass or Rent feature. We also talked with Diddy and Jonah Hill to talk all about their new movie, with the guys sharing about the fun they had working together. Speaking of movies, we’re counting down to Sunday’s MTV Movie Awards and took a look back at our favorite past funny Spoofs. Meanwhile, on FabTV, you can check out our exclusive chat with CFDA Awards nominess like Joseph Altuzarra and Prabal Gurung and then on Bella TV, learn how to get longer lashes . To see this week’s Bella and FabTV, as well as Diddy and Jonah Hill talk about their movie, just read more. CFDA Nominees React How to get longer lashes: Diddy wants to be a major movie star: Jonah Hill talks about hitting Vegas Diddy-style: This week’s Watch, Pass or Rent: [From: Pop Sugar]

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MTV Spoofs You Must See Again, How to Get Longer Lashes, and CFDA Nominees React: The Best of PopSugar TV This Week!

Russell Brand Exposes Himself on ‘Today’

Actors Russell Brand and Rose Byrne make an appearence on NBC's “Today” show at Rockefeller Center on June 3, 2010 in New York City. (Getty Images) more pics

‘Get Him to the Greek’

Talking dogs, an out of control rock star, bizarre genetically engineered creatures, and a super-spy masquerading as a normal guy…yes, there’s a little something for everyone in this weekend’s new release. Get Him to the Greek is the funniest film of 2010 by a long-shot. Delivering the most fun I’ve had in a theater this year, this R-rated raunchy, wacky spin-off from 2008’s Forgetting Sarah Marshall is loaded with jokes that connect, it’s fast-paced, and even has a bit of heart to it (it is a Judd Apatow production, after all). The R-rating is rightfully deserved as Get Him to the Greek pushes the limits in its attempts to elicit laughs. It’s not for everyone, taking the whole sex, drugs and rock ‘n roll theme to the absolute extremes, but if you’re not easily offended and ready to laugh, Get Him to the Greek doesn’t disappoint. The Story Russell Brand and Jonah Hill reunite, with Brand playing the character he created in Forgetting Sarah Marshall while Hill’s a completely different character from FSM . Confused? Don’t be…just go with it and move on. This time around Hill plays Aaron Green, a record company employee who loves rock and roll and is committed to his job and his live-in girlfriend. When his boss, Sergio (Sean Combs), asks for suggestions on how to perk up sales, Aaron chimes in with the idea of a 10 year anniversary concert by Aldous Snow at the Greek Theatre. Snow used to be a rock god, but after committing career suicide with the horrible “African Child” song/music video, an absolutely disastrous attempt at displaying an awareness and empathy for those in need, he’s in desperate need of a career resurrection. When none of his other minions come up with a better suggestion, Sergio commands Aaron to go to London, pick up Aldous and get him to the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles in time for the concert that’s now just a few days away. Russell Brand as Aldous Snow in ‘Get Him to the Greek.’ © Universal Pictures What follows is one of the most twisted road trips ever in a feature film. Aaron’s on a tight timeline but Aldous doesn’t operate that way and so getting him from Point A (London) to Point B (New York for interviews) to Point C (Los Angeles for the concert) involves everything from Aaron stuffing drugs up his butt to sex with total strangers to the rubbing of furry walls in an effort to gain inner peace. There’s fighting and fleeing and much debauchery going on as Aaron tries his best to deliver the wild man on time and in one piece, while trying not to get swept up into Aldous’ hard-partying, ‘looks glamourous from the outside but doesn’t hold up on close inspection’ ways.

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‘Get Him to the Greek’

Russell Brand Doesn’t Think Monogamy Is For Everyone

Actor/comedian Russell Brand (L) and singer Katy Perry arrive at the premiere of Universal Pictures' 'Get Him To The Greek' held at the Greek Theatre on May 25, 2010 in Los Angeles, California. (Getty Images) more pics

Get Him to the Greek Review

The golden age of comedy — this new golden age, which will only be apparent years from now, when it’s over — continues with the release of “ Get Him to the Greek ,” which is so comically fertile and yet so grounded in the reality of its characters that it’s really a kind of Marvel. There is a quick and simple litmus test to tell whether or not you’ll enjoy Get Him to the Greek. If you found Aldous Snow , Russell Brand ’s caricature of a rock star, to be one of the funnier elements of Forgetting Sarah Marshall, then you will no doubt have a riot with the increased raunchiness his character once again brings to the screen for director Nicholas Stoller . If, for whatever reason, you find Brand’s larger-than-life presence to be as insufferable as the real rock stars he’s lampooning, chances are good his spin-off film will do little to convince you there’s more to him than just an outrageous persona. Get Him to the Greek is exactly what the trailers advertise: Aldous Snow turned to 11…read more [ Cinematical ] Russell Brand and (Aldous Snow) in Get Him To The Greek Judd Apatow — the current king of movie comedy — took a risk last summer with the bloated and terribly self-involved “Funny People.” The Adam Sandler film took a nose dive at the box office — a fate it deserved. But this summer, the creator of such crowd-pleasers as “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” and “Knocked Up” rebounds mightily with “Get Him to the Greek,” one of the funniest, raunchiest and edgiest comedies in years. The outrageous “Greek” works better than “Funny People” at least in part because Apatow, who tends to make films that meander too much, hands over writing and directing duties to a protege — “Forgetting Sarah Marshall’s” Nicholas Stoller. Instead, Apatow produces “Greek,” just as he did with the terrific teen comedy “Superbad.”…read more [ MercuryNews ] Married-rich radical M.I.A. might be having press problems these days, but they’re nothing compared with the pretensions of fictional rocker Aldous Snow (squirmy, effortlessly charming Brand). Get Him to the Greek opens with a devastatingly funny parody—a video for Snow’s self-serious “African Child,” described by shocked music critics as the worst thing to happen to the continent since apartheid. Seven years of infamy lead the debauched frontman to agree to a comeback concert, the brainstorm of superfan label-rep Aaron (Hill). After sparring with his workaholic girlfriend (Mad Men’s Moss, an unlikely partner), Aaron is on his way to London to shepherd Snow to the L.A. concert, scheduled to occur in three days…read more [ TimeOut NewYork ] Russell Brand stars as Aldous Snow and Jonah Hill stars as Aaron Greenberg in Get Him to the Greek The movie is funny in the way of “The Hangover” about what trouble lads can get into when their senses are whirling. Unlike some depictions of binges, it doesn’t shortchange vomit. The adventures of Aldous and Aaron remind me of a friend I used to meet on Saturday mornings for what we called Drunch. “Sometimes,” she said, “it can be really exhausting having a good time.” Aaron, who has been threatened with flaying if he doesn’t deliver Aldous on time, panics when he can’t get him to Heathrow for the right flight, can’t get him to “Today” on time, can’t get him to the sound check at the Greek, and very nearly can’t get him to the Greek. Aldous for the most part floats benevolently above these small misunderstandings. When it comes to himself, he’s a very understanding man…read more [ Roger Ebert ] The beauty of the film is that, having put in place a solid comic structure, Stoller keeps coming up with surefire comic situations. And so when young, straight-arrow Aaron (Jonah Hill) finds himself in a limousine heading for the “Today” show with a rock star who absolutely must not arrive drunk or stoned, what does he do when the rock star whips out drugs and alcohol? Aaron hogs the drugs and drinks all the alcohol and arrives on the set with vomit all over his own jacket. And on and on, for 109 minutes, just one absurd, uncomfortable, hysterical situation after another…read more [ SFGate ] Colm Meane stars as Jonathan Snow and Russell Brand stars as Aldous Snow in Get Him to the Greek Get Him to the Greek is a transcontinental substance-filled race against time. When the closing credits rolled, I was absolutely exhausted. This was not due to a cinematic marvel of transference, it was because I’d been laughing, heavily, for one hundred and nine straight minutes.Wisely giving “Aldous Snow,” the best thing about his so-so Forgetting Sarah Marshall the spotlight, Nicholas Stoller’s Get Him to the Greek delivers what’s advertised – Russell Brand being a madman and Jonah Hill being an oaf – and sets them running on a plot-light ride through ridiculous, environment-driven set pieces. While at heart a simple road picture taken straight from the Hope and Crosby playbook, Greek bends over backward to stuff as much dazzle in each scene…read more [ UGO ] The picture is much better when it sticks to being a satire of the music industry. That’s when comedian Brand is at his most inspired. His band may be called Infant Sorrow (a bookish nod to William Blake), but the decadent Aldous Snow is a wicked parody of geezer rock. Looking like the bastard child of Keith Moon and Jimmy Page, he prances about the stage with the prissiness of Mick Jagger, flashing wild-man eyes that could outstare Iggy Pop. His Today Show number, The Clap, even sounds like a send-up of the Stones at their dirtiest. (Rock vet Lyle Workman provided the film’s witty music.) Brand also brings to the character his own double-edged comedic persona – part crude, part genteel, with an irresistible blend of devilry and disarming innocence…read more [ CBS News ] Russell Brand stars as Aldous Snow and Rose Byrne stars as Jackie Q in Get Him to the Greek Get Him to the Greek is filled with gags like that, jokes so lame and ludicrous they somehow circle ‘round back to being funny. It doesn’t hurt that the movie is dotted with an assortment of lively second- and third bananas, Combs among them. (He has the megalomaniacal record-industry exec thing down cold.) Rose Byrne, as Snow’s ditzy, kittenish ex, Jackie Q., also has a few deliciously zonked-out scenes, including a faux rock video that shows her romping around in a tiny, flouncy French milkmaid costume. Byrne, in addition to being a good sport, has marvelous comic timing: At one point she blinks out at us from behind a set of enormous feather eyelashes, fluttering her lids as if it were the most normal thing in the world to have Cleopatra’s fans affixed to your lashline…read more [ Movie Line ] Get Him to the Greek has all the hallmarks of an Apatow project. It’s raunchy, kinda sweet and filled with snarky pop culture references. Not surprisingly the third act has some structural issues, but while it’s a tad long it isn’t bloated or overly ambitious à la Funny People. It strikes an entertaining balance between the predictable and freewheeling, between being conventional and outrageous. Personally, I could do without all the vomit, but, then again, physical discomfort is essential to comedy. And at least now I know that furry walls can calm my anxiety…read more [ BoxOfficeMagazine ] Get Him to the Greek Video Review Share this on Blinklist Share this on del.icio.us Digg this! Post this on Diigo Share this on Reddit Stumble upon something good? Share it on StumbleUpon Share this on Technorati Share this on Mixx Tweet This! Subscribe to the comments for this post? Add this to Mister Wong Add this to Izeby Submit this to Twittley Save this to Xerpi Submit this to Netvibes Blend this! Engage with this article! Add to a lense on Squidoo

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Get Him to the Greek Review

‘Get Him To The Greek’ Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know

Hit the road with Russell Brand and Jonah Hill in the ‘Forgetting Sarah Marshall’ follow-up. By Josh Wigler Jonah Hill and Russell Brand in “Get Him To The Greek” Photo: Universal Pictures In “Forgetting Sarah Marshall,” Infant Sorrow frontman Aldous Snow had it all figured out: hit singles in the form of “Inside of You” and “We’ve Got to Do Something,” fans from all across the globe and several years of sobriety. But to quote another great musician, the times are a-changing when an off-the-wagon Snow returns in “Get Him to the Greek,” the “Sarah Marshall” spin-off arriving in theaters Friday (June 4). Russell Brand and Jonah Hill take center stage in the comedy about a disgraced rock singer and a budding talent agent looking to stage a glorious comeback. While that’s the film’s basic premise, the story behind the story has several layers. As the comedy arrives in theaters, MTV News is bringing you a cheat sheet to catch you up on everything you need to go “Greek.” Forgetting ‘Sarah’ and Going ‘Greek’ One of the reasons moviegoers latched onto “Forgetting Sarah Marshall” was the onscreen chemistry of Brand as rock god Aldous Snow and Hill as an aspiring musician and Snow-obsessed fan. Apparently, the chemistry didn’t go unnoticed by director Nicholas Stoller and producer Judd Apatow, as they announced a new comedy project re-teaming Brand and Hill just one week following the release of “Sarah Marshall.” That project would eventually become “Get Him to the Greek,” and while Brand was set to reprise his role as Aldous Snow , Hill took on an entirely new character: Aaron Green, a record-company intern who volunteers to escort the down-and-out Snow from his London home to the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles for a comeback concert. Madness, debauchery and hilarity inevitably ensue. The Third Greek Although Hill and Brand present quite the dynamic duo on their own, a third player entered the “Greek” arena in the form of Sean “Diddy” Combs as record-company executive Sergio Roma. “We did a table read, and I thought to myself, ‘I wonder how funny [Diddy’s] going to be and how much help he’s going to need,’ ” Apatow told MTV News in 2009 . “And I found out the answer was none. He needs no help. He was riotously funny. As a man with one skill, I was annoyed that he was also funny. You shouldn’t be allowed to be good at so many things.” Dubbed by Hill as “the McLovin of ‘Get Him to the Greek,’ ” Combs endeared himself to his co-stars with a trip to Las Vegas that Brand described as “a hedonism boot camp.” “[Hanging with Diddy in Vegas] means you don’t get enough sleep, and when you go to a restaurant, it’s noisy, and when you go to a club, it’s noisy, and when you’re in an elevator, it’s noisy,” Brand said of the trip. “Hanging with Diddy is noisy.” Sex, Drugs and Rocky Terrain Having survived the Vegas outing with few scratches to speak of, the “Greek” stars barreled on with production, but neither Brand nor Hill were without their share of hardships during the shoot. Brand, a recovering alcoholic and former drug addict, was faced with revisiting his old demons alongside his character. “I don’t take relapsing very seriously as a possibility in terms of thinking of it as ‘Must not relapse. Must not relapse.’ But it reminded me, ‘Don’t do drugs,’ ” Brand said of his experience playing the drug-addled Snow . “It’s not worth it. Not for me.” For Hill, his difficulties were a bit more transparent … one could even say, well, nude . The comedian was able to overcome the awkwardness of filming his in-the-buff scenes by focusing on the bright side: “I had all sorts of thoughts about waxing or what I should do to prepare. And then eventually, I just, I said, ‘I’m just gonna be free and be me and just sort of, you know, let that happen.’ ” Nudity and old ghosts aside, the point of “Get Him to the Greek” isn’t to dwell on the negative; it’s about laughing and having a good time at the movies. On that front, Hill feels that the mission was accomplished. “This movie, to me, is just a pure weekend night movie,” he said. “You go and have a great time, and it’s so full of energy. It’s a road movie, and it’s hysterical, in my opinion.” Don’t miss the live red-carpet coverage, exclusive movie clips and fist-pumping action on MTV News’ “Jersey Shore Blow-Out at the MTV Movie Awards,” airing live from Los Angeles this Sunday, June 6, at 8 p.m. ET/PT. Then stay tuned for the 2010 MTV Movie Awards at 9 p.m. ET/PT. Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘Get Him To The Greek’ Related Photos ‘Get Him To The Greek’ Russell Brand And Katy Perry At The ‘Get Him To The Greek’ L.A. Premiere

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‘Get Him To The Greek’ Cheat Sheet: Everything You Need To Know

Did Get Him to the Greek Kill a Guy?

Laughter is the best medicine, right? Well, in the case of Jonah Hill and Russell Brand’s new flick Get Him to the Greek, laughter could kill you! No, seriously. It could. Check out…

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Did Get Him to the Greek Kill a Guy?

Katy Perry & Russell Brand: We’re the New Brangelina

“I do feel like the new Brangelina with his movie coming out on Tuesday, Get Him to the Greek. We’re going to the premiere tomorrow and everything is happening at the same time….

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Katy Perry & Russell Brand: We’re the New Brangelina

Diddy Open to Being ‘American Idol’ Judge — For The Right Price

‘Just change the name on the check, and I’ll be there,’ Diddy says of Simon Cowell’s impressive salary. By Mawuse Ziegbe, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Diddy Photo: MTV News From label boss to fashion designer to reality-TV star, Diddy has one of the most extensive r

Buzz Break: Going Greek