My name is Brittany and I am a HUGE Justin Bieber fan. I found out Justin was coming into town for promo of Believe. I was so determined to meet him before he left. Since I couldn’t go to the famous Apollo Theatre in NYC for his free show, I found out he was doing David Letterman. I have been waiting about 2 years to meet Justin. I woke up at about 6:00 am to get ready for the city. When I got there I found out where I had to stand to see Justin come in for the taping. It was around 12:15 and a black van pulls up. Justin came out but didn’t come across the street to us at first. I was so upset, I thought he wouldnt stop when he came back out. About 20-30 minutes after, we saw all the crew coming out and then Justin followed. He meets some fans across the street infront of the stage door and then he came over to us. It was amazing just to be able to look at him, have him stand next to us and take a picture with me. I really love Justin a lot and it meant so much he came and took a people with me. He is a huge inspiration to me and will be forever. -@brittcuratolo See the article here: My name is Brittany and I am a HUGE Justin Bieber fan. I found…
My name is Camilla, I’m 15 and I live in Turin, Italy. Justin came in Milan, Italy to promote Believe on 2nd June 2012. Some of my friends won the contest to see him at the Believe Party at the Alcatraz Disco or at the Verona Arena, but I didn’t win anything unfortunately. I decided to go to Milan to try to meet him anyways. The morning of 2nd June, we went to the Alcatraz and some parents of our friend gave us the bracelet to enter at the Believe Party. Then we went to the Linate Airport and we didn’t see Justin but we saw ALL of Justin’s crew such as Ryan Good, Dan Kanter, Scrappy, Kenny, Alfredo and more. I gave a letter for Justin to Scrappy and we followed their cars until we found Justin’s hotel. We spoke a little with Scrappy (who pulled out of his pocket the letter I gave him and said ”I’ve still got it”) and Dan Kanter. There we saw Marisol (she works for Kiss Kiss Radio) and she had to interview Justin. She saw us and after the interview said, “Alessandra, Ilaria and Gaia come here.” She told my friends that they needed 3 girls to ask 3 questions to Justin on the stage at the Believe Party and obviously they said, “OF COURSE.” When we arrived to the party, Marisol accompanied us in the backstage area and a man told us to be quiet and not to cry or he would kick us out. When Justin arrived and started singing, I was completely absorbed. I couldn’t believe that minutes later I would meet the only person that I really cared about. When he finished singing a man told us again to keep calm and don’t freak out. I can’t remember much but I remember Marisol said, “Okay Justin we have the girls here” and we went on the stage. Justin was two steps from me and I was enchanted while I saw his smile when he hugged Gaia. After Ilaria hugged him, I threw my arms around his neck and I felt nothing, only joy. I was about to let him go but I cuddled him stronger and I heard him saying, “Ooooh” with his sweet voice. He was so friendly and sweet with us. We asked him to take a picture but there wasn’t much time so we took a group picture with him. You don’t know how important that guy is to me. He did a lot for us, he has created a big fantastic Belieber family. I’ll never stop thanking my friend Gaia, without her I probably wouldn’t of met Justin. Also to Arianna because she cried with me when we didn’t won anything. Alessandra, Francesca and Ilaria for supporting me and made the 2nd June the best day ever. But more than anything I want to thank Justin for ALL he did for me. He put his soul in all he does for his fans, he’s amazing and I hope all of you to meet him one day. You just have to BELIEVE. – @CamiWingsBiebe Read more here: My name is Camilla, I’m 15 and I live in Turin, Italy….
Magic Mike ’s Cody Horn probably could have taken a more direct line to acting – her father is former Warner Bros. president Alan Horn , the veteran studio exec who recently took the helm at Disney – but life took her on a more circuitous path. A passion for movies early on (“I read my first script when I was 9”) led to internships and script reading, and she also earned a degree in philosophy at NYU and modeled, but it wasn’t until she met Joel Schumacher that she was cast in her first film, at 22. Now, coming off a turn opposite Channing Tatum as the pragmatic Brooke in Steven Soderbergh’s Magic Mike , Horn has a host of intriguing roles ahead of her – and she’s determined to avoid being the traditional leading lady. Horn rang Movieline to discuss the path that brought her to being cast in Magic Mike sans audition, how she and Tatum improvised scenes – and even worked her real life tattoos into her character – and what it was like growing up surrounded by the film business, sharing a passion for film with her film exec father (and giving him notes on a little movie called Harry Potter ). It must have been a fun experience, being one of the only women among this testosterone-packed cast… I mean, the guys really had this fun camaraderie and they included me in it, and I felt very lucky and happy to be a part of it. They’re all like brothers in many senses. Your character and Channing’s character are quite opposite in many ways – he’s gregarious and she’s a bit reserved. How much of Brooke’s restrained nature was on the page, and how much did you bring to it? I think a lot of it was on the page. I was there to play that role, and that’s what I was there to facilitate. I think it helps ground a movie and brings perspective to the movie, and I also think it adds an element of realness – they all kind of love what they do, but not everybody will respond to that industry that way. So I was really glad to be able to bring that perspective in. When you first met with Steven to discuss the role, it wasn’t so much an audition as it was a conversation. My first meeting with Steven, I had already booked the role. I had met with the casting director and they weren’t going to see me because they thought I was too young, but then they did see me and my agent fought for it. I went in, and we taped the interview, and then I booked it off that interview. That seems like an unusual way to go about casting – almost more personality matching than auditioning. One thing Steven said was one of his favorite things about the film was that he never caught anyone acting. It’s all very natural. I think what he wanted to find was people who were close to what he wanted, and then there we were. He makes a lot of use out of an observational style, letting scenes unfold – how much did you find yourself spitballing on set as the cameras rolled? A lot. There was a lot of improv and a lot of being natural. Also, Channing and I have a similar approach to acting, which is to just have a general understanding of the story we’re supposed to be telling, and then how the scene that we’re doing fits into that story, and we kind of just play from there. That’s what we did a lot of. There’s a scene on the sandbar where Mike breaks through to Brooke for the first time, and she lets down her guard a bit. How did you go about finding that scene? It’s ironic, because the scene as it was written by Reid [Carolin] was about five and a half pages long. Then we get there and Steven says, “It’s too long, it’s too wordy – let’s try something out.” So he and Channing and I worked for about ten minutes on the scene, and then Steven said, “Okay, I’m going to go set up the shot.” We had about twenty minutes to rewrite this whole scene. Channing and Reid and I wade out into the water about knee deep and we just started saying things. We knew what we had to hit, we knew that we had to get them to connect, we knew that we had to get Mike to say he would take care of The Kid, we knew that we had to get to The Kid’s backstory a little bit and we knew that we had to get that Brooke had gone to see him dance. Other than that it was completely just, like, whatever. All of a sudden Steven says, “I’m ready,” and Channing and I are like, “Uh….” So we just said, okay, I got you – let’s just go for it. It was great, and then Steven said he didn’t like what he did, so we did it again and kept going. As you can see, it’s one take, so to not know exactly what you’re saying the whole time was kind of scary, but we just stuck with it. And it was really fun – it’s actually a really fun way to work. There’s a moment in that scene that focuses on Brooke’s tattoo – your character acknowledges but shies away from explaining her tattoos, which suggest that Brooke had a much more carefree and hedonistic youth herself, years ago, that she’s since matured out of. Were those your actual tattoos? For the character, what Steven and I had talked about was that part of the reason Brooke is so protective and hesitant is because she’s been there. She’s never stripped, but she had those years after college, but then she turned her life around. She knows that he’s not necessarily the kind of person that could make it out of it. And yes, those were my tattoos. [Laughs] Are you shy about your tattoos, or was that just a convenient way to write an existing element into your character’s backstory? No! I did get them early, like the one that’s lower on my front I got when I was 18. But the one on my side… I’ve kind of gotten one every year between 18 and 22, and I don’t regret them. There’s some placing I regret, like the one in the front, just for kids someday. But I think my body at that point in my life was like a sketch pad, and if I sketched something – even if I don’t necessarily sketch the same thing now – I sketched it then and it reminds me of that part of my life. I did them all in happy moments. I’m curious about your background and what made you want to get into acting in the first place, especially given your father’s profession – he’s not only in the industry, he kind of runs entire studios. How did that shape your attitudes toward even jumping into the business to begin with? Well, I read my first screenplay when I was 9, so I fell in love with story at that time. I knew I wanted to produce, I knew I wanted to be involved, and so I started interning and doing different things. I was a reader, and then I came about acting pretty organically. I got cast as a model because of a lot of volunteer work I was doing as a kid – the Ralph Lauren Polo Jeans Give Campaign – and I kept booking it. I thought, this was interesting. I wanted to be a professional soccer player, so I thought maybe I’d start producing films at 35. The only side of the film industry I knew was behind the camera. I started modeling and after a while the photographer Bruce Weber introduced me to Joel Schumacher, who cast me in my first film, and I just fell in love. Simple as anything. And I was very shy as a kid; if you sang me “Happy Birthday,” I would cry. Quite shy. So the idea of being an actor, much less a model, was just out of this world. There was just no way. But then it just sort of happened, and then it kept going. I’ve kind of said “Yes” to the moment my whole life, whenever something is happening. If I like it, I like it. If I don’t like it, I don’t like it. And being true to oneself and being true to that path is how I’ve gotten here. How did your dad influence your choices? I’m lucky to have my dad in my life. He’s very brilliant, I think he’s really a smart man, and he’s a kind guy. [The way] he approaches the movie industry – although he comes from a business background, he just loves movies. And that’s the way I feel as well. I just love film. That’s why it’s fun for me, and why I’m having such a good time. If you don’t love what you do, you’re not going to be successful at it. How old were you when the Harry Potter films happened under your dad’s watch? You must have been right around the right target age… I was – I’m a little bit older than the [actors] but I was of age when the actual books were coming out. I was 11 when the characters were 11. But the movies came out a couple of years later. Did you ever find yourself giving him feedback with those sorts of things? I feel like having kids around the age of these heroes must have helped inform him in some way. My dad and I always had a really special bond, and we have a very similar brain and talk well with each other. I started giving him notes; he started asking me age-appropriate questions on age-appropriate projects. I think I was just a little focus group for him! I was very lucky that he valued my opinion, but at the end of the day the decisions were, of course, his. Growing up in L.A. is a unique experience for a kid in itself, let alone in such proximity with show business. How do you think that affected you, or taught you what you might expect as an adult entering the entertainment industry? I think that what growing up here has taught me is that people are just people. So while there are so many times that I walk into a room just overcome with respect and admiration for an artist, or a director, or a producer, or a studio executive, or anyone, what growing up here has taught me is there’s no need to fear anyone. There’ s no need to walk in with anyone up on a pedestal , because people are just people – even the ones you admire. Of course, there are times when you walk in and you can’t help it… for me, it’s Harrison Ford because I grew up a massive Star Wars freak. So meeting someone like him, I was like, “Oh my God…” And then you realize, he’s just a guy who played a character. He’s just a guy. That’s a surreal realization to come to. That also is rare, though – it’s rare that you meet your heroes, even working in this industry. But what that’s taught me on a day to day basis is that since I grew up having conversations with my dad like, “Who would you cast in this role?” I’d like to think I have a little better understanding of why sometimes you don’t get it. Sometimes you’re just not right, sometimes there’s someone who just fits better, sometimes it’s about the person that you’re working opposite, and sometimes it’s just not going to happen. There’s no one that’s clearly the best. It’s very subjective, and sometimes it’s out of your control – you could be amazing, but you could be too tall, or too fair-skinned, or too blonde, anything. That brings me to your choice of upcoming projects; a lot of up-and-coming actresses might fall prey to typecasting, or struggle to find really challenging and varied roles when they’re starting out. But your next few projects are very interesting and, it seems, much different from what you’ve played in Magic Mike and before. For example, you play a cop in End of Watch . Yeah – for End of Watch , I initially auditioned for the role of Jake Gyllenhaal’s wife [played eventually by Anna Kendrick]. I got up to audition in front of the director and I walked out of the room knowing I didn’t get it. I could just feel it wasn’t mine. But I knew I’d done a really good job. So when he called a couple days later and said, “Would you like to play a cop?” I said “Hell yeah!” That sounded way more interesting anyway! Also, I just personally am quite old-school; I do love the strong roles and I do love the female roles that are out there, but I almost wish I was in the ‘50s or ‘40s where actors weren’t necessarily required to do all these crazy love scenes. As someone who believes in “The One,” I find it hard to share your body like that – even though it’s not you, it’s a character. But I find it intellectually hard to deal with, hard to reconcile, and that’s why I’m less interested in playing a romantic lead. I would rather not. I would rather play the romantic lead’s best friend, like, “Dude, your life’s crazy.” That’s interesting, because acting is already such a disassociative profession. It seems like some actors can have a lot of trouble balancing that part of it. I mean, I do believe that when you walk on the stage, or onto the screen, that’s your character – not you. So it’s an interesting challenge, an interesting line to walk. How much does the comedy world appeal to you, and what was it like being caught between Will Ferrell and Rainn Wilson on the set of The Office ? You know, it’s funny – I started booking Rescue Me and The Office and my agents were sending me out to meet with Judd Apatow. I thought, “What is this? I have a degree in philosophy – I want to be making Inception ! I want to be making Waking Life , and Before Sunrise !” Just talking. But after navigating heavier waters, I realized that the lighter stuff is fun. It’s fun to go to work and do that, and it’s a good day – it’s a funny, fun day when you’re laughing. But it was really fun, and I had a great time – and of course, they are geniuses, and they’re at the top of their field. Magic Mike is in theaters now; look for End of Watch on September 28. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
Also in Tuesday afternoon’s round up of news briefs, Susan Sarandon will lend her voice to an R-rated stop-motion comedy; Marvel moves the dates of its untitled 2014 super-hero juggernaut and Hollywood production stays flat. Sharon Stone Joins Mother’s Day She joins Andie MacDowell and her real-life daughter who joined recently . Fittingly, the film is about the relationship between 12 mothers and their daughters, Deadline reports . Susan Sarandon Joins Hell & Back Sarandon will voice the role of Barb the Angel in the R-rated stop-motion comedy. The pic stars Nick Swardson and TJ Miller as friends who go down to rescue their pal who was accidentally dragged to hell, Deadline reports . The Complete Comic-Con Party Grid Parties, exhibitions, band performances, major geek-out sessions. They’re allegedly all here with times and locations nicely organized into a grid. Go get ’em. The Tracking Board has the info . Marvel Moves Untitled 2014 Superhero Pic from May to August Details about the project will be unveiled at the upcoming Comic-Con in San Diego. It is believed to The Guardians of the Galaxy , THR reports . Hollywood Production Flat with TV Decline A 9.1% increase in features and a 28% gain in commercial activity augmented a 15.4% drop in TV production in Los Angeles in the second quarter. Advocacy group FilmL.A. blamed state government for the decline in TV production, Variety reports .
I’ve never heard of the reality show The Catalina but here are the female cast all wearing bikinis. My personal favorite is Morgan More (the redhead) but seeing that they all have big boobs, the first one to motorboat me would get my vote. Ladies, contact my assistant.
I told you yesterday that Blake Lively was absolutely gorgeous, I wasn’t kidding. Here she is again looking even better than the last time. What the hell? How am I supposed to be productive at work if every day she comes out with better and better pictures? It’s just not fair. She keeps dropping more and more cleavage, I love it. At this rate she’ll be topless by the weekend. Sooner or later she’s going to have to do a topless scene, if she wants to be taken seriously as an actress, she’s got to go topless. That’s not me talking, that’s just the way it is. I can’t wait.
I’m glad that Blake Lively has a new movie coming out, not because I think it’s going to be a good movie, I know better than that, but because she’s contractually obligated to make all kinds of appearances to promote it and that means all kinds of Blake Lively hotness. Here she is looking as hot as ever as she smiles for me outside the Letterman studios last night. She’s so hot, I would marry this chick without ever saying one word to her if she’d have me. No pre-nuo either. Call me.
Last night was the premiere of Katy Perry’s annoying movie about herself, why we need a behind the scenes Katy Perry movie is beyond me, but Selena Gomez was invited to the party so…. I don’t really have anything else to say on the subject to be honest, I just think that Selena is a cutie and wanted to get some shots of her up on the site for my own personal pleasure. If there were some girl-on-girl scenes in this crap I might be into it. Is there a director’s cut?
Nora Ephron, the acclaimed screenwriter behind such iconic romantic comedies as Sleepless in Seattle and When Harry Met Sally , has passed away. She was 71. The three-time Academy Award nominee reportedly had been suffering from leukemia, although she kept her illness a secret from the public until today’s tragic news. Ephron was once married to famous Watergate reporter Carl Bernstein. She now is survived by her third husband, Goodfellas scribe Nicholas Pileggi, and two sons she shared with Bernstein.