Tag Archives: ideas

Justin Bieber 3-D Movie Director Drops Out

Oscar-winning filmmaker Davis Guggenheim was lined up to helm the ‘feature biopic.’ By Kara Warner Justin Bieber Photo: George Pimentel/ WireImage Uh-oh, Justin Bieber fans. The teen heartthrob’s 3-D concert-movie extravaganza has hit a roadblock: Oscar-winning filmmaker Davis Guggenheim has reportedly dropped out. According to Deadline.com , the “Inconvenient Truth” director withdrew from the Paramount Pictures project Tuesday night to concentrate on promoting Sundance darling “Waiting for Superman.” Paramount is said to already be interviewing directors to take over the project. Joining the ear-splitting, teen concert-film ranks — which includes “Hannah Montana and Miley Cyrus: The Best of Both Worlds Concert” and “Jonas Brothers: The 3D Concert Experience” — Bieber will play himself in what is described as a “feature biopic.” Bieber’s manager, Scooter Braun, and Island Def Jam chairman L.A. Reid will produce, and a release date is currently set for February 11, 2011 — Valentine’s Day weekend. When the news about the Bieber movie broke, the 16-year-old took to Twitter to express his enthusiasm: “Next Valentine’s we r coming with a major 3D movie telling the story with an Oscar winning director and also filming the tour at MSG in NYC!!” He followed that up with, “This is so sick!! Gonna come out in theaters worldwide Valentine’s 2011!!! I’m taking this thing worldwide thanks to u all!! Hyped!!” Beiber has yet to tweet an update about the director news. Who should direct Bieber’s film debut? Share your ideas in the comments below! For young Hollywood news, fashion and “Twilight” updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com . Related Artists Justin Bieber

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Justin Bieber 3-D Movie Director Drops Out

Howard Zinn: Hollywood’s Favorite ‘Communist’ Historian

Don’t expect Matt Damon or Josh Brolin or any of the other celebrities and Hollywood producers behind the History Channel’s The People Speak to issue apologies for their celebration of leftist professor and author Howard Zinn in light of the release last week of file 100-369217 – the FBI’s decades long investigation into Zinn’s alleged communist activities. Already, Zinn’s far-left sympathizers are poking holes, some more credibly than others, in the 430 pages of documents, and trying to draw focus away from Zinn’s alleged membership in the Kremlin-controlled Communist Party USA and onto the fact that a Boston University administrator turned FBI informant once plotted to have him fired in the 1970s. To the radical left, trying to interfere with an extremist professor as he dutifully decries his country as a police state is a far more egregious crime than belonging to a political organization allied with and controlled by the sworn enemy of the United States. It’s all about perspective… Still, Zinn’s apologists are not incorrect in pointing out that the evidence to support the claims that the professor was a card-carrying member of the CPUSA is hardly conclusive, or as J. Edgar Hoover had requested – admissible. Despite the breadth of documentation in the file – the interviews with Zinn, the statements made by confidential informants claiming to have attended CPUSA meetings at which Zinn taught on “Basic Marxism” and encouraged participants to adhere to the tenants of Marx and Lenin, the suggestions that these meetings often took place in Zinn’s own home – proof of the kind the right might hope for is just not to be found. That Zinn was a leftist is clear by his own admission. That he belonged to groups infiltrated by Communists is well-established, but that he was an actual, card-carrying member of the Communist Party is just not proven. Which is not to say there is not a compelling case made. It is just not an iron-clad one. Of course, the right’s desire to prove Zinn’s membership in the Communist Party in the late 1940s and early 1950s is certainly understandable. After all, this was long after the idealistic 1930s when the already liberal American media churned out stories to Americans wrecked by the Great Depression of a Utopian revolution occurring in the east. It was after the subjugation of Eastern Europe, the Russian bomb, and Stalin’s gulags. To prove that Zinn was a member of the organization during this period would go a long way toward validating the animosity and distrust the right has for Zinn’s work, both as an anti-war activist, influential author and professor, and sainted historian of the left. But it is a mistake to focus too closely on Zinn’s status as a member of CPUSA. Proving it is difficult, and even if it could be proven – what does it prove? Undoubtedly many people in their twenties made poor choices and joined organizations that as adults they would shun. To judge Zinn’s life and career by how he spent his youth, the Eddie Vedders and Danny Glovers of the world would argue, ignores the larger question of how he spent the rest of his life. And it is that question – how Howard Zinn spent his life – that the right should desire. The left undoubtedly loves dancing around such myopic questions as, “Was Zinn a member of the Communist Party,” expressly because it detracts from the larger question of, “Was Zinn a communist?” Did Howard Zinn espouse communist philosophy? Did he openly sympathize with America’s communist enemies? Did he seek to use his influence in academia and the media to convert America’s young to the cause of communism? These questions do not require the kind of definitive proof the left can demand of the more precise issue of Zinn’s actual political affiliation. They only require the smell test, and Howard Zinn cannot pass the communist smell test. From his well-known early work on behalf of infiltrated, trans-national labor and civil-rights organizations, to his radical anti-war activism, his seminal and revisionist historical work, The People’s History of the United States, and his lesser known entries into literature, the theater, and television – like his play Marx in Soho, or The People Speak – Zinn continually championed a view of America, capitalism, and the west in general that was utterly sympathetic to the views of Marx and Lenin. Where he departed from their views was only in the nuanced world of implementation, the ultimate fate of the Bolshevik Revolution, and questions regarding the scale – regional or global – of the communist cause. That our Hollywood betters continued to promote Zinn’s work is not a testament to their naivety about his official party membership status; it is a testimony to the fact that they agree with his broader communist views – at least as far as they safely can from their positions in the upper echelon of the bourgeois elite. Consider these words from Zinn’s forward to a compilation of Anarcho-Communist activist and philosopher Alexander Berkman’s work titled Life of an Anarchist. Alexander Berkman is one of those lost heros of American radicalism, a rare pure voice of rebellion against the state, against capitalism, against war. …[He] is an inspiring example of living an honest life, as well as a vision of a better society. It might be worth here noting that Berkman did fifteen years in prison for the attempted murder of businessman Henry Clay Frick in 1892, opposed American intervention in World War One, and was eventually deported to Russia where he was a first hand observer of the revolution. So inspiring… At least to Howard Zinn, who imported hundreds of copies of his work, The ABC of Anarchist Communism into the United States, “for my students to use” and wrote a play about him. It is Zinn’s conclusion to the introduction that is the most illuminating though. [Life of an Anarchist] is a welcome introduction to the ideas of anarchism . . . which appear more and more relevant in this era of bullying governments, corporate ruthlessness, and endless war. Viva la Revolution! In the end, Zinn’s own words damn him, and his Hollywood appostles, far more than anything J. Edgar Hoover ever dreamt of. Crossposted at Big Hollywood .

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Howard Zinn: Hollywood’s Favorite ‘Communist’ Historian

Did Dr. Dre Know Detox Would Take This Long? ‘Absolutely Not’

‘I thought it would take, at worst case, a couple of years,’ he tells Vibe for his cover story with Eminem. By Hillary Crosley Eminem and Dr. Dre on the cover of Vibe Photo: Vibe While Eminem talked about death and Brittany Murphy in his interview for the Vibe “Juice” issue, Dr. Dre delved into his Detox delay , the “Under Pressure” leak and rumors of an instrumental album. The Eminem and Dr. Dre cover of Vibe ‘s 15th-anniversary “Juice” issue is a nod to their original appearance in the mag eight years ago. The issue hits newsstands August 16, and Dre began by answering the question on many fans’ minds: Did he know Detox would take this long? “Absolutely not. I thought it would take, at worst case, a couple of years,” the super-producer said. “For example, actual work time on The Chronic was nine months, and actual work time on my last album, 2001, was about 10 months. The actual work time on this album is about half of that, where I’m seriously focusing on it. There is always something coming up. Like signing talent, old and new.” The California icon also talked about the recent leak of his duet with Jay-Z, “Under Pressure.” “[That] was a little bit more frustrating, because at least ‘Crack a Bottle’ had a hook on it,” Dre said of a previous leak. “I wouldn’t be as mad at a leak if the song was done. “I’m not mad at the fans,” he continued. “I’m mad at the person that leaked the sh–. I have no idea how it got out. It’s not even worth looking to see who did it. It happens. The most painful part about it is that I’m passionate about what I do, so people should hear it in the right form. Somebody actually hacked into our e-mails, so that made our red flags go up. We’re in a new age, and that’s a sign: ‘Wake up, mother—-er. You have to be more careful with your sh–.’ That’s all there is to it. I know what’s up now.” As for an album of instrumentals, Dre said it’s definitely on deck. “Oh, yeah, that’s in the works,” he said. “An instrumental album is something I’ve been wanting to do for a long time. I have the ideas for it. I want to call it The Planets. I don’t even know if I should be saying this, but f— it. [ Laughs. ] It’s just my interpretation of what each planet sounds like. I’m gonna go off on that. Just all instrumental. I’ve been studying the planets and learning the personalities of each planet. I’ve been doing this for about two years now, just in my spare time, so to speak. I wanna do it in surround sound. It’ll have to be in surround sound for Saturn to work.” What are you expecting from Dr. Dre’s new material? Share your thoughts in the comments! Related Artists Dr. Dre Eminem

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Did Dr. Dre Know Detox Would Take This Long? ‘Absolutely Not’

NYT Finds ‘Bellicose’ Bloggers Against ‘Monument to Religious Tolerance’ (i.e., a Mosque) at Ground Zero

The New York Times continues its delicate, sympathetic coverage of NYC-centric Muslims issues with its treatment of the controversy over the Cordoba House, a proposed Muslim community center, to be topped by a mosque, that would be raised at the sight of the World Trade Center. Wednesday’s Metro section story by Javier Hernandez, ” Planned Sign of Tolerance Bringing Division Instead ” certainly made a lot of positive-sounding assumptions (starting with the headline) about the ideas behind the mosque, but failed to probe the secret details of the financiers behind it or to question the propriety of building an Islamic worship site at the same spot where thousands were murdered by radical Muslims in the name of Islam. The Cordoba House was supposed to be a monument to religious tolerance , an homage to the city in Spain where Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived together centuries ago in the midst of religious foment. Its 15 stories, home to a Muslim community center and a mosque, would rise two blocks from the pit of dust and cranes where the twin towers once stood, a symbol of the resilience of the American melting pot, its supporters said. But instead of inspiring mutual respect, the center has opened deep divisions marked by vitriolic commentary , pitting Muslims against Christians, Tea Partiers against staunch liberals, and Sept. 11 families against one another. And so what began as a gesture of combined good faith by Muslims and non-Muslims has turned into a familiar game of New York City political football. The bellicose discourse was on full display on Tuesday in an auditorium at Hunter College in Manhattan as the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission considered whether to grant one of the buildings that would be torn down for the project, at 45-47 Park Place, status as a protected landmark. The entire center would occupy 45-51 Park Place. …. In recent days, politicians have called for an investigation of the group’s finances and expressed concerns about the views of its leader, Imam Feisal Abdul Rauf , who has held services in a small mosque in TriBeCa since 1983. The Internet has featured fury from all sides, and some bloggers have labeled the proposal a sub-rosa effort to spread extremist Islam. Many Muslim-Americans have been taken aback by the intensity of the reaction, saying it was a sign that discrimination was alive and well nearly nine years after 9/11. But they said the vigorous opposition underscored the need for the $100 million center, which would include a 500-seat auditorium and offer a range of programs modeled on the Y.M.C.A. and the Jewish Community Center in Manhattan. El-Gamal refuses to say where the funding for the $100 million project is coming from, a detail Hernandez skips even while saying the project “began as a gesture of combined good faith by Muslims and non-Muslims.” So who are they, exactly? Hernandez wasn’t curious. Neither did he raise Rauf’s recent refusal to call Hamas a terrorist group . A 9-11 victim’s group that opposes the construction rounded up details on The Cordoba Initiative, the consortium backing the plan, the name of which didn’t appear in the Times’s article. The Times has a history of soft, sympathetic pseudo-coverage of local Muslim initiatives and controversies, going so far as to blame rival papers like the New York Post for ” relentless criticism,” in the case of principal Debbie Almontaser, dismissed from a Muslim academy in Brooklyn for defending distribution of a T-shirt by a related organization that read “Intifada NYC.”

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NYT Finds ‘Bellicose’ Bloggers Against ‘Monument to Religious Tolerance’ (i.e., a Mosque) at Ground Zero

GE Puts Up Serious Cash For Smart Grid Ideas

photo via flickr General Electric, along with four venture capital firms, is putting up some serious cash for innovators that can help with the development of a smart grid–a networked energy system that increases efficiency and allows for more renewable energy to come into the power grid. The competition, known as the Ecomagnination Challenge , has $200 million and will be judged by GE, RockPort Capital, K.P.C.B., Foundation Capital and Emerald Technology. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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GE Puts Up Serious Cash For Smart Grid Ideas

Nicolas Cage’s Bruce Lee Homage Cut From ‘Sorcerer’s Apprentice’

Director Jon Turteltaub let his star take him to ‘some wild places,’ but not all of them actually worked. By Eric Ditzian, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Nicolas Cage Photo: MTV News Oh, Nicolas Cage, you wonderfully wacky man! Who else has to tell a group of reporters that he honestly never hired a voodoo priestess to break a hex on a movie set? Who can start a conversation about irascible filmmaker Werner Herzog’s directorial style by saying, “Werner doesn’t really know a lot about jazz”? Who else could tell David Letterman a story about taking mushrooms with a cat named Louis? What would Hollywood (and those of us who write about it) do without Nic Cage? The town would be a much less compelling place, that’s for certain. Yet there is a flip side to the actor’s madcap worldview. As “Sorcerer’s Apprentice” director Jon Turteltaub told MTV News, a great majority of the ideas Cage brings to a set are simply too nutso to consider. “What’s a big percentage, 60? 70?” Turteltaub laughed. “Here’s the thing with Nic: Sometimes the ideas are completely insane and off-the-wall, but you still do them, because you can be wrong, and in the context of the film, you never know when it might actually be brilliant. “Nic made me promise before this movie that I would just let him lead me on a crazy adventure through this character,” added Turteltaub, who has also directed Cage in two “National Treasure” movies. “And I said, ‘OK, I’ll go there.’ He brought me to some wild places.” But one improvisatory moment in particular was just too weird to include in the final cut of “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice,” in which Cage stars as immortal magician Balthazar Blake, who does mystical battle against archenemy Maxim Horvath (Alfred Molina). The incident took place during a scene in which Balthazar and Horvath converge in an NYU public bathroom for a plasma-bolt-filled throwdown. “At one point, Nic went into a whole Bruce Lee routine,” Turteltaub said. “We were like, ‘Oh, that’s great. Do that more.’ Cut, cut. … It won’t be on the DVD!” Check out everything we’ve got on “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: ‘The Sorcerer’s Apprentice’

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Nicolas Cage’s Bruce Lee Homage Cut From ‘Sorcerer’s Apprentice’

Melting Steel With Only the Sun (Video)

Photo: Youtube screen grab. See video below. Steel’s Melting Point is Approx. 1,370 °C (2,500 °F) Melting steel in a solar oven (aka solar concentrator) isn’t new or unique, but it’s always cool to see and a good reminder of just how much energy is hitting the sunny side of the planet at any moment. The video below shows a short exerpt of James May’s ” Big Ideas ” series (James is better known for the Top Gear show), and they start by cooking, er, burning a sausage, and then they melt a steel plate. Impressive to see how q… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Melting Steel With Only the Sun (Video)

Diplo Previews Thom Yorke’s Major Lazer Remix For New EP

Producer explains how the Radiohead frontman wound up on Lazers Never Die. By James Montgomery Thom Yorke Photo: John Shearer/ Getty Images At the South by Southwest music festival in March, MTV News sat down with producer Diplo to talk about his work on M.I.A.’s upcoming ///Y/&#92 album (this was before he called it “a turd” ), and, at the end of the chat — almost in passing — he mentioned an upcoming EP by his Major Lazer project that featured a remix by none other than Radiohead ‘s Thom Yorke . It sounded pretty rad, but there was one problem: According to a label rep who was standing off-camera, the EP would probably never see the light of day, due to — as she put it — “clearance issues.” This was news to practically everyone, Diplo included. “There’s an EP that comes out next month, I think — is it coming out?” he said, stopping to ask the rep. “Oh, it’s not cleared? Oh, well, we have like five records, there’s a record with Collie Buddz, Thom Yorke did a remix for us. … I mixed it down; it’s pretty crazy. … It’ll get out, somehow.” Turns out, he wasn’t kidding. After months of waiting, the Major Lazer EP, called Lazers Never Die, will hit stores on July 20. So, we decided now was a pretty good time to revisit our chat with Dip, in which he told the story behind the collaboration with Yorke. “He came to our party in London in August, the Carnival party — the Notting Hill Carnival — it’s one of the biggest Caribbean parties in the world, 1.5 million people there, dancing to disco, dub music, everything, and Thom Yorke was at our party. He got in, was moshing basically the whole party, like going crazy for Major Lazer,” Diplo laughed. “I met him and we traded some information, and he asked to do a remix for Major Lazer. … And of all the tracks he could’ve remixed, he picked ‘Jump Up,’ which is this jumping, crazy, hype record. And I was like, ‘All right, you sure?’ And he’s like, ‘Yeah, we can do that one.’ “And he did it, I mixed it down a little bit and put it on our EP,” he continued. “It’s pretty good. It sounds like what you would expect. It sounds like a Thom Yorke remix. It sounds something like ‘Idioteque’ off the Kid A record. I’m a huge Radiohead fan. … What they do kind of influences our music so heavily. I feel like sometimes, Radiohead maybe has a mistake in the studio, and they build with it. They clean it up and make something out of it. And that’s what we kind of do. I feel like most of the stuff I do is an accident.” And that includes spilling the beans on the Die EP, though, even back in March, Dip seemed confident that eventually, fans would be able to hear it. Even if he had to take matters into his own hands. “People will find it,” he laughed, winking at the publicist. “If it doesn’t come out soon, you’ll find it.” Who would you like to see do a remix with Major Lazer? Share your ideas in the comments Related Artists Radiohead Thom Yorke Major Lazer

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Diplo Previews Thom Yorke’s Major Lazer Remix For New EP

Jay-Z Slams Spirituality Accusations On Rick Ross’ ‘Free Mason’

‘I said I was amazing/ Not that I’m a Mason,’ Jay raps on Ross’ upcoming Teflon Don LP. By Shaheem Reid Jay-Z Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images Jay-Z takes aim at all those who have questioned his spirituality on the new Rick Ross song “Free Mason” . At the top of the year, while on New York radio, Jay dismissed rumors that he was a member of the illuminati, worshiped the devil and had Satanic images in the video for “On to the Next One” .

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Jay-Z Slams Spirituality Accusations On Rick Ross’ ‘Free Mason’

Lady Gaga Fans Want Nicki Minaj, Marilyn Manson Duets On Next Album

But some fans hope she flies solo: ‘I want to see her work with no one but herself right now, because Gaga’s Gaga.’ By James Montgomery Lady Gaga Photo: Matt Harper/ MTV News These days, Lady Gaga will tell anyone who will listen that her new album is 100 percent finished, but that she won’t be putting it out until next year. In fact, earlier this week at the kickoff of the North American leg of her Monster Ball Tour in Montreal , she told her “little monsters” that she’s been listening to the new songs before taking the stage, and that she’s simply dying to let her fans hear them. Of course, she followed that statement up by unveiling “You and I,” a song that had leaked to YouTube a few days earlier, which only further whetted fans’ appetites. With so much brand-new Lady Gaga music so tantalizingly close to being released, we decided to ask LG’s fans what they’re expecting to hear on the album — and who, if anyone, they would like to see their Mother Monster collaborate with on the record. We heard a whole lot of the usual suspects — Britney Spears, Katy Perry (though we sort of doubt that will happen anytime soon ), Madonna, etc. — but the fans in Montreal also had some rather, uh, less-than-traditional suggestions, some of which would be positively amazing if they every came to fruition. “I would like to see Marilyn Manson with her,” Nicholas Vansorto said. “She has made a remix with him , but I would like to hear a song with Marilyn Manson and Lady Gaga. It would be amazing.” “Nicki Minaj!” Shareejah Daley suggested. “Nicki Minaj and Lady Gaga would be crazy.” Of course, there are still those out there who think that Gaga’s at her best when she’s flying solo — and that’s exactly what they want to hear on her new album. “I know she’s not going to work with anybody — she’s not going to do any duets,” Genevieve Plante said. “I would like if she would continue on the way of ‘Telephone,’ or ‘Dance in the Dark,’ ‘Bad Romance,’ I would love that.” “I want to see her work with no one but herself right now, because Gaga’s Gaga,” Danik Renaud added. “So there shouldn’t be anyone [else] — other than Beyonc