Elisha Cuthbert opens up to MTV News about reconciling with her TV ex and her racist pet parrot for season three, which kicks off Tuesday. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Josh Horowitz Elisha Cuthbert Photo: MTV News
‘Ask Obama Live: An MTV Interview With the President’ will air Friday, October 26 at 5 p.m. across all MTV screens. By James Montgomery President Barack Obama Photo: Courtesy of The White House
For the first time since her husband admitted to an affair with Kristen Stewart , Liberty Ross has spoken out and directly addressed the scandal that continues to rock Twilight nation. “I believe we’re all on journeys and we’re all given lessons at certain times in our life, Ross says in a video for Style.com. “Sometimes when things seem really bad you have to be able to see the good and learn from it. And move forward as graciously as possible.” Ross and husband Rupert Sanders have reportedly reconciled, although reports claim the model has put in place certain guidelines if the couple is truly to make it. But she only focused on the positive in the video confessional (below). “I have a really good balance. I’m very happy with my life. I’m lucky. I have good people. I have two amazing children. “[This year was] the end of some things and the beginning of something else. Beginnings and ending are always really exciting.” Stewart and Robert Pattinson , many outlets confirm, are also beginning again as a couple. Get to know Ross a little better now: Liberty Ross Interview
Kate Upton is too fat … if you’re a delusional moron. Seriously, some people have said this. Fortunately, Kate is not a delusional moron, and tells Vogue she’s proud of her curves. “I don’t want to starve myself. I still want to hang out with my family and be a normal girl,” says the 20-year-old. “You have to be confident, and that doesn’t mean starving yourself.” “I think it’s important to look at magazines and think a healthy lifestyle is attainable. Now that the fashion industry likes the idea of me, I’m happy if I can have an influence.” “Now, whenever girls come up to me saying they’re happy to see I am confident about my body, it makes me feel good that I am contributing in a way among people my age.” “I never sat there and said to myself, ‘I want to be every man’s fantasy.’” Call it a side benefit then. Check out more Kate Upton pics below!
Yup, she’s number-one again. Just hours after her latest album debuted at the top of the iTunes chart, Taylor Swift sat down with George Stephanopoulos on Good Morning America to talk all about “Red.” Focusing on the process of actually collaborating with various songwriters for a change, Swift said the CD took her to the “edges of what I’m allowed to do” as an artist. Meaning what, exactly? Watch the interview now and find out: Taylor Swift GMA Interview And remember to visit our Taylor Swift video section for a look and a listen at the tracks released so far off “Red.”
Ben Lewin’s The Sessions (formerly The Surrogate ) emerged as the undisputed hit of Sundance 2012, landing a $6 million sale with the unlikeliest of subjects: A paralyzed man’s quest to lose his virginity, based on the life and writings of Bay Area poet Mark O’Brien. Thanks to Lewin’s sensitive and honest script and an impressive turn by indie favorite John Hawkes — who shines with wit and grace in a physically demanding performance as O’Brien, who has no use of his limbs due to polio but begins to explore his sexuality with the help of a hands-on sex therapist (Helen Hunt) – The Sessions earned consecutive standing ovations and got critics buzzing with the possibilities for next year’s Academy Awards. Movieline sat down with Hawkes after the film’s Sundance debut to discuss the indie labor of love, why O’Brien’s story resonates so powerfully, and how opportunities have expanded for him since breaking out two years ago in Park City with his Oscar-nominated turn in Winter’s Bone . I grew up close to Berkeley and was a little familiar with Mark O’Brien before seeing the film, but it captured that sense of place for me – especially with little touches like Pink Man to set the atmosphere. Yes, of course! That’s good, because we shot in Los Angeles because we couldn’t afford to shoot up there. We had to make our own Pink Man and everything. [Laughs] Luckily there are a couple of Victorian streets in Los Angeles that we were able to utilize. How familiar were you with O’Brien’s story beforehand? I was minutely aware of Mark because I had heard of Jessica Yu’s amazing, Academy Award-winning short doc about Mark, called Breathing Lessons . I’d just vaguely kind of remembered that, and I may have seen an article about him at that time, but it was a new kind of story to me when I picked up the script and read it. I was pretty taken with the script itself, by Ben Lewin, and knowing he was going to direct the film which is often a wonderful thing – it’s the person who wrote the script, directing the movie. I just thought he was an extraordinarily interesting man, a polio survivor himself and very uniquely qualified to tell the story. When the project came to you – a very challenging role, to say the least – what made you decide you had to do it? My first question to Ben, as we sat down to meet before he’d offered the role and before I’d accepted the role, was ‘Why not a disabled actor?’ And he assured me that he had taken the last couple of years, he’d put out feelers to disabled groups, and had auditioned several people – a couple of them are in the film – and just felt like he hadn’t found his Mark. So with that huge question answered, I talked to Ben a lot about how he saw the film as a whole, how he saw the character of Mark; I had my ideas, we chatted and seemed to get along really well, so it was a good fit. We went forward from there. And this is a very small project. Ben raised the money by appealing to friends, basically, and so this tiny little script suddenly attracting William H. Macy, Helen Hunt, and a bunch of other wonderful actors – it’s vindicating to read something and think, ‘This is really good!’ And then you realize other people think so too. I’m not insane, it is a great script! How challenging was the shoot itself, physically? It was very challenging – again, a minute amount of the challenge that a disabled person faces, moment to moment, but certainly it was physically challenging. I helped invent a device that we used to curve Mark’s spine, basically a large piece of foam that we nicknamed ‘The Torture Ball’ because it would lay under the left side of my body and curve my spine for every shot in the movie. Sometimes I’d have to lay on that for an hour at a time, and it was hard – it apparently displaced my organs. [Laughs] My chiropractor told me that my organs were migrating and to hopefully finish the movie soon. I have minor health issues that may relate to laying on that thing, but nothing compared to what many people suffer daily, and it’s a small price to pay for what’s turned out to be a really beautiful film. To paraphrase Mark himself in the film, it may have hurt – but it was worth it? Yes! Definitely. It’s an interesting choice that Ben made to present Mark’s story here not as a straight biopic but with a focus on his relationship with his sex surrogate. What do you think that shifted angle brings, as opposed to a more conventional portrayal? Interesting. I think Ben originally had seen the movie as a biopic and then began to realize that the part of Mark’s life that interested him the most was his quest to learn his sexual possibilities as a disabled man. I think it’s a really wise choice; biopics are interesting, but I’d rather see a documentary of a person’s whole life, and I’d much rather see a narrative feature focused on a small piece of their life. And if you can focus on a small piece of someone’s life and tell it well enough, I think it informs the whole of their life. And there’s a real interesting story there – there’s a relationship that develops, certainly heightened in our film, but with the blessing of the real surrogate, Cheryl Cohen Green, to heighten and complicate their relationship a bit and to make it a love story of sorts. The subject matter, as you describe it, doesn’t have wide appeal but I think it has so much humor and so much truth, it’s a breath of fresh air. Mark’s voice really comes through – the same painfully honest, witty spirit you can see in his writings. It was important to me to fight self-pity at every turn, and for the film as a whole to fight sentiment as much as possible. He certainly never wanted people to feel sorry for him . No! The idea that he was a courageous person and stuff, he thought was bullshit. Like, how do you presume to know what I feel, what I go through? I think through his articles he was very interested in the political and social aspects of his disability. One thing that’s striking about Jessica Yu’s film, and I believe I also read something Mark wrote about it, is that to the taxpayer – to those of us who help support disabled people by paying taxes – it was half or maybe one-third of the cost of him being in an institution and live on his own, to pay rent, to hire attendance, way less of a strain on the taxpayer than keeping him an institution, where he was sadly stuck for a few years of his life when his parents were too old to take care of him. Luckily, the University of California, Berkeley in the ‘70s said, we’ll take care of any student who qualifies, who can pass our admission – it doesn’t matter what their disability. There’s an amazing photograph of his iron lung, 800 lbs. of it, hanging from a crane right outside his dorm room window as they’re trying to get it inside. So I know Mark always had a really felt beholden to Berkeley and felt a wonderful debt to that college and that town. They opened up his life, he was kind of reborn in his 30s in Berkeley. Sex and love are central to Mark’s journey in this film, and it’s such a fascinating terrain to explore – the relationship between disability and sexuality, and sexuality and manhood, and what they all might have meant to him. I can’t exactly speak in exact detail to his innermost thought, but he was quite effusive in his writings. In Jessica Yu’s film there is a brief mention of his surrogate time. Bill Macy’s made the point that he worked with a group, and disabled people, like able-bodied people, want to be independent as much as possible and live their lives that way, and they also want to love and be loved. Those are commonalities among people everywhere, and certainly disabled people are no exception. I think that Mark mainly was interested in sex because he was more largely interested in love and in a relationship with someone, and I think that he felt that if he ever met someone he could love, that he would want to have explored his possibilities, sexually. So that’s where the surrogate comes in. The minute that the first screening here ended, folks were buzzing about next year’s Oscars. It’s a little early! [Laughs] It’s a lot early. I mean, there may be twenty more amazing films that come out in the next year. I hope so! So who knows? It’s way too early and it doesn’t exactly make me nervous, I just turn a deaf ear to it because low expectations have always been the key to happiness for me. I don’t want to expect things to happen as much as hope, and if those Oscar predictions come true, fantastic – because it will bring more people to this film. After the success of Winter’s Bone , perhaps, how much did things change for you? Has the way that you’ve chosen projects in the last few years evolved at all? No, though I’ve certainly been afforded the opportunity to choose what I might be a part of. It’s not like every director in every movie is seeking me out by any means, there are a lot of things I’m not suited for, a lot of things I’m not interested in, and a lot of things that directors wouldn’t be interested in me for. What are you interested in? I’m interested in amazing stories told by talented people, and to get to play a terrific role. The three things I try to find are story, parts, people. Has it gotten easier to find the great characters? You know, I think it maybe is. It’s certainly changed for me because when I first got to Los Angeles 20 years ago, I had worked a lot of my life and was still working regular jobs. Acting was more fun to me, and paid better when I could get the gigs, so in order to avoid any further carpentry and restaurant work and things I’d been doing for many years, I just took whatever came my way. I was happy to be able to pay rent and eat. Certainly I’m freer now; I don’t get to do everything I want to do, but I no longer have to do things I don’t want to do – so that’s good. This interview previously ran as part of Movieline’s Sundance 2012 coverage. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
Khloe Kardashian Talks Being Considered “The Ugly Sister” Being the tall and towering, stallion-esque Kardashian sister with the noticeably different physical and facial features is no easy task. In addition her chubby-lumpkins struggle to stay thin and still go toe-to-toe with her thicky-thick sisters in the limelight, Khloe is also the only one of the three to have a ring on her finger and plenty of rumors to go along with it. Khloe recently sat down with The Block to reveal how she really feels about being considered the no-so-pretty sister. Check out a few excerpts from the interview below: JWD: In Interviews, I’ve heard you group together the experience of being bullied with the comparisons that you had with your sisters. Was there ever a point when you thought, “If I was an only child, I wouldn’t be experiencing this.” KK: No because when I was bullied…Yes, it happened from comparison. Even with teachers. They didn’t realize it, but they would teach my sisters before me because we all attended the same school, and they’d say to me “Oh, you’re a Kardashian sister? But they’re so pretty!” They’re not saying I’m ugly, but they are —-or that’s how I took it. JWD: Well, because that’s your core belief already. KK: Right, so it validates that. But I do believe that stuff prepared me for being older because now everyone has an opinion and everyone still compares me to them. It made me stronger. Everyone asks, “How did you get so confident?” But I don’t know when the turning point was. One day I just thought, yeah, I am different and I’m pretty in my own way and they’re pretty in their own way. Some people like apples, some people like oranges, but that doesn’t mean that apples are bad. I just accept it. My dad always used to tell me, “Your sisters, you might think, are so drop-dead beautiful but you have a personality that a lot of people would like have.” When he said that to me, he wasn’t saying that I wasn’t beautiful. He was saying, you’re going to come into your own but own what you have right now. And he’s right, I’m fun and I get along with people. I’ve just owned who I am. Good for her. Hopefully all that confidence will help keep her marriage in tact.. Images via Khloe Kardashian.com
Some concert-goers in Colorado were upset with Madonna’s pulling out guns on stage during her concert in Denver Thursday night, according to KUSA-TV. In light of James Holmes’ movie theater slaying of 12 people July 20 in Aurora, a suburb of Denver, many attendees weren’t delighted to see the Queen of Pop strapped. Madonna pulling out guns is not new; she’s done it at every MDNA tour stop. The Material Girl has said she does not condone violence or gunplay and uses them as “symbols of intolerance” and “the pain [she has] felt from having [her] heart broken.” What do you think: Madonna pulling a gun on stage … It’s all in good fun! It’s a lame cry for attention! It’s an irresponsible stunt! View Poll »
Christina Aguilera appeared on Chelsea Lately last night, but she only booked the gig under one condition: Following the many jokes Chelsea Handler has made at the expense of The Voice judge and her hatred of pants, Handler herself had to make like Christina throughout the interview. See what we mean here: Christina Aguilera on Chelsea Lately Aguilera, meanwhile, talked openly about how she disdains pants – and other types of layering. “I don’t like to wear underwear,” the five-time Grammy Award winner said. “I like to be as free as possible at all times. It’s just who I am.” She concluded: “It’s empowering. It’s p-ssy power!” So is this, sort of: check out a photo of Christina Aguilera nude !
Christina Aguilera appeared on Chelsea Lately last night, but she only booked the gig under one condition: Following the many jokes Chelsea Handler has made at the expense of The Voice judge and her hatred of pants, Handler herself had to make like Christina throughout the interview. See what we mean here: Christina Aguilera on Chelsea Lately Aguilera, meanwhile, talked openly about how she disdains pants – and other types of layering. “I don’t like to wear underwear,” the five-time Grammy Award winner said. “I like to be as free as possible at all times. It’s just who I am.” She concluded: “It’s empowering. It’s p-ssy power!” So is this, sort of: check out a photo of Christina Aguilera nude !