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'Homeland': Spy, Interrupted

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There's a great moment early in the new season of Homeland: Claire Danes as ex-CIA agent Carrie Mathison, back on the team for this one last mission, stalks the streets of Beirut, Lebanon. She spots a shady guy trailing her, hangs up on her boss, tosses the cellphone and executes a clever knee-to-groin takedown of her adversary. Then she breaks into a furtively girlish goofball smile, the first moment of happiness she's had in a long time. For once, she was scared of something that turned out to be real. Just because she's paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get her.



Created by a couple of 24 vets, Homeland might have seemed just like an old-fashioned story: the rogue American superspy who plays by her own rules to save the world from the latest Dr. Evil. She follows her hunches, defies her superiors, ignores the protocols. It might seem a little implausible that she's always right. But it works because it comes down to the story of this woman and her struggle with her sanity.

Danes makes it compelling all by turning on the crazy, with her quivering voice and flinching face muscles. Her main grip on stability is her relationship with her mentor Saul (Mandy Patinkin), playing the Peggy Olson to his Don Draper, the Liz Lemon to his Jack Donaghy. On Homeland, the geopolitical hot-button issues don't always come across as credible, but the psychological and emotional issues do. Here, the terrorist conspiracy is embedded so deeply in the U.S. that only the crazy Americans are patriots. Danes' wild-eyed fragility is the proof that she's for real. She's the only character we can trust because she's constantly about to flip the fuck out.

At the end of the bang-up first season, you could be forgiven for worrying that Homeland had used up all its narrative ammunition. Where are they supposed to go from here? We found out the big mystery when we learned that Carrie's hunch was right – Nicholas Brody, the returned POW and new congressman, is a terrorist, turned by Al Qaeda. Then Carrie got axed from the CIA after a complete mental flameout. But Homeland doesn't waste any time dragging Carrie out of exile and back into the CIA fold, although this time she's strictly a freelancer. Nobody knows she was on the right trail, not even her; she follows her hunches because she can't control herself. There's an element of Buffy the Vampire Slayer in all her lonely struggle. Buffy's epitaph read, "She Saved the World. A Lot." Carrie's in the same business. Homeland is a paranoid drama for a paranoid nation, one where the threat of terrorism is constant, yet inert.

Morally and politically, it's not all that far removed from 24. The good guys may have their flaws, but Homeland doesn't question that they're doing what has to be done. And while the bad guys have their reasons, the good guys/bad guys line remains suspiciously tidy. As Carrie, Danes is the element that messes up all this tidiness; she's scary, unstable, out of control. She panics over actual threats as well as things that are merely in her head. In other words, she's human. And ultimately, her humanity is what keeps Homeland fascinating.



Source

I completely agree, tbh. Never been a fan of Danes but she is flawless on this show.

kety perr performs at amfAR gala

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Katy Perry will do anything for a good cause.

She'll even offer to have sex with you for the right price.

OK, maybe not, but last night at the American Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR) "Inspiration Gala" in Los Angeles, she helped auction off a signed guitar by screaming out during the bidding, "I'll have sex with you, too."

Kidding aside, she did throw in another perk: taking the winning bidder to gay bar The Abbey. Girls Gone Wild creator Joe Francis started things off with a $10,000 bid, but he was outdone by New York Giants owner Steve Tisch, who won with a $32,000 pledge.
Perry ran over to Tisch, hugged him and smiled, "I'm going to have sex with you."


Perry closed the event by performing five songs, including her hits "Wide Awake" and "Firework."

She also sang Bonnie Raitt's "I Can't Make You Love Me." (watch HERE) No word if it had anything to do with men like Russell Brand or John Mayer, but she did say before belting out the tune, "This song needs no introduction."

SOURCE

this post is dedicated to my bff katyperry

Ricki Lake discusses circumcision

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On today's Ricki Lake show, the question of the day is "to cut or not to cut?" Ricki meets a man who chose to get an adult circumcision at age 37 due to medical reasons. Hugo Schwyzer talks about his painless surgery as well as his improvements to his sexual life.

source

Ricki also meets a couple about to have a baby boy who are at odds on whether to circumcise or not. Two doctors will debate the health pros and cons, and we will debunk the sexual myths about circumcision.

Official Synopsis for THOR: THE DARK WORLD

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Marvel’s Thor: The Dark World continues the big-screen adventures of Thor, the Mighty Avenger, as he battles to save Earth and all the Nine Realms from a shadowy enemy that predates the universe itself. In the aftermath of Marvel’s Thor and Marvel’s The Avengers, Thor fights to restore order across the cosmos…but an ancient race led by the vengeful Malekith returns to plunge the universe back into darkness. Faced with an enemy that even Odin and Asgard cannot withstand, Thor must embark on his most perilous and personal journey yet, one that will reunite him with Jane Foster and force him to sacrifice everything to save us all.

Starring Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman, Tom Hiddleston, Stellan Skarsgård, Idris Elba, Christopher Eccleston, Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje, Kat Dennings, Ray Stevenson, Zachary Levi, Tadanobu Asano and Jaimie Alexander with Rene Russo and Anthony Hopkins as Odin, Thor: The Dark World is directed by Alan Taylor, produced by Kevin Feige, from a story by Don Payne (credit not final) and screenplay by Christopher Yost and Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely (credit not final) and is based on Marvel’s classic Super Hero Thor, who first appeared in the comic book Journey into Mystery“ #83 in August, 1962.

Thor: The Dark World is presented by Marvel Studios. The executive producers are Louis D’Esposito, Alan Fine, Stan Lee, Victoria Alonso, Craig Kyle and Nigel Gostelow. The film releases November 8, 2013, and is distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures.
Directed by Alan Taylor, Thor: The Dark World opens on November 8th, 2013.


src

Time To Get Stoned

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After a brief visit with her male companion, Emma Stone made her way back to her car in Los Angeles on Tuesday October 9th







Visiting a friend in Los Angeles October 10th











On Set of iCarly





The name of the episode Emma will guest star is iFind Spencer Friends and will air next week, Oct 20th.

Plot: Carly and the gang try to find Spencer some adult friends, and along the way, they cross paths with a high-energy iCarly uberfan portrayed by Emma Stone.

About her character: Heather crosses paths with Carly and Spencer when the gang tries to find him some friends his own age, but she doesn't turn out to be as "adult" as Carly and the gang wished. She turns out to be a s "superfan" of iCarly. And has the same high enrgy as Spencer.

More Fan Pics







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Covert Affairs 3x11 Promos & Sneak Peeks

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Covert Affairs season 3 returns from its brief hiatus on October 16 with episode 11, "Rock 'N' Roll Suicide," which will show what happens next for Annie, who's on the run and in trouble.

"Auggie, Joan and Arthur work with an old friend to bring Annie home from a Russian prison."

Promo #1




Promo #2


Promo #3


Promo #4




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Blue Ivy's sibling coming soon?

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[Blind Gossip]  They do want to have more kids. And she is not taking on a high-profile project. So, is she pregnant or isn’t she pregnant?

The answer is no. She didn’t carry the first baby. So why in the world would she carry the next? Perhaps because the last pregnancy was a total PR mess? But if she can’t/won’t get pregnant on her own, they still have a couple of choices. They can either be more convincing the next time around (better SFX and more realistic acting)… or just admit that they are using a surrogate.

In either case,  the next baby is planned for late 2013/early 2014. And since they have some embryos left over from the last time, it will definitely be their baby biologically!

Oh, and the real reason she bailed out of that high-profile project? Because the director dissed her friend.

Tulisa Thinks There Is a Beast Inside of Nicole Scherzinger; Travis Payne Says She's a True Star

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Travis Payne: Nicole Scherzinger is a true star


Michael Jackson's choreographer Travis Payne thinks Nicole Scherzinger is a huge talent and makes a great 'X Factor' judge, but insists no one in music will ever topple the King of Pop.
Nicole Scherzinger is ''very qualified'' to be a talent show judge, legendary choreographer Travis Payne has claimed.

Travis - who is best known for inventing some of Michael Jackson's signature moves - immediately saw star potential in the former Pussycat Dolls singer while judging US programme 'Popstars' in 2001 and thinks she has all right qualities to mentor other pop hopefuls on British series 'The X Factor'.

Travis told BANG Showbiz: ''I think Nicole's very qualified. I remember being a judge on a show called 'Popstars' years ago which is where I found her, and was very insistent in her continuing on in the process through the auditions.


''She always thanks me for that, but I saw in her that she was a star and she just needed to be discovered. I met her in Chicago. She was in college and she had pigtails and glasses - not at all the vixen that we've come to know now!

''I think she's immensely talented and she's had enough experience that she can mentor others.''

Despite working closely with Nicole and the likes of Madonna and Lady Gaga, Travis is yet to find an artist who exudes as much star quality as Michael Jackson or even comes close to having his talent.

Travis doesn't think his legacy will ever be bettered and his reign as the King of Pop will last forever.

Travis admitted: ''There are many great artists out there that will have rich legacies of their own, but I think that Michael was a very unique individual who paved a way for a lot of those people.

''It wasn't just a talent, it was the timing, it was the innovation, it was the pioneering that I think are going to be very difficult for anyone to top ... That just doesn't happen anymore.''

Travis is a choreographer on the 'Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour' by Cirque du Soleil. The spectacular show opens in the UK on Friday 12 October at London's O2 arena and runs until October 21.




X Factor’s Tulisa: There's a beast inside Nicole Scherzinger



X Factor’s Tulisa: There's a beast inside Nicole Scherzinger

Tulisa Contostavlos has revealed that fellow X Factor judge Nicole Scherzinger isn't as soft as she seems.

Nonetheless, former N-Dubz singer Tulisa - who's in her second year on the panel of Simon Cowell's singing contest - thinks newbie Nicole, 34, is "lovely".

Tulisa told Cosmopolitan magazine: "There will be no fights between us. We’re complete opposites and she brings out the more sensitive side in me.

"There is a beast inside Nicole, though, if you push her. She would bite your f*cking head off.

"That girl has got so much fire, but - unlike me - she keeps it reserved, whereas I wear my fire on the outside!"

Tulisa's group Little Mix won X Factor last year - but she insists she's not worried about her chances mentoring the girls category this series.

The singer continued: "I know that everyone will assume I want to win again this year - especially after the year I’ve had - but I’m not bothered.

"It’s not about me, it’s about the contestants, and I believe in righteousness. I want the right person to win, whether they are in my category or not.”

Tulisa's tough year has included a high-profile break-up from her N-Dubz band mate Fazer and the release of a "humiliating" sex tape that saw her giving oral sex to another former boyfriend.

The 24-year-old described the release of the X-rated video as the worst thing that's ever happened to her, but now she insists she's over it.

And Tulisa's adamant that she doesn't pine for the attention that comes with being a celebrity.

She continued to Cosmopolitan: “I don’t want the fame; I want the success... There’s always higher to go.

"Once I achieve something, though, I always focus on reaching for the next goal. If you don’t keep stepping up to the next level, then you just stop and think there’s nowhere to go.

"I look around me and there are other artists doing stuff on a bigger scale, and I’ve got to be up there. I should be around the world by now!"


source 1 | 2

Green Day Producer: Billie Joe Armstrong's Rehab Is 'No Joke'

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Rob Cavallo hints the band may need to cancel more shows




Last month, Green Day frontman Billie Joe Armstrong checked into rehab for substance abuse after an onstage tirade at the iHeartRadio music festival in Las Vegas, and Rolling Stone has learned his road to recovery may be a long one.

"His rehab is no joke," says Warner Bros. Records Chairman Rob Cavallo. "He's under medical supervision for a while to get him clean."

So far, the band has canceled appearances including New Orleans' upcoming Voodoo Music and Arts Experience. They currently have tour dates scheduled beginning November 26th at Seattle's Paramount Theatre and wrapping in February, but it's still up in the air whether more dates will be canceled.

"His doctors are still evaluating," says Cavallo, who has produced major Green Day albums including 1994's Dookie and 2004's American Idiot. "All I can say is I don't know if we'll see him before or after Christmas. It's basically undetermined when he'll be back."

Earlier this week, Green Day bassist Mike Dirnt told BBC Radio 1 host Zane Lowe the pressure to promote three albums – ¡Uno!, ¡Dos! and ¡Tre! – put a heavy burden on the band. "With hindsight 20/20, it was a tremendous undertaking," Dirnt said. "Although we were having fun, we didn't take our nose out of the book for a long time. I think it catches up with you a little bit. We definitely just jumped off a moving train."

The bassist added Armstrong's Vegas incident wasn't a complete surprise. "There were signs of things hitting the fan," he said. "We hadn't slept in forever and Billie had definitely had the worst of it. He'd been going through his own struggles . . . We were there with him, but you can only handle things on your own . . . At the end of the day, when we got off the road, the most important thing was my friend's life."

Bat For Lashes - Natasha Khan's guide to new album The Haunted Man

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bfl500


Bat For Lashes, aka Natasha Khan, releases her third album The Haunted Man on Monday (22 October). She gave Q a personal tour through the record...

Lilies
"Every time I write an album, the first track is my favourite in a way. This one especially because the content of the song is a really good manifesto for the rest of the record. It starts out haunted by being lonely or not able to get inspiration, feeling a bit isolated. By the end it moves into this pro-life, elated full-on ending. For me, the album is about letting go of things and resolving something. I think because I wrote it over such a long time - a period of two years - I was almost trying to get away from extremes, trying to be a real person and settle down and find out about those bits in between the drama of feeling really sad and fucked up and really euphoric and happy, because I'd written the last album in that dramatic dark place. I wanted the The Haunted Man to be a bit more eclectic and varied and rich, I suppose."





All Your Gold
"This song was a real pain in the arse. It was the troubled teenager of the album. I wrote it really early on and it was kind of like an En Vogue-style R&B tune. I loved it but didn't know what to do with it cos it wasn't quite right. I tried it a few different production things, but in the end I realised it wasn't the production - the songwriting wasn't up to scratch. So I rewrote it with just the main hook and changed the key and re-wrote the chorus. It's really simple and with [co-producer] Dan Carey on the MPC [hip hop sampling machine], we sampled old indian drums and took lots of electronic hip hop 808 sounds and put them through old amps. We used forks on glasses of water as well, so there's loads of layers of percussion that made it what it was. It's a song about the difficult choice that women have; the choice between the good new guy and the old bad guy. If you know someone's bad for you and you really want them, it's really hard when you get someone nice. Women are really bad for that. This album is me taking away all the glitter and the feathers and all the things that have become passé in a way and also for me I felt like I'd pushed those visual symbols to the extreme. The question was, If I strip it away, can I still convey something powerful? I embraced it and if it feels like less like a reinvention than it does peeling back the layers to get to the essence of what you're feeling like. For me, this album is going back to square one. It was exciting, but it was a long process."




Horses Of The Sun
"This was the first song I wrote for the album. It was written in a hotel room at the end of the Two Suns tour. It sounds most like the old stuff to me. I wrote it on an autoharp in a hotel room. When I brought it back, what moved it into the realm of the new album was [co-producer] David Kosten and I working on this Rihanna-y, Lil Wayne style snare beats, thinking of Snoop Dogg. I was really exploring my voice, trying out the lower part of my register. The content of the song makes sense that it's the first one, it says I curse the road. It's walking back through my door off this crazy journey and deciding to stay at home in England and not move for a couple of years. I wanted to incorporate a much more English sound on this album. I was looking at the history of the English side of my family and reading a lot of old English authors and romantic poetry. There are quite archaic themes in there."

Oh Yeah
"I wrote this one quite early too. I thought the syncopated hip-hop beat in it was really sexy and then I found a sample of the gospel, choral part. It took a long time to develop the lyrics. Eventually, I visualised a big Henri Rousseau painting, or those big jungle paintings with all the naked ladies in it. It's about blossoming into womanhood. It's quite a sexy song, trawling through this jungle-y flora and fauna, a hot and sweaty landscape where nectarine dripping. It's basically my biological clock ticking, loudly!"

Laura
"I wrote Laura with [Video Games co-writer] Justin Parker. We played around the piano chords together and then I went away and did the vocal and melody. We just put it down that day and that's the recording I use, the first moment I sang that song. It captures that starkness and the feeling. The orchestral arrangement I wrote the day before we went to Abbey Road, then I quickly arranged it all. That's when I realised that maybe I have developed a bit of a craft in some ways, because some people would go in and ham it up and I remember writing it and thinking, This has to grow so slowly. I wanted to hold it back. I'm proud of that arrangement. When we went to Abbey Road and they actually played it, I think everyone in the control room had a tear in their eye. We were like, It worked! I knew it would never be chosen as a single because it would depress the nation so that's why we put it out as a free download. The record company wanted to put something out and it's a classic ballad in terms of the 70s ballads. I just wanted to give it a chance. It would never be supported by Radio 1 or whatever."




Winter Fields
"The end of Laura has these fading orchestral, minimal low notes, and moving into Winter Fields seemed to work because it's a similar set-up which is bass flutes and low cellos. They kind of relate to each other in some ways but Winter Fields becomes much more rousing and moves into that English landscape place. I think it's the most nostalgic track on the record, harkening back to my memories of childhood, being in the back of a car driving through country lanes as it's snowing, looking out over the fields. Those real childhood depictions of the English landscape. It's a little bit haunted, lost in the flurries of snow."

The Haunted Man
"I think the whole album is about The Haunted Man, he features in most of the songs, where he can be a lover in a relationship that's gone wrong or relationship baggage I want to let go of. In this one, it's a husband who's come back from war. It's using that metaphor of war. The man is really traumatised, the woman is trying to help. By the end of the song, the male voices and female voices are speaking to each other but it's about how men and women speak very different languages sometimes. So the women will try and fix something by being nurturing and show love and the men are saying, I just want to go to my cave. It was using the idea that my Granddad went away to war, nobody was offered help in those days, and how did that affect his relationship with my Grandma. Our families have all experience a lot of that in this country and that dynamic can come through in modern relationships too. I wanted to make it like a mini-musical, so the woman is alone and then the soldiers come over the hill and we panned the sound across so it sounds like soldiers coming over a hill. I feel like it explores all the different textures of the record. I wanted to write a song that was like a soundtrack."

Marilyn
"This is one of my favourites. It's really romantic to me. It's one I worked with Beck on and the little arpeggio sounds and shoegazey guitars came from the sessions with him. I've got fond memories of recording it. It's about being in love with someone who is unattainable. It's a romantic, gushy sweet song. I love how experimental and playful Beck is still. He's always got an energy. He has a lovely family too. I hung out with his kids and his wife and we had a lovely time."




A Wall
"In the past, I'd done not as many happy songs. For me, A Wall is definitely a more positive slant on coming through something and looking at it positively. It's been going down really well live. The end is really euphoric and the outro is really happy. If we do it as a single, it'd be good to get it remixed. I feel like it could a really nice dance song."


Rest Your Head
"I was working with Dan Carey on the beats and stuff. Rest Your Head has got this dubby vibe to the low notes with me playing some piano for real over the top. We were listening to the Jamie xx/ Gil Scott Heron album and I was also thinking about some 90s dance music. I like to combine the electronic with organic things and give them a bit of humanity. I've got no idea where I'll go next - I've got absolutely nothing. It's like when you've just had a baby and you're breastfeeding. I don't want to think about another baby right now!"


Deep Sea Diver
"This wasn't written as a closing song, and for a while I didn't know what the last song would be. As it developed, I really like the ambient layering. It's a comforting song for me, it sets everything back to neutral. It's a good cuddle at the end of the album. It built-up slowly with loads of layers. The beginning of the song has a really important refrain: Let your hair down, throw your head back, relax, it's alright. By the end the music takes over and it's called Deep Sea Diver. Maybe you're on your own, feeling really goofy sitting at the bottom of the sea!"

Niall Doherty @NiallMDoherty





I love reading musicians insights into their albums so I thought this would make a good post. 
What's everyone's first impressions of The Haunted Man?


SOURCE: http://news.qthemusic.com/2012/10/bat_for_lashes_-_natasha_khans.html 

Jake T. Austin at American Humane Association's "Hero Dog Awards"

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Bailee Madison and Jake T. Austin hit the red carpet together at The American Humane Association’s 2012 Hero Dog Awards held at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Saturday night (October 6) in Beverly Hills, Calif.

The two presented an award at the ceremony later in the night.











Source 1, 2, 3

Rihanna at Colony nightclub

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After a studio session Rihanna took a break at Colony nightclub. Yesterday RiRi unveiled her new album cover and title: “Unapologetic”. The album will hit the shelves on November 19th.
 





Arriving at a Recording Studio.
Rihanna was spotted yesterday evening (October 11) arriving at a recording studio in Los Angeles.  
src: 1 | 2 | 3

her body is perfect imo

FFAF: October 12

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Have a lovely weekend!

May it be full of pugs and candy





You know the rules kids, no porn, spamming, fighting, dickishness, whatever.

Patti Smith: Kristen Stewart, Rob Pattinson ‘could have easily played us’ in ‘Just Kids’ film

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Is singer-writer and early punk inspiration Patti Smith a fan of Kristen Stewart and Rob Pattinson?
You bet.
The iconic performer, who is steadily working with Oscar-nominated screenwriter John Logan (in between touring) on the script for a film adaptation of her 2010 bestselling memoir Just Kids, about her relationship with photographer Robbert Mapplethorpe when the two were starving young artists in New York City, voiced her appreciation of the Twilight stars to EW just before her small, private concert for Los Angeles radio station KCRW on Wednesday. She added that she could see the pair playing her and Mapplethorpe on screen … when they were lesser known.

I remember the very first time I saw Kristen Stewart and Rob Pattinson together, when they were younger, and I thought, ‘Those two kids could have easily played us when they were first starting,” said Smith. “There’s something in his eyes. And Robert [Mapplethorpe] was also a bit shy, and a bit stoic. Kristen has a very special quality. She’s not conventionally beautiful, but very charismatic.



Hear that Robsten? Stewart, who’s already played another rocker, Joan Jett, in 2010′s The Runaways, better perk up those slender ears.
Smith, a self-professed movies fan, also said that writing the screenplay was harder to do with her packed touring schedule behind her newest album Banga, but that anyone who snags the coveted roles of her and Mapplethorpe have to be unknown names. (Ok, put those ears down, Robsten).
John Logan and I are very close. We have our format. We’re both really busy right now. That’s the kind of thing that has to be done at the right time, and treated very tenderly,” Smith said. “Robert and I were very young. We were 20. We were unknowns, and I think it should be unknowns in the film, and young.
As for newer actresses she loves, besides Stewart?
I love Mia Wasikowka. I love the girl who plays Hannah – Saoirse Ronan. She’s brilliant. The depth of that girl. There’s a lot of interesting actresses and actors for any project. It’s a subject I like to think about. It gives me great hope when I see new young artists in any field,” said Smith, grinning. “People always ask me about my favorite new bands. I don’t really have any, but I have a lot of favorite new actresses. I love the movies. The first time I saw Tim Burton’s Alice In Wonderland, I must have cried an hour. I just sat in the movie theater. I saw Mia again in Jane Eyre, and she was wonderful in that. I just enjoy the movies.”
Case in point: Tom Hanks, Rita Wilson, Ed Harris, Tim Robbins and Ellen Page all showed up to Wednesday’s show.



http://popwatch.ew.com/2012/10/11/patti-smith-kristen-stewart-rob-pattinson-just-kids-film/

Shiny Toy Guns :: Somewhere To Hide


TLC's Newest Freak *cough* ~Educational~ Show: Extreme Cheapskates

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Roy Haynes pinches pennies by reusing paper towels, which he hangs in his living room to dry

Some people are frugal. Some people are tightwads. And others are so cheap, even they consider themselves to be extreme. Yahoo! Shine talked to three super-savers -- stars of TLC's new show, "Extreme Cheapskates," which debuts on October 16 -- to get tips on how everyday people can go for extreme savings.


"I would say 'cheapskate' is probably an understatement for me," Roy Haynes, 62, told Yahoo! Shine in an interview. "Some people think outside the box. I tend to live outside the box."

Haynes will happily dumpster dive for gifts and items to fix and resell and, while he won't touch food from the trash, he has no problem taking leftovers from a restaurant -- even if they come from other diners.

"We go out to eat every now and then, and I ask the people at the next table for their leftover food to take home," he told Yahoo! Shine. "That's fine. I have no qualms with that."

He married his longtime girlfriend years ago so he could be on her health insurance, but she's not always a fan of his extreme frugality. "Lisa sort of frowns upon some of my ways," he admits. When he starts eying other people's dinners, she'll walk out of the restaurant; she also hates it when he unwinds the two-ply toilet paper in order to make separate, single-ply rolls.

He'll go to great lengths to save a few cents -- he has a clothesline in his Huntington, Vermont, living room where he hangs the paper towels he washes and reuses, sharpens disposable razor blades, and makes his own cleaning supplies -- but Haynes has a big reason for pinching his pennies: He and his wife run a non-profit pet rescue center, Save Our Strays, out of their home.

"We've been doing this for 15 years," he says. The money he saves goes to pay for food and veterinarian bills for the pets they rescue. "It's a full-time job that doesn't pay anything," he explains. "We derive no income from it. That's why we have to save every penny we can."

Abdul-Salaam Mohammed, a hot-dog cart business owner in Sioux Falls, South Dakaota, cuts his expenses by haggling for everything, from food and utility bills to gifts and party supplies.

"First, you have to have the bravery to ask," he told Yahoo! Shine. "Most people are too intimidated to even ask for a cheaper price."

Most businesses have sales, discounts, and mark downs, he points out. "Don't be so willing to give up so quickly," he advises. "If you're not embarrassed by how low your offer is, then you didn't get a great deal."

He recently bought a $7,000 used car for $3,500 in cash, thanks to his keen haggling skills, and threw an anniversary party for his wife for just $25. The money they save funds family trips to places like Aruba, China, and the Dominican Republic, but his kids -- ages 17, 14, and 12 -- aren't impressed.

"They're still at that embarrassed stage right now," he admits. "Maybe when they get a little older."

Ben Livingston of Austin, Texas, is a 54-year-old artist who's gotten creative about ways to keep his costs low. He covers himself in cornstarch to beat the Texas heat, and gets his drinking water from a creek nearby.

"We have a lot of artisan springs here that come out of the ground," he told Yahoo! Shine. "Why would I spend money on awful tap water that has all these impurities in it when I can go down and get really lovely creek water that's coming out of a spring?"

"I've been an self-supporting artist for 30 years," he explained. "When you work on a shoestring budget, you have to keep your expenses down."

His thrifty ways extend to his artwork: He crafts his neon sculptures from scraps and shards gathered from glass makers and neon shops. (You can see some of his work at BenLivingston.com.)

Because he works with glass, deep cuts are a fact of life. But Livingston handles these work-related injuries himself: He has friends and clients who are doctors, and they taught him how to suture. "I have sewn myself up on my kitchen sink so many times," he says. "I have probably saved… God only knows. It's fantastic!"

He does have health insurance -- "I'm not stupid, I'm just frugal," he quips -- but he, his wife, and their 30-year-old daughter live debt-free thanks to his penny-pinching ways.

"If you get into what people call the waste stream, it's kind of amazing how inexpensive you can live," he says.

Interested in trying out some of their extreme measures? Here are a few of these frugal zealots' best, easy-to-adopt tips:
  • Save on your water bill by putting a brick in your toilet's tank; you'll use less water with every flush.
  • Slip scraps of soap into an old sock and keep it in the shower. "It works like a scrubby thing," Livingston says.
  • Be aware of what you're using. Victoria Hunt, who retired from her accounting career before she was 50, has been tracking her expenses and her income on a spreadsheet since 1989. "Every minute of every day has something to do with how I can make a better decisions financially," she points out.
  • Refill your condiment bottles at home with free packets from fast-food restaurants.
  • Instead of throwing away your coffee grounds, add a pinch of fresh coffee to the old ones and perk another pot.
  • Cut open your toothpaste tube after you've squeezed all you can out of it. "You'll get an extra week's worth," Haynes says.
  • Kill your cable bill and subscribe to services like Netflix that allow you to watch what you want through your gaming console, Mohammed suggests.
  • Keep electrical appliances and gadgets unplugged whenever possible.
  • Look for the deep discounts on out-of-season decorations, discontinued gadgets, and about-to-expire food that's still good. You don't have to dumpster dive to get something for almost free.
  • Don't be afraid to ask for a discount. "I've called and had the electricity bill lowered," Mohammed says. "I just called and asked."

But the cheapskates agree that their biggest tips are to stop worrying about what other people think, stay open-minded, and believe that every little thing matters.

"You decide what it is in life that you really want to spend money on," Livingston says. "To live on a shoestring budget and to do what you want to do in life just takes a little more imagination."


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So what do you scrimp on, ONTD?  

Oprah's Favorite Things Returning as OWN Special

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If you miss the pandemonium that ensued with every annual edition of "Oprah's Favorite Things," you're in luck. OWN is bringing it back in a two-hour special this fall.



The network made the announcement Friday. This time, the audience getting showered with Oprah's insane giveaways is an “unsuspecting group of deserving military spouses." The special will air on November 18, and serve as the lead-in for OWN's new documentary series "Married to the Army: Alaska."

"Oprah's Favorite Things" took a one-year hiatus in 2011 after Oprah's daytime show came to an end. To look back at the legendary feature, see some of the highlights from 2010.

OWN is reviving "Favorite Things" as it gains traction in the ratings. The network initially struggled after launching in January 2011, prompting Oprah to take the reins and overhaul the programming. Oprah's "Next Chapter" interviews with newsmakers like Jennifer Hudson and Whitney Houston's daughter Bobbi Christina have been key to the recent boon.














Huff Post

First preview of Miley Cyrus on 'Two And A Half Men'

Inside Amanda Bynes' Career-Ending Meltdown: 'I Don't Love Acting Anymore'

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With no agents, managers or publicists left, the one-time exemplary actress - called a "young Lucille Ball" by one exec - gave harrowing warning signs after being fired off the 2011 film "Hall Pass."

Amanda Bynes was trying to make a change. In August 2008, the former teen star parted ways with her talent agency CAA and began making the rounds at several others that were vying to represent the actress. Coming off of the 2007 hit Hairspray and a handful of modestly successful teen comedies, Bynes was widely coveted by agencies that saw a lot of upside in the former Nickelodeon television star. But, according to a high-level agency source who was present at one of the meetings Bynes took with her father in tow, the then-22-year-old actress was deeply frustrated with her lot in Hollywood.

"Everybody had her as a goody-goody. She couldn't break out of that genre," this executive says. "Her frustration was, 'I could have played this role; I could have played that role. I'm not getting the Lindsay Lohan roles.' "


Back then, Bynes and Lohan, born just months apart, were indeed charting different career paths, with Lohan landing parts in adult fare like Robert Altman's A Prairie Home Companion. But the young women also were viewed very differently by the public. By the summer of 2008, Lohan had been arrested a handful of times on drunk driving and drug possession charges, while Bynes' reputation -- at least in the media -- was largely untarnished.

Four years later, the actress finally might be getting her wish: comparisons to Lohan. But this has nothing to do with Bynes' filmography and everything to do with her unraveling personal life.

Since an early April 2012 arrest for drunk driving and an alleged hit-and-run a few days later, the one-time star appears to have become unhinged. In addition to her legal troubles -- she has twice been cited for driving on a suspended license and in August was involved in another alleged hit-and-run -- the actress' recent erratic behavior has alarmed industry observers. In September alone, she was reported to have locked herself in the dressing room of the West Hollywood boutique Kin for two hours, was thrown out of an Equinox in West Hollywood after removing her shirt and exercising in a strapless push-up bra, was photographed smoking an unknown substance in her car and shut herself in New York's Little Cupcake Bakeshop's bathroom for 30 minutes. Meanwhile, Bynes reiterated to People on Sept. 20 a claim that she first made in 2010: "I am retired as an actor."

The strange chain of events has shocked Hollywood players because, for much of her career, Bynes seemed a model citizen. "I am as surprised as anyone would be after working with her and having such a positive experience," says David Robinson, president of Morgan Creek Productions, who was a producer on Bynes' 2007 teen comedy Sydney White. "She was always on time, worked hard and was great with the crew and the cast."

Indeed, the young actress had a sterling reputation in Hollywood until, according to sources, she was unable to capitalize on the opportunity she'd long waited for -- an adult role in the 2011 prurient comedy Hall Pass. It was her departure from the project -- after arriving to the shoot unprepared -- that either was symptomatic of or the beginning of her precipitous decline, say sources.

Wrapped up in the wayward actress' messy fall is an implicit question: Who, if anyone, is responsible for protecting young actors as they transition into adulthood? It's an age-old Hollywood issue, but one that the Bynes situation has magnified. Many industry sources say that, in addition to an actor's parents, it falls to his or her representation -- the agent, manager, publicist and attorney -- to intervene when serious personal issues like drug abuse materialize, even if such effort isn't part of the job description. "Absolutely it's their responsibility, and they know it," says writer-director Paul Schrader, who helmed the forthcoming Lohan starrer The Canyons. "Unfortunately, sometimes clients don't let them do their job. It's not for lack of trying that intervention fails."

Hollywood, of course, has produced countless young stars who have melted down after struggling with issues such as substance abuse. The Wizard of Oz star Judy Garland famously grappled with drug and alcohol problems starting in her 20s, as did Drew Barrymore, Corey Feldman and Todd Bridges before turning things around. And still others, including the late Corey Haim and Dana Plato, never overcame their demons. Traditionally, it has not been the role of talent agents and other representatives to guide the personal lives of clients, even if some young actors live alone and unsupervised far earlier than "regular" children; from the beginning, many agents make it clear they manage careers and not datebooks.

And so several sources note that it isn't always easy to make that difficult call and confront a client. Some representatives wind up enabling rather than shepherding their clients, out of fear of losing a breadwinner. "When you get involved, you have to be ready for the repercussions," says a talent agent who has been present for an intervention with a wayward starlet. "There is a moral bridge you get to: What's more important, the representation of a client or the health and welfare of a human being?"

But these days, Bynes no longer has representation after parting ways in the past few years with CAA's Jason Heyman, attorney David Feldman and publicist Melissa Raubvogel. And serious issues beyond career management loom. Bynes has an Oct. 29 trial date in a case stemming from the DUI arrest; she has pleaded not guilty. On Sept. 27 she also pleaded not guilty to two misdemeanor counts of hit-and-run -- a pretrial hearing is scheduled for Oct. 19 -- and faces up to a year in jail if convicted on both counts.

After roughly two years out of the limelight, Bynes seemingly popped up out of nowhere when she was arrested April 6 in West Hollywood for driving under the influence and sideswiping an L.A. County Sheriff's Department cruiser with her black BMW 5-series. The arrest produced her now-infamous jailhouse-booking photograph -- in which she vacantly stared out from a mop of dirty pink hair. And in June, she tweeted that President Obama should "fire the cop who arrested" her because she does not drink or "hit and run." The only Bynes tweet that ever received so much attention was her June 2010 announcement that she was quitting acting. Her explanation? "If I don't love something anymore I stop doing it," she wrote. "I don't love acting anymore so I've stopped doing it."

That declaration capped a more than decadelong career that began early, and with great promise. Bynes grew up the youngest of three children in suburban Thousand Oaks, Calif., about an hour from Los Angeles, and was raised by parents Rick, a former dentist, and Lynn, a former office manager. Bynes, then 7 or 8, was discovered in 1994 at a Los Angeles children's comedy camp that her parents enrolled her in, leading to a job on Nickelodeon's sketch comedy show All That, according to a glowing 2002 profile of the young actress in The New York Times, which noted her "gift for physical comedy" and "remarkably self-possessed" nature. Bynes performed on All That from 1996 until 2002 while also starring in Nickelodeon's The Amanda Show starting in 1999, making her the network's biggest star.

But by 16, Bynes, who graduated from Thousand Oaks High School's independent study program in 2004, already was showing signs that she was tiring of teen fare. "I knew I didn't want to be a Nickelodeon kid when I was 30,'' she said in the Times profile. That year, Bynes left Nickelodeon and toplined her first movie, the $15 million teen comedy Big Fat Liar. The movie was a modest hit, grossing $53 million worldwide. She also landed a starring role on The WB's What I Like About You opposite Jennie Garth. A source from the now-defunct network says that Bynes was well behaved during the sitcom's 2002-2006 run. "Amanda was textbook great," this person says. "She didn't act like a star, didn't have an entourage, didn't need the biggest trailer."

Bynes also lent her voice to Fox's animated feature Robots (2005) and starred in What a Girl Wants (2003), She's the Man (2006) and the musical Hairspray (2007). "She was completely professional and very sweet," says Jennifer Gibgot, an executive producer on Hairspray. "We thought of her as a young Lucille Ball." Bynes' success during this era landed her on Forbes' 2007 list of Hollywood's top young earners, on which she placed No. 5 -- two spots behind Lohan -- with estimated annual earnings of $2.5 million.

Even though Bynes had fashioned a lucrative career and was a model citizen on film sets, privately she was unhappy with the direction of her work. According to sources, she chafed at her image as an innocent teen star and began working to distance herself from it. A fall 2007 "Got Milk?" print ad touted her transformation: "Metamorphosis. What's changed since The Amanda Show? Me." Less than a year later, Bynes departed CAA and signed with William Morris' Theresa Peters in August 2008. But Peters left WMA a few months later for UTA, and Bynes eventually returned to CAA and Heyman in September 2009. Once there, she proceeded to make moves that indicated a new direction. She posed for the cover of the February 2010 issue of Maxim, sporting a navel ring and lingerie next to the headline "grown up & uncovered." In the Maxim story, Bynes, 23 at the time, said that when her parents asked if she'd be filming "sexy movies," the actress told them, "If they're done the right way, then maybe!" That same month, Bynes got her wish. Well, almost.

In February 2010, Bynes was cast alongside Owen Wilson, Jenna Fischer and Jason Sudeikis in the raunchy Farrelly brothers comedy Hall Pass. The New Line Cinema film revolved around unhappy husbands whose wives allow them to have sex with other women for one week. Bynes was cast as Paige, a provocative 21-year-old babysitter interested in Wilson's character.

Shooting began in Atlanta in early 2010, and according to a source involved in the production, Bynes was problematic from the start: On the first day of filming, it became clear that she didn't know her lines and was not gelling with the cast. Her behavior was described as "out of nowhere" by this insider, who says that Bynes admitted she was going through a rough breakup (she had been linked to rapper-actor Kid Cudi at the time). The filmmakers are said to have determined that the remainder of the shoot would be a struggle with Bynes on board, so they hired actress Alexandra Daddario to replace her. (Another source says that Bynes' departure from Hall Pass stemmed from a misunderstanding over the size of her role. Peter and Bobby Farrelly declined comment.)

Representatives for Bynes denied she was fired, and the actress tweeted that she left because of scheduling issues, but the damage was done. Observers now believe the Hall Pass debacle initiated her downward spiral. After all, one source says, Bynes had longed for a chance to prove she could handle an adult role. And after finally getting such a shot, she fumbled it. (THR attempted to contact Bynes through her former representatives but was rebuffed.)
After her departure from Hall Pass, Bynes raised eyebrows on Twitter with suggestive posts about her sexual proclivities. "It's amaziing how good it feels when someone knows how to love your body! I am having withdrawals from a certain guy lol :)" she tweeted in April 2010. "So turns out i prefer chocolate over vanilla. interesting." (Her Twitter account has since been scrubbed of all tweets and remains idle with about 300,000 followers.) In June 2010, she again took to Twitter, this time to announce her retirement: "Being an actress isn't as fun as it may seem."

After retiring, Bynes largely disappeared and wouldn't register with the public until her April run-ins with the law, which were only the beginning of a nearly six-month string of embarrassing incidents.

A source with insight into the actress' thinking says that part of the problem is Bynes doesn't believe she needs help or guidance. "She doesn't think she needs crisis management or professional help -- she says she is good, she is fine," this person says. Yet it isn't clear who was advising Bynes during her implosion this year. The actress' former representatives won't say why or exactly when they stopped working with her, though sources say that the actress' relationships with CAA and Feldman ended in 2010 when she announced her retirement. Feldman, who also is Lohan's attorney, declined comment for this story; Raubvogel, Bynes' former publicist, also declined comment.

Longtime publicist Nancy Kane, who has represented Roseanne, Matt LeBlanc and Kirstie Alley, says actors' representatives are sometimes put in a difficult position. "I'd be lying if I said in 20 years I hadn't seen a team enable. But at the end of the day, if you are professional, it's a business, and enabling someone's bad behavior -- it'll come out." In Bynes' case, a Daily Beast story said that before parting ways, her CAA agents staged an unsuccessful "please-get-help talk with her." (CAA declined comment.)

That wouldn't be the first failed effort to confront a young star about her personal troubles. A talent agent who once worked with a team that represented Lohan said that during the actress' mid-2000s ascent, her agency grew worried about her increasingly unruly behavior.</b> A discussion was had about whether it was the agents' responsibility to intervene, and this person says that many of those in the room felt that Lohan's personal life and the attendant drama was "an ugly mess and not worth the risk of getting involved." However, a senior agent decided to bring in Lohan and her mother, Dina, for a frank discussion about the actress' behavior. "We had a real conversation about how 'you need help,' " recalls this person. One week later, Lohan fired her agents and signed with another company. "I was pretty proud of the people who had said we should do something. But the people who argued we shouldn't have said anything said: 'What the f--? Look what happened.' "

Of course, many executives believe that reining in wayward child actors is a responsibility of parents. To that end, Disney Channel, for example, offers a seminar called Talent 101, which features security experts, psychologists, showrunners and life coaches, and aims to help child actors and parents learn how to navigate the tricky waters of fame. "But at the end of the day, it's the parents who really have to be parents," Gary Marsh, president of Disney Channels Worldwide, told THR in a June interview. "We give them the tools they might need, but the network is not responsible for raising their children."

There is a precedent of parents stepping in when their A-list children are in crisis: Some observers invoked Britney Spears' placement under the conservatorship of her father after a 2008 meltdown and questioned whether Bynes' troubles also could be tied to psychological issues.

It's not clear what role Bynes' parents play in managing her personal or professional life; Rick Bynes served as her manager until about 2007, according to a source, but could not be reached for comment.

With the looming court dates, there is little talk of Bynes staging a Hollywood comeback -- particularly because she hasn't said this interests her. But if Bynes changed her mind, a comeback would be tough, says Kane. "Once you have a photo of a pipe in your mouth in a car, you can't un-ring that bell," she says. "It would be hard to see Amanda Bynes as a rosy-faced ingenue ever again. She's crossed a line." Still, such stars as Robert Downey Jr. and Barrymore have bounced back from well-documented substance abuse issues -- and Lohan is in the midst of yet another attempted comeback of her own -- proving that Hollywood can be forgiving of such indiscretions.

If Bynes never makes another movie, her final film will be the 2010 Screen Gems comedy Easy A. No one connected to the project would discuss her comportment on the Ojai, Calif., set, though there were no reports of trouble. The film received strong reviews and ultimately helped launch then-21-year-old Emma Stone's career. In Easy A, which grossed $75 million worldwide, Bynes was cast in a familiar role: a high school drama queen.

It couldn't have been easy for Bynes to stand by and watch the Hollywood machinery align to catapult Stone to stardom, much in the same way that it decided Lohan was the child star to place on the fast track instead of her.

It might have been enough to make a girl just want to run away.

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New TVD Promo Posters & Stills from s04e04 "The Five"

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