Tag Archives: winter

The Winter Olympics Are the Best Olympics

So the Vancouver Winter Olympics start tonight , and, awful incidents aside , I am pretty fucking excited. What’s that? The Winter games suck? Can’t hold a candle to the Summer? Well, Nancy Naysayer, I beg to differ. I have to admit that a large part of my love for the Winter Games is sentimental. The first Olympics I really remember watching — sat on the couch every night and marveled at the variety of countries and weird little snow sports and, most of all, the swirling drama of the ice skating rink — were the Albertville games in ’92. Sure Barcelona intrigued me later that summer (remember when both games were in the same year?? Crazy!), but Albertville truly captured my heart. There was that horse-jawed wonder Kristi Yamaguchi who skated to a gold while future stars like Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan nipped at her heels. And there was Paul Wylie, that tuft-headed Harvard grad (ohhh a Boston connection!) who glided and hopped to a silver in the men’s icecapades. My mother told me all about the great Italian skiing star Alberto Tomba and we watched him together, trundling down the mountain to win what would be his last Olympic gold. Plus there were ski jumpers and lugers (hopefully safe-and-sound ones), cartoony looking sports that I’d never seen before. They were my first Olympics and thus the best ones, and they’ve endeared the Winter games to me permanently. That Lillehammer came just two short years later to help shore up the snow-madness (Why me? Why me???) certainly didn’t hurt matters. But there’s also something a little less personal about why I love the Winter. Sure the Summer games have way more events, and feature somewhat more relatable sports, but for me that almost makes them a bit too familiar, too colloquial. No, I don’t often go flipping off of narrow beams or see people jumping between two uneven bars when walking down the street, but we’ve all swam before, we’ve all run, and we’ve probably seen someone throw a javelin at a high school track meet. But the Winter games feel more rarefied, they’re stranger and more hinged on circumstances, on climate and place. Does that, by cruel trick of geography, make the Winter games pretty lily-white? Yes, unfortunately. (Though who can forget the magnificent Surya Bonaly??) But that unpleasant fact aside, the sports at hand feel more like an odd human accomplishment, a sign of people taking hard and icy and snowy situations and making the best of them, strapping two planks to their feet and going flying. Humans persevere in harsh conditions and here’s a fun way to celebrate that. I like that quaintness and ingenuity. It feels slightly more special and small than the big grand-stand Summer games (which, obviously, I am wholeheartedly obsessed with as well). Plus in the golden years of my Olympic boyhood, the Winter games were in quaint little European hamlets that may as well have been from a fairytale. A bunch of internationals coming together every four years, with turgid pomp, to do wacky things on ice and snow? Yes, absolutely, sign me up. It was like Ice World from Mario 3 made manifest. The Winter Olympics could never be in Boston (sorry, Wachusett), so they just seemed all the more magical. The world is terribly big and terribly strange and isn’t that wonderful, is what the TV said to me for those two weeks in ’92. But mostly, guys, it’s the skating. I mean, the skating . Agony, ecstasy, crazy music, crazier clothes. That’s a sport I can really get behind.

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The Winter Olympics Are the Best Olympics

Olympic Skeleton Racer Noelle Pikus-Pace Powered By Taylor Swift, Pampers

‘I really like country music … if I’m too hyped up, I like to chill out,’ says the U.S. Olympic athlete. By James Montgomery Noelle Pikus-Pace Photo: MTV News VANCOUVER — As we’ve mentioned, most members of the U.S. Skeleton team are pretty nuts, unafraid not only to stare death in the face but rocket towards it at 90 miles an hour. Face first. With no brakes. And while one-half of the U.S. women’s team here at the Winter Olympics outwardly embraces the sport’s daredevil mystique (that would be 25-year-old firebrand Katie Uhlaender), her partner does not. The most risqu

Leona Lewis Gets Fussy With Her Food

Leona Lewis reportedly had a few odd requests when out to dinner in London at club Hospital. A source said: “She was her usual shy but charming self but when she ordered she seemed to have some unusual hang-ups about what she’d eat.” Lewis reportedly asked that her tofu be “extremely well done and slowly grilled.” Havin’ it her way? We guess so! Related Links: Leona Lewis And Susan Boyle Teaming Up?

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Leona Lewis Gets Fussy With Her Food

Stars Love Their Winter Games

The Winter Olympics have finally begun… But the snowy season certainly isn’t just for spectators.

Tonight on The Rotten Tomatoes Show! From Paris With Love, Frozen & a new Top 5

Tune in tonight at 10:30 pm to The Rotten Tomatoes Show for our reviews of Frozen, Dear John and From Paris With Love. Then stick around for our new Director Intervention, the Top 5 Aborted Movie Franchises and a special look at the Winter Olympics thanks to the Rotten Tomatoes Sports Network. added by: Ellen_Fox

‘We Are The World’ Director Paul Haggis Recalls Video-Shoot ‘Chaos’

‘You hear these stories about people checking their egos at the door, and it really is true,’ he says of all-star recording session. By Eric Ditzian ‘We Are The World’ Director Paul Haggis Photo: MTV News NEW YORK — Oscar-winning director Paul Haggis had just days to prepare to shoot the music video for the 25th-anniversary recording session of “We Are the World,” the revamped version of the classic tune meant to raise funds for post-earthquake relief efforts in Haiti. In this, he was exactly like producers Lionel Richie and Quincy Jones and the 85-odd participating artists: No one had any time to prepare and you just had to go with it. Or, as Haggis put it in an interview with MTV News, “I embraced the chaos.” That’s pretty much what he was still doing when we caught up with the “Crash” director in a Manhattan editing suite on Thursday afternoon (February 11). He and his team were working on essentially no sleep as they scrambled to put the finishing touches on not one but two versions of the video: a three-and-a-half-minute version for the opening ceremony of the Winter Olympics and a seven-and-a-half-minute version that encompasses the uncut song. When we spoke, Haggis was just minutes away from streaming the finished footage to iTunes, where it will be available Friday. Despite the lack of sleep, Haggis talked excitedly about the process of shooting the video in Los Angeles earlier this month, as artists from various genres and generations came together in support of a common cause. “It was interesting seeing Pink and Tony Bennett working it out,” he said. “They were jamming. They had a lot of fun. “You hear these stories about people checking their egos at the door, and it really is true,” Haggis continued. “They came and stood forever and were glorified extras a lot of the time. They just stood in the corner and waved. It was hot and it was crowded. When there’s chaos, there’s friction. Where there’s fiction, there’s drama, and I knew I’d have fun things to shoot. Unfortunately, there wasn’t as much drama as I expected. People really got along very well.” Haggis said the finished song and video will include artists not present during the initial shoot that still wanted to take part in the charity effort. But he declined to name names, wanting the full revelation to take place during the opening ceremony. Participants that Haggis did want to make mention of were the Haitian film students he flew in from the island to participate in the shoot, as well as a behind-the-scenes documentary. “The most important thing to me was that we include the people of Haiti in this and it just not be a bunch of well-meaning, wealthy folks from Santa Monica and Brentwood and Bel Air,” he said. Related Videos Behind The Scenes Of ‘We Are The World’ Related Photos ‘We Are The World 25 For Haiti’ Recording Session

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‘We Are The World’ Director Paul Haggis Recalls Video-Shoot ‘Chaos’

APPlicable: The Winter Olympics Edition

Curling, hockey, figure skating… and even farting . Get ready for the 2010 Winter Olympics with these sports-centered apps and games for the iPhone.

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APPlicable: The Winter Olympics Edition

Olympic Where Are They Now: Dominique Moceanu

Listen, I know gymnastics isn't a Winter sport, but this picture still seemed both relevant and “whoa.” Dominique was also a personal favorite of Jack's . The Best Links: A floor routine for the ages. via Kelly Reeves I have this autobiography at my mom’s house if anyone wants to borrow it (out of print now, obv). View

Kellan Lutz is a Warrior

Can Kellan Lutz carry a movie?

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Kellan Lutz is a Warrior

Woman falls and tears a Picasso

A significant Pablo Picasso painting was damaged after a woman attending art class lost her balance, fell into “The Actor” and tore it, The Metropolitan Museum of Art said. The unusually large canvas, measuring 77.25 by 45.38 inches (196 by 115cm), sustained a vertical tear of about six inches (15cm) in the lower right-hand corner in the accident on Friday

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Woman falls and tears a Picasso