Check out this epic ‘Suicide Squad’ parody featuring a reworked version of Lady Gaga’s “Judas.”
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Harley Quinn Meets Lady Gaga In Fiery Suicide Squad Parody
Check out this epic ‘Suicide Squad’ parody featuring a reworked version of Lady Gaga’s “Judas.”
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Harley Quinn Meets Lady Gaga In Fiery Suicide Squad Parody
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Tagged bennyhollywood, car, carrie, epic, Lennon, Movies, Music, music-news, parody-featuring, reworked-version, squad, stars, the-late, willow
Sean Lennon and Willow Smith duet on “Bird Song,” a song Lennon co-wrote by the late Carrie Fisher.
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Willow Smith Lends Her ‘Golden Voice’ To A Song Written By Sean Lennon And Carrie Fisher
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Tagged bennyhollywood, car, carrie, Lennon, Music, music-news, stars, the-late, willow, willow-smith
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Just in case you need something to do today: Yoko Ono has posted Bed Peace, a 70-minute documentary about the famous 1969 Bed-Ins she staged with John Lennon to protest the Vietnam war, on YouTube for free viewing this weekend only. To be honest, we’re not sure why the time limit has been enforced, especially Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Flavorwire Discovery Date : 14/08/2011 01:02 Number of articles : 2
This Weekend Only, Watch John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s ‘Bed Peace’ Online
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Tagged bennyhollywood, famous-1969, Hollywood, invalid, Lennon, need-something, peace, TMZ, video, vietnam, watch-john
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DSI John Mitchell says the parcel bomb that was sent to Celtic manager Neil Lennon was “designed to cause real harm”. Follow us on twitter at http://twitter.com/itn Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Top Twitter Videos Discovery Date : 20/04/2011 14:13 Number of articles : 2
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Tagged bomb-sent, cause-real, celtic, discovery-date, invalid, Lennon, parcel, parcel-bomb, says-the-parcel, Twitter, twitter-at-http, twitter-videos, Videos
Rolling Stone releases full-length interview conducted three days before Lennon’s death in its year-end issue. By Gil Kaufman John Lennon Photo: Susan Wood/ Getty Images It was 30 years ago today that former Beatle John Lennon was murdered by a crazed fan outside his home in New York. To mark that tragic event, fans around the world are planning commemorations of the singer’s life and legacy on Wednesday (December 8), remembering his message of peace and love and paying tribute to one of the premier songwriters of the modern era. As part of that celebration of Lennon’s life, Rolling Stone magazine has devoted its final 2010 issue to a nine-hour interview the singer did just three days before his death on December 8, 1980. Select excerpts from the interview writer Jonathan Cott conducted with Lennon ran in a tribute issue put out by the magazine in January 1981, but the full talk sat on a shelf in Cott’s closet for nearly 30 years. “Earlier this year I was cleaning up to find some files in the recesses of my closet when I came across two cassette tapes marked ‘John Lennon, December 5th, 1980,'” Cott told the magazine about Lennon’s final print interview. “It had been 30 years since I listened to them, and when I put them on, this totally alive, uplifting voice started speaking on this magical strip of magnetic tape.” On the tapes, Cott found a Lennon who was still angry at fans and critics who had taken him to task for a five-year musical hiatus, during which the singer devoted his time to raising his son Sean with wife Yoko Ono and decompressing from more than 15 years in the intense media spotlight. “These critics with the illusions they’ve created about artists — it’s like idol worship. They only like people when they’re on their way up,” he said. “I cannot be on the way up again. What they want is dead heroes, like Sid Vicious and James Dean,” he added in an eerily prescient screed. “I’m not interested in being a dead f—ing hero … so forget ’em, forget ’em.” With Bruce Springsteen then the face of rock’s future, Lennon expressed fear that the Boss would fall victim to the same kind of pressures as he did. “And God help Bruce Springsteen when they decide he’s no longer God. … They’ll turn on him, and I hope he survives it.” Seemingly recharged after his hiatus, Lennon also contemplated going back out on the road to play some shows. “We just might do it,” he said. “But there will be no smoke bombs, no lipstick, no flashing lights. It just has to be comfy. But we could have a laugh. We’re born-again rockers, and we’re starting over. … There’s plenty of time, right? Plenty of time.” In audio excerpts from the interview on Rolling Stone ‘s website, Lennon laments, “I cannot live up to other people’s expectations of me, because they’re illusory,” he said of his efforts to include positive messages of hope and togetherness in his music and the pressure to live up to his legacy. “Give peace a chance, not shoot people for peace … I only put out songs and answer questions … I cannot be 18 and a be a punk … I see the world through different eyes. I still believe in love, peace and understanding, as Elvis Costello says.” At the time of his murder, Lennon, then 40, had just released what would be his final album, Double Fantasy. In excerpts from the Rolling Stone tapes, he discusses the musical hiatus he took before that time, going on at length about an electric guitar he had purchased before the Fantasy sessions and how it had never seen any “professional” work until he used it on the album. The ex-Beatle sounds at times reflective and whimsical when discussing the winding road he took back to music, while also hitting on a note of bitterness about the loss of innocence and privacy he’s endured as part of the biggest band in music history. Ono released a statement on Tuesday night in tribute to her late husband, telling fans, “On this tragic anniversary, please join me in remembering John with deep love and respect,” Ono said. “In his short-lived life of 40 years, he has given so much to the world. The world was lucky to have known him. We still learn so much from him today. John, I love you!” Share your thoughts on John Lennon in our comments section below. Related Artists John Lennon

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John Lennon’s Final Interview Published On 30th Anniversary Of His Death
;jif=21880287104703;dcove=r; Exclusive: Rock 'N Roll Treasure Revealed By TARA WALLIS-FINESTONE Updated 8:12 AM PDT, Mon, Sep 13, 2010 The British invasion. The Beatles and the Rolling Stones: Their music, their fashion and their swagger. Rock 'n roll's first super groups took America by storm in the 1960s, changing the cultural landscape of American youth. Now almost 50 years later, like a mirage emerging from a desert oasis, a Southern California woman has answers to questions that rock 'n roll's fans asked for decades. “I was just in awe of all these beautiful people,” said Patti Daley, 64. “They were just our friends, it was amazing.” The answers lie within boxes that Daley has stored for decades underneath her bed, in her home two hours east of Los Angeles. Inside the boxes are a treasure trove of old photo albums full of rare Polaroids of icons in rock, plus John Lennon lyrics, and letters and cards from members of the Beatles. These are items the public has never seen, until now. Perhaps the rarest set of photos she owns are two Polaroids of Paul McCartney playing piano inside Lennon's beach house in 1974. It was their first meeting since the Beatles breakup in 1970. “It's incredible, incredible, a lot of these things are things we've only read about,” said Chris Carter, host of the nationally syndicated radio program “Breakfast with The Beatles.” “I saw a picture of Mickey Dolenz climbing up a hill, a picture of Keith Moon on a shag carpet,” added Carter. “You know these are rock icons and these pictures no one has ever seen. And they are not published in 25 Beatles books. These are really first time viewings for these pictures.” Amazingly, Patti's treasure includes more than just photos. She also has handwritten cards from George Harrison and John Lennon, plus personal notes from now legendary recording sessions, all signed by the musicians who were there. But the potential motherload are several song lyrics from Lennon's “Walls and Bridges” recording sessions, including what is believed to be his hand-written lyrics to his only number one song “Whatever Gets You Through the Night.” “I came to acquire those after sessions,” Daley remembered. “John would come in and put the lyrics on a podium. And he would just leave them there for me to pick up.” Daley also has a copy of a letter John Lennon sent to record executives in 1976. Although it might not be worth a lot of money to collectors, it's significant historically. In the letter, Lennon was angry with Capitol Records about the cover art selected for the Beatles' first greatest hits album “Rock 'N Roll Beatles.” Among other things, an animated Lennon accuses the record executives of trying to ruin the image of the Beatles. Daley was the ultimate rock 'n roll insider. She said the love of her life was a well-known session guitarist named Jesse Ed Davis, a man many consider one of the greatest unsung guitar heroes in rock 'n roll. “He was the most subtle, tasty guitar player when rock and roll was really happening,” said Daley. “Everyone loved his playing and sought after him to play on their records.” Legends like all the Beatles, members of the Rolling Stones, Rod Stewart and the Faces, Bob Dylan, Eric Clapton and more all enlisted Davis' skills on his trademark Fender Telecaster. Daley said, “I still hear him on the radio, I listen to the old stations, it makes my heart smile.” For more than a decade, she toured the world with Jesse and her young son Billy, not only baring witness to, but also documenting, what is now a legendary time in pop culture. A mother armed with a Polaroid camera, Patti took candid, one-of-a-kind pictures of icons in rock. “I just kept my Polaroid camera on me all the time in my purse, and when I'd see a good shot, I'd take them candidly,” said Daley. The photos are incredible: From a young Mick Jagger and Charlie Watts in the early 1970s, to several shots of a care free Ronnie Woods before he joined the Stones, to a series of Beatles photos after the breakup — many taken during John Lennon's “Lost Weekend.” In 1973, Lennon separated from his wife Yoko Ono and began an 18-month relationship with his secretary May Pang. It was a relationship that Yoko reportedly initiated. And the couple spent quite a bit of time at a rented beach house in Santa Monica. Lennon later referred to this time as his “Lost Weekend.” “It's always desirable to have material from somebody who was part of an inner circle, somebody who was really a witness to history,” said Dr. Catherine Williamson, director of Books and Manuscripts at Bonhams & Butterfields auction house in Los Angeles. Williamson said, if authenticated, Daley's treasure could be highly desirable not only to collectors, but also potentially to museums. As for Daley, she is not sure what she will do with her treasure. She admits, though, that it was an incredible time in her life, and now she wants to share it with the world. She said, “I feel very privileged to have met the people I have met and heard the music I have heard.” Editor's Note: NBCLA will have a series of reports this week on this “Rock-N-Roll Treasure.” On Monday, we bring you more never-before-seen photos from John Lennon's Lost Weekend. Plus, what Patti Daley remembers about that day in 1974 when Paul McCartney and John Lennon first got together again to play music. First Published: Sep 12, 2010 5:26 PM PDT added by: EthicalVegan
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Tagged asked-state, Beatles, bennyhollywood, celeb news, House, image, Lennon, life, lost, massive-fish, Music, night, the-game, TMZ
John Lennon's Woman Yoko Ono overcome with emotion as she visits the house where her late Beatle husband grew up Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1308768/John-Lennons-Woman-Yoko-Ono… Imagine: John Lennon's Woman Yoko Ono overcome with emotion as she visits the house where her late Beatle husband grew up By Jody Thompson Last updated at 8:13 PM on 3rd September 2010 John Lennon's widow Yoko Ono made an emotional visit today to the Liverpool house where her late husband grew up as part of his 70th birthday commemorations. The 77-year-old artist, musician and peace activist, looking decades younger in a black trouser suit topped off with a white trilby and her trademark dark glasses, paid homage to the Beatle at the modest Menlove Avenue semi he grew up in. But she could hardly stop the tears flowing as she crossed the threshold where Lennon lived with his Aunt Mimi and Uncle George from 1945-1963. Yoko Ono Emotional visit: Yoko Ono tried hard to stop her tears from falling as she paid a visit to her late husband John Lennon's childhood home in Liverpool today Day tripper: Yoko stands on the doorstep of the modest semi in Menlove Avenue as part of her visit to Liverpool today as part of John Lennon's 70th birthday commemorations Yesterday: Peace activist and Lennon's widow Yoko ponders a while in the place where her late husband once played in the past Earlier, Yoko was greeted by hundreds of fans when she visited John’s old school, Dovedale Junior, to open a new children's and community centre. The Sure Start Children’s Centre, a joint project between Dovedale Junior and Dovedale Infants schools, is a local support base for children from birth and up to school age and their families in the community. She was even shown an old school register to see her late husband's name – John Winston Lennon – in all its glory. John Lennon blue plaque Get back: The blue plaque marks the spot on the pebble dash outside Hello, Goodbye: Yoko greets the crowds outside Lennon's old school, Dovedale, as part of her whistle-stop trip to Liverpool Baby, It's You: Yoko peruses a register at her late Beatle husband's old school Yoko's Merseyside trip is just the start of a host of activity to celebrate the anniversary of the influential musician's birth on 9 October. Lennon was shot dead by crazed fan Mark Chapman on 8 December 1980, aged just 40. As part of the commemorations, Yoko has also announced she will be holding several events in Iceland on the day of his birthday to 'promote peace throughout the world'. These include illumination of the Imagine Peace Tower, built on the island of Vi
Up is down! Right is wrong! You say goodbye, I say hello. Everything’s different now in Idol Isle, and the Top 9 rankings are almost reversed thanks this week’s performances from the Lennon/McCartney songbook. Everything you thought you knew about Crystal Bowersox’s lock on #1 — or Tim Urban’s lock on #Infinity — has been destroyed. Your onetime love of Ellen DeGeneres is but an ember flickering in Kara DioGuardi’s snowman stare. It’s the kind of chaos that makes us scream “Get back to where you once belonged!” right at the Benami-less TV. After the jump, this week’s topsy-turvy rankings.

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American Idol Recap: Who Drove Us to Beatlemania?
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Tagged aaron-kelly, crystal bowersox, different-now, films, Lennon, onetime, onetime-love, recaps, tim urban, tvline, week