Tag Archives: project

T.I. Aiming To Complete Trouble Man By Year’s End

‘Being the perfectionist that I am, I’m still tweaking and fine-tuning all parts of this project,’ Tip says of his next LP. By Nadeska Alexis, with reporting by James Lacsina T.I. Photo: MTV News

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T.I. Aiming To Complete Trouble Man By Year’s End

Wookiee Here! Fanboys Director Kyle Newman Developing Chewie: Star Wars As Seen Through the Eyes of Peter Mayhew

Finally, a Wookiee-centric Star Wars vehicle that could get some actual laughs. Anyone who’s actually sat through The Star Wars Holiday Special should welcome a report by The Hollywood Reporter’s Heat Vision blog that Fanboys director Kyle Newman is developing Chewie , a spec script by Evan Susser and Van Robichaux that is reportedly a tongue-in-cheek look at the making of Star Wars through the eyes of Peter Mayhew, the seven-foot-three-inch hospital worker who donned a fur suit and became one of the most memorable sci-fi/fantasy sidekicks of all time. In December, Deadline reported  that Chewie was near the top of film executive Franklin Leonard’s 2011 Black List of hot unproduced screenplays.  The script follows Mayhew as he tries to balance a career as a hospital worker while chasing his Hollywood dreams. Mayhew recently tweeted that he’s working with Newman on Chewie and Heat Vision reports that the Fanboys filmmaker acquired the gentle giant’s life rights to advance the project. Newman’s involvement bodes well for the project given that Star Wars creator George Lucas put his stamp of approval on Fanboys , which enabled the director to use the official sound effects. Let’s hope Lucas gives Chewie the thumbs up, too, since, a movie about Chewbacca that would not be permitted to use his official yowl — an amalgamation of bear growls “with a dash of walrus, dog, and lion thrown in,” according to Star Wars sound designer Ben Burtt — would be sad indeed. A scene or two involving Mayhew’s involvement in the much-ridiculed Star Wars Holiday Special , which centered around the Wookiee Christmas equivalent, Life Day, would be an added bonus, but, if Lucas does become involved, we won’t be surprised if the subject is avoided. Lucas once deemed the 1978 CBS Television special a “travesty. [ Heat Vision ] Follow Frank DiGiacomo on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.

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Wookiee Here! Fanboys Director Kyle Newman Developing Chewie: Star Wars As Seen Through the Eyes of Peter Mayhew

A “Lil Positivity”: Beyonce And The United Nations Come Together For A Global Campaign Initiative

Beyonce is going to work with The United Nations on a global scale and the new campaign is encouraging people all over the world to get involved : The international pop star and songwriter Diane Warren will donate a video of “I Was Here” that will be filmed in the UN General Assembly Hall in New York in front of a live audience. The video will premiere Aug. 19 on World Humanitarian Day and the UN hopes it will help the campaign reach 1 billion people. The campaign website launched today.  Bey says she’s excited to work on the project and that “this is our time to leave our mark on the world.” Aw how nice. Isn’t that special? Source

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A “Lil Positivity”: Beyonce And The United Nations Come Together For A Global Campaign Initiative

There’s No Place Like Home: Adult Kids Living At Home On The Rise….And You’ll Never Guess Which Race Is Worse…

Get yo ish….and get out! Study Shows That Adult Children Living At Home Are On The Rise All you anti-post racial society folks might want to stop reading here. Cause this study doesn’t point the finger at any specific race….it says adult children in America are pretty much equal opportunity freeloaders . Whether in their 20s or 30s, black or white, in the West or Northeast, adult kids find there’s no place like home when their finances are in a tailspin or their relationships in shambles. The number of young adults ages 20 to 34 who lived with their parents jumped from 17% in 1980 to 24% in 2007-09 — the Great Recession— according to a detailed analysis out today. The rise was sharpest among those under 25 — a new high of 43% vs. 32% in 1980 — but it increased largely across the board. Even among 30- to 34-year-olds, nearly one in 10 lived with parents. “This ‘Great Recession’ has had tremendous effects that previous smaller recessions did not,” says Zhenchao Qian, a sociology professor at Ohio State University and the author of the report for the US2010 Project, which studies trends in American society. “The surprise mostly is that it’s increasing for every group.” The only segment not affected: young adults with graduate degrees. The share living with parents has stayed at 8% since 1980. Do you agree with this study? Should parents put their foot down and kick their adult children to the curb more often? Source Image via Shutterstock

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There’s No Place Like Home: Adult Kids Living At Home On The Rise….And You’ll Never Guess Which Race Is Worse…

Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry (And the World’s Most Important Artist) Under the Lens

Chinese artist Ai Weiwei lead ArtReview magazine’s list of the 100 most powerful artists in the world last October. The Beijing-based artist, photographer, documentarian, architect, activist, dissident, avid-Tweeter and charismatic father made a splash on the international scene when he helped Swiss architectural firm Herzog & de Meuron design Beijing’s National Stadium – more commonly known as the Bird’s Nest due to its design – which served as both corner stone and bragging material for the Beijing Olympics by the government. While immensely proud of the project, Mr. Ai denounced the regime and famously criticized officials for its treatment of dissenters and its human rights record in the lead-up to the event. Freelance journalist Alison Klayman met the artist through her roommate in 2008 by chance as he prepped an exhibition of photos he took while living in New York in the ’80s and early ’90s. Initially commissioned to do a short video on the fly, Klayman, who lived in China from 2006 – 2010 producing shows for PBS Frontline , National Public Radio and A.P. took on a larger doc about Ai Weiwei. In the film, Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry which will be released this weekend via IFC Films, she captured him being assaulted by police, confronting police, promoting his view of human rights and traveling to acclaim overseas. But it’s his political activism that has brought him both fame and danger at home. Authorities have “minders” in unmarked cars outside his home and studio in the Chinese capital as well as cameras pointed at his compound, which is filled with his beloved cats where he lives with his wife. The film also delves into his personal life and reveals the backstory about his very young son and his passion for Twitter and the internet. The latter were surprises for Klayman as she edited the film, which debuted earlier this year at the Sundance Film Festival – an event Ai Weiwei did not attend, likely due to restrictions he now lives under following an 81 day detention by authorities. ML spoke with Klayman last week about her film and spending time in the glare of Ai Weiwei’s spotlight. How did it work out that you came into contact with Ai Weiwei in Beijing and get him to work with you on this documentary? Yeah. The the answer to that pretty much answers like a whole host of questions like, ‘how did you hear of him and how did you get a chance and the access and all that stuff.’ I was already living in China.  I went there after school and I was there for two years already.  My roommate was curating a show for him at a gallery… So you speak Mandarin? By 2008, I did. In 2006 I went with a few sentences that I could use upon arrival.  I worked really hard.  I had a lot of jobs, which I saw all as vehicles for adventure and also on the job language-learning.   By 2008 I was waiting to get a press credential which was coming through and my roommate was working on an exhibition of Ai Weiwei’s for a local gallery.  It was his New York photographs – all the black and white. There were 10,000 of them and I would look through them at the kitchen table because she’d bring her work home and she’d tell me about it.  So that’s really how I even first heard of him. I didn’t know about him before I went to China or anything like that.  And she asked me if I wanted to do a video for the exhibition – just do one of those things that plays in the lobby on loop.  I was really excited to try my hand.  I wanted to do more video film documentary, and so the first time I met Ai Weiwei it was just like, “Here’s Alison.  She’s here to do a video for the show.” So I came with the gallery team and they introduced me. There was never a transition from like being a random person to being the person who films him.  It was just ‘this is Alison, she’s here to film you’ and, you know, it really – even in those first few weeks—his personality totally won me over and made me curious.  I wanted to know about him.  I felt like he could absolutely carry a longer piece than this kind of 20-minute thing.  I just felt like to do a character portrait of him would really not only be entertaining but also it would illuminate something about a side of contemporary China that I felt like I was just encountering for the first time through him.   Our conversations were already [developing] about his blog and censorship and the upcoming earthquake campaign.  All stuff that just wasn’t going to fit in the video about New York photographs.  So I was definitely feeling that at least I needed to follow up with this guy and he liked the video that I did for the exhibition.  So that was also a good way to keep moving forward. So when you decided to continue going forward, were there any boundaries that you had set as far as what areas of his life you could explore, because you’re following him in his home, not just when he’s out traveling and being the public persona of Ai Weiwei. Totally true.  I mean, in terms of my working style, I feel like I push, but I’m not pushy in the sense that he would sometimes chastise me. He’d be like, “Why do you always ask?  You’re always so polite.  Just do it.”  But filming in his home is a really good point. At one point, I [spoke to] his wife about the fact I was coming around a lot and asked her, “I recognize that this is your home and there really aren’t any separations here so please tell me if you ever like – if I’m doing something you don’t like, or if you ever want me to turn off the camera.”  And she was really sweet.  She was like, “Oh, it’s totally fine.  You can film me doing anything, but I don’t want to do it a sit down interview.  That really freaks me out.”  She has a very different personality than him in terms of media savvy and kind of playing with it.   So actually much, much later I asked her for an interview, but on the whole I just felt like with him you certainly should never be embarrassed to ask.  And through asking there were usually no boundaries, except his kind of private life in terms of his son.  When he was first born, he said, “Oh, you should meet him.  He’s the smartest baby in the world.”  He was already the proudest dad ever.  He said, “You know, so you want to come meet him?”  I said, “Yeah, can I bring my camera?”  And then he’s like, “Come on, no.  That’s a baby.”  And really it wasn’t a complicated situation. I found some boundaries, so I guess he had to get a little older before he kind of felt comfortable [with shooting him].” And it was interesting.  I mean, we’ll get more into his activism side in a moment, but it was interesting though that the backstory behind his son actually came out while you were filming Ai Weiwei doing separate interviews with various press. There were two. The first one was in Beijing with the New Yorker correspondent, and then the second one was the BBC guy at the Tate Modern. For me to sit down and ask him about something that he knew I already knew the answer to was not really going to work.  I feel like he does enough interviews a day that he doesn’t need to talk if he doesn’t want to talk.  So I felt like [filming him doing a separate interview about his son] was probably going to be the only way for him to explain it and I think it’s really instructive to see how he deals with different people as well. Ai Weiwei has been called “the most powerful artist in the world today,” and certainly if not the most famous living artist, then definitely in the very top tier.  After your time with him, what is your take on his approach to art, political activism and how he connects the two? Well, if there’s a question whether they are related, I would say yes. For me, the artist side is trying to be as relevant and engaged and fostering more conversations.  To me, that’s definitely the most interesting.  I think how you feel about his artwork and museum [exhibitions] is up to people’s taste.  I personally really like so many of his works because I think that they actually don’t say something specific. I think they are kind of really hard to read and complicated and they leave a lot of room for you to say what the meaning possibly is. When he gives an interview or posts a Tweet, he’s pretty direct about his criticisms and what he says he thinks.  So it’s all about his artistic practice and it’s kind of in its entirety. And he does have all these different ways of speaking – whether it’s in a populous way or in a fine art way.   I think from the beginning I was definitely told that he was a very famous artist, and not being from the art world, I just had to take people’s word for that.  When I went to his show in Munich I think that was really the first time when I really appreciated that this guy is really, really famous.  He has a very big audience and following in Germany, but I mostly saw him in the context of Beijing.  So that was my first exposure to how the art world treats him. Then there’s also the news world.  He was one of the few prominent people who would actually tell you what they thought on the record when you needed a more critical voice.  In a way, I felt like I was doing something about someone who was kind of over exposed but still room to do something that had more quality and substance. I was so focused on that, that I didn’t know what the movie was like, but I just I needed to be filming as much as possible in all these different parts of his life and stay really open and not draw conclusions on a lot of questions until I was in post-production.   For example, I heard him for years talking about the internet, which was always the subject he would turn to in interviews.  I feel sometimes I was like rolling my eyes in my head maybe a little bit.  I didn’t think I was making a movie about the power of the internet because I hadn’t really examined it that much.  When I went back and thought about the meaning of his life’s work and progress, and also what’s going on with the realities of contemporary China, and the world – and all this pre-dated the Arab Spring and WikiLeaks and all this stuff –  suddenly I was like, “No, this is totally on point.”  I don’t think I got it at first. It was interesting to learn he had lived in New York for ten years. And he had already at least participated in some protests against the regime in China while living here – of course with comparatively much less fanfare than his protests and criticisms since returning to China. But I nevertheless found it curious that he was still asked and participated in the design of the Bird’s Nest stadium for the Beijing Olympics. The thing with the Olympics is it always gets short-handed that he was asked but that wasn’t actually how it happened.  I tried as much as I could to make this clear in the film, because the film doesn’t say he was asked but maybe it’s not fully clear enough how it happened.  The Swiss architectural firm Herzong & de Meuron wanted to do more projects in China and they were introduced to Weiwei by a former Swiss ambassador and a really big collector.  

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Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry (And the World’s Most Important Artist) Under the Lens

Heidi dishes about the runway! — Hollywood.TV

http://www.youtube.com/v/IxsMf0uW3Ro?version=3&f=user_uploads&app=youtube_gdata

Hollywood.TV is your source for all the latest celebrity news, gossip and videos of your favorite stars! bit.ly – Click to Subscribe! Facebook.com – Become a Fan! Twitter.com – Follow Us! Hollywood.TV caught Heidi Klum while she appeared on Good Morning America in New York, looking stunning as usual. After the interview, she made her way over to sign autographs for fans, where she talks about the upcoming season of Project Runway and more! Hollywood.TV is the global leader in capturing celebrity breaking news as it happens. We cover all the major Hollywood events including The Golden Globes, The Oscars, The Screen Actors Guild Awards, The Grammy’s, The Emmy’s and the American Music Awards, as well as all the red carpet movie premiers in Los Angeles and New York. HTV is on the streets 24/7, at all the industry events and invited by the stars to cover their every move in Hollywood, New York and Miami. Hollywood.TV is currently the third most viewed reporter channel on www.youtube.com YouTube with almost 400 million views, and our footage is seen worldwide! Tune in daily for all the latest Hollywood news on www.hollywood.tv and http like us on Facebook!

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Heidi dishes about the runway! — Hollywood.TV

Jennifer Tilly loves her fans! – Hollywood.TV

http://www.youtube.com/v/KWUgocQCBLY?version=3&f=user_uploads&app=youtube_gdata

Hollywood.TV is your source for all the latest celebrity news, gossip and videos of your favorite stars! bit.ly – Click to Subscribe! Facebook.com – Become a Fan! Twitter.com – Follow Us! Hollywood.TV caught Jennifer Tilly arriving at ‘Good Day New York’ today, and she took a lot of time to sign autographs for fans and answer our questions. She talks about David Cassidy, and her experience as a pro poker player. And she thinks all the autographs might give her carpel tunnel! Hollywood.TV is one of the top celebrity news providers in the world. Since 2008, Hollywood.TV has been bringing all the latest celebrity news, interviews, gossip, and candid videos to viewers all over the world. HTV is on the job 24/7, and at all the best festivals from Sundance to Coachella, as well as on the streets every day to cover the hottest celebs in Hollywood, New York, and Miami. Hollywood.TV is currently the third most viewed reporter channel on www.youtube.com YouTube with almost 400 million views, and our footage is seen worldwide! Tune in daily for all the latest Hollywood news on www.hollywood.tv and http like us on Facebook!

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Jennifer Tilly loves her fans! – Hollywood.TV

Georgina Wilson in Esquire Philippines July 2012 of the Day

Georgina Wilson is a totally irrelevant person because she is a celebrity in the Philippines…..and she was in Esquire Philippines, a totally irrelevant magazine, unless you’re a cleaning lady who happens to speak english…a limited market to be into… But I thought she was hot, so I looked her up, and what I found about her made me laugh: Wilson attended High School in Assumption College Makati, the lowest mark she received was a 91. During her sophomore year, with soaring grades of 95 or 96 in Math, she was transferred to the Math Enrichment Program Who the fuck cares about someone’s high school marks in promoting themselves as slutty models….I guess Filipinos do….

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Georgina Wilson in Esquire Philippines July 2012 of the Day

Sarah Hyland in a One Piece Bathing Suit of the Day

Sarah Hyland always looks 12 even though she’s 22. I’m thinking she got up on that Disney hormone therapy they feed young starlets so that they stay young, Project Peter Pan….which is in the office next to Project make the young girl who really wants to live out her dream suck our executive dicks but only after she contractually signs off on it so that we can’t be arrested for being sex offenders….they have it all figured out…those billion dollar corporations celebrating 100 years in the PEDO game… Either way Sarah Hyland is in her one-piece and it is alright….cuz she is 22 playing out a 12 year old body…

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Sarah Hyland in a One Piece Bathing Suit of the Day

Jeremy Renner Possible Replacement for Christian Bale in Pic; Universal Sails Across $1B Overseas: Biz Break

Also in Tuesday afternoon’s round-up of news briefs, the AMPAS, the organization behind the annual Oscar ceremony adds new members to its Board of Governors and re-elects others including Tom Hanks. New York’s Museum of Modern Art long-time senior film curator sets retirement; Entertainment One takes rights to Daniel Radcliffe rom-com; PJ Byrne joins Scorsese pic and a lead role for a Sundance breakout actor. Academy Adds Six to Board of Governors The Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) have elected six first-time governors to its board. New members include Dante Spinotti, representing the Cinematographers branch; Lisa Cholodenko, Directors branch; Dick Cook, Executives; John Knoll, Visual Effects; Scott Millan, Sound and Bill Condon, Writers. Reelected governors are Tom Hanks, Actors; Jim Bissell, Designers; Rob Epstein, Documentary; Mark Goldblatt, Film Editors; Leonard Engelman, Makeup and Hairstylists; Rob Friedman, Public Relations and Bill Kroyer; Short Films & Feature Animation. Fourteen of the Academy’s 15 branches are represented by three governors, who may serve up to three consecutive three-year terms. MoMA Senior Film Curator Set to Retire Laurence Kardish, Senior Curator in the Department of Film at The Museum of Modern Art, will retire on October 15, after a 44-year career at MoMA. Mr. Kardish joined the Museum as Curatorial Assistant in the Department of Film in 1968, and was promoted to Assistant Curator in 1971, Associate Curator in 1977, Curator in 1984, and Senior Curator in 1999. During his career at MoMA, he organized hundreds of film exhibitions and special screenings, established a number of important annual film series, and was responsible for coordinating more than 60 film exhibitions each year in the Museum’s Roy and Niuta Titus Theaters. Around the ‘net… Jeremy Renner to Possibly Replace Christian Bale in David O. Russell Pic The Bourne Legacy star is in negotiations to replace Bale in the untitled Sony Pictures drama formerly known as American Bullshit . The story revolves around a notorious financial con artist and his mistress & partner in crime who were forced to work with an ambitious FBI agent to nab on other con artists, mobsters and politicians, Variety reports . eOne Films Takes Daniel Radcliffe and Zoe Kazan’s The F Word Entertainment One picked up worldwide rights to the romantic comedy, starring Radcliffe and Kazan. The film is set to shoot this summer, THR reports . Universal Crosses $1B at the Overseas Box Office Universal Pictures International said will will hit the $1 billion milestone abroad today, making it the fastest it’s hit the mark since 2008. Snow White and the Huntsman ($220M), Battleship ($238M) and American Reunion ($177.4M) were among the big draws, Deadline reports . P.J. Byrne Joins The Wolf of Wall Street Byrne joins the Martin Scorsese-directed feature playing “Wigwam” Cohen, one of the gaggle of brokers who hang with the main Wolf, Jordan Belfort, played by Leonardo DiCaprio, Deadline reports . Sundance Breakout Gina Rodriguez Takes Sleeping With Fishes Lead Rodriguez will play the lead in the indie by writer-director Nicole Gomez Fisher. She wil play a young woman who returns to her dysfunctional cross-cultural family after the death of her unfaithful husband. But her sister comes to her aid and a possible romance looms, THR reports .

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Jeremy Renner Possible Replacement for Christian Bale in Pic; Universal Sails Across $1B Overseas: Biz Break