When you arrive at home on a Tuesday evening and have to double-check your own address because there is a line of valet parkers in front, one of whom hands you a ticket, and when you proceed into your home of find a crowd of well-dressed people, most of whom you do not know, and an orangutan sitting on your chair at the head of the table — when all of this happens and you’re not really that surprised, there is a better than average chance that you are married to Arleen Sorkin.
The occasion on that Tuesday was a hastily arranged fundraiser for a South African human (and animal) rights organization, and the orangutan was by no means the only luminary I was surprised to find sitting in my chair over the three decades I spent with my big-hearted wife.
Wasn’t it only six months earlier that I...
The occasion on that Tuesday was a hastily arranged fundraiser for a South African human (and animal) rights organization, and the orangutan was by no means the only luminary I was surprised to find sitting in my chair over the three decades I spent with my big-hearted wife.
Wasn’t it only six months earlier that I...
- 9/9/2023
- by Christopher Lloyd
- Variety Film + TV
A new biopic based on Pakistani queer television personality Ali Saleem is in the works. Ali is a Pakistani television host, actor, scriptwriter and impressionist who broke into the mainstream audiences through his impersonations of late Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto and went on to play the cross-dressing Begum Nawazish Ali on various television channels.
Ali, who was biologically born a male to a retired colonel father in Pakistan Army, has sometimes called himself gay, bisexual or at other times even a transsexual. He was also a contestant in ‘Bigg Boss 4’ back in 2010.
Deepak Pandey, CEO of Eortv, who has announced a biopic, has expressed his desire to cast Mallika Sherawat for the part.
He said, “This is a strong story, a story of boldness and courage. The character is multifaceted and needed someone as courageous and undaunted as the Begum thyself. I am planning to approach Mallika Sherawat for this...
Ali, who was biologically born a male to a retired colonel father in Pakistan Army, has sometimes called himself gay, bisexual or at other times even a transsexual. He was also a contestant in ‘Bigg Boss 4’ back in 2010.
Deepak Pandey, CEO of Eortv, who has announced a biopic, has expressed his desire to cast Mallika Sherawat for the part.
He said, “This is a strong story, a story of boldness and courage. The character is multifaceted and needed someone as courageous and undaunted as the Begum thyself. I am planning to approach Mallika Sherawat for this...
- 3/28/2023
- by News Bureau
- GlamSham
Click here to read the full article.
Each week, The Hollywood Reporter will offer up the best new (and newly relevant) books that everyone will be talking about — whether it’s a tome that’s ripe for adaptation, a new Hollywood-centric tell-all or the source material for a hot new TV show.
Rights Available
The Book of Goose by Yiyun Li (The Wylie Agency)
The prolific author’s latest novel borrows a bit of mood and background from Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan novels (two girls growing up in a European town eventually grow estranged) but adds a juicy secret about literary fraud to the center of the story.
Creep: A Love Story by Lygia Day Peñaflor (Grandview)
This YA thriller follows a private high school’s golden couple, Laney and Nico — they’re gorgeous, popular and seemingly in love — from the perspective of an interloping fellow student whose admiration quickly spirals into dangerous obsession.
Each week, The Hollywood Reporter will offer up the best new (and newly relevant) books that everyone will be talking about — whether it’s a tome that’s ripe for adaptation, a new Hollywood-centric tell-all or the source material for a hot new TV show.
Rights Available
The Book of Goose by Yiyun Li (The Wylie Agency)
The prolific author’s latest novel borrows a bit of mood and background from Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan novels (two girls growing up in a European town eventually grow estranged) but adds a juicy secret about literary fraud to the center of the story.
Creep: A Love Story by Lygia Day Peñaflor (Grandview)
This YA thriller follows a private high school’s golden couple, Laney and Nico — they’re gorgeous, popular and seemingly in love — from the perspective of an interloping fellow student whose admiration quickly spirals into dangerous obsession.
- 10/5/2022
- by Seija Rankin
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Shikara
Starring Adil Khan, Sadia
Directed by Vidhu Vinod Chopra
Vinod Chopra is no stranger to the theme of love during the time of war. He walked down the same road in 1942: A Love Story with the incandescent Manisha Koirala and the buoyant Anil Kapoor riding the crest of romance on the wings of R D Burman’s timeless melody.
Now in Shikara, as Chopra returns to the theme with far less satisfying results than the enormity of the plot would suggest, the music is not quite the stuff epic dreams are made of.
Think about it. 60,000 families were rendered homeless overnight. Forced to flee from their homes, Kasmiri Hindus were left with only their memories. Some like Shiv, the hero of Shikara, were lucky to have their life partners with them as they struggled to come to terms with their lives as refugees in their own country.
It...
Starring Adil Khan, Sadia
Directed by Vidhu Vinod Chopra
Vinod Chopra is no stranger to the theme of love during the time of war. He walked down the same road in 1942: A Love Story with the incandescent Manisha Koirala and the buoyant Anil Kapoor riding the crest of romance on the wings of R D Burman’s timeless melody.
Now in Shikara, as Chopra returns to the theme with far less satisfying results than the enormity of the plot would suggest, the music is not quite the stuff epic dreams are made of.
Think about it. 60,000 families were rendered homeless overnight. Forced to flee from their homes, Kasmiri Hindus were left with only their memories. Some like Shiv, the hero of Shikara, were lucky to have their life partners with them as they struggled to come to terms with their lives as refugees in their own country.
It...
- 2/9/2020
- by Subhash K Jha
- Bollyspice
Blame for the political situation in Abuddin is getting passed around like a hot potato.
With the unfortunate news that Tyrant Season 3 Episode 10 might be the de facto series finale after FX's cancelation, we may never find out if Barry is capable of taking responsibility for his actions.
Of course, he's not the only one who refuses to acknowledge that actions have consequences.
Sammy's predictable injury may have helped in serving his parent's with a wake up call about just how far they'd strayed from the path, but it's hard to say it those realizations could stick. While Barry and Molly have both recognized that their revenge mission has taken a toll, neither has really seemed to regret the cost.
For Molly, that's because she's caught up in her victim-hood. She is more than willing to burn the whole world down while she enacts her revenge.
The pain that...
With the unfortunate news that Tyrant Season 3 Episode 10 might be the de facto series finale after FX's cancelation, we may never find out if Barry is capable of taking responsibility for his actions.
Of course, he's not the only one who refuses to acknowledge that actions have consequences.
Sammy's predictable injury may have helped in serving his parent's with a wake up call about just how far they'd strayed from the path, but it's hard to say it those realizations could stick. While Barry and Molly have both recognized that their revenge mission has taken a toll, neither has really seemed to regret the cost.
For Molly, that's because she's caught up in her victim-hood. She is more than willing to burn the whole world down while she enacts her revenge.
The pain that...
- 9/8/2016
- by Elizabeth Harlow
- TVfanatic
Will the United Kingdom soon have its second female Prime Minister? That's the big question hanging in the London air following another crazy political week that has seen hot Prime Minister favorite Boris Johnson quit the race. The new contender for the title? Theresa May, 59, Member of Parliament for the sleepy rural constituency of Maidenhead in Royal Berkshire - and just about the toughest, most no-nonsense politician in Britain. "I know I'm not a showy politician," May said at her campaign launch on Thursday. "I don't tour the television studios. I don't gossip about people over lunch. I don't go drinking in Parliament's bars.
- 7/1/2016
- by Philip Boucher, @philipboucher
- PEOPLE.com
Two-time Academy Award® winner Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy and Andy Schocken bring their acclaimed documentary Song of Lahore to U.S. audiences this Friday, May 20 with a release that includes theaters in New York and Los Angeles plus national availability on DVD, VOD and Digital HD at the same time.
The co-directors sat down for this exclusive interview to discuss their new film which features the music of The Sachal Ensemble of Pakistan and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis and examines the lives and the cultural heritage of Pakistan’s classical musicians as they prepare for a concert in New York City.
Interview with Song Of Lahore co-directors Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy and Andy Schocken:
Q: Was music ever banned in Pakistan?
A: Music was never banned outright, but when General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq took power in 1977 he put in place restrictions on broadcasting non-religious music and dancing. Nightclubs and alcohol were banned,...
The co-directors sat down for this exclusive interview to discuss their new film which features the music of The Sachal Ensemble of Pakistan and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis and examines the lives and the cultural heritage of Pakistan’s classical musicians as they prepare for a concert in New York City.
Interview with Song Of Lahore co-directors Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy and Andy Schocken:
Q: Was music ever banned in Pakistan?
A: Music was never banned outright, but when General Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq took power in 1977 he put in place restrictions on broadcasting non-religious music and dancing. Nightclubs and alcohol were banned,...
- 5/19/2016
- by BollySpice Editors
- Bollyspice
The last time Raveena Tandon was seen on the silver screen was in a blink and you miss role in Anurag Kashyap's Bombay Velvet, which tanked at the box-office. This time round, she will be seen in Maatr, a film that comes with a strong social message of violence against women and how to empower them.
Speaking about the film, Raveena Tandon said that she will begin shooting on March 19 in a month-long start-to-finish schedule in North India. And when asked about her film on (the late) Benazir Bhutto, Raveena Tandon said that the film will happen for sure and that they are waiting for permission from those associated with the late Pakistani Prime Minister.
Watch this space for developments.
Speaking about the film, Raveena Tandon said that she will begin shooting on March 19 in a month-long start-to-finish schedule in North India. And when asked about her film on (the late) Benazir Bhutto, Raveena Tandon said that the film will happen for sure and that they are waiting for permission from those associated with the late Pakistani Prime Minister.
Watch this space for developments.
- 3/9/2016
- by Bollywood Hungama News Network
- BollywoodHungama
Chicago – In 2011, author Kim Barker released a press memoir with the odd title of “The Taliban Shuffle: Strange Days in Afghanistan and Pakistan.” Tina Fey was interested in adapting the book for film – and portraying Barker – so “Whiskey Tango Foxtrot” was born. The film opens on March 4th, 2016.
Kim Barker was the South Asia bureau chief for The Chicago Tribune from 2004 to 2009, based in New Delhi and Islamabad. Her press memoir covers her years there, through the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the corruption in Afghanistan, and the assassination of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto. In the film version based on the book, they altered Ms. Barker’s name – she is Kim Baker as portrayed by Tina Fey – and instead of being a print reporter, the Fey character is a on-air broadcast journalism. But the morality of the book remains in the film, and the...
Kim Barker was the South Asia bureau chief for The Chicago Tribune from 2004 to 2009, based in New Delhi and Islamabad. Her press memoir covers her years there, through the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the corruption in Afghanistan, and the assassination of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto. In the film version based on the book, they altered Ms. Barker’s name – she is Kim Baker as portrayed by Tina Fey – and instead of being a print reporter, the Fey character is a on-air broadcast journalism. But the morality of the book remains in the film, and the...
- 3/3/2016
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
Vidya Balan, who has always expressed her wish to star in a biopic, has finally found the role of her dreams and it is of yet another yesteryear actress. The actress will be seen playing Suchitra Sen, who is known to be one of the most talented and beautiful actresses of Indian cinema. Raima and Riya Sen, granddaughters of Suchitra Sen, had previously mentioned about making a film on their grandmother and Vidya Balan, who is known for her love for Bengali culture and Kolkata, has now got an opportunity to explore it further by portraying the life of the popular Bengali actress on screen. Also, prior to this, the actress who is busy wrapping up the Emraan Hashmi starrer Hamari Adhuri Kahani, was reading about four scripts which included this biopic and one on Benazir Bhutto. Moreover, from what we hear, Vidya Balan will also be training in Kathak,...
- 3/16/2015
- by Bollywood Hungama News Network
- BollywoodHungama
Homeland, Season 4, Episode 5, “About A Boy”
Written by Meredith Stiehm
Directed by Charlotte Sieling
Airs Sundays at 9pm on Showtime
“I’m a spy. I know shit.”
That line, spoken by John Redmond, is funny in the moment, but begins to feel ironic by the end of the episode. Practically everyone is off their game this week, with an abundance of questionable decisions leading to Saul getting kidnapped. By this point, we’ve spent plenty of time with Carrie, Saul, Quinn, even Fara. We know what they can do, we know how good they are at their jobs…except when the writers need them to be stupid. It all feels overly telegraphed, to the point where these uncharacteristic decisions not only frustrate on a plot level, but a character one too. It’s reminiscent of how a show like Family Guy treats its characters and its continuity, which is an...
Written by Meredith Stiehm
Directed by Charlotte Sieling
Airs Sundays at 9pm on Showtime
“I’m a spy. I know shit.”
That line, spoken by John Redmond, is funny in the moment, but begins to feel ironic by the end of the episode. Practically everyone is off their game this week, with an abundance of questionable decisions leading to Saul getting kidnapped. By this point, we’ve spent plenty of time with Carrie, Saul, Quinn, even Fara. We know what they can do, we know how good they are at their jobs…except when the writers need them to be stupid. It all feels overly telegraphed, to the point where these uncharacteristic decisions not only frustrate on a plot level, but a character one too. It’s reminiscent of how a show like Family Guy treats its characters and its continuity, which is an...
- 10/27/2014
- by Jake Pitre
- SoundOnSight
CNN has hired NBC News’ Michelle Kosinki as White House correspondent, the network’s senior vice president and Washington bureau chief Sam Feist said Friday. The network has also given new roles to Dana Bash and Pamela Brown. Also read: Michael Wolff Slams Ronan Farrow On CNN: He’s ‘Never Had A Paying Job’ As White House correspondent, Kosinski will join CNN’s senior White House correspondent Jim Acosta as the network’s on-air team at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. While at NBC News,Kosinksi covered international and national topics such as unrest in Afghanistan, Russian politics and issues, the death of Nelson Mandela,...
- 2/7/2014
- by Tim Kenneally
- The Wrap
CNN this morning named Michelle Kosinski its White House Correspondent, and Dana Bash and Pamela Brown have been given new roles as the 2014 and 2016 campaigns approach. Kosinski will join senior White House correspondent Jim Acosta as CNN’s on-air team at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. As previously announced, Brianna Keilar has been named senior political correspondent and Suzanne Malveaux returns to the nation’s capital as national correspondent. Kosinski joins CNN from NBC News as White House correspondent this month. While at NBC, she covered a range of international and national stories for the network, including the unrest in Afghanistan, Russian politics and issues, the death of Nelson Mandela, the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, terrorist threats and attacks in London, Glasgow and Germany, and the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Kosinski was also instrumental to NBC’s Emmy-Award winning election night coverage in 2008. Prior to her work at NBC News, Kosinski received an...
- 2/7/2014
- by THE DEADLINE TEAM
- Deadline TV
Sir David Frost died yesterday (August 31) after suffering a suspected heart attack on board the Queen Elizabeth cruise ship.
Frost was born in Kent in 1939, the son of a minister. A keen footballer, he was offered a contract with Nottingham Forest Fc while at school, but chose to study English at Cambridge University instead.
It was here that he started out in journalism, editing the student newspaper Varsity and literary magazine Granta. He also became secretary of the Footlights club, where he met future comedy stars such as Peter Cook, Graham Chapman and John Bird.
Upon graduating, Frost became a trainee at ITV and was soon asked to host satirical show That Was The Week That Was in 1962. He went on to front a Us version of the programme for NBC, before presenting The Frost Report from 1966 to 1967, helping to launch the careers of John Cleese, Ronnie Barker and Ronnie Corbett.
Frost was born in Kent in 1939, the son of a minister. A keen footballer, he was offered a contract with Nottingham Forest Fc while at school, but chose to study English at Cambridge University instead.
It was here that he started out in journalism, editing the student newspaper Varsity and literary magazine Granta. He also became secretary of the Footlights club, where he met future comedy stars such as Peter Cook, Graham Chapman and John Bird.
Upon graduating, Frost became a trainee at ITV and was soon asked to host satirical show That Was The Week That Was in 1962. He went on to front a Us version of the programme for NBC, before presenting The Frost Report from 1966 to 1967, helping to launch the careers of John Cleese, Ronnie Barker and Ronnie Corbett.
- 9/1/2013
- Digital Spy
Culture Project will rename their mainstage theatre, currently known as 45 Bleecker Street, the Lynn Redgrave Theatre this June. The announcement was made onstage by Mr. Buchman during the opening night curtain call for Culture Project's current production of Shaheed The Dream and Death of Benazir Bhutto. A naming ceremony and commemorative gala in honor of the late Ms. Redgrave will take place today, June 3, 2013 at Stage 48 605 West 48th Street, New York City. Honorary Chairs for the evening are Vanessa Redgrave, Liam Neeson, and Ms. Redgrave's three children Annabel Clark, Ben Clark, and Pema Clark.
- 6/3/2013
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Join Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Ron Suskind, the last major journalist to interview Benazir Bhutto, for a special post-performance discussion tonight, Monday, April 8th at 730 P.M. with Anna Khaja, writer and performer of the acclaimed new play, Lafayette Street. Ms. Khaja relied on Mr. Suskind's 2008 bestseller, 'The Way of the World,' for insights in Bhutto's final days.
- 4/9/2013
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Culture Project will rename their mainstage theatre, currently known as 45 Bleecker Street, the Lynn Redgrave Theatre this June. The announcement was made onstage by Mr. Buchman during the opening night curtain call for Culture Project's current production of Shaheed The Dream and Death of Benazir Bhutto. A naming ceremony and commemorative gala in honor of the late Ms. Redgrave will take place on Monday, June 3, 2013 at Stage 48 605 West 48th Street, New York City. Honorary Chairs for the evening are Vanessa Redgrave, Liam Neeson, and Ms. Redgrave's three children Annabel Clark, Ben Clark, and Pema Clark.
- 3/19/2013
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
After finally being removed from 2011′s ‘Black List’ of unproduced scripts, Grace of Monaco will have Nicole Kidman to portray Monaco’s princess and one of Hollywood’s most beloved actresses, it seems. Olivier Dahan (who directed – pardon the pun – Marion Cotillard to an Oscar in the Edith Piaf biopic La vie en rose) is [...]
Continue reading Nicole Kidman To Take A Role Of Grace Kelly? on FilmoFilia.
Related posts: Olivier Dahan to Direct Grace Of Monaco – Grace Kelly Biopic Nicole Kidman To Play In New Liman’s Movie Nicole Kidman to play Benazir Bhutto...
Continue reading Nicole Kidman To Take A Role Of Grace Kelly? on FilmoFilia.
Related posts: Olivier Dahan to Direct Grace Of Monaco – Grace Kelly Biopic Nicole Kidman To Play In New Liman’s Movie Nicole Kidman to play Benazir Bhutto...
- 4/6/2012
- by Sunrider
- Filmofilia
The winners of the George Foster Peabody Awards were announced this morning, and among the entertainment winners are "Game of Thrones," "Parks and Recreation," "Portlandia," "The Colbert Report" and "Treme."
In the television news and documentary categories, Al Jazeera English, NPR and CNN all won Peabodys for their coverage of the Arab Spring, and two Japanese networks won for their coverage of the tsunami and nuclear crisis in Japan.
The Peabody Awards honor excellence in all electronic media, and in the program's 71st year, 38 awards were handed out. Those winners range from Web sites such as Ted.com and Human Rights Watch to ongoing programs like American Masters to the radio series StoryCorps to long-running shows like "Austin City Limits" and "Jeopardy!" A full list of winners is below.
I am fortunate enough to be one of the 16 Peabody board members, and it's been an honor and a great pleasure...
In the television news and documentary categories, Al Jazeera English, NPR and CNN all won Peabodys for their coverage of the Arab Spring, and two Japanese networks won for their coverage of the tsunami and nuclear crisis in Japan.
The Peabody Awards honor excellence in all electronic media, and in the program's 71st year, 38 awards were handed out. Those winners range from Web sites such as Ted.com and Human Rights Watch to ongoing programs like American Masters to the radio series StoryCorps to long-running shows like "Austin City Limits" and "Jeopardy!" A full list of winners is below.
I am fortunate enough to be one of the 16 Peabody board members, and it's been an honor and a great pleasure...
- 4/4/2012
- by Maureen Ryan
- Huffington Post
From HBO Films comes a new trailer for the upcoming Hemingway & Gellhorn. Starring Clive Owen and Nicole Kidman and directed by Phillip Kaufman (The Unbearable Lightness of Being, Quills), the film is about the relationship between author Ernest Hemingway and war correspondent Martha Gellhorn, and will chronicle their torrid five-year marriage throughout the Spanish Civil War, as well [...]
Continue reading Hemingway & Gellhorn Trailer Starring Clive Owen and Nicole Kidman on FilmoFilia.
Related posts: Nicole Kidman to play Benazir Bhutto Nicole Kidman in Another Musical – ‘Nine’ Nicole Kidman To Play In New Liman’s Movie...
Continue reading Hemingway & Gellhorn Trailer Starring Clive Owen and Nicole Kidman on FilmoFilia.
Related posts: Nicole Kidman to play Benazir Bhutto Nicole Kidman in Another Musical – ‘Nine’ Nicole Kidman To Play In New Liman’s Movie...
- 2/6/2012
- by Allan Ford
- Filmofilia
The founder of private equity firm Forstmann Little died today of complications from brain cancer. He was 71. Forstmann was best known as a critic of junk bonds who lost the 1989 bidding war with Kohlberg Kravis Roberts for Nabisco chronicled in the book Barbarians At The Gate: The Fall Of Rjr Nabisco. But Forstmann also was active in media. He bought Ziff-Davis Publishing in 1994 and turned it around. He also bought Img, a management firm that handles athletes including Tiger Woods and Roger Federer. Other media investments included Citadel Broadcasting and Topps. In 1995 the National Academy of Popular Music gave him its Patron of the Arts Award. Media execs flocked to Forstmann’s annual conferences in Aspen, which attracted world leaders including Bill Clinton, Nelson Mandela, and late Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto. The billionaire also was well known for his personal life which included relationships with Princess Diana and Top Chef star Padma Lakshmi.
- 11/20/2011
- by DAVID LIEBERMAN, Executive Editor
- Deadline TV
Our Wild Life finally has Nicole Kidman on board. Yeah, exactly, it’s official, Kidman will indeed star in the upcoming Phillip Noyce‘s project based on the life of animal conservationist Dame Daphne Sheldrick. I’m not actually sure if I’m even interested in this one, but hey, what the hell – I guess I’m always interested [...]
Continue reading Nicole Kidman in Phillip Noyce’s Our Wild Life on FilmoFilia.
Related posts:Nicole Kidman As Lead in Our Wild Life Nicole Kidman to play Benazir Bhutto Nicole Kidman To Quit Acting...
Continue reading Nicole Kidman in Phillip Noyce’s Our Wild Life on FilmoFilia.
Related posts:Nicole Kidman As Lead in Our Wild Life Nicole Kidman to play Benazir Bhutto Nicole Kidman To Quit Acting...
- 11/2/2011
- by Fiona
- Filmofilia
Nicole Kidman, I almost forgot who she was. Wait, yeah, I remember now, and I’m (kind of) glad that her name is all of the sudden attached to the upcoming The Family Fang adaptation of Kevin Wilson’s bestselling novel of the same name. Nice move for Kidman, indeed! After all, she will not just star [...]
Continue reading Nicole Kidman in The Family Fang Adaptation on FilmoFilia.
Related posts:Nicole Kidman to Replace Sofia Vergara in Lee Daniels’ The Paperboy Nicole Kidman Joins Woody Allen’s New Movie Nicole Kidman to play Benazir Bhutto...
Continue reading Nicole Kidman in The Family Fang Adaptation on FilmoFilia.
Related posts:Nicole Kidman to Replace Sofia Vergara in Lee Daniels’ The Paperboy Nicole Kidman Joins Woody Allen’s New Movie Nicole Kidman to play Benazir Bhutto...
- 10/28/2011
- by Fiona
- Filmofilia
Millennium Films has released four new clips for Joel Schumacher’s next film, Trespass, which debuts in theaters nationwide on October 14. Nicole Kidman and Cam Gigandet The film stars Nicolas Cage and Nicole Kidman as a married couple who are taken hostage by four brutal perpetrators seeking easy cash. Additional cast include Cam Gigandet, Liana [...]
Continue reading Four New Trespass Clips Starring Nicolas Cage and Nicole Kidman on FilmoFilia.
Related posts:Trespass Trailer Featuring Nicolas Cage and Nicole Kidman First Trespass Photo: Nicolas Cage and Nicole Kidman Nicole Kidman to play Benazir Bhutto...
Continue reading Four New Trespass Clips Starring Nicolas Cage and Nicole Kidman on FilmoFilia.
Related posts:Trespass Trailer Featuring Nicolas Cage and Nicole Kidman First Trespass Photo: Nicolas Cage and Nicole Kidman Nicole Kidman to play Benazir Bhutto...
- 10/3/2011
- by Allan Ford
- Filmofilia
Pakistan officials say Hamza bin Laden, perhaps Osama's most militant son, escaped the raid that killed his father. David A. Graham reports on why having this bin Laden on the loose could be dangerous. Plus, full coverage of Osama bin Laden's death.
Hamza bin Laden was supposed to be a dead man. As the Obama administration made jubilant remarks in the wake of Osama bin Laden's death, counterrorism adviser John Brennan told reporters that the young man had been killed alongside his father.
Related story on The Daily Beast: End The Costly War in Afghanistan
Then the story changed: It was Khaled bin Laden, not Hamza, who was killed. That might have been the end of the story, but now reports out of Pakistan suggest the tale is even more elaborate: Not only was Hamza not killed, but he escaped in the midst of the raid.
Whether that's true is still hotly contested.
Hamza bin Laden was supposed to be a dead man. As the Obama administration made jubilant remarks in the wake of Osama bin Laden's death, counterrorism adviser John Brennan told reporters that the young man had been killed alongside his father.
Related story on The Daily Beast: End The Costly War in Afghanistan
Then the story changed: It was Khaled bin Laden, not Hamza, who was killed. That might have been the end of the story, but now reports out of Pakistan suggest the tale is even more elaborate: Not only was Hamza not killed, but he escaped in the midst of the raid.
Whether that's true is still hotly contested.
- 5/12/2011
- by David A. Graham
- The Daily Beast
Bhutto, a documentary about the life and assassination of Benazir Bhutto, the daughter of privilege and violence twice elected Pakistan’s prime minister and twice forced out of office on corruption charges, is in many ways frustratingly out of touch with today’s news. Even though Bhutto’s life was full of political ambition, democratic idealism and high drama, the film - shown at Sundance in 2010 and tonight on PBS’s Independent Lens series - can’t directly address the post-Bin Laden conversation about the U.S.’s fraught relations with Pakistan. But buried in this smartly made yet glowingly positive film is a bit of…...
- 5/10/2011
- James on ScreenS
The terror mastermind was finally found in Pakistan's heartland. Who will lead in the post-Arab Spring era? Bruce Riedel on the unanswered questions bin Laden left in his wake.
Plus, full coverage of bin Laden's death.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Britain's Crush on Obama
Osama bin Laden's death is a severe blow to al Qaeda-but not its end. His death answers some key questions about the terror cell and Pakistan, but leaves some even more perplexing ones still open.
First, congratulations to President Obama and the CIA. From the very start of his administration, he ordered an intense focus on al Qaeda and its leader. The trail had long gone cold due largely to the diversion of critical resources to Iraq back in 2002 and 2003. Obama rightly promised to focus on Pakistan, the center of the global jihad and the most dangerous country in the world, and his efforts have now paid off.
Plus, full coverage of bin Laden's death.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Britain's Crush on Obama
Osama bin Laden's death is a severe blow to al Qaeda-but not its end. His death answers some key questions about the terror cell and Pakistan, but leaves some even more perplexing ones still open.
First, congratulations to President Obama and the CIA. From the very start of his administration, he ordered an intense focus on al Qaeda and its leader. The trail had long gone cold due largely to the diversion of critical resources to Iraq back in 2002 and 2003. Obama rightly promised to focus on Pakistan, the center of the global jihad and the most dangerous country in the world, and his efforts have now paid off.
- 5/2/2011
- by Bruce Riedel
- The Daily Beast
Richard Holbrooke's successor as special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan takes office when a jihadist takeover in Pakistan is a possibility for the first time. Bruce Riedel on America's challenges in that nightmare scenario.
Marc Grossman, a veteran American diplomat called out of retirement, is about to take over one of toughest jobs in U.S. foreign policy-special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan. Grossman's challenge will be particularly difficult on Pakistan, where a dispute over the diplomatic status of Raymond Davis, an American official accused of two murders by the Pakistani police, threatens to undo two years of patient efforts by the Obama team to build a strategic relationship with the most dangerous country in the world. High-level talks have been suspended and President Obama's planned visit to Pakistan is in jeopardy. The Hill is calling for aid cuts. Unless Grossman can get the bilateral engagement back on track,...
Marc Grossman, a veteran American diplomat called out of retirement, is about to take over one of toughest jobs in U.S. foreign policy-special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan. Grossman's challenge will be particularly difficult on Pakistan, where a dispute over the diplomatic status of Raymond Davis, an American official accused of two murders by the Pakistani police, threatens to undo two years of patient efforts by the Obama team to build a strategic relationship with the most dangerous country in the world. High-level talks have been suspended and President Obama's planned visit to Pakistan is in jeopardy. The Hill is calling for aid cuts. Unless Grossman can get the bilateral engagement back on track,...
- 2/16/2011
- by Bruce Riedel
- The Daily Beast
Gaddafi's son has been linked to arms smuggling. Saddam's kids were rapists and torturers. The children of despots often hasten their fathers' downfall. Just ask Mubarak.
Hosni Mubarak is falling from power in Egypt partly because he refused to heed one of history's hidden lessons: Dictators shouldn't have sons.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Libya's Rebels Advance on Gaddafi's Hometown
Most do. That often hastens their downfall or that of their nations.
Egyptians might have been willing to accept their lot for a while longer if the ailing Mubarak had not made it clear he intended his son, Gamal, to succeed him in power. Of all his arrogant acts, none insulted his people more than his insistence that of the 80 million Egyptians, Gamal Mubarak was best qualified to lead the country. The plan was for him to rise to power not by popular vote, but only because his father wished it that way.
Hosni Mubarak is falling from power in Egypt partly because he refused to heed one of history's hidden lessons: Dictators shouldn't have sons.
Related story on The Daily Beast: Libya's Rebels Advance on Gaddafi's Hometown
Most do. That often hastens their downfall or that of their nations.
Egyptians might have been willing to accept their lot for a while longer if the ailing Mubarak had not made it clear he intended his son, Gamal, to succeed him in power. Of all his arrogant acts, none insulted his people more than his insistence that of the 80 million Egyptians, Gamal Mubarak was best qualified to lead the country. The plan was for him to rise to power not by popular vote, but only because his father wished it that way.
- 2/10/2011
- by Stephen Kinzer
- The Daily Beast
A woman whose online bio describes her as a "humor writer" (as well as "fine artist, excellent cook, devoted wife") has called MSNBC's Keith Olbermann "a target," and asked for someone to "stop him." The post written by Andrea Rouda is entitled "Speaking of Target Practice," and--after listing murdered leaders including JFK, Martin Luther King, Jr. and Benazir Bhutto--suggests "there are so many good targets still out there. Take Keith Olbermann."...
- 1/9/2011
- by Mark Joyella
- Mediaite - TV
A bit of a glossy perspective on Benazir Bhutto but a vital and frank portrayal of Pakistan as an emerging world power. Writer/director Johnny O.Hara was best known for his funny and informative documentary .Fuel. that threw gasoline on the flames of America.s energy crisis. It opened a few eyes, no doubt, and that.s the best that anyone can expect when fighting the big boys. His .Bhutto. examines the life of Benazir Bhutto and her fight against the big boys. She paid for that fight with her life but also opened a few eyes in the process. O.Hara.s and co-director Duane Baughman.s film is a riveting and informative look at Pakistan and its most famous leader. The importance of...
- 12/7/2010
- by Ron Wilkinson
- Monsters and Critics
If it's Friday, it means that it's time to figure out what to see at the movies this weekend. And if it's a Friday in December, it means that your choices are at polar opposites, as they consist of either envelope-pushing awards bait or bombastic crowd-pleasers. This weekend sees a handful of releases in both categories. At the heavy-rotation end of the spectrum, there's the Asian action epic "The Warrior's Way," but if you're in the mood for something a little more challenging (and you live in the New York or Los Angeles areas), your cup runneth over. There's "All Good Things" (which features Ryan Gosling as a doomed real estate mogul), "I Love You Phillip Morris" (an unusual gay prison romance flick starring Jim Carrey), "Night Catches Us" (a '70s black power throwback) and "Bhutto" (a gripping documentary about Benazir Bhutto, the first woman elected as the head...
- 12/3/2010
- by Kyle Anderson
- MTV Newsroom
Benazir Bhutto was a remarkable figure in the modern history of the Middle East. After all, she was the democratically elected Prime Minister of a country that had previously sent women to jail when they were raped and looked down on women who drove cars or showed their faces in public. She was not simply a woman who happened to be a politician. Rather, her femininity and her feminism informed her political advocacy, her life, and ultimately her tragic death. She was, to no surprise, a polarizing figure within her own country. Pro-democracy Pakistanis saw her as a beacon of hope for the country’s future and her election as a clean slate in place of a torrid history, while fundamentalists saw her as an emblem of Western decadence and a threat to the Islamic way of life. Benazir Bhutto, and all the implications associated with her name, is the subject of Duane Baughman and Johnny O...
- 12/2/2010
- by Landon Palmer
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
Benazir Bhutto, the two time Pakistani prime minister who in 2007 was assassinated just days after she returned from military imposed exile in Dubai to once again attempt to take control of the country, was the countries’ most significant civilian political figure of her generation. Using the tragic life and times of the Muslim world’s most dynamic and successful female politician as a lens through which to capture the larger political machinations and social upheaval that has led to the sixty-seven year old Pakistani state constantly being handed back and forth between an imperiled civilian government and a conservative military establishment, Bhutto is not light on substance. However glamorous and entitled this scion of one of the country’s richest feudal families was, it’s clear in Duane Baughman’s incisive, well-researched and ultimately moving documentary that Benazir Bhutto’s motives were primarily civic duty and national pride, even if those convictions compelled her…...
- 12/1/2010
- by Brandon Harris
- Filmmaker Magazine - Blog
Director: Duane Baughman Duane Baughman’s biographical documentary Bhutto may focus on Benazir Bhutto -- the first (and to date, the only) female Prime Minister of Pakistan (1988–1990; 1993–1996) and the first (and to date, the only) woman ever elected to lead a Muslim state -- but it also does an excellent job of synopsizing the political history of Pakistan, a history to which the Bhutto family (once referred to as the “Kennedys of Pakistan”) has found itself fatefully entwined. The Islamic Republic of Pakistan adopted its constitution in 1956 and in 1957 Benazir Bhutto’s father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, began his political career as the youngest member of Pakistan's delegation to the United Nations. He soon became the head of the energy ministry; then the head of the ministries of commerce, information and industries. In 1962, he was appointed as Pakistan's foreign minister. In 1967, he founded the Pakistan Peoples Party (Ppp). Zulfikar Ali Bhutto...
- 12/1/2010
- by Don Simpson
- SmellsLikeScreenSpirit
Directors Duane Baughman and Johnny O’Hara’s award-winning documentary “Bhutto” is a spellbinding portrait of the beautiful and enigmatic leader who, at the age of 35, became the first female prime minister of a Muslim country. Born on June 21, 1953, Benazir Bhutto was assassinated on Dec. 27, 2007. Her murderers remain unknown, and at large.
Bhutto’s legacy began with her father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Fourth president and ninth prime minister of Pakistan, the charismatic and flamboyant patriarch was both loved and hated. He is primarily remembered for developing nuclear weaponry, establishing the Pakistan Peoples Party (Ppp), and for his execution ordered by Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq — the general he had appointed as Chief of Army Staff.
Recognizing his eldest child’s potential for inheriting his political mantle, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s selection of Benazir over eldest son Murtaza caused a life-long feud between the two siblings that ended only when the increasingly militant Murtaza Bhutto was killed on Sept.
Bhutto’s legacy began with her father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto. Fourth president and ninth prime minister of Pakistan, the charismatic and flamboyant patriarch was both loved and hated. He is primarily remembered for developing nuclear weaponry, establishing the Pakistan Peoples Party (Ppp), and for his execution ordered by Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq — the general he had appointed as Chief of Army Staff.
Recognizing his eldest child’s potential for inheriting his political mantle, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto’s selection of Benazir over eldest son Murtaza caused a life-long feud between the two siblings that ended only when the increasingly militant Murtaza Bhutto was killed on Sept.
- 11/30/2010
- Moving Pictures Magazine
The 2010 L.A. Stage Alliance Ovation Award nominees were announced last night at The Autry National Center for the American West in Griffith Park. Several winners of last year's Ovation Awards, including Jake Broder and Vanessa Claire Smith, presented the 2010 nominations. The Theatre at Boston Court was the most highly nominated theater company, garnering 17 nods. Among the company's nominated productions are "Oedipus el Rey" and "The Twentieth Century Way."Center Theatre Group followed closely behind with 16 nominations, while the Geffen Playhouse took 12. The brand-new "Ovation Honors," a series of awards recognizing theater excellence outside of the standard categories, have been given out for the first time this year. Ovations Honors awardees include "The Who's Tommy" for video design and "The Gogol Project" for music composition for a play. The complete list of nominees is as follows:Best SeasonCabrillo Music Theatre"The Andrews Brothers""Cinderella""Guys and Dolls""Little Shop of Horrors...
- 10/19/2010
- backstage.com
Last week, PBS revealed that Ugly Betty star America Ferrera would take over hosting duties for the upcoming ninth season of their documentary series Independent Lens, which premieres Oct. 19. It’s certainly an interesting choice, considering her success with mass-appeal projects like Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants and Betty, but it makes sense for the star, considering her love for documentaries. Lately, she’s been traveling the world promoting the documentary The Dry Land — about soldiers back from tours in Iraq who are suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder — that she produced alongside her fiancé Ryan Piers Williams. EW took a...
- 9/15/2010
- by Tanner Stransky
- EW.com - PopWatch
A documentary about Benazir Bhutto, which premiered in London last night, makes for gripping but troublingly partial viewing
"Zulfikar Ali Bhutto: Executed, 1979. Shahnawaz Bhutto: Murdered, 1985. Mir Murtaza Bhutto: Assassinated, 1996. Benazir Bhutto: Assassinated, 2007."
This chilling roll call, which appears on the front cover of Fatima Bhutto's politicial memoir, Songs of Blood and Sword, reads like a trailer for a Hollywood thriller – so incredulous, that it couldn't possibly be true. But you can't make this stuff up.
Murder, corruption, assassination, exile and family feuds: if ever there was a political story that makes for superbly gripping viewing, it's definitely the Bhutto story. And now it's finally been translated to screen in Bhutto, a documentary film put together by an American political-consultant-turned director and production team.
At a time when both Pakistan's flood calamity and precarious politics dominate the global media landscape, Bhutto provides a condensed and comprehensive glimpse...
"Zulfikar Ali Bhutto: Executed, 1979. Shahnawaz Bhutto: Murdered, 1985. Mir Murtaza Bhutto: Assassinated, 1996. Benazir Bhutto: Assassinated, 2007."
This chilling roll call, which appears on the front cover of Fatima Bhutto's politicial memoir, Songs of Blood and Sword, reads like a trailer for a Hollywood thriller – so incredulous, that it couldn't possibly be true. But you can't make this stuff up.
Murder, corruption, assassination, exile and family feuds: if ever there was a political story that makes for superbly gripping viewing, it's definitely the Bhutto story. And now it's finally been translated to screen in Bhutto, a documentary film put together by an American political-consultant-turned director and production team.
At a time when both Pakistan's flood calamity and precarious politics dominate the global media landscape, Bhutto provides a condensed and comprehensive glimpse...
- 8/27/2010
- by Huma Qureshi
- The Guardian - Film News
I View Film Festival 2010, presented by the human rights organization Engendered and runnning from Sept. 18-26 at the Tribeca Film Center and Asia Society in New York City, will open with Indian director Onir's "I Am."
The festival focuses on South Asian Cinema.
The line-up also includes Duane Baughman and Johnny O’Hara's "Bhutto," about assassinated Pakistan prime minister Benazir Bhutto, and Kaushik Ganguly and Rituparno Ghosh's "Just Another Love Story."...
The festival focuses on South Asian Cinema.
The line-up also includes Duane Baughman and Johnny O’Hara's "Bhutto," about assassinated Pakistan prime minister Benazir Bhutto, and Kaushik Ganguly and Rituparno Ghosh's "Just Another Love Story."...
- 8/13/2010
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
North American rights to Duane Baughman Sundance '10 documentary "Bhutto" have been picked up by First Run Features. Glenn Aveni of Icon Tmi negotiated the deal with Seymour Wishman, president of First Run Features. A November theatrical release is planned for North America, with home video, internet platforms, and television to follow. Educational sales begin immediately. "Bhutto" follows the epic story of Benazir Bhutto, the first woman in history to lead ...
- 6/29/2010
- Indiewire
Architect Norman Foster and author Margaret Atwood to spearhead partial tie-up between festivals
Norman Foster and Margaret Atwood are to star in a collaboration between two of Edinburgh's largest festivals as part of a new initiative to expand the reach and audience of the city's international book festival.
In a joint project with the Edinburgh film festival this August – the first on this scale attempted by two of the city's 12 annual festivals – Foster and Atwood will be amongst a number of prominent guests exploring the different techniques film-makers and writers use for biographies.
The events will be staged at the Filmhouse cinema complex, where this year's film festival is now taking place, as part of plans by the new director of the city's international book festival, Nick Barley, to develop an event based for nearly 30 years in a "tented city" in the gardens of Charlotte Square in the city's Georgian New Town.
Norman Foster and Margaret Atwood are to star in a collaboration between two of Edinburgh's largest festivals as part of a new initiative to expand the reach and audience of the city's international book festival.
In a joint project with the Edinburgh film festival this August – the first on this scale attempted by two of the city's 12 annual festivals – Foster and Atwood will be amongst a number of prominent guests exploring the different techniques film-makers and writers use for biographies.
The events will be staged at the Filmhouse cinema complex, where this year's film festival is now taking place, as part of plans by the new director of the city's international book festival, Nick Barley, to develop an event based for nearly 30 years in a "tented city" in the gardens of Charlotte Square in the city's Georgian New Town.
- 6/17/2010
- by Severin Carrell
- The Guardian - Film News
It's been nearly two and half years since the assassination of former Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto. Since her murder her party has won democratically contested parliamentary elections, established a government, elected a Prime Minister, installed the Muslim world's first female Speaker, elected her husband Asif Ali Zardari as president and restored the nation's democratic constitution that had been perverted by decades of dictatorship. For a woman who once told a Joint Session of the U.S. Congress that "democracy is the greatest revenge" one would think her murder has been avenged. But the United Nation's Commission of Inquiry into her death has recently opened new wounds with a blistering indictment of General Pervez Musharraf and his government, holding them responsible and accountable for the assassination by deliberate decisions to reject even minimal security arrangements for Ms. Bhutto...
- 6/10/2010
- by Duane Baughman
- Huffington Post
Filmmaker Ashok Pandit is enraged with the Central Board Of Film Certification. Reason: They have asked for cuts in his documentary, Village Of Widows. Pandit informs that the two sequences that he has been asked to delete from his documentary, produced by Madhur Bhandarkar, are late Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto delivering an anti-India speech propagating terrorism in Kashmir against India and the Indian flag shown burning. “Benazir Bhuto’s speech is taken from the actual recording which has been telecast by news channels years ago. The National Flag was burnt there at that time, so we’ve incorporated that footage too. ...
- 6/1/2010
- Hindustan Times - Cinema
Documentary film, Village of Widows produced by Madhur Bhandarkar and directed by Ashoke Pandit is in trouble with the censor board. The censor officials had raised their eyebrows on two major important portions of the film. The film was sent to the reviewing committee. The report of the committee has staunchly asked for two major portions to be cut for the clearance of the censor. The scenes that were asked to be cut are: Benazir Bhutto giving anti-India speech and propagating terrorism against India for Kashmir....whereby she proclaims the need of supposed freedom of ...
- 5/30/2010
- BusinessofCinema
Bakhtawar Bhutto Zardari, the elder daughter of slain former Pakistani premier Benazir Bhutto and President Asif Ali Zardari, is quietly documenting her pain in the world of music. While her fiery cousin Fatima Bhutto makes headlines by her memoir on the Bhutto dynasty, Bakhtawar has released nine songs, mostly in her mother’s memory, and one on the many dead members of the Bhutto family. Bakhtawar’s musical talent first got noticed when she released a song, I’ll take the pain away, on the internet on her mother’s first death anniversary. A student at Edinburgh University, Bakhtawar, 20, wrote on her webpage: “It ...
- 5/13/2010
- Hindustan Times - Cinema
Bhutto: The Film was one of sixteen documentaries selected for judging at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah. Entertaining, compelling and heartbreaking, Bhutto did not "win" at Sundance, but in this case winning is certainly not everything. The visually dazzling opening flashback sequence ends with a bomb blast announcing the assassination of Benazir Bhutto in December 2007. That image slowly fades over Pakistan's green flag with its crescent moon and five-point star. A history lesson begins to take hold, but never overwhelms. If the goal of a good documentary is to tell the story and motivate thought, questions and discussion, then the makers of Bhutto should rest easy. In this case, history and its retelling has a soul, and the soul of Benazir Bhutto inhabits this film. A friend sent me the trailer and it was so beautifully...
- 2/1/2010
- by Georgianne Nienaber
- Huffington Post
My Sundance Film Festival Monday (Jan. 25) began with a pair of high profile entries from the U.S. Documentary Competition slate. However, despite fascinating subject matter for "Bhutto" and favored Sundance director Jeffrey Blitz behind "Lucky," neither doc fully engaged me. Brief reviews for "Bhutto" and "Lucky" after the break... "Bhutto" (directors Jessica Hernandez and Johnny O'Hara) - The late Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto gets adoring and arduously by-the-numbers bio-doc treatment in "Bhutto," which aspires to nothing less than a full history of Pakistan, the Bhutto family and a year-by-year chronicle of the iconic politician's life. Although not without enlightening...
- 1/26/2010
- by Daniel Fienberg
- Hitfix
Amidst the controversial decision of the current American President to prolong the lamentable war started by his predecessor, here comes a documentary that shows a glint of upside to the whole mess. After the fall of the Taliban’s gender oppressive regime in 2001 shortly after the September 11th attack, Afghanistan enjoyed a modest surge of female empowerment, as the stranglehold was lifted.
One woman who stepped up to lead the charge was Dr. Massouda Jalal, a psychiatrist and mother of three (her campaign slogan: “Vote for the mother”) whose desire to raise Afghan women’s social standing led her to become the only woman out of 17 Presidential candidates to run in Afghanistan’s first ever democratic election in 2004.
Frontrunner reminds me of an equally arresting and similar in premise documentary called My Country, My Country, which also followed first hand an ordinary doctor’s bid to become a political candidate...
One woman who stepped up to lead the charge was Dr. Massouda Jalal, a psychiatrist and mother of three (her campaign slogan: “Vote for the mother”) whose desire to raise Afghan women’s social standing led her to become the only woman out of 17 Presidential candidates to run in Afghanistan’s first ever democratic election in 2004.
Frontrunner reminds me of an equally arresting and similar in premise documentary called My Country, My Country, which also followed first hand an ordinary doctor’s bid to become a political candidate...
- 1/16/2010
- by Arya Ponto
- JustPressPlay.net
Back. I'm back. Traf fic's lousy, weather's freezing -- and I'm so happy to be back! B'way's incoming Dame Edna and Mi chael Feinstein musical, shrouded in hush-hush secrecy, is from now on less hush-hush. Its title "All About Me," is because half will be about female impersonator Dame Edna, half about cabaret star King Michael. Even the Playbills will be half/half. Half will feature one of them, saying, "This show is all about me," while the other half features the other half saying, "This show is all about me!
- 1/5/2010
- by By CINDY ADAMS
- NYPost.com
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