Despite dropping to a tropical storm status, Irma is still a dangerous threat. The downgraded storm has killed at least one person in Georgia on Monday, the Associated Press reports.
The storm-related death is confirmed to have happened in rural Worth County, Georgia Emergency Management Agency spokeswoman, Catherine Howden, told the news outlet, where the tropical storm winds reached more than 400 miles from its center.
The storm — which arrived at high tide Monday afternoon — swamped Georgia’s communities that occupy its 100-mile coast. One area on Tybee Island experienced extreme flooding, affecting more than 3,000 residents.
“There’s a lot of...
The storm-related death is confirmed to have happened in rural Worth County, Georgia Emergency Management Agency spokeswoman, Catherine Howden, told the news outlet, where the tropical storm winds reached more than 400 miles from its center.
The storm — which arrived at high tide Monday afternoon — swamped Georgia’s communities that occupy its 100-mile coast. One area on Tybee Island experienced extreme flooding, affecting more than 3,000 residents.
“There’s a lot of...
- 9/11/2017
- by Caitlin Keating
- PEOPLE.com
In February of 1989 a fantastic gem from director Joe Dante was released into theaters called The Burbs.
Tom Hanks, Bruce Dern and Rick Ducommun starred in what has become a Saturday night, cult classic where suburbanites at the end of a culdesac in Everywhere, U.S.A. went a little nuts when they began suspecting their neighbors of nefarious activities.
“Remember what you were saying about people in the ‘burbs, Art, people like Skip, people who mow their lawn for the 800th time, and then Snap? Well, That’S Us. It’S Not Them, That’S Us. We’Re the ones who are vaulting over the fences, and peeking in through people’s windows. We’re the ones who are Throwing Garbage In The Street, And Lighting Fires. We’Re The Ones Who Are Acting Suspicious And Paranoid, Art. We’Re The Lunatics. Us. It’S Not Them. It’s us.
Tom Hanks, Bruce Dern and Rick Ducommun starred in what has become a Saturday night, cult classic where suburbanites at the end of a culdesac in Everywhere, U.S.A. went a little nuts when they began suspecting their neighbors of nefarious activities.
“Remember what you were saying about people in the ‘burbs, Art, people like Skip, people who mow their lawn for the 800th time, and then Snap? Well, That’S Us. It’S Not Them, That’S Us. We’Re the ones who are vaulting over the fences, and peeking in through people’s windows. We’re the ones who are Throwing Garbage In The Street, And Lighting Fires. We’Re The Ones Who Are Acting Suspicious And Paranoid, Art. We’Re The Lunatics. Us. It’S Not Them. It’s us.
- 7/27/2017
- by Melissa Thompson
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Clarke and Bellamy set out on a humanity-saving mission with Jaha that was ultimately a failure, while Abby worked to save Luna and the other radiation-sickened grounders on The 100 Season 4 Episode 3.
Octavia, meanwhile, learned a shocking truth about Indra's past back in Polis – and wound up betraying Roan in a major way in the process.
TV Fanatics Yana Grebenyuk and Allison Nichols are joined by Samantha Coley from Tell-Tale TV, to discuss everything that went down during "The Four Horsemen."
Check out their thoughts, and chime in with your own by leaving us a comment below. Be sure to tune in for The 100 Season 4 Episode 4 on Wednesday, February 22nd at 9/8c on The CW.
What did you think of the twist that Gaia is Indra's estranged daughter?
Yana: I think I was actually hearing whispers of this before the big reveal, so I was expecting it. But I love watching Indra and Gaia.
Octavia, meanwhile, learned a shocking truth about Indra's past back in Polis – and wound up betraying Roan in a major way in the process.
TV Fanatics Yana Grebenyuk and Allison Nichols are joined by Samantha Coley from Tell-Tale TV, to discuss everything that went down during "The Four Horsemen."
Check out their thoughts, and chime in with your own by leaving us a comment below. Be sure to tune in for The 100 Season 4 Episode 4 on Wednesday, February 22nd at 9/8c on The CW.
What did you think of the twist that Gaia is Indra's estranged daughter?
Yana: I think I was actually hearing whispers of this before the big reveal, so I was expecting it. But I love watching Indra and Gaia.
- 2/21/2017
- by Caralynn Lippo
- TVfanatic
The veteran actor joins Chris Pratt to discuss his remake of the classic western. But why are they so keen to play down its obvious radical political subtext?
It is mid-afternoon and the Venice Lido is a ghost town baking in the sun. The film festival wound down the previous evening, and now the thoroughfare between the beach and the cinemas is deserted except for construction workers in threes and fours dismantling the decorations. The glitz has faded. The stars are gone.
Well, most of them. Denzel Washington and Chris Pratt are the last men standing in this tumbleweed town. In the street, their faces loom menacingly out of the posters for the remake of The Magnificent Seven, in which an ethnically diverse cast of outlaws and miscreants defend oppressed townsfolk from a brutal tyrant. Seated at a table in a hotel room, the actors appear somewhat less than magnificent.
It is mid-afternoon and the Venice Lido is a ghost town baking in the sun. The film festival wound down the previous evening, and now the thoroughfare between the beach and the cinemas is deserted except for construction workers in threes and fours dismantling the decorations. The glitz has faded. The stars are gone.
Well, most of them. Denzel Washington and Chris Pratt are the last men standing in this tumbleweed town. In the street, their faces loom menacingly out of the posters for the remake of The Magnificent Seven, in which an ethnically diverse cast of outlaws and miscreants defend oppressed townsfolk from a brutal tyrant. Seated at a table in a hotel room, the actors appear somewhat less than magnificent.
- 9/15/2016
- by Ryan Gilbey
- The Guardian - Film News
Last Halloween (my birthday, as it happens), I loaded up my Bolex to shoot some 16mm black-and-white images of a children’s costume parade in my Brooklyn neighborhood. I was thinking of Helen Levitt’s 1948 masterpiece, In the Street. Levitt (and her co-cinematographers James Agee and Janis Loeb) used a small camera to surreptitiously record images (mostly of children) in Spanish Harlem. The film is a poetic time capsule — observational vignettes that become more than the sum of their parts. The Bolex looks pretty big these days compared to digital cameras, so I wasn’t hiding anything from anybody. As I […]...
- 8/16/2016
- by Mark Street
- Filmmaker Magazine - Blog
Apparently, nothing helps quell the jitters of competition like tossing on the old swimsuit, hopping in a car and belting out a few pop tunes. As they prepare to engage in watery combat in Rio, the 2016 USA Olympic swim team took a page from “Late Late Show” host James Corden and engaged in their own session of Carpool Karaoke. The merry band of water-rats got down and belted out their own versions of Fifth Harmony’s “Bo$$,” Big Star’s “In the Street” (better known as the theme song to “That ’70s Show”), One Direction’s “What Makes You Beautiful” and Flo Rida’s “My.
- 8/5/2016
- by Tim Kenneally
- The Wrap
Despite playing the largest female role in the universe, Fisher’s troubled, brilliant and authentically eccentric character has never been overshadowed
The actor and writer Carrie Fisher has many talents but soothsaying appears not to be among them. “I don’t think there is an inexhaustible public appetite for Star Wars,” she said while promoting The Empire Strikes Back, the second in the blockbuster series in 1980. If only she could have foreseen the levels of excitement and anticipation surrounding Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the seventh instalment, in which she will return alongside co-stars from the original trilogy including Harrison Ford and Mark Hamill.
Fisher accepted long ago that she would always be associated with her character from the series – Princess Leia, a plucky intergalactic warrior first seen in 1977 with a hairdo like two bagels clamped to either side of her head. Fisher referred to them as her “hairy...
The actor and writer Carrie Fisher has many talents but soothsaying appears not to be among them. “I don’t think there is an inexhaustible public appetite for Star Wars,” she said while promoting The Empire Strikes Back, the second in the blockbuster series in 1980. If only she could have foreseen the levels of excitement and anticipation surrounding Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the seventh instalment, in which she will return alongside co-stars from the original trilogy including Harrison Ford and Mark Hamill.
Fisher accepted long ago that she would always be associated with her character from the series – Princess Leia, a plucky intergalactic warrior first seen in 1977 with a hairdo like two bagels clamped to either side of her head. Fisher referred to them as her “hairy...
- 12/14/2015
- by Ryan Gilbey
- The Guardian - Film News
Despite playing the largest female role in the universe, Fisher’s troubled, brilliant and authentically eccentric character has never been overshadowed
The actor and writer Carrie Fisher has many talents but soothsaying appears not to be among them. “I don’t think there is an inexhaustible public appetite for Star Wars,” she said while promoting The Empire Strikes Back, the second in the blockbuster series in 1980. If only she could have foreseen the levels of excitement and anticipation surrounding Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the seventh instalment, in which she will return alongside co-stars from the original trilogy including Harrison Ford and Mark Hamill.
Fisher accepted long ago that she would always be associated with her character from the series – Princess Leia, a plucky intergalactic warrior first seen in 1977 with a hairdo like two bagels clamped to either side of her head. Fisher referred to them as her “hairy earphones...
The actor and writer Carrie Fisher has many talents but soothsaying appears not to be among them. “I don’t think there is an inexhaustible public appetite for Star Wars,” she said while promoting The Empire Strikes Back, the second in the blockbuster series in 1980. If only she could have foreseen the levels of excitement and anticipation surrounding Star Wars: The Force Awakens, the seventh instalment, in which she will return alongside co-stars from the original trilogy including Harrison Ford and Mark Hamill.
Fisher accepted long ago that she would always be associated with her character from the series – Princess Leia, a plucky intergalactic warrior first seen in 1977 with a hairdo like two bagels clamped to either side of her head. Fisher referred to them as her “hairy earphones...
- 12/14/2015
- by Ryan Gilbey
- The Guardian - Film News
Get your beret and warm up the espresso! Some of the most famous deep-dish art film is here -- in HD -- starting with attempts to translate various art 'isms' to the screen, to graphics-oriented abstractions, to 'city symphonies' to the dream visions of Maya Deren and beyond. The careful remasters reproduce proper projection speeds and original music. Masterworks of American Avant-Garde Experimental Film 1920-1970 Blu-ray + DVD Flicker Alley 1920-1970 / B&W and Color / 1:33 full frame / 418 min. / Street Date October 6, 2015 / 59.95 With films by James Agee, Kenneth Anger, Bruce Baillie, Stan Brakhage, James Broughton, Rudolph Burckhardt, Mary Ellen Bute, Joseph Cornell, Jim Davis, Maya Deren, Marcel Duchamp, Emien Etting, Oksar Fischinger, Robert Florey, Amy Greenfield, A. Hackenschmied, Alexander Hammid, Hillary Harris, Hy Hirsh, Ian Hugo, Lawrence Janiac, Lawrence Jordan, Owen Land, Francis Lee, Fernand Léger, Helen Levitt, Jan Leyda, Janice Loeb, Jonas Mekas, Marie Menken, Dudley Murphy, Ted Nemeth, Bernard O'Brien,...
- 10/6/2015
- by Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
We weren't surprised that Candace Cameron Bure still remembers all the words to the Full House theme song "Everywhere You Look" considering she played D.J. Tanner for eight seasons on the beloved sitcom.
The tune had all the elements of a good opening – it immediately got you excited for your favorite show to begin, was instantly recognizable and entirely unforgettable.
While we wait to see if "Everywhere You Look" will return as Fuller House's opener, we're happy to run down more of the best theme songs over the years, limiting ourselves to iconic opening sequences featuring vocals (sorry American Horror Story,...
The tune had all the elements of a good opening – it immediately got you excited for your favorite show to begin, was instantly recognizable and entirely unforgettable.
While we wait to see if "Everywhere You Look" will return as Fuller House's opener, we're happy to run down more of the best theme songs over the years, limiting ourselves to iconic opening sequences featuring vocals (sorry American Horror Story,...
- 8/12/2015
- by Lydia Price, @lydsprice
- People.com - TV Watch
Syfy’s Defiance opened Season 3 with the introduction of two new kinds of lethal adversaries — both of which left their mark, as well as threatened to do further damage, by the end of the two-hour opener.
RelatedDefiance‘s Grant Bowler on Season 3’s Big Deaths: ‘Television Has Become a Very Precarious World’
White Supremacy | On the hunt for crazy Pilar, who in the finale had left town with son Quentin, pregnant daughter Christie and son-in-law Alak, Datak, Stahma and Rafe crossed paths with General Rahm Tak aka “The Beast” (played by Oz‘s Lee Tergesen). To curry favor with...
RelatedDefiance‘s Grant Bowler on Season 3’s Big Deaths: ‘Television Has Become a Very Precarious World’
White Supremacy | On the hunt for crazy Pilar, who in the finale had left town with son Quentin, pregnant daughter Christie and son-in-law Alak, Datak, Stahma and Rafe crossed paths with General Rahm Tak aka “The Beast” (played by Oz‘s Lee Tergesen). To curry favor with...
- 6/13/2015
- TVLine.com
Move over Derrick Zoolander, the new hot male model goes by the name of -- The Fat Jewish! Yup, the funniest guy on Instagram is kicking off his quest to change the face of modeling forever. Which might explain why we found him sunbathing in a Speedo ... on a New York City street. Actually, he's In the street. Dangerous, and kinda gross. Read more...
- 4/7/2015
- by TMZ Staff
- TMZ
Equality, the end of sexism and a fair share? How awful.
It goes without saying that feminism is an important movement for both men and women to get involved with. That’s sort of like saying not killing people is a nice thing to do, but the logic is getting lost somewhere along the line. Equal rights amongst genders seems like a basic, human right but people still continue to be treated like ‘second class citizens’ based on their chromosomes make-up. Because genetics bigotry has Always turned out so well.
But there are still those who take upon themselves to tear down feminism as if it isn’t a positive step. As if it is somehow ruining their lives to have to think of the people who gave birth to them, who might marry them, and who they interact with like decent human beings every day (hopefully) as the same as them.
It goes without saying that feminism is an important movement for both men and women to get involved with. That’s sort of like saying not killing people is a nice thing to do, but the logic is getting lost somewhere along the line. Equal rights amongst genders seems like a basic, human right but people still continue to be treated like ‘second class citizens’ based on their chromosomes make-up. Because genetics bigotry has Always turned out so well.
But there are still those who take upon themselves to tear down feminism as if it isn’t a positive step. As if it is somehow ruining their lives to have to think of the people who gave birth to them, who might marry them, and who they interact with like decent human beings every day (hopefully) as the same as them.
- 3/13/2015
- by Sara Weir
- Obsessed with Film
Now that our minds are off awards season trends, it's time to refocus on the matter at hand—or the red carpets at hand, really! This week, stars are ringing in spring with bight hues and scalloped minis: Like Chrissy Teigen, who wowed in a structured blush-hued frock at Amopé's Glass Slipper Ready event at Grand Central Terminal in New York City on March 5. Sarah Hyland, meanwhile, went for a longer length and neon color, wearing a slinky midi and strappy Giuseppe Zanotti sandals at the Kindred Foundation for Adoption Inaugural Fundraiser held March 3 in Beverly Hills. In the street-chic realm, we've been keeping our eye on Solange Knowles at Paris Fashion Week: The singer knows how to make a...
- 3/6/2015
- E! Online
instagram
London. City of opportunity. Where the streets are paved with gold, jobs and ironic bars. Every year thousands of people arrive in the fair capital of England with a twinkle in their eye, a pocketful of dreams, and a Breville sandwich maker.
No-one tells though, that after a few months certain changes may occur. If you are displaying one or more of the traits on this list, it might be time to book a countryside break…
10. You Can’t Handle It When You See Someone You Know In The Street
Before London, many people would have been able to stride out into their town or village and been engaged in a chat with someone they know before they could even check in on Facebook.
London, however, is a sprawling metropolis with a population of over 8,000,000. Therefore when meetings in person occur that have not been confirmed and reconfirmed at...
London. City of opportunity. Where the streets are paved with gold, jobs and ironic bars. Every year thousands of people arrive in the fair capital of England with a twinkle in their eye, a pocketful of dreams, and a Breville sandwich maker.
No-one tells though, that after a few months certain changes may occur. If you are displaying one or more of the traits on this list, it might be time to book a countryside break…
10. You Can’t Handle It When You See Someone You Know In The Street
Before London, many people would have been able to stride out into their town or village and been engaged in a chat with someone they know before they could even check in on Facebook.
London, however, is a sprawling metropolis with a population of over 8,000,000. Therefore when meetings in person occur that have not been confirmed and reconfirmed at...
- 1/26/2015
- by Lee Gant
- Obsessed with Film
Spoiler alert: If you haven’t watched the May 6 episode of The Originals, stop reading now!
Our boys just got played. While Marcel, Elijah, and Klaus focused on looking good, getting revenge, and building armies, two women made their move. And as much as I want to root for the strong females (girl power and whatnot), I’m a little too angry that the wolves ruined another one of Elijah’s suits. But in all honesty, I’m glad Francesca is more than just a boring human. Who needs those, right? Let’s do this!
We kicked things off with...
Our boys just got played. While Marcel, Elijah, and Klaus focused on looking good, getting revenge, and building armies, two women made their move. And as much as I want to root for the strong females (girl power and whatnot), I’m a little too angry that the wolves ruined another one of Elijah’s suits. But in all honesty, I’m glad Francesca is more than just a boring human. Who needs those, right? Let’s do this!
We kicked things off with...
- 5/7/2014
- by Samantha Highfill
- EW.com - PopWatch
Late Monday afternoon, at the peak of rush hour, a woman gave birth in the middle of a crosswalk on New York City's Upper East Side. The anonymous new mother exited her apartment building on the corner of Third Avenue and 68th Street with the help of her doorman, according to Fox 5. In labor and in need of a hospital, she tried to catch a taxi. More from People: 'How I Learned to Love My Daughter,' the Confessions of a Reluctant FatherAfter several minutes of searching, the woman dropped to the ground and began to give birth. Passersby immediately...
- 2/25/2014
- by Kelli Bender
- PEOPLE.com
TV series reunion photos can be pretty scary. “Behold the ravages of time!” and all that. Thankfully, the cast of Fox’s That ’70s Show cast seems to be aging quite nicely. Here’s a pic that co-star Danny Masterson posted on Instagram. Mila Kunis, Laura Prepon, Ashton Kutcher, Topher Grace and Wilmer Valderrama are also all there. Masterson noted, “Every once in awhile friends gather for a 6 part harmony of a Big Star song…” (Big Star wrote the show’s theme song, “In the Street”). That ’70s Show went off the air in 2006. Why isn’t there video for this?...
- 10/9/2013
- by James Hibberd
- EW - Inside TV
The legend of the band Big Star was born back in May 1973, when a promoter flew legions of young rock critics into Memphis for a "convention" that was essentially a stunt to get them to hear Big Star perform.
Big Star, a Memphis group built around former Box Tops singer and songwriter Alex Chilton ("The Letter"), was a bit out of step with the music of its day, a power-pop quartet just a little ahead of its time. Most people know them for creating the song "In the Street" that was adapted and covered by Cheap Trick as the theme to "That '70s Show."
With their jangly Byrds-inspired guitars and close harmonies, Chilton, Chris Bell, Andy Hummel and Jody Stephens were already earning glowing reviews, if not great record sales.
But that May '73 junket stunt cemented them in legend. As the fame never came and the decades of musical...
Big Star, a Memphis group built around former Box Tops singer and songwriter Alex Chilton ("The Letter"), was a bit out of step with the music of its day, a power-pop quartet just a little ahead of its time. Most people know them for creating the song "In the Street" that was adapted and covered by Cheap Trick as the theme to "That '70s Show."
With their jangly Byrds-inspired guitars and close harmonies, Chilton, Chris Bell, Andy Hummel and Jody Stephens were already earning glowing reviews, if not great record sales.
But that May '73 junket stunt cemented them in legend. As the fame never came and the decades of musical...
- 7/5/2013
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Pop2it
Billed as the definitive story of the greatest band who never made it, the new rock documentary "Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me" will no doubt be a must-see for serious music aficionados who already know every note the power pop group ever recorded. But what they may not be as versed in is just how Big Star came to be in the first place or how the band who inspired countless acts who would go onto great success (including R.E.M., The Replacements, Belle & Sebastian, Beck, Jeff Buckley and Flaming Lips among others), never found success of their own. Pitchfork called them “not just rock's greatest cult band [but] arguably rock's first cult band” and their music has inspired cultish devotion from its fans for decades. Even casual music fans are probably familiar with two of their songs: "In The Street" which graced the opening credits of "That 70's...
- 7/3/2013
- by Cory Everett
- The Playlist
Opened six months before the Ica, the Arts Laboratory is more of a playground but just as culturally omnivorous
In the blaze of chic surrounding the new Ica headquarters, we mustn't overlook the dear old Arts Laboratory (182 Drury Lane), in many ways its prototype, which has been in operation for all of six months. More of a playground than the powerhouse in the Mall, it is just as culturally omnivorous. Like any good lab, it sometimes houses experiments that blow up in their investors' faces; but it's blessedly unsmart, and you get a happy sense of work-in-progress, of new departures that may blossom into new arrivals. The ambience is ramshackle, sweet-tempered and eclectic – three adjectives that could equally well apply to the personality of Jim Haynes, its founder and genius loci.
When I went there last week, the place was crowded with classless youth, buying avant-garde magazines at the bookstall,...
In the blaze of chic surrounding the new Ica headquarters, we mustn't overlook the dear old Arts Laboratory (182 Drury Lane), in many ways its prototype, which has been in operation for all of six months. More of a playground than the powerhouse in the Mall, it is just as culturally omnivorous. Like any good lab, it sometimes houses experiments that blow up in their investors' faces; but it's blessedly unsmart, and you get a happy sense of work-in-progress, of new departures that may blossom into new arrivals. The ambience is ramshackle, sweet-tempered and eclectic – three adjectives that could equally well apply to the personality of Jim Haynes, its founder and genius loci.
When I went there last week, the place was crowded with classless youth, buying avant-garde magazines at the bookstall,...
- 4/27/2013
- The Guardian - Film News
Anderson Cooper was absolutely bewildered when Dr. Conrad Murray, Michael Jackson's doctor, serenaded him in the middle of his interview from prison on Tuesday.
Murray gave a two-part telephone interview in which he maintained his innocence. He is currently serving a sentence for involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's death. At one point, he began, "You know what describes me? Let me sing something for you."
He proceeded to deliver a rendition of Nat King Cole's "The Little Boy that Santa Claus Forgot" in a falsetto voice, singing, "In the street he envies all those lucky boys, but goodness knows he didn’t want a lot. I’m so sorry for that laddie who hasn’t got a daddy, the little boy that Santa Claus forgot."
"That song tells my story," Murray concluded. “That’s how I grew up.
The best part was probably when Cooper, dripping confusion, glanced off-camera; presumably,...
Murray gave a two-part telephone interview in which he maintained his innocence. He is currently serving a sentence for involuntary manslaughter in Jackson's death. At one point, he began, "You know what describes me? Let me sing something for you."
He proceeded to deliver a rendition of Nat King Cole's "The Little Boy that Santa Claus Forgot" in a falsetto voice, singing, "In the street he envies all those lucky boys, but goodness knows he didn’t want a lot. I’m so sorry for that laddie who hasn’t got a daddy, the little boy that Santa Claus forgot."
"That song tells my story," Murray concluded. “That’s how I grew up.
The best part was probably when Cooper, dripping confusion, glanced off-camera; presumably,...
- 4/3/2013
- by Katherine Fung
- Huffington Post
Birthday shoutouts go to Noel Fisher (above), who is 29?!, Emile Hirsch is 28, and Dana Delany is 57. In ratings news, Smash was up a bit this week. Wait ... what? Win tickets to join Madonna at the GLAAD Media Awards in NYC Colton Haynes has been upped to a series regular on Arrow.Btw, Colton's former co-star Dylan O'Brien's move The First Time is out now on iTunes and DVD. Below you can hear Naya Rivera's full performance of "Cold Hearted" from this week's Glee. Hmm ... who could she talking about *cough* Brody.
Veronica Mars fans set new Kickstarter record, pouring $1 million into sequel flick in under five hours
Below you can see the latest episode of Old Dogs & New Tricks, which continues the Big Gay Wedding. So Nathan, have you apologized to Stockard Channing?
Below you can see Episode Two of Just Us Guys, which features the debut of new character Elsie.
Veronica Mars fans set new Kickstarter record, pouring $1 million into sequel flick in under five hours
Below you can see the latest episode of Old Dogs & New Tricks, which continues the Big Gay Wedding. So Nathan, have you apologized to Stockard Channing?
Below you can see Episode Two of Just Us Guys, which features the debut of new character Elsie.
- 3/13/2013
- by snicks
- The Backlot
Jade Cole was famously on "America's Next Top Model, Cycle 6," but now she's on the street -- well ... In the street ... having some tipsy fun! Warning: don't ask her to spell stuff.Check out TMZ on TV -- click here to see your local listings! Read more...
- 12/28/2012
- by TMZ Staff
- TMZ
Enter now for your chance to win an autographed poster, signed by all band members of The All-American Rejects. Check out the details here and sign up now! The All-American Rejects released their newest album 'Kids in The Street' this year to critical acclaim. Check out our 5-Star Review of the album Here and read our interview with drummer Chris Gaylor Here. The Band Kids In the Street is available now on iTunes. For more on the band, visit their official site at allamericanrejects.com as well as their Facebook and Twitter. The Prize One winner will receive all of the following prizes: - One (1) autographed poster signed by The All-American Rejects The Rules 1) Follow our Twitter Page and post the following text onto yours: I Entered @TheRejects Signed Poster Giveaway @TheDailyBLAM...
- 12/21/2012
- by Keven Skinner
- The Daily BLAM!
Actress Mischa Barton showed off her fantastic fuchsia matte lips at the Johnnie Walker Gold Label Reserve Launch party on July 18. Ready to pink out your pout? We'll tell you how to get the look! Mischa Barton, 26, knows how to go big, bright, and bold! She knows just how to make her lips pop against her neutral attire. This summer is all about neon colors, and Mischa's fuchsia lip is sure to stand out! Try this new fun and flirty alternative to the classic red lip. To get this perfect pout, try a lipstick like Sonia Kashuk Satin Luxe Lipcolor . First take a chapstick and apply it all over your lips. Then, apply the lipstick all over your lips, adding a liner in an exact color along with it. Then blot your luscious lips with a tissue to help stop the bleeding. This lip color will leave your lips plump and creamy,...
- 7/19/2012
- by HL
- HollywoodLife
The All-American Rejects have taken a liking to the Internet to draw attention to their latest release, “Kids In The Street”, which dropped March 26th via Dgc/Interscope Records. The Internet has discovered emerging artists and cultivated established ones. The All-American Rejects have made yet another smart move in their lengthy alternative rock career. Plus the outfit is known for their outlandish personalities, so why not showcase them off a bit more? The band recently unveiled two new clips from their tour stops in Montreal and Toronto. The band plays a game of Parkour Freestyle Voguing and also creates a unique sound in their dressing room called Montreal Noise. Adding to [ Read More ]...
- 5/2/2012
- by lonnie
- ShockYa
Zap2it caught up with All-American Rejects guitarist Mike Kennerty recently to ask him not about his band's new album, but important stuff like his favorite word ("Dude") and his spirit animal ("A chippy"?).
The All-American Rejects' new album, "Kids In The Street," was released in March and features the new single "Beekeeper's Daughter." The band is currently preparing for a run of East Coast dates in the U.S. before heading overseas for a U.K. tour supporting Blink-182. Luckily, Kennerty (above right) wasn't too busy to indulge our list of burning questions.
Below, his gracious answers:
What is your current computer desktop picture?
The big smiling head of Killface from "Frisky Dingo" (show on Adult Swim).
What's a saying you say a lot?
F*****' A!
What is your favorite word?
Dude.
What would you want to be written on your tombstone?
My name.
What's a song that...
The All-American Rejects' new album, "Kids In The Street," was released in March and features the new single "Beekeeper's Daughter." The band is currently preparing for a run of East Coast dates in the U.S. before heading overseas for a U.K. tour supporting Blink-182. Luckily, Kennerty (above right) wasn't too busy to indulge our list of burning questions.
Below, his gracious answers:
What is your current computer desktop picture?
The big smiling head of Killface from "Frisky Dingo" (show on Adult Swim).
What's a saying you say a lot?
F*****' A!
What is your favorite word?
Dude.
What would you want to be written on your tombstone?
My name.
What's a song that...
- 4/23/2012
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Pop2it
Hot on the heels of her prize-winning debut, Tiny Furniture, comes a show about the 'assorted humiliations' of twentysomethings in New York. Her family are big fans – but will her father watch her sex scenes?
"I think breakfast is the one meal when you don't have to eat animal, maybe," says Lena Dunham as we sit down at a vegan cafe in La. It is 8.30am. She has arrived lugging a gym bag, hair wet from what she describes as a "sleepover" at a friend's house, and she is not being euphemistic. Dunham is 25. She still has what she calls her "college body". When she's in New York, her home town, she lives with her parents. She is in most respects a standard-issue young American, right down to the ironic verbosity ("Isn't this an intense beverage?") and slouchy posture, except in one crucial aspect – next month, a new series airs...
"I think breakfast is the one meal when you don't have to eat animal, maybe," says Lena Dunham as we sit down at a vegan cafe in La. It is 8.30am. She has arrived lugging a gym bag, hair wet from what she describes as a "sleepover" at a friend's house, and she is not being euphemistic. Dunham is 25. She still has what she calls her "college body". When she's in New York, her home town, she lives with her parents. She is in most respects a standard-issue young American, right down to the ironic verbosity ("Isn't this an intense beverage?") and slouchy posture, except in one crucial aspect – next month, a new series airs...
- 3/24/2012
- by Emma Brockes
- The Guardian - Film News
Last week during SXSW, director Drew Dinicola gave an excited Austin audience a preview of his work-in-progress film “Big Star: Nothing Can Hurt Me,” before a star-studded tribute concert to the beloved cult band Big Star. It was an appropriate environment for the sneak peek, as SXSW 2010 served as a de facto memorial for deceased lead singer Alex Chilton, when he unexpectedly passed away from a heart attack just three days before a scheduled appearance at the festival. SXSW Festival Producer Janet Pierson mentioned in her introduction of the film that because it was such an emotionally relevant film to the SXSW audience, she wanted to show it in any form at this year’s fest and would take it as a work-in-progress. And going by the unfinished cut, the movie is destined to be a seminal rock doc in the canon, and one that will bring Big Star to a new generation of fans.
- 3/20/2012
- by Katie Walsh
- The Playlist
Carmageddon should have been a day of disaster for Liam as that was the day he had planned to relaunch his bar. However, the fates often smile kindly on the residents of "90210" (Tue., 8 p.m. Est on The CW), and so the event turned out to be just about the best one he could have ever hoped for.
Multi-platinum-selling super band The All-American Rejects just happened to be stuck in traffic three blocks away from the bar and Naomi managed to talk them into coming over and headlining the relaunch.
The episode featured the Rejects' new single, "Bee-Keeper's Daughter," which is taken from their upcoming studio album, "Kids In The Street."
The drama continues on "90210" every Tuesday at 8 p.m. Est on The CW.
TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.
Multi-platinum-selling super band The All-American Rejects just happened to be stuck in traffic three blocks away from the bar and Naomi managed to talk them into coming over and headlining the relaunch.
The episode featured the Rejects' new single, "Bee-Keeper's Daughter," which is taken from their upcoming studio album, "Kids In The Street."
The drama continues on "90210" every Tuesday at 8 p.m. Est on The CW.
TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.
- 2/1/2012
- by Catherine Lawson
- Huffington Post
With the 2011 album countdowns officially over, there is now enough room for the music of 2012 to come on through. As with every year, the top ten albums competition is stiff, but that only means good news for listeners who are provided with a wide variety of genres to choose amongst. What will you pick for your 2012 lists? You are probably quite unsure of your choices right now, but The All-American Rejects upcoming album, “Kids In The Street”, will be a given contender. The Dgc/Interscope recording artists will digitally release the first track, “Beekeeper’s Daughter”, off their fourth studio album on January 24th. Written by lead singer, lyricist...
- 1/5/2012
- by lonnie
- ShockYa
There’s something instinctively appealing about the serial killer film: The exhaustive and often overwhelming journey its protagonists must face; the terrifying notion of an unstoppable force ready to strike at any time; the relentless pursuit of clues and evidence; an insight into the mindset of somebody driven to murderous acts; the dark and twisted mise-on-scène. Cinema has exploited the serial killer – both fictional and non-fictional – to varying results. Here, we showcase the best of this brilliant sub-genre.
The Great Serial Killer Films #2: Se7en (1995)
Se7en is one of the best-loved films of its era and perhaps the most famous serial killer picture ever made. Considering that it has no true life inspiration, prides itself on dank, gloomy visuals, and paints a negative picture of the human race at large, it’s somewhat surprising that audiences embraced it (and continue to embrace it) with such giddy enthusiasm. Despite its cynical positioning,...
The Great Serial Killer Films #2: Se7en (1995)
Se7en is one of the best-loved films of its era and perhaps the most famous serial killer picture ever made. Considering that it has no true life inspiration, prides itself on dank, gloomy visuals, and paints a negative picture of the human race at large, it’s somewhat surprising that audiences embraced it (and continue to embrace it) with such giddy enthusiasm. Despite its cynical positioning,...
- 12/3/2011
- by Tom Barnard
- Obsessed with Film
When the change was made uptown, and the Big Man joined the band…
Clarence Clemons, legendary saxophonist and the mountain of Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band, passed away on Saturday after suffering a stroke last week in Florida. He was 69.
Clemons, a Norfolk, Virginia native, joined what would become the E Street Band in 1972 after meeting Springsteen in an Asbury Park club – whose doors he allegedly tore off in the middle of a lightning storm. Indeed, Clemons, both in physique and personality, was larger than life.
In a statement, Springsteen reflected fondly of his bandmate and friend.
"Clarence lived a wonderful life. He carried within him a love of people that made them love him. He created a wondrous and extended family. He loved the saxophone, loved our fans and gave everything he had every night he stepped on stage. His loss is immeasurable and we are honored and...
Clarence Clemons, legendary saxophonist and the mountain of Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band, passed away on Saturday after suffering a stroke last week in Florida. He was 69.
Clemons, a Norfolk, Virginia native, joined what would become the E Street Band in 1972 after meeting Springsteen in an Asbury Park club – whose doors he allegedly tore off in the middle of a lightning storm. Indeed, Clemons, both in physique and personality, was larger than life.
In a statement, Springsteen reflected fondly of his bandmate and friend.
"Clarence lived a wonderful life. He carried within him a love of people that made them love him. He created a wondrous and extended family. He loved the saxophone, loved our fans and gave everything he had every night he stepped on stage. His loss is immeasurable and we are honored and...
- 6/19/2011
- by Jordan Zakarin
- Huffington Post
[1] To paraphrase Sam Elliott's Big Lebowski character: "Sometimes, you eat the burger... and sometimes, the burger, well, he eats you." That seems to be the moral of today's Votd, Hambuster, about an evil hamburger determined to eat everything in its path. The funny and rather impressive seven-minute short was created by students from French digital filmmaking school Supinfocom, and is also available in 3D. Watch it after the jump -- unless you were about to eat a cheeseburger for lunch. In that case, I'd recommend saving it til later. [via The Daily What [2]] Hambuster was directed by a team of five Supinfocom students named Paul Alexandre, Dara Cazamea, Maxime Cazaux, Romain Delaunay and Bruno Ortolland. We've featured a couple of other shorts from the school in the past -- StopMo [3] and Meet Buck [4] were also Supinfocom projects. I think Hambuster may be my favorite one yet. The top-notch animation is as crisp, detailed...
- 5/4/2011
- by Angie Han
- Slash Film
Beware, giant mutant cheeseburgers are here and ready to attack. They have had enough of people eating them and have decided to fight back. The 6-minute short was done in 3D Sterescopic by five students from Supinfocom Arles.
Here is a description:
You may like having a good lunch in a quiet place as a park... But what if your lunch doesn't?
In the street everyone can hear you scream, but honestly who cares?
The animation and sound quality are great. Check out the film below and share your thoughts!
Here is a description:
You may like having a good lunch in a quiet place as a park... But what if your lunch doesn't?
In the street everyone can hear you scream, but honestly who cares?
The animation and sound quality are great. Check out the film below and share your thoughts!
- 5/3/2011
- by Tiberius
- GeekTyrant
Did a folksong-loving teacher really just happen to write England's most famous classical work? Film-maker Tony Palmer questions the myth of the author of The Planets
Making a film – any film – is a journey of exploration. If you knew at the beginning what you know at the end, why bother to make the film? This is one of the reasons I am often spurned by commissioning editors: I begin with no script, certainly no "agenda" (their favourite word), and no schedule. Not much of a budget either, come to think of it.
It was 40 years ago, while filming Benjamin Britten, that I first thought of making a film about Gustav Holst. I had noticed a photograph of the young Holst in Britten's music room, and asked him why. He told me, "I owe him more than I can tell you." Which was odd, because you almost never heard the name...
Making a film – any film – is a journey of exploration. If you knew at the beginning what you know at the end, why bother to make the film? This is one of the reasons I am often spurned by commissioning editors: I begin with no script, certainly no "agenda" (their favourite word), and no schedule. Not much of a budget either, come to think of it.
It was 40 years ago, while filming Benjamin Britten, that I first thought of making a film about Gustav Holst. I had noticed a photograph of the young Holst in Britten's music room, and asked him why. He told me, "I owe him more than I can tell you." Which was odd, because you almost never heard the name...
- 4/21/2011
- The Guardian - Film News
Musician lost a two-year battle with cancer.
By Kara Warner
Big Star's Chris Bell, Jody Stephens, Andy Hummel and Alex Chilton in 1972
Photo: Charlie Gillett/ Redferns
More sad news for Big Star fans. Almost four months to the day since Alex Chilton's sudden death comes the loss of original bassist Andy Hummel. According to Dallas website Dfw.com, Hummel died Monday (July 19) after a two-year battle with cancer.
Current bassist Ken Stringfellow broke the news, tweeting: "Another sad loss for Big Star fans as Andy Hummel passes away after long illness."
Jason Elzy, a representative with Big Star's label, Rhino Records, confirmed the report to MTV News: "Sadly, I can confirm this is true. Andy has passed away."
The Memphis-born Hummel, along with singer/songwriter Chilton, guitarist Chris Bell and drummer Jody Stephens (who is the only living original member), formed the rock band in 1971, and their uniquely layered...
By Kara Warner
Big Star's Chris Bell, Jody Stephens, Andy Hummel and Alex Chilton in 1972
Photo: Charlie Gillett/ Redferns
More sad news for Big Star fans. Almost four months to the day since Alex Chilton's sudden death comes the loss of original bassist Andy Hummel. According to Dallas website Dfw.com, Hummel died Monday (July 19) after a two-year battle with cancer.
Current bassist Ken Stringfellow broke the news, tweeting: "Another sad loss for Big Star fans as Andy Hummel passes away after long illness."
Jason Elzy, a representative with Big Star's label, Rhino Records, confirmed the report to MTV News: "Sadly, I can confirm this is true. Andy has passed away."
The Memphis-born Hummel, along with singer/songwriter Chilton, guitarist Chris Bell and drummer Jody Stephens (who is the only living original member), formed the rock band in 1971, and their uniquely layered...
- 7/19/2010
- MTV Music News
TNT shares another look into its new series "Rizzoli & Isles" which puts Angie Harmon as the lead star. Unlike most crime drama series, this one partners two women as the lead investigators. The promo highlights on the chemistry between Harmon's Jane Rizole and Sasha Alexander's Maura Isles.
In the street of Boston, it takes more than understanding the mind of a killer to track down a twisted criminal. To solve these complex cases, you need to understand the science of murder. That's why detective Jane Rizole joins forces with medical examiner Maura Isles. But these two friends don't work alone. They've got back up from Jane's rookie partner, her seasoned former partner and FBI agent Gabriel Dean.
The show is inspired by Tess Gerritsen novels. TNT puts this as a summer series, airing the pilot on July 12.
In the street of Boston, it takes more than understanding the mind of a killer to track down a twisted criminal. To solve these complex cases, you need to understand the science of murder. That's why detective Jane Rizole joins forces with medical examiner Maura Isles. But these two friends don't work alone. They've got back up from Jane's rookie partner, her seasoned former partner and FBI agent Gabriel Dean.
The show is inspired by Tess Gerritsen novels. TNT puts this as a summer series, airing the pilot on July 12.
- 6/1/2010
- by AceShowbiz.com
- Aceshowbiz
Anyone who saw the previews for last night's episode of The Real Housewives of New York knew that a showdown of epic proportions was going to take place between Alex and Jill -- the clip of Alex angrily saying "You are a mean girl! You are in high school!" has been making the rounds for weeks now, actually. Of course, anyone who watches the show also knew that several smaller eruptions would occur before we got to the main even. That's just how these women roll. The episode started off at Sonja's Cocktails and Couture party. Everyone (minus Bethenney and Simon) showed up,...
- 5/7/2010
- by Catherine Garcia
- EW.com - PopWatch
First the history, then the list:
In 1969, Jerome Hill, P. Adams Sitney, Peter Kubelka, Stan Brakhage, and Jonas Mekas decided to open the world’s first museum devoted to film. Of course, a typical museum hangs its collections of artwork on the wall for visitors to walk up to and study. However, a film museum needs special considerations on how — and what, of course — to present its collection to the public.
Thus, for this film museum, first a film selection committee was formed that included James Broughton, Ken Kelman, Peter Kubelka, Jonas Mekas and P. Adams Sitney, plus, for a time, Stan Brakhage. This committee met over the course of several months to decide exactly what films would be collected and how they would be shown. The final selection of films would come to be called the The Essential Cinema Repertory.
The Essential Cinema Collection that the committee came up with consisted of about 330 films.
In 1969, Jerome Hill, P. Adams Sitney, Peter Kubelka, Stan Brakhage, and Jonas Mekas decided to open the world’s first museum devoted to film. Of course, a typical museum hangs its collections of artwork on the wall for visitors to walk up to and study. However, a film museum needs special considerations on how — and what, of course — to present its collection to the public.
Thus, for this film museum, first a film selection committee was formed that included James Broughton, Ken Kelman, Peter Kubelka, Jonas Mekas and P. Adams Sitney, plus, for a time, Stan Brakhage. This committee met over the course of several months to decide exactly what films would be collected and how they would be shown. The final selection of films would come to be called the The Essential Cinema Repertory.
The Essential Cinema Collection that the committee came up with consisted of about 330 films.
- 5/3/2010
- by Mike Everleth
- Underground Film Journal
“I don’t get the song choices tonight. I really don’t.” – Ellen Degeneres Your Aunt Whittlz took her first steps into Idoldome Oh-Ten this afternoon with what could tentatively be termed optimism, PopWatchers. I have learned my lesson after yea these many years of writing blogs on this here website: You commenters can be tough, but you are never more cutting than when the author expresses a certain weary disdain for the subject at hand. New Season, New Attitude! was my Tlc-reality-show-style motto today, fueled by the gorgeous L.A. weather and a meeting we had with the...
- 3/24/2010
- by Whitney Pastorek
- EW.com - PopWatch
Alex Chilton died today of an apparent heart attack, a great loss to the New Orleans music scene. He was witty and shy - probably more comfortable on stage than off, like any former teen rock star. Chilton and The Boxtops scored a Number One hit with "The Letter" in 1967 when he was a 16 year old in Memphis. Boxtop hits that followed were "Cry Like a Baby" and "Soul Deep." His subsequent band Big Star had indie hits including "September Gurls," and That '70s Show theme "In the Street," earning the band and Chilton a dedicated following. He inspired "The Replacements" song "Alex Chilton" for their 1987 album, and an entire MySpace group is dedicated to celebrating Alex Chilton's birthday every year. Big Star was to perform tomorrow at South by Southwest indie music festival in Austin,...
- 3/19/2010
- by Karen Dalton-Beninato
- Huffington Post
You may not be able to place the name, but you'll definitely recognize the voice. Mega influential singer and guitarist Alex Chilton has died at the age of 59, after a music career that spanned more than four decades and included stints as a teen singer in the Box Tops (go ahead, just try not to sing along with "The Letter") and then in alt-rock darlings Big Star (whose hit "In the Street" was the theme song for That '70s Show). As a driving force behind Big Star, with whom he had been scheduled to perform at South by Southwest this Saturday, Chilton inspired the likes of R.E.M., Wilco, Jeff Buckley and the Replacements, who even went so far as to pen "Alex Chilton," a tribute tune to...
- 3/18/2010
- E! Online
Influential rock musician was scheduled to play at SXSW this week.
By Gil Kaufman
Alex Chilton
Photo: Frank Mullen/ Wireimage
Cult rock icon Alex Chilton, leader of the influential 1970s power-pop band Big Star, died on Wednesday in a New Orleans hospital at age 59.
The Memphis Commercial Appeal reported that Chilton, who was also a member of the 1960s pop-soul group the Box Tops ("The Letter"), had been complaining about feeling unwell earlier in the day and was taken by paramedics to an emergency room, where doctors could not revive him after he suffered a suspected heart attack.
"I'm crushed. We're all just crushed," said John Fry, a longtime friend of Chilton's and owner of Memphis' Ardent Studios, the legendary recording studio whose label, Ardent Records, released the first two Big Star albums. "This sudden death experience is never something that you're prepared for. And yet it occurs."
Chilton's death...
By Gil Kaufman
Alex Chilton
Photo: Frank Mullen/ Wireimage
Cult rock icon Alex Chilton, leader of the influential 1970s power-pop band Big Star, died on Wednesday in a New Orleans hospital at age 59.
The Memphis Commercial Appeal reported that Chilton, who was also a member of the 1960s pop-soul group the Box Tops ("The Letter"), had been complaining about feeling unwell earlier in the day and was taken by paramedics to an emergency room, where doctors could not revive him after he suffered a suspected heart attack.
"I'm crushed. We're all just crushed," said John Fry, a longtime friend of Chilton's and owner of Memphis' Ardent Studios, the legendary recording studio whose label, Ardent Records, released the first two Big Star albums. "This sudden death experience is never something that you're prepared for. And yet it occurs."
Chilton's death...
- 3/18/2010
- MTV Music News
The music world lost one of its true greats on Wednesday (March 17) as Alex Chilton, the mastermind of Big Star and an inspiration for most of the alternative rock revolution, died of a heart attack. He was 59 years old. Formed in Memphis in 1971, Big Star began as a group that channeled British Invasion sounds and filtered them through American recording traditions, creating a spectacular brew that borrowed elements from dozens of different genres but kept the hooks at the center of everything.
Chilton essentially invented power pop, and though Big Star didn't get the credit they deserved at the time, their records (especially 1974's Radio City) informed hundreds of bands that followed. They say that only a few hundred people bought the first album from the Velvet Underground, but every single one of them started a band. The same could be said for Big Star's debut #1 Record, often cited...
Chilton essentially invented power pop, and though Big Star didn't get the credit they deserved at the time, their records (especially 1974's Radio City) informed hundreds of bands that followed. They say that only a few hundred people bought the first album from the Velvet Underground, but every single one of them started a band. The same could be said for Big Star's debut #1 Record, often cited...
- 3/18/2010
- by Kyle Anderson
- MTV Newsroom
By Dominic Patten
Alex Chilton, the teenage chart-topper and cult rock icon who fronted the Box Tops and Big Star, died Wednesday in New Orleans of an apparent heart attack.
Primarily known for “In the Street,” the theme song of the hit sitcom “That 70s Show,” the 59-year old Chilton was also one of the major influences on bands such as R.E.M., Primal Scream and Wilco. In 1987, the Replacements released the song “Alex Chilton,” on their &ld...
Alex Chilton, the teenage chart-topper and cult rock icon who fronted the Box Tops and Big Star, died Wednesday in New Orleans of an apparent heart attack.
Primarily known for “In the Street,” the theme song of the hit sitcom “That 70s Show,” the 59-year old Chilton was also one of the major influences on bands such as R.E.M., Primal Scream and Wilco. In 1987, the Replacements released the song “Alex Chilton,” on their &ld...
- 3/18/2010
- by Josh Dickey
- The Wrap
Musician Alex Chilton died Wednesday (March 17) in New Orleans of a heart attack, reports his hometown paper, the Memphis Commercial Appeal. He was 59.
TV fans know Chilton for his group Big Star's song "In the Street," from the 1972 album "#1 Record" which was later recorded by Cheap Trick and used as the theme song for "That '70s Show."
In addition to Cheap Trick, Chilton has been cited as a major influence on many other musicians including Ryan Adams, R.E.M., The Replacements, Elliott Smith, Matthew Sweet and Wilco.
Chilton was scheduled to both perform an participate in a panel discussion Saturday at SXSW in Austin.
Follow Zap2it's Dish Rag on Twitter and Zap2it on Facebook for the latest celeb news and buzz.
TV fans know Chilton for his group Big Star's song "In the Street," from the 1972 album "#1 Record" which was later recorded by Cheap Trick and used as the theme song for "That '70s Show."
In addition to Cheap Trick, Chilton has been cited as a major influence on many other musicians including Ryan Adams, R.E.M., The Replacements, Elliott Smith, Matthew Sweet and Wilco.
Chilton was scheduled to both perform an participate in a panel discussion Saturday at SXSW in Austin.
Follow Zap2it's Dish Rag on Twitter and Zap2it on Facebook for the latest celeb news and buzz.
- 3/18/2010
- by editorial@zap2it.com
- Pop2it
Click images to enlarge...
Canadian film distributors Kinosmith are offering the following DVD titles of note from their extensive film collection :
"The Art Star And The Sudanese Twins" follows Vanessa Beecroft’s intentions to adopt orphaned twins, and how it affects her art and personal life.
"...Pop star of the art world, Vanessa Beecroft is determined to adopt orphaned twins, an intention that bleeds into her art and reveals her volatile relationship with her husband. Alongside the adoption process Vanessa photographs herself breast feeding the twins, creating her own artwork. Like Angelina and Madonna, Vanessa is a white westerner intent on rescuing third world babies. But at what cost to her personal life?..."
In "Ghosts", a 17 year-old girl left on her own, creates an intriguing journey to meet a new companion and reunite with her mother.
"...Nina (Julia Hummer) is a vulnerable 17-year old, alone in the world except...
Canadian film distributors Kinosmith are offering the following DVD titles of note from their extensive film collection :
"The Art Star And The Sudanese Twins" follows Vanessa Beecroft’s intentions to adopt orphaned twins, and how it affects her art and personal life.
"...Pop star of the art world, Vanessa Beecroft is determined to adopt orphaned twins, an intention that bleeds into her art and reveals her volatile relationship with her husband. Alongside the adoption process Vanessa photographs herself breast feeding the twins, creating her own artwork. Like Angelina and Madonna, Vanessa is a white westerner intent on rescuing third world babies. But at what cost to her personal life?..."
In "Ghosts", a 17 year-old girl left on her own, creates an intriguing journey to meet a new companion and reunite with her mother.
"...Nina (Julia Hummer) is a vulnerable 17-year old, alone in the world except...
- 12/7/2009
- by Michael Stevens
- SneakPeek
Canadian-based film distributors Kinosmith, in association with DVD partner Project X Distribution have announced new DVD titles to their extensive film collection. The Art Star And The Sudanese Twins follows Vanessa Beecroft.s intentions to adopt orphaned twins, and how it affects her art and personal life. "...Pop star of the art world, Vanessa Beecroft is determined to adopt orphaned twins, an intention that bleeds into her art and reveals her volatile relationship with her husband. Alongside the adoption process Vanessa photographs herself breast feeding the twins, creating her own artwork. Like Angelina and Madonna, Vanessa is a white westerner intent on rescuing third world babies. But at what cost to her personal life?..." In Ghosts, a 17 year-old girl left on her own, creates an intriguing journey to meet a new companion and reunite with her mother. "...Nina (Julia Hummer) is a vulnerable 17-year old, alone in the world except...
- 11/20/2009
- HollywoodNorthReport.com
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