Unstoppable album will notch 17th non-consecutive week on top of the Billboard chart, tying Billy Ray Cyrus’ 1992 release. By Gil Kaufman Adele Photo: Getty Images Adele ‘s 21 gives a whole new meaning to “Achy Breaky Heart.” And since the singer’s unstoppable album will notch its 17th non-consecutive week at #1 next week on the Billboard albums chart, she now shares that honor with Billy Ray Cyrus’ breakthrough, Some Gave All , which did the same in 1992. After blowing past the 1997 “Titanic” soundtrack last week, Adele sold another 95,000 copies of 21 to keep the top spot, according to figures provided by Nielsen SoundScan. That was more than enough to lock out the 21st edition of the Kidz Bop series, which will debut at #2 on sales of 59,000. The only other new face in the top 10 is gospel act James Fortune & FIYA ‘s Identity , which moved 18,000 units. The rest of the top 10: Black Keys ‘ El Camino (#3, 29,000), Drake ‘s Take Care (#4, 29,000), Rihanna ‘s Talk That Talk (#5, 20,000), Young Jeezy ‘s TM 103: Hustlerz Ambition (#6, 19,000), Toby Keith ‘s Clancy’s Tavern (#8, 17,000), Coldplay ‘s Mylo Xyloto (#9, 17,000) and Nickelback ‘s Here and Now (#10, 17,000). Otherwise, it was pretty quiet, with punk band Attack Attack! sliding into the #11 spot with their new one, This Means War (17,000), and the soundtrack to the Dolly Parton/Queen Latifah feel-good movie “Joyful Noise” jumping up nine spots in its second week to #12 (just under 17,000). Down at #26 was protest folkie Ani DiFranco with Which Side Are You On? (11,000) and, at #33, soft rockers Snow Patrol , whose Fallen Empires tumbled 28 spots in its second week on the charts. Adele might be safe for another week if the latest from country star Tim McGraw doesn’t push her out of the top spot. Other new releases include albums from Lamb of God , Kellie Pickler and Amnesty International’s four-disc Chimes of Freedom: The Songs of Bob Dylan compilation. Related Artists Adele
Say what you want but this LL man has stayed relevant for a hell of a long time… Two-time GRAMMY winner LL Cool J is set to host the 54th Annual GRAMMY Awards, marking the first time in seven years that the music industry’s premier event will have an official host. “I’m thrilled to be part of Music’s Biggest Night,” said LL Cool J. “I will always have fond memories of my first GRAMMY Awards and to now be hosting the GRAMMY show, in the company of so many other incredible artists, is a dream come true. Great performances and great music — it’s gonna be a great night!” LL Cool J has hosted “The GRAMMY Nominations Concert Live!! — Countdown To Music’s Biggest Night” since its inception in December 2008, and this will be his first time hosting the annual GRAMMY Awards telecast. Recent past hosts include Queen Latifah at the 47th GRAMMY Awards and Jon Stewart at the 43rd and 44th GRAMMY telecasts. Over the years, additional GRAMMY hosts include Billy Crystal, Ellen DeGeneres and Rosie O’Donnell, among others. We not hatin’, check out pics of some of his best award moments next… Source
A slightly above-average weekend at the box office abated further talks of a moviegoing slump (for now), with a proven star and a buffed-out Disney classic teaming up in the top two. Mission: Impossible continued its formidable hold, meanwhile, barely suppressing a certain Joyful Noise . Your Weekend Receipts are here. 1. Contraband Gross: $24,100,000 (new) Screens: 2,863 (PSA $8,418) Weeks: 1 This week’s Mark Wahlberg action-thriller — based on the 2008 international hit Reykjavik-Rotterdam — fared better than expected, potentially opening up a lucrative trend in Icelandic remakes. I nominate Dagur Kári’s Nói albinói , the white-knuckle tale of a sensitive young man’s coming of age in a remote fishing village (pop. 957). Could be huge . 2. Beauty and the Beast 3D Gross: $18,490,000 (new) Screens: 2,625 (PSA $7,044) Weeks: 1 People will fucking watch anything, I swear. 3. Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol Gross: $11,500,000 ($186,747,000) Screens: 3,346 (PSA $3,437) Weeks: 5 (Change: -42.1%) Hell, yes, Paula Patton was drunk at last night’s Golden Globe Awards — drunk on being the female lead in the biggest hit of the 2011-12 holiday session . Like any of us would have managed any better. 4. Joyful Noise Gross: $11,345,000 (new) Screens: 2,735 (PSA: $4,148) Weeks: 1 The Queen Latifah/Dolly Parton church-choir escapade narrowly missed a third-place finish. One look at Parton, and the film’s competitive shortcoming is clear: Needed more IMAX . 5. Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows Gross: $8,410,000 ($170,010,000) Screens: 3,155 (PSA $2,666) Weeks: 5 (Change: -38.6%) 6. The Devil Inside Gross: $7,900,000 ($46,247,000) Screens: 2,551 (PSA $3,097) Weeks: 2 (Change: -76.6%) Sherlock Holmes ‘s continued, steady representation in the top five should not be overlooked, but the real congratulations are in order to the abysmally reviewed , popularly loathed found-footage pustule on the heel of contemporary Hollywood for making it into the top 20 biggest week-two drops ever . We all knew you could do it. [Figures via Box Office Mojo ] Follow S.T. VanAirsdale on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
The idea of seeing Queen Latifah and Dolly Parton in a movie together, not to mention a movie about a gospel choir, is a particular kind of heaven. Latifah is a radiant performer capable of elevating even the most mundane material to a level of charm and grace unachievable by most mere mortals. And Parton, aside from having one of the sweetest and most haunting voices in all of country music, is a firecracker presence by herself — if you could bottle force of will in a perfume bottle, you couldn’t name it anything but Dolly. But whatever Latifah and Parton might have achieved together in that mythical heavenly ideal, it’s just not coming together in this lifetime – or at least not in Joyful Noise , a well-intentioned, pleasant-enough picture that shoots off in too many directions to ever ignite. Latifah plays Vi Rose Hill, a sturdy, no-nonsense family woman who inherits the leadership of her church choir after the death of its beloved director (played, in just a few tiny scenes, by Kris Kristofferson). But this is a very small town we’re talking about — Pacashau, Georgia, pop. 233, or something like that — and petty rivalries and resentments abound. It turns out that G.G. Sparrow (Parton), who has contributed heaps of money to the church and who’s also a leading (and undeniably shapely) figure in its Divinity Church Choir, thinks she should inherit the mantle. She has some new ideas for the group, which she wants to implement before the all-important National Joyful Noise Competition. Vi Rose, a traditionalist, likes to do things the old-fashioned way. The two women start trading insults and play-fighting even before it becomes apparent that G.G.’s rapscallion grandson, Randy (Jeremy Jordan), who has just drifted into town from New York City, is madly attracted to Vi Rose’s daughter, Olivia (Keke Palmer), the choir’s obvious rising young star. Actually, there’s a new conflict every five minutes in Joyful Noise : It’s pretty much all writer-director Todd Graff ( Bandslam ) can do to tamp each one down, Whac-a-Mole style, before another one pops up. Vi Rose doesn’t much approve of Randy, until he takes her pop-music-loving, Asperger’s-afflicted son, Walter (Dexter Darden), under his wing. (Walter’s favorite song is the Left Banke’s Walk Away Renee , and if you’re going to have just one favorite, that’s not a bad one to have.) Randy, you see, is an ace pianist and arranger, and he also has some ideas for spiffing up the choir’s material and moves. Meanwhile, Olivia starts acting up, as young ‘uns will. And don’t look now, but a rival for her affections (Paul Woolfolk) is just about to show up at the local quarry, where Randy and Walter have gone to practice their vocals (it makes a handy echo chamber). That could be big trouble. And yet, somehow, it’s really not. There’s so much going on in Joyful Noise that there doesn’t seem to be much time for anyone to actually sing. Still, the gang manages to squeeze some in. Many of the numbers are pop songs reimagined as gospel material, some making the transition with ease (like Sly Stone’s “I Want to Take You Higher”) and others (“Maybe I’m Amazed”) that, no matter how you slice them — or tweak the lyrics — still sound like secular love songs rather than hymns of praise. One of the loveliest numbers is Latifah’s spare rendition of “Fix Me, Jesus”: It’s plain and unvarnished, in a way that too much of Joyful Noise isn’t. Parton sings a duet with Kristofferson (he returns from the grave specifically for this purpose), called “From Here to the Moon and Back,” which is pretty enough in its serene, wistful way. But even though there’s so much going on in Joyful Noise , there still isn’t much for its two stars to do other than trade one-liners masquerading as small-town insults. (Observing G.G.’s superblond tousle of hair, Vi Rose snickers, “What, you’re worried you’re not gonna be seen from space?”) Parton and Latifah are both high-spirited all right, and their sparring is reasonably fun to watch. But Parton’s face, as those of us who have loved her for years, is not what it used to be, and looking at it is a bit disconcerting. Latifah, on the other hand, looks as luminous as ever. As performers, the two clearly have a great deal of respect and admiration for each other, and that’s the motor that drives Joyful Noise . But movies need more than just good mechanics, or even just good chemistry, to bloom. They always need at least a scrap of divine intervention. And on that count, Joyful Noise could still use a little fixing from Jesus. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
No, Denise Vasi isn’t a Rihanna look-alike, she’s the new star of VH1′s “Single Ladies.” The former “All My Children” actress will be playing a new character on the show named Raquel. Denise won’t exactly be replacing Stacey Dash, but her character is going to be a close friend of Keisha, who’s is played by LisaRaye McCoy. Charity Shea, who co-stars in “Single Ladies” as April, will also return for season two. Executive producer Queen Latifah says, “Denise is the perfect addition to the ‘Single Ladies’ cast. She is bringing a fun, new element to the show.” Filming will begin next month in Atlanta, and the second season of “Single Ladies” is scheduled to premiere this summer. Get the rest of the story about the addition of Denise Vasi right here . RELATED POSTS: What’s Next For Stacey Dash Now That She’s Single?: Life After “Single Ladies” Meagan Good Replacing Stacey Dash On VH1′s “Single Ladies”? 7 Women Who Could Replace Stacey Dash On “Single Ladies”
Deadline reports that “Reno 911!” and “Hoarders” star Niecy Nash will join Cedric The Entertainer in a spinoff of the popular “Hot In Cleveland” TV show. Written by Hot In Cleveland creator Suzanne Martin, the spinoff follows Cedric’s character Reverend Boyce as he moves to St. Louis and has to balance his wild past with the expectations of his congregation and his family. Reno 911! alumna Nash, repped by WME and Principato-Young, will play his wife… Production is slated to begin on Dec. 2. More TV News: Bad Girls Club Reunion Trailer [VIDEO] Queen Latifah Launches New Talk Show, Will Smith To Produce “In Living Color” Coming Back To TV, Keenen Ivory Wayans Onboard
Dana “Queen Latifah” Owens is a legendary rapper, fabulous singer and an exceptional actress. She has won a “Golden Globe award, two Screen Actors Guild Awards, two Image Awards, a Grammy Award, six additional Grammy nominations, an Emmy Award nomination and an Academy Award nomination.” The Queen is highly respected by her peers, fans, elders and was recently inducted into the New Jersey Hall Of Fame. Let’s take a look at her greatest movie roles: Taxi The Queen stars as “A mouthy and feisty taxicab driver who has hot tips for a green and inept cop set on solving a string of New York City bank robberies committed by a quartet of female Brazilian bank robbers.” Just Wright Dana plays “A physical therapist who falls for the basketball player she is helping recover from a career-threatening injury.” The Secret Life Of Bees Queen Latifah starred alongside Dakota Fanning in this film about a 14 year old who runs-away into the arms of four black sisters. Last Holiday “After she’s diagnosed with a terminal illness, a shy woman named Georgia Bird decides to take a European vacation. She finds love with a man (LL Cool J) and it changes her life.” Hairspray The Queen’s large bouffant like hair assisted her amazing acting in the remake of “Hairspray”. Life Support Queen Latifah played the role of “a mother who overcame an addiction to crack and became a positive role model and an AIDS activist in the black community.” Bringin’ Down The House Queen Latifah brings the funny in “Bringin’ Down The House” as a wrongly convicted woman looking for love on an Internet date! Set It Off “Set It Off” is considered one of the greatest “bank robber” movies of all time. Queen Latifah’s gangster “Cleo” character is most respected by the streets for the way she went out, shooting at police while taking her life at the same time. Dana starred along-side Jada Pinkett-Smith, Vivica A. Foxx and Kimberly Elise. Sources: IMDB RELATED POSTS: Queen Latifah & Snooki To Join “Dancing With The Stars” Did Queen Latifah & Her “Girlfriend” Breakup Over Eating Habits?
Dana “Queen Latifah” Owens is a legendary rapper, fabulous singer and an exceptional actress. She has won a “Golden Globe award, two Screen Actors Guild Awards, two Image Awards, a Grammy Award, six additional Grammy nominations, an Emmy Award nomination and an Academy Award nomination.” The Queen is highly respected by her peers, fans, elders and was recently inducted into the New Jersey Hall Of Fame. Let’s take a look at her greatest movie rolls: Taxi The Queen stars as “A mouthy and feisty taxicab driver has hot tips for a green and inept cop set on solving a string of New York City bank robberies committed by a quartet of female Brazilian bank robbers.” Just Wright Dana plays “A physical therapist falls for the basketball player she is helping recover from a career-threatening injury.” The Secret Life Of Bees Queen Latifah starred alongside Dakota Fanning in this 1964 film about a 14 year old who runs-away into the arms of 4 black sisters. Last Holiday “After she’s diagnosed with a terminal illness, a shy woman decides to take a European vacation.” She finds love with a man (LL Cool J) and it changes her life. Hairspray The Queen’s large bouffant like hair assisted her amazing acting in the remake of “Hairspray”. Life Support Queen Latifah played the role of “a mother who overcame an addiction to crack and became a positive role model and an AIDS activist in the black community.” Bringin’ Down The House Queen Latifah brings the funny in “Bringin’ Down The House” as a wrongly convicted woman, looking for love on an Internet date! Set It Off “Set It Off” is considered one of the greatest “bank robber” movies of all time. Queen Latifah’s gangster “Cleo” character is most respected by the streets for the way she went out, shooting at police while taking her life at the same time. Dana starred along-side Jada Pinkett-Smith, Vivica A. Foxx and Kimberly Elise. Sources: IMDB Queen Latifah & Snooki To Join “Dancing With The Stars” Did Queen Latifah & Her “Girlfriend” Breakup Over Eating Habits?
Tia and Tamera Mowry appeared on “The Wendy Williams” Show today on which Tia may have outed Queen Latifah as being a lesbian – by accident, of course! Wendy had asked the new mom about how she lost her pregnancy weight and Tia gave all the credit to celebrity trainer Jeanette Jenkins (who we all know is Latifah’s long-time rumored girlfriend). But wait until you see Tia’s face (and hear her stutter!) when Wendy asks about Jenkins & Latifah’s friendship! Too funny. Watch the 4:30 mark! Tia & Tamera Bring Baby Cree To ‘Wendy Wiliams’ [PHOTOS] Which Mom-To-Be Rocked Her Baby Bump Best On The Red Carpet? [VIDEO] Queen Latifah’s Girlfriend Will Take Her Back If She Kicks Her Nasty Habits