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Globes honor Scorsese with Cecil B. DeMille Award

Globes honor Scorsese with Cecil B. DeMille Award In presenting Martin Scorsese with the Cecil B. DeMille Award for lifetime achievement at the Golden Globes, his long nike outlettime friend and collaborator Robert De Niro found a new way to describe the director's famous, obsessive love of cinema. "Marty sleeps, drinks and eats film," De Niro said. "I hear there are videos on the Internet of Marty having sex with film." He continued the joke in a husky voice: "A hot reel of 35 mm stock ..." Such honors have become somewhat old hat for Scorsese and De Niro. De Niro — who has apparently learned a thing or two from the plethora of comedies he's made in recent years — joked that after 20 years making movies together, they've spent the last 10 "presenting each other with awards." "We're like an old married couple," said De Niro. "We built a life together, we have great memories — we just don't sleep together anymore." But De Niro's finest line might have been wondering if the award was perhaps lesser than the man: "I can't help thinking if times were a bit different, how proud Cecil B. DeMille would have been to be honored with the Martin Scorsese Award." Taking the stage to a adidas outletstanding ovation at the International Ballroom of the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif., the veteran director acknowledged that "Goodfellas" didn't seemingly have much in common with DeMille's "The Greatest Show on Earth." "When I got to make my own films, no matter what they looked like, the overall intention was always to tap into the powerful cinematic experience that characterized a DeMille picture," said Scorsese. He applauded "the big show, the spectacular" of DeMille's extravagant films, saying they were "the shared landscape of our childhood." Only Scorsese would turn such an award into a tribute to its namesake. Scorsese is a well-known film preservationist and he helped release an acclaimed new copy of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's 1948 classic "The Red Shoes" this year. He founded the Film Foundation in 1990 as a nonprofit organization dedicated to preserving films. He thanked the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, which puts on the Globes, for its continued support and contributall star shoesions to film preservation. "As William Faulkner said, `The past is never dead, it is not even past,'" said Scorsese. "As far as I'm concerned, making films and preserving them are the same thing." Leonardo DiCaprio, who joined De Niro in the introduction, called Scorsese "a master filmmaker and a generous, patient teacher," whose name defines cinema. Though Scorsese's 2007 Oscar win for directing "The Departed" was a long time coming, he has had better success at the Globes, previously winning two Globes for best director, for "The Departed" and 2001's "Gangs of New York." He was nominated six other times. While the 67-year-old Scorsese was being honored for a lifetime of work in cinema, he's as active as ever. His latest film, "Shutter Island," a thriller starring DiCaprio, will be released Feb. 19. He is also executive producer of the HBO series "Boardwalk Empire" with "Sopranos" writer Terence Winter. The series, out later this year, stars Steve Buscemi and chronicles the 1920s gangland of Atlantic City. Recent winners of tnike shoes outlethe Cecil B. DeMille Award include Steven Spielberg in 2009, Warren Beatty in 2007 and Anthony Hopkins in 2006.
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King Cameron redux? `Avatar' aims for Oscar glory

King Cameron redux? `Avatar' aims for Oscar glory James Cameron may get to proclaim himself kiuggs outletng of the distant moon Pandora at the Academy Awards. Cameron — who borrowed Leonardo DiCaprio's line from "Titanic" and declared himself "king of the world" when that film sailed to Oscar glory 12 years ago — positioned himself for a repeat with his Golden Globe wins Sunday for the sci-fi blockbuster "Avatar." The tale of big, blue aliens in conflict with rapacious humans on Pandora earned the Globes for best drama and director, prizes that also preceded the Oscar run of "Titanic." "This is a trip," said Cameron, recalling that as "Titanic" was becoming a box-office and Oscar juggernaut, he had thought to himself, "enjoy this ride, it ain't never going to happen again." Yet "Avatar" has soared to a worldwide box office of $1.6 billion, second only to "Titanic" at $1.8 billion, and could end up surpassing his 1997 smash about the doomed luxury liner. A key difference for Cameron's success this awards season is that he's doing it with a space fantasy, the sort of far-out tale that usually goes overlooked except for visual effects and other technical honors duringuggs outlet store Hollywood's prestige period. "Hopefully, this is part of a trend of the acceptance of science fiction as a legitimate dramatic form of cinema," said Cameron, whose films include the sci-fi tales "Aliens," "The Abyss" and the first two "Terminator" movies. Globe acting winners also firmed up their Oscar prospects, including dramatic-performance recipients Sandra Bullock for the football tale "The Blind Side" and Jeff Bridges for the country-music story "Crazy Heart." The musical or comedy acting prizes went to Robert Downey Jr. for the crime romp "Sherlock Holmes" and Meryl Streep for the Julia Child tale "Julie & Julia." Supporting honors were presented to Mo'Nique for the Harlem drama "Precious: Based on the Novel `Push' By Sapphire" and Christoph Waltz for the World War II saga "Inglourious Basterds." Like "Avatar," "Titanic" was a visual marvel, but it was an epic period drama, too, the kind of movie awards voters have embraced since the early days of the Oscars. Peter Jackson achieved rare awards acceptance for fantasy adventures with his "Lord of the Rings" trilogy, though those films had a long and distinguished literary pedigree in the works of J.R.R.Tolkien. Cameron made everything up himself for "Avatar," a 22nd century story of interspecies romance set on Pandora, wherugg outlet e intrusive humans are mining a priceless energy source, steam-rolling over the world's natives to do it. Pandora's inhabitants, the 10-foot, blue-skinned Na'vi, fight back with help from a paralyzed human (Sam Worthington), whose mind is transferred to an "avatar" resembling the natives. In something of a "Dances With Avatars" story, he finds a mentor and romantic interest in a fierce Na'vi princess (Zoe Saldana). "Thank you for believing in blue people," "Avatar" producer Jon Landau told the Globes crowd. Assuming "Avatar" earns a best-picture nomination for the Oscars, it will have more company than usual. Oscars organizers have doubled the best-picture category to 10 nominees, aiming to bring a broader range of movies into the fold. The Oscars often are dominated by small and sober dramas, but this time, blockbusters could hold sway in the top category. Along with "Avatar," potential nominees include two other sci-fi smashes, "Star Trek" and "District 9," the hit "Inglourious Basterds," and the animated blockbuster "Up." Cameron said he was aiming only for a crowd-pleasing commercial success this time, not another awards contender. "We have been down that road. It is a nightmare. You have to wear a tux all the time, and here we are again," Cameugg outlet storeron said. "What the hell did we do?" Maybe expand his Oscar kingdom to the cosmos.
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Cameron's `Avatar' wins best drama honor at Globes

Cameron's `Avatar' wins best drama honor at Globes The Golden Globes gave top honors to James Cameron's "Avatar" and took its cue from the film's celebratuggs outletion of humanity, with winners ranging from the gritty child-abuse drama "Precious" to freewheeling comedy "The Hangover." Sunday's awards ceremony also opened wide to embrace the long-admired Jeff Bridges, who took best dramatic-acting honors for the country-music film "Crazy Heart," and a sitcom actress, Mo'Nique, who emerged as a fierce screen presence in "Precious." Fox's spunky new TV musical comedy series "Glee" was honored, while the best TV drama award went to AMC's 1960s Madison Avenue saga "Mad Men" for the third year in a row. Cameron was the big winner on the movie side, claiming best drama and best director for his science-fiction blockbuster and setting him for a possible awards sequel to 1997's "Titanic." Cameron's epic about the doomed oceanliner won the same prizes and went on to dominate the Academy Awards. This time, though, instead of being "king of the world," as Cameron declared at the Oscar ceremony, he has becouggs outlet storeme king of a computer-generated distant moon that made critics gush and sent box-office receipts soaring. The film has grossed $1.6 billion worldwide, second only to "Titanic" with $1.8 billion. "'Avatar' asks us to see that everything is connected, all human beings to each other, and us to the Earth. And if you have to go four and a half light years to another, made-up planet to appreciate this miracle of the world that we have right here, well, you know what, that's the wonder of cinema right there, that's the magic," Cameron said. Other film acting prizes went to Sandra Bullock for the football tale "The Blind Side," Meryl Streep for the Julia Child story "Julie & Julia," Robert Downey Jr. for the crime romp "Sherlock Holmes" and Austrian actor Christoph Waltz as a gleefully bloodthirsty Nazi in "Inglourious Basterds." Sunday's winners could get a last-minute boost for the Oscars, whose nominations balloting closes Saturday. Last year's big Globe winner, "Slumdog Millionaire," went on to garner Oscar glory. Michael C. Hall won for best actor in a TV drama for Showtime's "Dexter," in which he plays a serial killer with a code of ethics, targeting only other murderers. Hall's publicists said last week that Hall is being treugg outletated for Hodgkin's lymphoma and that the cancer is in remission. "Dexter" also won the supporting-actor TV honor for John Lithgow. Other TV winners included Juliana Margulies as best actress in a drama for CBS' "The Good Wife" and Toni Collette as best comedy actress for Showtime's "The United States of Tara." Bridges, a beloved veteran generally overlooked for key Hollywood honors, got a standing ovation at the ceremony hosted by Ricky Gervais. "You're really screwing up my underappreciated status here," Bridges said. The son of late actor Lloyd Bridges, Bridges thanked his father for encouraging him to go into show business. "So glad I listened to you, dad," he said. Bullock cited Michael Oher, the Baltimore Ravens rookie lineman whose life is the subject of "The Blind Side." She plays a wealthy Memphis woman whose family took the teenage Oher and gave him shelter after discovering he was homeless. "If I may steal from Michael Oher, I may not be the most talented, but I've been given opportunity," Bullock said. The Vegas bachelor bugg outlet storeash "The Hangover" won for best musical or comedy, bringing uncharacteristic awards attention for broad comedy, a genre that often gets overlooked at Hollywood honors. The Globes marked a dramatic turning point for Mo'Nique, who was mainly known for lowbrow comedy but startled audiences with her brutal performance in "Precious: Based on the Novel `Push' By Sapphire," directed by Lee Daniels and starring newcomer Gabourey Sidibe, who was a Globe nominee. Streep's competition for best actress in a musical or comedy included herself. She also was nominated for the romance "It's Complicated." "I just want to say that in my long career, I've played so many extraordinary woman that I'm getting mistaken for one," Streep said. "I'm very clear that I'm the vessel for other people's stories and other people's lives." The blockbuster "Up" came away with the award for animated film. Pixar Animation, the Disney outfit that made "Up," has won all four prizes for animated movies since the Globes introduced the category in 2006. Past Piuggs outlet storesxar winners are "WALL-E," "Ratatouille" and "Cars." "Up" features the voice of Ed Asner in a tale of a lonely, bitter widower who renews his zest for adventure by flying his house off under helium balloons to South America, where he encounters his childhood hero and a hilarious gang of talking canines. Jason Reitman and Sheldon Turner won the screenplay honor for "Up in the Air," which Reitman also directed. The foreign-language honor went to "The White Ribbon," a stark drama of guilt and suspicion set in a German town on the eve of World War I. The rain-drenched red carpet was a rare sight for an awards show in sunny southern California, stars in their finery getting damp under umbrellas as storms swept the region. Although the Globes are one of Hollywood's biggest parties, the ceremony included somber reminders of tragedy in the real world, many stars wearing ribbons in support of earthquake victims in Haiti. The Globes, which aired on NBC, are presented by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, a group of about 90 reporters covering suggs on salehow business for overseas outlets.
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"Hurt Locker" a blast at Critics Choice Awards

"Hurt Locker" a blast at Critics Choice Awards "The Hurt Locker," a low-budget movie about an American bomb-disposal unit in Iraq, was named best picture on Friday at nike outletthe Critics' Choice Awards, an event that has an uncanny knack of foreshadowing Oscar success. The movie's director, Kathryn Bigelow, also was honored, beating a high-profile field that included her ex-husband, "Avatar" filmmaker James Cameron -- a duel she described as "sorta surreal." "Avatar," which scored nine nominations, was named best action movie, and picked up five other awards in newly established technical categories to lead the overall field. Jeff Bridges was named best actor for playing a drunken country singer in "Crazy Heart," while the actress award was a tie between Meryl Streep for "Julie & Julia" and Sandra Bullock for "The Blind Side." The supporting actor awards went to a pair of on-screen villains: Austrian actor Christoph Waltz for his turn as a malevolent Nazi in "Inglourious Basterds" and comedienne Mo'Nique who played an abusive mother in "Precious." "NINE" AN UNLUCKY NUMBER "Inglourious Basterds" won two other awards: for director Quentin Tarantino's original screenplay and for best ensemble. Along withadidas outlet the all-star musical "Nine," it led the field with 10 nominations. "Nine," a major box-office bomb, went home empty-handed. Other winners included Jason Reitman and Sheldon Turner for their adapted screenplay for "Up in the Air," and Spanish filmmaker Pedro Almodovar's Broken Embraces" for foreign-language film. The Critics' Choice Awards, organized by the 235 members of the Broadcast Film Critics Association in the United States and Canada, have established a reputation as the leading barometer of Oscar success. In the past 10 years, 80 percent of its best-picture winners went on to take Oscar gold. The success rate for director, best actor and actress is 70 percent. Backstage, the winners were decidedly cagey about their Oscar chances ahead of the February 2 nominations announcement. Bridges, who has been nominated for four Oscars but never won, simply hoped the awards attention would boost the commercial prospects of "Crazy Heart" -- a country version of last year's Oscar hopeful "The Wrestler." "It's really wonderful to get the tip of the hat by the guys that do what you do," he said. "So if that should happen it would be wonderful." Bullock and Streep shared all star shoesthe platform backstage and traded glowing assessments of each other. Bullock's eyes welled up when Streep hailed her rival's "amazing" facility for on-screen charm and compassion. 'Our Town' Featured on "CBS Sunday Morning" The critically acclaimed Off-Broadway staging of Thornton Wilder's Our Town will be the subject of a feature on "CBS Sunday Morning" Jan. 17. Special correspondent Mo Rocca will take viewers backstage at the environmental production that commingles actors and audience at the tiny Barrow Street Theatre in Greenwich Village. "CBS Sunday Morning" airs 9 AM-10:30 AM on WCBS-TV, Channel 2 in New York City. Check local listings for time in your area. David Cromer's award-winning staging of Wilder's classic play was included on the Best of the Year lists of such publications as The New York Times, The New Yorker, Wall Street Journal, Time Out New York, Entertainment Weekly and The Gothamist and was named the Best Show of the Year by New York Magazine. Our Town began performances Feb. 17, 2009, and opened to rave reviews on Feb. 26, 2009, at the Barrow Street, which has been completely redesigned for this production. The production was awarded the 2009 Lucille Lortel for Outstanding Play Revival and Direction, with Cromer receiving the 2009 Obie Award for Outstanding Director. This current staging of Ournike shoes outlet Town became the longest-running production of the play in its 71-year history with its record-breaking 337th performance on Dec. 16, 2009. The current cast at The Barrow Street Theatre features (in alphabetical order) Robert Beitzel as Howie Newsome, Susan Bennett as Mrs. Soames, Kati Brazda as Mrs. Webb, Will Brill as Joe Crowell, Nathan Dame as Sam Craig, George Demas as Constable Warren, Jennifer Grace as Emily, Wilbur Edwin Henry as Professor Willard, Jake Horowitz as Wally Webb, Stephen Kunken as the Stage Manager, Ronete Levenson as Rebecca Gibbs, Ben Livingston as Doc Gibbs, David Manis as Editor Webb, and Daniel Marcus as Simon Stimson James McMenamin as George, Lori Myers as Mrs. Gibbs, Jay Russell as Joe Stoddard, and Jason Yachanin as Si Crowell with Elizabeth Audley, Dana Jacks, Kathleen Peirce, Keith Perry and Mark Shock. Our Town is produced by Scott Morfee, Jean Doumanian, Tom Wirtshafter, Ted Snowdon, Eagle Productions, Dena Hammerstein/Pam Pariseau, The Weinstein Company, and Burnt Umber Productions. The performance schedule is Tuesday-Friday at 7:30 PM, Saturday at 2:30 PM & 7:30 PM, Sunday at 2:30 PM & 7:30 PM. Tickets are priced at $69 & $49.50 and are available through SmartTix (212) 868.4444, www.smarttix.com, or at the Barrow Street Theatre box office (open at 1 PM daily). Student tickets at $20 are available on the day of performance only at the box office. Barrow Street Theatre is located at 27 Barrow Street at Seventh Avenue South in the heart of Greenwich adidas shoes outlet Village.
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Source: Deal near for O'Brien to leave `Tonight'

Source: Deal near for O'Brien to leave `Tonight' In an agreement close to completion, "Tonight" host Conan O'Brien would leave NBC and free Jay Leno to reclaimnike outlet the late-night show he stewarded for 17 years, according to a person familiar with the negotiations. Top NBC Universal executives and representatives for O'Brien on Friday were close to settling details of his departure, said the person, who lacked authority to discuss the issue and spoke on condition of anonymity. Universal Studios president and COO Ron Meyer was among those involved in the talks, the person said. The focus has been on how much O'Brien, who has time left on his NBC contract, would be paid for leaving and what limits NBC may put on his future employment at another network. The deal under discussion would provide for a settlement of more than $30 million and allow him to start a new show as early as this fall, the person said. O'Brien has two-and-a-half years left on his contract; reports of his annual salary vary widely, from $10 million to $25 million. NBC didn't immediately respond to a request for comment Friday night. The progress in negotiations didn't stop O'Brien from once again hammering NBC in his "Tonight" monadidas outletologue. "In the press this week, NBC has been calling me every name in the book. In fact, they think I'm such an idiot they now want me to run the network," O'Brien said Friday. Other late-night hosts, including David Letterman on CBS, have been using their shows to crack jokes about NBC's late-night mess and the players. On Friday, Leno fired back. "Even Dave Letterman is taking shots at me, which surprised me. Usually he's just taking shots at the interns," Leno said, a reference to the CBS host's admission last year that he had affairs with women who worked on his show. Letterman and Leno had vied for "Tonight" after longtime host Johnny Carson retired in 1992, and Leno won the hard-fought contest. O'Brien landed "The Tonight Show" gig after successfully hosting "Late Night," which airs an hour later, since 1993. But after debuting last May, he quickly stumbled in the ratings race against Letterman. Leno's prime-time weeknight show, which premiered last September, got its cancellation notice Sunday. Leno had reigned as ratings champ as host of "Tonight" but drew disappointing ratings with his experiment in prim all star shoese time. As a fix, NBC wanted to put Leno at 11:35 p.m. EST in a half-hour edition and push O'Brien's "Tonight Show" to 12:05 a.m. But O'Brien rejected the idea, saying he hadn't been given the necessary time or support to establish himself as host. Fox executives have expressed their admiration for O'Brien but said they haven't taken steps to create a late-night show for him. Sarah Jessica Parker said to partner with Halston Sarah Jessica Parker and Halston may be banking on fashion sequels: The storied designer label reportedly has hired the "Sex and the City" star in a creative role. Halston is tapping Parker for its newly announced Halston Heritage collection, a less expensive extension of its signature collection, according to Women's Wear Daily. The company wouldn't confirm reports of the partnership, but did say an announcement of some sort was forthcoming within the next week. There was no immediate response to an e-mail to Parker's publicist Friday. Halston's glitzy image from its heyday of the disco era — with the late Roy Halston Frowick turning out jersey jumpsuits and the like for the Studio 54 crowd — had become tarnished in recent years with a disappointing reladidas shoes outletaunch in 2008. Parker, meanwhile, found herself without a home for her own once-popular line Bitten after retail partner Steve & Barry's filed for bankruptcy and closed its doors. But Parker is still considered one of the most influential celebrities in the fashion world and insiders think she and Halston would make good co-stars. "If she is to come to Halston, I know that she will do an incredible job and finally get the brand back to being a Halston that is respectful of Mr. Halston and his legacy but also move it forward to what women today want to wear," says stylist and commentator Mary Alice Stephenson. Parker's style-icon "SATC" character Carrie Bradshaw has already been shown in the trailer for "Sex and the City 2" in a white dress from Halston Heritage, a brand extension with retail prices ranging from $55 to $595. Marios Schwab remains the designer for the main line, which has a slot on the calendar at New York Fashion Week in February. Halston couldn't have hired just any boldface name as a partner, says Stephenson, who styled Parker for a memorable Harper's Bazaar cover with the actress — in Chanel — running across the Brooklyn Bridge. "She's probably the only actress who could pull this off." Lindsay Lohan was tapped as artistic adviser to Emanuel Ungaro with much fanfare last fall; just weeks later her work for the label was trounced by fashion critics. "There's a big diffnike shoes outleterence from this than Lindsay Lohan," says Suze Yalof Schwartz, Glamour magazine's executive fashion editor at large. "Lindsay's name isn't synonymous with fashion, whereas when you think about Sarah Jessica Parker, you think about the clothes." Schwartz considers Halston lucky to have Parker: "There would be no one better to revive that label."
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B'way awaits the arrival of a delayed 'Spider-Man'

B'way awaits the arrival of a delayed 'Spider-Man' The drawing of a familiar superhero stares out from the double doors of the dark Hilton Theatrenike outlet on 42nd Street, just west of Times Square. The red-and-blue-clad figure looks trapped inside the building, unable to get out, an apt metaphor perhaps for the show he is trumpeting: "Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark," a $50 million — and counting — Broadway musical celebrating the exploits of America's most famous web slinger. So far, all the drama has been offstage for what most likely will be the most expensive production in Broadway history for some time to come. The mammoth musical directed and co-written by Julie Taymor of "Lion King" fame and featuring a score by Bono and The Edge, was at one time set to begin preview performances Feb. 25 with an official opening scheduled for sometime in April. The "Spider-Man" producers have been tightlipped about the show's status except for an occasional chipper press release announcing the musical is "moving forward" with additional financing under the supervision of the show's current lead producer, Michael Cohl. He came aboard in November. New performance dates for the show are expected to be announced shortly with speculation about the rescheduled opening ranging from this summadidas outleter after the Tony Awards in June to next fall. Work on "Spider-Man" stopped last year because of financial difficulties, including an expensive renovation of the Hilton, reportedly to accommodate Taymor's environmental staging of the show, which would have the action — including some aerial bits of derring-do — swirl throughout the theater. And production, not to mention the financing, have proved difficult to get back on track. The 1800-seat Hilton is one of Broadway's biggest and unluckiest theaters. It was cobbled together by Canadian producer Garth Drabinsky from the shells of two venerable playhouses — the Lyric and the Apollo. The theater officially opened in January 1998 with Drabinsky's production of "Ragtime," which ran for two years and never made any money. Most of the Hilton's subsequent tenants have been less than illustrious. Remember "Hot Feet" (the Earth, Wind and Fire musical) and "The Pirate Queen"? And it hasn't housed a show since "Young Frankenstein" closed more than a year ago. "Spider-Man" the musical has been in the works for more than six years, starting with an announcement about the show in 2004 from producer Tony Adams, who died unexpectedly the next year of a stroke. Adams was replaced by David Garfinkle, a Chicago lawyer, who bowed out of the lead producer slot after financial pressures mounted. No one is speaking on the reco all star shoesrd about "Spider-Man," not Taymor, Bono or its cast. The performers include rock singer Reeve Carney as the title character and Peter Parker, his mild alter-ego; Evan Rachel Wood as Mary Jane Watson, Parker's girl friend, and Alan Cumming in the role of Norman Osborn, also known as the villainous Green Goblin. But in a New York Times report of a recent TimesTalk event, Cumming alluded to the show's financial problems, saying it's "a really weird, frustrating thing to be waiting." And the waiting has affected more than the actors connected with the show. Other jobs are in limbo, too. A platoon of backstage personnel will be needed. "Young Frankenstein," for example, employed 29 stagehands, 15 dressers and 10 people for hair and make-up during its run at the Hilton. Group-sales organizations saw a "Spider-Man" presentation last March, a showcase that featured Taymor, Bono and several singers who performed songs from the musical. "It was elegant, sumptuous. No expense was spared," said Phyllis Maxwell, who runs her own group-sales company, the Phyllis Maxwell Group. "I thought the show had potential. A lot of our people (customers) have been calling about it. They want to know what's happening to it." Added Rick Kelley, Maxwell's associate, about the musical's box-office appeal: "People definitely were interested. The problem is that it has been put off and put off and put off, and they are losing interest. But I think tomorrow if they (the producers) came out and said, 'OK, it's coming,' we could sell it again. nike shoes outletIt's a family show. It's big. It's lavish. And that's what people want." The stage version of "Spider-Man" isn't the only Spidey franchise to experience turbulence. Sony Pictures and Marvel Studios announced earlier this week that "Spider-Man" director Sam Raimi and his star, Toby Maguire, would not be returning for a planned fourth movie. Instead, a new cast and filmmaking team will produce a new "Spider-Man" movie that would focus on a much younger Peter Parker and debut in the summer of 2012. By then, the Broadway version should be up — and with luck — still running.
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Show's not over yet for Idol Internet sensation

Show's not over yet for Idol Internet sensation He won't be the next American Idol, but the show's hardly over for "General" Larry Platt. The 63-year-onike outletld civil rights veteran has become an Internet sensation after performing his original song, "Pants On The Ground" at an audition for the ninth season of "American Idol." It wasn't really singing or rapping but it was performed with some gusto and even included a little break dancing for good measure. Platt's fan base exploded after his Wednesday night debut, as his audition hit YouTube and Twitter. Within hours, he had been clicked and tweeted into one of the Internet's most popular topics. Jimmy Fallon reprised a version of the song on his show Thursday night, and Platt is scheduled for an appearance on ABC's daytime talk show "The View" next week. Clips of Platt's "Idol" performance continued to get Web hits Friday on Twitter and YouTube. "I have a horrible feeling that song could be a hit," skeptical "Idol" judge Simon Cowell reluctantly predicted on the show. Surrounded by plaques recognizing his work in civil rights and photographs of Platt with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Congressman John Lewis and others from that era at his home in East Atlanta this week, the e-celebrity seemed dazed by the attention. Platt — given the nickname "General" for his work during the civil rights era — said he hoped his message of personal responsibility doesn't get lost in his poadidas outletpularity. His message is simple and the lyrics of the song came to him one day after he spotted a young man holding a child, his pants hanging below his waist. "After all this work I did with Dr. King ... walking around with your pants on the ground?" Platt said. "They're going to have to get them up. I'm sorry." His show-stealing performance was the last of a round of auditions taped in Atlanta last August. He was allowed to perform even though the age cutoff for contestants was 28. The spotlight on him, Contestant 103519 began belting out the now infamous verse: "Pants on the ground! Pants on the ground! Looking like a fool with your pants on the ground!" Shaking his head at the end of Platt's song, Cowell offered: "I don't think this is gonna be the last we hear about you. I have a feeling about you, Larry." For Platt, the song was just another one of his causes. He said Thursday that he and his civil rights colleagues sacrificed too much for today's youth to walk around with sagging pants. Platt — his black jeans s all star shoesecurely fastened — proudly showed off black and white photographs that show him alongside civil rights icons documenting his social justice work as a dedicated foot soldier with the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Platt is still an activist, and can frequently be seen in downtown Atlanta holding signs protesting foreclosures, war, violence, racism and "any wicked things that take place." Bolstered by his newfound fame, Platt doesn't plan to stop singing his "Idol" anthem anytime soon and is grateful for the opportunity for his song to reach a broader audience. "People around the world are calling about me because they like what I'm doing," Platt said. "Some people tried to steal my song but they can't sing like me. I'm going to go around the world singing my song." Platt said he's hoping for the same fate as fellow wacky Idol contestant William Hung, whose rendition of Latin crooner Ricky Martin's "She Bangs" gained him a cult following and a record deal, even though he didn't make the Idol cut. "He still made it, ain't thnike shoes outletat right?" Platt said, smiling. "That's what I'm going to do."
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Groups raise doubts about Wyclef Jean's charity

Groups raise doubts about Wyclef Jean's charity Groups uggs on salethat vet charities are raising doubts about the organization backed by Haitian-born rapper Wyclef Jean, questioning its accounting practices and ability to function in earthquake-hit Haiti. Even as more than $2 million poured into The Wyclef Jean Foundation Inc. via text message after just two days, experts questioned how much of the money would help those in need. "It's questionable. There's no way to get around that," said Art Taylor, president and chief executive of the Better Business Bureau's Wise Giving Alliance, based in Arlington, Va. Taylor reviewed Internal Revenue Service tax returns for the organization also known as Yele Haiti Foundation from 2005 through 2007. He said the first red flag of poor accounting practices was that three years of returns were filed on the same day — Aug. 10 of last year. In 2007, the foundation's spending exceeded its revenues by $411,000. It brought in just $79,000 that year. "Here's uggs for cheapthe bottom line: for an earthquake of catastrophic proportions, do people really believe that this organization is in a position to do anything right now?" he said. Jean, a 37-year-old Grammy-winning artist, has been imploring followers to text "Yele" to 501501 to donate $5 to his foundation in support of Haitian earthquake victims. The foundation, founded in January 2005, intends to airlift supplies using a FedEx plane into Haiti early next week carrying medical supplies, water and Clif Bars, according to foundation president Hugh Locke. An Associated Press review of tax returns and independent audits provided by Jean's foundation showed that it was closely intertwined with Jean's businesses. Three of the five foundation board members — Jean, Jerry Duplessis and Seth Kanegis — are involved in his personal music and business endeavors. According to an IRS tax return from 2006 reviewed earlier by the Web site The Smoking Gun, the foundation paid $250,000 to buy airtime from Telemax S.A., a for-profit TV station in Haiti that is majority owned by Jean and Duplessis. Part of that money went to pay for a concert iUGG Bailey Button Bootsn Haiti put on by Jean himself, Locke said. Another $160,000 that year was spent on a concert in Monte Carlo that Jean participated in, of which $75,000 paid for backup singers and $25,000 went to Jean through a company he owns with Duplessis, Platinum Sound Recording Studios Inc., Locke said. "I'm not saying he didn't benefit from it," said Locke, who says his own salary is $8,100 a month after taxes. "We were paying that to Platinum Sound because that covered the cost of him participating in the event." Locke argued that the foundation took in "several hundred thousand" dollars in exchange for Jean's work through the proceeds of an auction. The foundation also rents office space from Platinum Sound, paying about $2,600 a month in New York. Locke said the foundation also plans to partner with Jean's Sak Pase Records to build a music studio to provide vocational training to Haitian children. Sandra Miniutti, vice president of marketUGG boots Women's Liberty Bootsing for Charity Navigator, an organization that evaluates charities, said the foundation was too small to have been examined recently, although the current flood of goodwill may change that. Its revenue in 2008 was $1.9 million. "My concern is it goes against our first tip, and that is to give only to groups with experience with disaster relief," Miniutti said. "I think it's very hard for a new organization even with the best intentions to handle something on this magnitude." Locke said the foundation has been directly involved in delivering food and providing clean-up services in many disasters, including the hurricanes that devastated Haiti in late 2008. Jean's standing among Haitians can help the foundation gain access to gang-controlled or other troubled regions, he said. "We have a niche which no one else occupies," Locke said. He said the foundation is now seeking bridge financing to allow it to use money that has been pledged in unprecedented volumes by text message. It could take at least a month for donors' money to flow in because it is not released until they pay their phone bills. That delay presents a challenge and an opportunity, the Better Business Bureau's Taylor said. "The challengeUGG Classic Argyle Knit Boots is they can't do anything until they get the money," Taylor said. "The opportunity is that some people may change their minds and decide that $10 or whatever they text to him might be better used somewhere else."
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An inside look at a boy band on Nick's new comedy

An inside look at a boy band on Nick's new comedy Four hockey-loving teenage pals from the nation's frigid heartland get a crack at musuggs outletic stardom as a boy band in sunny L.A. What a break! But the deal almost collapses when the excitable record exec, Gustavo Rocque, picks only one of the lads at an audition in their Minnesota hometown. Unacceptable. On "Big Time Rush," Nickelodeon's new comedy series, an all-or-nothing pact unites these chums. They stand firm against Gustavo, who, after seething and ranting, agrees to sign them all. Almost before they can stash their hockey sticks, they're heading west. But once there, they discover that show-biz success calls for more than any old song-and-dance. In fact, initially their song-and-dance needs a lot of improvement. Gustavo has to whip them into shape, and fast. Alas, they find more on their things-to-do list than catching rays by the pool and flirting with cute girls. "The show is all about the wild ride these guys go on trying to achieve their dream while still remaining friends," says Marjorie Cohn, Nickelodeon's executive vice president of original programming and development. "It's also about learning how to take responsibility, having your friends' backs, handling romantic crushes — all the kid issues, played out against a show business background. The guys aren't just handed the keys to thuggs outlet storee kingdom." With a comic-caper style, rousing spirit and snippets of music and dance, "Big Time Rush" is an engaging romp that should tickle the network's core audience (ranging roughly between 6 and 14) — plus many parents. Fun is fun. The series pilot, aired in November, snagged some 3.5 million viewers. Now the 20-segment season debuts Monday at 8:30 p.m. EST, as the lads discover, to their dismay, that their quest for a hit song won't exempt them from hitting the books at school. "Big Time Rush" was created by Scott Fellows, who already scored for Nickelodeon with the zany "Ned's DeClassified School Survival Guide." Like that series, "Rush" has sharp writing, snappy pacing, and it spoofs the entertainment industry with relish. But the key to the show, of course, is its four stars-in-the-making: Kendall (played by Kendall Schmidt, "Gilmore Girls"); James (James Maslow, "iCarly"); Logan (Logan Henderson, "Friday Night Lights"); and Carlos (Carlos Pena, "Ned's DeClassified School Survival Guide"). Kendall, a 19-year-old Kansan raised in Los Angeles, describes the character he plays as "the mortar in between, making sure everyone is treated fairly. I don't go anywhere without them, and they don't go anywherugg outlete without me." James, also 19, is a LaJolla, Calif., native whose early singing skill earned him a spot in the San Diego Children's Choir. His character, alone among the foursome, had already dreamed of being a famous pop star, which turned "him into a narcissist — but in a harmless way." Logan, a 20-year-old native of Dallas-Fort Worth, calls his character the reasonable, grounded one. "He says, 'Guys, let's think this through before we do it.' But he isn't afraid to be goofy and crazy." Carlos, 20, from Weston, Fla., somewhat sheepishly acknowledges competing on the MTV musical-reality flop "Making Menudo" back in 2007. His character, he says, "isn't the brightest, but he's the one who keeps the other guys from being boring. He does anything he thinks might be fun." Finding these fellows was tough, says Nickelodeon's Cohn, explaining that "Big Time Rush" was given the green light two years ago, which unleashed a cross-country talent search and auditions in a half-dozen cities. "There was a trugg outlet storeiple-threat nature for what we needed them to do," Cohn says. "The acting and the singing were really challenging, and then you needed to find guys who looked different from each other and who had the required complementary voice qualities. "Dancing came last on the list because we figured: How bad could they be?" Then she laughs. "I'm not 100 percent comfortable with myself dancing yet," acknowledges Kendall, in a separate interview. Yet, hearing that, Carlos jumps in, "He's good! He's very dedicated and he gets his stuff down." Around 1,500 hopefuls were considered for the four roles before Kendall, the final and most elusive piece of the puzzle, was cast last August. Then filming started. Already, says James, "we've been able to put our own flavor into the show about us becoming a band in real life, as well as in the episodes." With "Big Time Rush" produced in partnership with Sony Music, its future holds promise for hit recordings and concert tours. "The story arc will mirror their actual lives," says Cohn, even if the comic flavor serves more like a fun house uggs outlet storesmirror. "We aren't trying to be anything we're not," Logan sums up. "We're regular guys. But in the show, we're able to say, 'Hey, sometimes you got to take a chance — and great things may come from it.'"
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Editor & Publisher to get new owner

Editor & Publisher to get new owner Editor & Publisher, chronicler of the U.S. newspaper business for more than a century, will live again afteruggs outlet being shut down two weeks ago. E&P, as journalists often call it, will resume publication after being sold to boating magazine publisher Duncan McIntosh, it confirmed on its website after Reuters reported the news. The announcement came two weeks after Nielsen Co shut down the "bible of the newspaper industry" -- as it called itself on its website -- because of financial difficulties. Current owner Nielsen Co closed the magazine and related website two weeks ago after agreeing to sell its Nielsen Business Media unit to a new company called e5 Global Media, formed by private equity company Pluribus Capital Management and Guggenheim Partners. Editor & Publisher's own publisher, Charles McKeown, will keep his job, the website reported. Twenty-six-year veteran Mark Fitzgerald will be the new editor, the site said. He replaces Greg Mitchell. Editor & Publisher closed after suffering the same financial difficulties as the U.S. newspapers it covered. Ad revenue and a drift of readers to the Internet have hurt nearly every U.S. newspaperuggs outlet store publisher. Duncan McIntosh Co Inc publishes magazines such as Boating World and FishRap. The company did not disclose terms of the transaction. "Such a critical information source for a newspaper industry so desperately in need of help should not go away," McIntosh told Editor & Publisher. "I've been a reader of E&P over the course of 30 years and know its incredible value to readers and advertisers." Editor & Publisher's closing was one of the most ominous events in the slow decline of the U.S. newspaper business. Storied publishers from The New York Times Co to Gannett Co Inc and McClatchy Co have received steadily declining amounts of coverage in the news media as their fortunes have fallen. Editor & Publisher continued to write tough stories about the business even as other media outlets decreased their coverage because they considered publishers to no longer be big enough -- or lucrative enough -- to attract investor interest. "Up in the Air" Wins Bigugg outlet at National Board of Review Awards George Clooney is on a roll. The actor picked up another best actor award in New York on Tuesday night, Jan. 12, at the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures annual awards gala for "Up in the Air," sharing the accolades with Morgan Freeman, who also won best actor for his portrayal of former South African president Nelson Mandela in "Invictus." "You hear that, Morgan? That's right, pal...Nelson Mandela, huh," joked Clooney in mock skepticism as he started his acceptance speech about fellow winner Morgan Freeman. "First of all, to share an award with Morgan Freeman is an honor. As you can imagine, you'd want to share anything with him. He raises the bar too high for everyone. It's an honor to be on the stage with him. He's a friend, and anytime you get to be around Morgan, it's fun. Do it." Clint Eastwood, who directed Freeman in "Invictus," won best director. Clooney also went on to praise "Up in the Air" director Jason Reitman, whose film won for best picture. "Actors are only as good as the screenplay and the director," said Clooney. Another "Up in the Air" performance was also honored at the gala. Clooney's co-star Anna Kendrick won the award nike outletfor best supporting actress. Best supporting actor went to Woody Harrelson for "The Messenger." Carey Mulligan of "An Education," sporting a short Audrey Hepburn-like cropped hairdo and chic little black dress with flutter sleeves, accepted the award for best actress, and first-time actress Gabourey Sidibe, wearing a deep amethyst draped satin gown by David Meister, won the "Breakthrough Performance by an Actress" award for "Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire." Jeremy Renner, who starred in Academy Award favorite "The Hurt Locker," which picked up best picture honors at Monday's New York Film Critics Circle awards, took home the National Board award for "Breakthrough Performance by an Actor." Director Wes Anderson accepted his award, "Special Filmmaking Achievement," first as a stop animation character, in reference to his latest film, "Fantastic Mr. Fox," before stepping up to the podium. The National Board of Readidas outletview of Motion Pictures is a not-for-profit group that has honored achievement in film for over 100 years. The 2009 award winners were first announced by the board on Dec. 3, 2009.
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R&B singer Teddy Pendergrass dies at 59

R&B singer Teddy Pendergrass dies at 59 R&B singer Teddy Pendergrass, who was one of the most electric and successful figures in music until a cnike outletar crash 28 years ago left him in a wheelchair, has died of colon cancer. He was 59. Pendergrass died Wednesday in suburban Philadelphia, where he had been hospitalized for months. The singer's son, Teddy Pendergrass II, said his father underwent colon cancer surgery eight months ago and had "a difficult recovery." Before the crash, Pendergrass established a new era of R&B with an explosive, raw voice that symbolized masculinity, passion and the joys and sorrow of romance in songs such as "Close the Door," "It Don't Hurt Now," "Love T.K.O." and other hits that have since become classics. He was an international superstar and sex symbol. His career was at its apex — and still climbing. Friend and longtime collaborator Kenny Gamble, of the renowned production duo Gamble & Huff, teamed with Pendergrass on his biggest hits and recalled how the singer was even working on a movie. "He had about 10 platinum albums in a row, so he was a very, very successful recording artist and as a performing artist," Gamble said Thursday. "He had a tremendous career ahead of him, and the accident sortadidas outlet of got in the way of many of those plans." Pendergrass, who was born in Philadelphia in 1950, suffered a spinal cord injury in a 1982 car accident that left him paralyzed from the waist down — still able to sing but without his signature power. The image of the strong, virile lover was replaced with one that drew sympathy. But instead of becoming bitter or depressed, Pendergrass created a new identity — that as a role model, Gamble said. "He never showed me that he was angry at all about his accident," Gamble said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "In fact, he was very courageous." Pendergrass left a remarkable imprint on the music world as he ushered in a new era in R&B with his fiery, sensual and forceful brand of soul and his ladies' man image, burnished by his strikingly handsome looks. Gamble said Pendergrass was one of a kind as an artist and boasted a powerful voice and "a great all star shoes magnetism." "He was a great baritone singer, and he had a real smooth sound, but he had a real rough sound, too, when he wanted to exert power in his voice," Gamble said. But it wasn't Pendergrass' voice that got him his break in the music business — it was his drum playing abilities. He met Harold Melvin, who was looking for replacement members for his group, the Blue Notes, and signed on to be the drummer. Later, he became the lead singer of the group, which became known as Harold Melvin and the Blue Notes. The band started working with Gamble and Leon Huff and had signature hits in the early 1970s with "Wake Up Everybody" and "If You Don't Know Me by Now." But Pendergrass had creative differences with Melvin and soon left for a solo career, according to his Web site. It was then he would become a sex symbol for the R&B genre, working women into a frenzy with hits such as "Only You" and concerts dedicated for ladies only. "The females," Gamble said, "loved Teddy Pendergrass. The females were very attracted to him and his music." Unlike the songs of mnike shoes outletany of today's male R&B crooners, Pendergrass' music bordered on eroticism without explicit lyrics or coarse language — just through the raw emotion in his voice. "Turn Off the Lights" was a tune that perhaps best represented the many moods of Pendergrass — tender and coaxing yet strong as the song reaches its climax. Fans were devastated when, at age 31, Pendergrass was critically injured after his Rolls-Royce hit a tree. He spent six months in a hospital and returned to recording the next year with the album "Love Language." He continued to sing and recorded several albums, receiving Grammy nominations. "To all his fans who loved his music, thank you," his son said. "He will live on through his music." It was 19 years before Pendergrass resumed performing at his own concerts. He made his return on Memorial Day weekend in 2001, with two sold-out shows in Atlantic City, N.J. Gamble noted Pendergrass' charitable work for people with spinal cord injuries, his performances despite pain and his focus on the positive in the face of great challenges. "He used to say something iadidas shoes outletn his act in the wheelchair, 'Don't let the wheelchair fool you,' because he still proclaimed he was a lover," Gamble said. But his career was never the same. Gamble said it was difficult for Pendergrass to project vocally like he once did: "The breathing aspect of it, he wasn't really able to deal with it." And while he had albums, he was no longer seen as the sex symbol but more of a sympathetic, tragic figure, even though he still had a strong following among his core female fans. After the accident, he dedicated much of his life to helping others with spinal cord injuries and founded the Teddy Pendergrass Alliance to do just that. Gamble said he wanted to help others. "In his quiet moments, he probably did a lot of reflection. But I never saw him pity himself. He stayed busy," Gamble said. "(But) I feel that he's in a better place now. ... He doesn't have to go through that pain or whatever he was going througUGG Classic Cardy Bootsh anymore."
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Haiti quake aid snarled; up to 50,000 feared dead

Haiti quake aid snarled; up to 50,000 feared dead Doctors and search dogs, troops and rescue teams flew to this devastated land of dazed, dead and dying peuggs outletople Thursday, finding bottlenecks everywhere, beginning at a main airport short on jet fuel and ramp space and without a control tower. The international Red Cross estimated 45,000 to 50,000 people were killed in Tuesday's cataclysmic earthquake, based on information from the Haitian Red Cross and government officials. Hard-pressed recovery teams resorted to using bulldozers to transport loads of dead. Worries mounted, meanwhile, about food and water for the survivors. "People have been almost fighting for water," aid worker Fevil Dubien said as he distributed water from a truck in a northern Port-au-Prince neighborhood. From Virginia, from France, from China, a handful of rescue teams were able to get down to work, scouring the rubble for survivors. In one "small miracle," searchers pulled a security guard alive from beneath the collapsed concrete floors of the U.N. peacekeeping headquarters, where many others were entombed. But the silence of the dead otherwise was overwhelming in a city where uncounted bodies littered the streets in the 80-degree heat, and dust-caked arms and legs reached, frozen and lifeless, from the ruins. uggs outlet storeOutside the General Hospital morgue, hundreds of collected corpses blanketed the parking lot, as the grief-stricken searched among them for loved ones. Brazilian U.N. peacekeepers, key to city security, were trying to organize mass burials. Patience already was wearing thin among the poorest who were waiting for aid, said David Wimhurst, spokesman for the U.N. peacekeeping mission. "They want us to provide them with help, which is, of course, what we want to do," he said. But they see U.N. vehicles patrolling the streets to maintain calm, and not delivering aid, and "they're slowly getting more angry and impatient," he said. In Washington, President Barack Obama announced "one of the largest relief efforts in our recent history," starting with $100 million in aid. The U.S. Southern Command reported the first 100 of a planned 900 paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne Division landed in Haiti from North Carolina on Thursday to support disaster relief, to be followed this weekend by more than 2,000 Marines. The American troops "will relieve pressure" on overworked U.N. elements, Wimhurst said. From Europe, Asia and the Augg outletmericas, other governments, the U.N. and private aid groups were sending planeloads of high-energy biscuits and other food, tons of water, tents, blankets, water-purification gear, heavy equipment for removing debris, helicopters and other transport, and teams of hundreds of search-and-rescue, medical and other specialists. But two days after much of this ramshackle city was shattered, the global helping hand was slowed by the poor roads, airport and seaport of a wretchedly poor nation. Some 60 aid flights had arrived by midday Thursday, but they then had to contend with the chokepoint of an overloaded Toussaint L'Ouverture International Airport. At midday, the Federal Aviation Administration said it was temporarily halting all civilian flights from the U.S. at Haiti's request, because the airport was jammed and jet fuel was limited for return flights. The control tower had been destroyed in Tuesday's tremor, complicating air traffic. Civilian relief flights were later allowed to resume. "There's only so much concrete" for parking planes, U.S. Air Force Col. Buck Elton said at the airport. "It's a constant puzzle of trying to move aircraft in and out." Teams that did land then had to navigate Haiti's inadequate roads, sometimes blocked by debris or by quake survivors lookuggs on saleing for safe open areas as aftershocks still rumbled through the city. The U.N. World Food Program said the quake-damaged seaport made ship deliveries of aid impossible. The looting of shops that broke out after the 7.0-magnitude quake struck late Tuesday afternoon added to concerns. The Brazilian military warned aid convoys to add security to guard against looting by the desperate population. "There is no other way to get provisions," American Red Cross representative Matt Marek said of the store looting. "Even if you have money, those resources are going to be exhausted in a few days." The city's "ti-marchant," mostly women who sell food on the streets, were expected to run out soon. Red Cross officials have estimated one-third of Haiti's 9 million people are in need of aid. The quake brought down Port-au-Prince's gleaming white National Palace and other government buildings, disabling much of the national leadership. That vacuum was evident Thursday. No senior Haitian government officials were visible at the airport, although President Leonel Fernandez of the neighboring Dominican Republic said after meeting with President Rene Preval that the Haitian leader wauggs for cheaps in control of the situation, working from the airport. "Donations are coming in to the airport here, but there is not yet a system to get it in," said Kate Conradt, a spokeswoman for the Save the Children aid group. "It's necessary to create a structure to stock and distribute supplies," the Brazilian military said. Edmond Mulet, a former U.N. peacekeeping chief in Haiti, arrived Thursday from U.N. headquarters in New York to lead the relief effort, along with a U.N. disaster coordination team. The first U.S. military units to arrive took on a coordinating role at the airport, but State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley underlined, "We're not taking over Haiti." Wimhurst said the Haitian police "are not visible at all," no doubt because many had to deal with lost homes and family members, and law-and-order needs had fallen completely to the 9,000 U.N. peacekeepers and international police in Haiti. Across the sprawling, hilly city, people milled about in open areas, hopeful for help, sometimes setting up camps amid piles of salvaged goods, including food scavenged from the rubble. Small groups by roadsides could be seen burying dead. Other dust-covered bodies were being dragged down streets, toward hospitals where relatives hoped to leave them. Countless remained unburied, stacked up, children's bodies lying atop mothers, tiny feet poking from blaUGG Bailey Button Bootsnkets. The injured, meanwhile, waited for treatment in makeshift holding areas — outside the General Hospital, for example, where the stench from piles of dead, just a few yards (meters) away, wafted over the assembled living. Crews began removing unclaimed bodies with bulldozers, dumping them into trucks, possibly for mass burial. Here and there, small tragedies unfolded. In the Petionville suburb, friends held back Kettely Clerge — "I want to see her," she sobbed — as neighbors with bare hands tried to dig out her 9-year-old goddaughter, Harryssa Keem Clerge, pleading for rescue, from beneath their home's rubble. "There's no police, there's nobody," the hopeless godmother cried. By day's end, the girl was dead. At the collapsed U.N. peacekeeping headquarters, an Estonian guard, Tarmo Joveer, was pulled alive and unhurt from the ruins at 8 a.m. Thursday, 39 hours after the quake — a "small miracle," Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in New York. But U.N. officials reported that 36 other U.N. personnel, mostly peacekeepers and international police, were confirmed dead and almost 200 remained missing, UGG boots Women's Liberty Bootsincluding top staff. Nearby, firefighters from Fairfax County, Va., and a rescue team from China, with sniffer dogs, clambered through rubble and searched for signs of life. Two excavators stood by, ready to dig for survivors — or dead. A French team, meanwhile, rescued three people alive from the wrecked Montana Hotel, U.N. officials reported. European and Latin American nations reported scores of their nationals unaccounted- for in Haiti, and a handful confirmed dead. Of the estimated 45,000 Americans in Haiti, the U.S. Embassy had contacted almost 1,000. Only one American was confirmed dead, a veteran Foreign Service officer, Victoria DeLong, killed in her collapsed home. For the long-suffering people of Haiti, the Western Hemisphere's poorest nation, shock and disbelief were giving way to despair. "We need food. The peopleUGG Classic Argyle Knit Boots are suffering. My neighbors and friends are suffering," said Sylvain Angerlotte, 22. "We don't have money. We don't have nothing to eat. We need pure water." But life also went on. Brazilian soldiers helped deliver a baby girl in an improvised garage-hospital at their base, just hours after the quake hit. Capt. Fabricio Almeida de Moura said the child was doing well, but the life of the mother, who apparently went into labor from the shock of the tremor, was in danger from bleeding, the Agencia Brasil news service reported. The unimaginable scope of the catastrophe left many Haitians, a fervently religious people, in helpless tears and prayer. Reached by The Associated Press from New York, Yael Talleyrand, a 16-year-old student in Jacmel, on Haiti's south coast, told of thousands of people made homeless by the quake and sleeping on an airfield runway, "crying, praying and I had never seen this in my entire life." Earlier, she said, one woman had run through Jacmel's streets screaming, "God, we know you can kill us! We know you're strongest! You don't need toUGG Classic Boots show us!"
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NBC's Leno drama might have a happy ending

NBC's Leno drama might have a happy ending NBC's late-night TV troubles are proving embarrassing and costly for the network -- but the drama could pay dnike outletividends down the road. NBC is scrapping its cost-cutting experiment that put "The Jay Leno Show" on TV at 10 p.m. because the show earned poor ratings and backlash from local TV stations that said it hurt the 11 o'clock newscasts that followed. NBC also remains the last of the four big U.S. TV networks in audience ratings. But the disaster might come with a benefit: it could draw more viewers to the network, media executives and advertising experts said. a "Controversy is sometimes great PR and could reinvigorate Leno's show. More viewers may turn in out of curiosity," said Gabelli & Co analyst Christopher Marangi. That would provide some comfort to NBC, which faces the prospect of spending $10 million to $20 million to reach a settlement with Conan O'Brien. The current host of "The Tonight Show" has refused to go along with NBC's plan to push his show back to 12:05 a.m. to accommodate Leno's return to his old time slot. "The Tonight Show" audience has thinned since O'Brien took over in June, allowing rival David Letterman on CBS adidas outletto take the lead in the battle for late-night network viewers. Analysts and industry executives think that NBC will put on a tried-and-true staple like "Law & Order" at 10 p.m. until they have new scripted programing in place. Some believe the move could boost NBC in the hot market for last-minute ad spots at the expense of its competitors. "While we don't anticipate that NBC's ratings fall will completely reverse as they introduce new 10 p.m. programing and return Jay Leno to late-night, these changes could slightly impact NBC's competitors who have gained relative share on the national and local level," Michael Nathanson, an analyst with Bernstein, said in a research report. It could also help NBC local stations' performance. "No doubt, a stronger 10 p.m. show could help the NBC station owner and negatively affect rival CBS, ABC and FOX local stations including owned and operated stations," he said. An advertising executive, speaking on condition of anonymity, said NBC will likely command better commercial pricing following the switch. "When all the dust settles it could be a benefit for NBC. They had offered deep discounts and may be able to command better pricing for the 10 o'clock scatter market now," he said. NBC will rebound, said Daviduggs outlet Scardino, entertainment specialist at ad agency RPA. "In the short-term, the network's going to take a hit. They're radically changing their schedule on short notice, but longer term, they'll put scripted programing and the best of their pilots on and they'll come out ahead of where they are now," he said. "Looking into the 2010-2011 and 2011-2012 season, the network should be re-programed and rescheduled and should be getting higher ratings than what they have been with Leno at 10 p.m.," he said. Still, there are plenty who view the episode as a setback. "They have a hole in the programing and will now have to spend about $300 million a year to put programing back and rush it, which does not necessarily guarantee success, versus $100 million they spent for the Leno show," said RBC analyst David Bank, who thinks that it might annoy advertisers. "I would think the advertisers would cry bloody murder if NBC, after getting them to experiment on Leno, tried to jam up pricing," he said. And there are also concerns Leno faces an uphill battle to reclaim his ratings and advertisers after suffering a drop in his audience during the prime-time experiment. NBC, which is owned by General Electric Co declined to comment for this story. Comcast Corp is in the process of buying a controllinguggs outlet store interest in NBC from GE. Michael Hayden Will Wear Two Crowns in DC Repertory of 'Richard II' and 'Henry V' Shakespeare's Richard II and Henry V - starring Michael Hayden as the title characters - will play in repertory at Sidney Harman Hall in Washington, DC, on a February-April Shakespeare Theatre Company bill called "The Leadership Repertory." Artistic director Michael Kahn will stage Richard II and associate artistic director David Muse will stage Henry V. Richard II will run Feb. 2-April 10, and Henry V will play Feb. 4-April 10. Henry V will open Feb. 16. Richard II will open Feb. 18. According to STC notes, "Shakespeare imagines the reigns of both Richard II and Henry V as they navigate through era-defining decisions, civil war and the ultimate struggle for power. Exploring the timeless themes of power and politics, these two plays performed in repertory keenly focus their lens on the traits of leadership." Kahn said in a statement, "We picked two contrasting plays: Richard II, about a leader who is born with power and misuses it, but then as that power is stripped from him learns what it means to be a human being; and Henry V, about a flawed human beinugg outletg who learns what it means to be a great leader." Hayden previously appeared in the 2008 STC production of The Dog in the Manger and the 1998 production of Sweet Bird of Youth. His Broadway credits include Festen, Henry IV, Carousel, Enchanted April, Judgment at Nuremberg and Cabaret. He was nominated for a Tony Award, a Drama Desk Award and a Laurence Olivier Award for playing Billy Bigelow in Carousel. The cast of Richard II also includes Charles Borland as Henry Bolingbroke; Conrad Feininger as Abbot/Captain/Keeper; Philip Goodwin as Gaunt/Gardener; Rachael Holmes as Queen Isabel; Naomi Jacobson as Duchess of York; Stephen Paul Johnson as Ross; Floyd King as Woodstock/Bishop of Carlisle; Dan Kremer as Willoughby; John Lescault as Salisbury; Louis Lotorto as Bagot; Darren Matthias as Mowbray/Scroop; Larry Paulsen as Cheney/Second Gardener/Groom; Robynn Rodriguez as Duchess of Gloucester/Lady; Tom Story as Aumerle; Ted van Griethuysen as Duke of York; Derrick Lee Weeden as Northumberland; Scott Whitehurst as Green with Meredith Burns, Sun King Davis, Joseph Ibanez, Devon Jackson, William Ledent, Jason Marr, Sarah Mollo-Christensen, Charlie Francis Murphy, Adam Navarro, Todd Quick, David Joseph Regelmann and Patrick Vaill. The cast of Henry V also includes Charles Borland as uggs on saleGower; Conrad Feininger as Westmorland; Philip Goodwin as Canterbury/King of France; Rachael Holmes as Princess Katharine; Naomi Jacobsonike outletn as Mistress Quickly/Queen of France; Stephen Paul Johnson as Fluellen/Bishop of Ely; Floyd King as Bardolph/Burgundy; Dan Kremer as Constable of France; John Lescault as Montjoy; Louis Lotorto as Nym/Rambures; Darren Matthias as Ensign Pistol; Larry Paulsen as Chorus 3; Robynn Rodriguez as Chorus 1/Alice; Tom Story as Dauphin; Ted van Griethuysen as Chorus 2/Erpingham; Derrick Lee Weeden as Exeter; Scott Whitehurst as Michael Williams/Bishop of Norwich with Meredith Burns, Sun King Davis, Joseph Ibanez, Devon Jackson, William Ledent, Jason Marr, Sarah Mollo-Christensen, Charlie Francis Murphy, Adam Navarro, Todd Quick, T. Anthony Quinn, David Joseph Regelmann, Jakob Stalnaker and Patrick Vaill. The design team for Richard II includes set designer Lee Savage, costume designer Jennifer Moeller, lighting designer Mark McCullough, composer and sound designer Martin Desjardins, voice and text coach Ellen O'Brien and fight director Rick Sordelet. The design team for Henry V includes set designer Lee Savage, costume designer Elizabeth Hope Clancy, lighting designer Mark McCullough, composer Fabian Obispo, sound designer Martin Desjardins, choreographer Daniel Pelzig, voice and text coach Ellen O'Brien, fight director Rick Sordelet and music director George Fulginitadidas outleti-Shakar.
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Stiller, Hilton, other celebs urge quake relief

Stiller, Hilton, other celebs urge quake relief Oprah Winfrey, Paris Hilton and Ben Stiller are among the celebrities and artists urging support for survivors ofuggs outlet the earthquake in Haiti. Stiller tweeted late Tuesday that "people in Haiti need our help and attention right now." Similar tweets are showing up from the likes of Hilton, Lindsay Lohan, Adam Lambert and Ryan Leslie. "It seems like across the wide spectrum of artists and people in the music industry and the movie industry and everything else, people are kind of joining together to help in whatever manner that they can," Blink-182 bassist-vocalist Mark Hoppus told The Associated Press on Wednesday. Singer Wyclef Jean arrived in Haiti, his native country, on Wednesday. "I cannot stress enough whaat a human disaster this is, and idle hands will only make this tragedy worse," he said in a statement. "The over 2 million people in Port-au-Prince tonight face catastrophe alone. We must act now." Publicist Leslie Chasky said he is focusing on his family, his Haitian charity, Yele, and responding to the disaster. Shakira, on her Web site, called for donations to Yele and to UNICEF. Winfrey began her television talk show Wednesday by asking viewers to donate to the Red Cross. "This is a time where we, as a global nation, should come together and support those who are in need," Winfrey said. Lee Daniels, director of the film "Precious," for which Winfrey served as executive producer, said Wednesday that the earthquake made this Sunday's Golden Globes ceremony seem "so unimportant." Daniels' filmuggs outlet store received three nominations. "Ultimately, what we do is so unnewsworthy in comparison and so unimportant when you have things like this at hand," Daniels said. "'Precious' seems so unimportant when casualties like that happen." Celebrities were invited to aid in Haitian relief by simply attending Platinum Publicity's Hollywood Helping Haiti Golden Globes Lounge. Organizers promised donations would be made in honor of every celebrity who came to the lounge, and stars could further contribute by autographing items that could be auctioned to support Haitian relief. Viacom Inc., whose companies include MTV Networks and Paramount Pictures, announced Wednesday that it was setting up a $500,000 matching gift program, with donations going to the Red Cross. Coldplay singer Chris Martin urged people to donate to a Haiti appeal set up by the charity Oxfam. "I visited Haiti with Oxfam a few years ago. It's a country of extreme poverty and brutal living conditions," Martin said. "Most people in Port-au-Prince live in tin shacks. The earthquake that has struck Haiti will have turned the city into an unimaginable hell." George Clooney is on a roll. The actor picked up anotheugg outletr best actor award in New York on Tuesday night, Jan. 12, at the National Board of Review of Motion Pictures annual awards gala for "Up in the Air," sharing the accolades with Morgan Freeman, who also won best actor for his portrayal of former South African president Nelson Mandela in "Invictus." "You hear that, Morgan? That's right, pal...Nelson Mandela, huh," joked Clooney in mock skepticism as he started his acceptance speech about fellow winner Morgan Freeman. "First of all, to share an award with Morgan Freeman is an honor. As you can imagine, you'd want to share anything with him. He raises the bar too high for everyone. It's an honor to be on the stage with him. He's a friend, and anytime you get to be around Morgan, it's fun. Do it." Clint Eastwood, who directed Freeman in "Invictus," won best director. Clooney also went on to praise "Up in the Air" director Jason Reitman, whose film won for best picture. "Actors are only as good as the screenplay and the director," said Clooney. Another "Up in the Air" performance was also honored at the gala. Clooney's co-star Anna Kendrick won the award for best supporting actress. Best supporting actor went to Woodyuggs on sale Harrelson for "The Messenger." Carey Mulligan of "An Education," sporting a short Audrey Hepburn-like cropped hairdo and chic little black dress with flutter sleeves, accepted the award for best actress, and first-time actress Gabourey Sidibe, wearing a deep amethyst draped satin gown by David Meister, won the "Breakthrough Performance by an Actress" award for "Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire." Jeremy Renner, who starred in Academy Award favorite "The Hurt Locker," which picked up best picture honors at Monday's New York Film Critics Circle awards, took home the National Board award for "Breakthrough Performance by an Actor." Director Wes Anderson accepted his award, "Special Filmmaking Achievement," first as a stop animation character, in reference to his latest film, "Fantastic Mr. Fox," before stepping up to the podium. The National Board of Review of Motion Pictures is a not-for-profit group that has honored achievement in film for over 100 years. The 2009 award winners were first announced by the board on Dec. 3, uggs for cheap2009.
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Review: Chan should be evicted as `Spy Next Door'

Review: Chan should be evicted as `Spy Next Door' Jackie Chan. Boring pen salesman named Bob Ho. But really an ace CIA agent who's retiring from the spy game to marry nike outletthe single mom next door. Only her kids can't stand him because they think he's a boring pen salesman named Bob Ho. So she goes away and he volunteers to baby-sit to win over the little ones. Except these Russian spies come after him and the children ... You buying any of this? Neither are we. Like many action stars, Chan is looking for a piece of the lucrative family market with "The Spy Next Door" and his upcoming "The Karate Kid." Maybe he'll have some luck with the latter, a remake with some built-in appeal, because "The Spy Next Door" is the sort of slop to make you long for a less-iarritating neighbor, like Barney the dinosaur or some Teletubbies. Maybe Jar-Jar Binks. In fairness, Chan is no more tiresome than anyone else in "The Spy Next Door," from Billy Ray Cyrus as his good old boy spy ally to George Lopez as his grinning CIA boss to Madeline Carroll, Will Shadley and Alina Foley as the supremely annoying children. It's not nice to make fun of kids, so let's blame the young ones' obnoxiousness on director Brian Levant, who specializes in bringing out the worst in performers for family fare ("Jingle All the Way," "Are We adidas outletThere Yet?"). The screenplay credited to Jonathan Bernstein, James Greer and Gregory Poirier (Really? Three guys to write this mess?) centers on some top-secret formula accidentally downloaded by one of the children Bob's minding for his girlfriend, Gillian (Amber Valletta). That sends the villains calling, putting Bob and his young charges on the run for their lives. Chan's halting English made for an endearing chuckle or two in his "Rush Hour" movies, but here, it's just a chore to decipher what he's saying. The language barrier is compounded by the sometimes incomprehensible mutterings from Magnus Scheving and Katherine Boecher, doing miserable Boris-and-Natasha imitations as the main Russian villains. Odds are, given the dumb dialogue that you actually can understand, we're not missing anything when the accents obscure the lines. This sad little movie is built entirely to set up Chan's stunt sequences as he fights with pots, pans, ladders and other found objects or hurtles stairways to chase bad guys. The action stuff is more tolerable than the jokes, but barely. Parents, there are so many better ways to entertain your kids for an afternoon than shelling out for this. Think all star shoes sock puppets and go from there. Farren sums things up nicely at the outset of "The Spy Next Door," shouting, "I hate this family!" Yeah, know the feeling. "The Spy Next Door," a Lionsgate release, is rated PG for sequences of action violence and some mild rude humor. Running time: 94 minutes. One and a half stars out of four. Networks rush personnel into Haiti Television news divisions raced to get into Haiti to report on the devastation wrought by a powerful earthquake, a journey made more difficult by the story they were trying to cover. Those first to arrive described scenes of horror frightening in scope. Even some of the journalists arriving a day after the earthquake indicated Wednesday that they had not yet seen any full-scale rescue and relief effort. "It's an eerie scene," said CNN's Anderson Cooper, who left in the midst of a newscast Tuesday for an overnight flight to the Caribbean. "Many people (are) just sort of standing around on the street, not sure of what to do or where to go. And for many, there is nowhere to go." The broadcast networks' three top anchors — Katie Couric, Diane Sawyer and Brian Williams — were all dispatched to the country. Sawyer flew 18 hours to New York from Afghanistan, where she had anchored ABC's "World News" for two days, and didn't even leave the airport before getting on another planenike shoes outlet headed south. CBS' Couric tweeted while en route from the Dominican Republic to Haiti: "Getting to Port au Prince will be very tricky. Sounds very bad, sixty percent of structures shabby in good circumstances." CBS' Kelly Cobiella arrived in Haiti Tuesday night. The broadcast networks expanded their evening newscasts to an hour for the story. A runway at the Haitian capital's airport remained unscarred, but the control tower was severely damaged. That prevented Fox News Channel's Steve Harrigan from landing. Cooper said he made sure his helicopter was brought down after narrowly missing a small plane in mid air. CNN's Sanjay Gupta nabbed Haitian President Rene Preval for an impromptu interview at the airport, where Preval was looking for a place to work. He said both his presidential palace and home were so damaged that he did not know where he was going to spend the night. In a telephone interview Wednesday, CNN's Cooper said that he saw corpses on the sidewalk on virtually every block he walked. The body of one little girl had only her face covered by a piece of cardboard. There are frequent aftershocks, each one prompting screams from people, he said. Many of the victims believe another large earthquake is on the way. "To people that are here, this feelsadidas shoes outlet like it's still going on," a weary Cooper said. ABC News was looking to get "Good Morning America" co-host Robin Roberts, Dan Harris, Kate Snow, Richard Besser and others into Haiti by plane, automobile and even boat, said David Reiter, vice president of newsgathering. "Food, lodging, security, how we (transmit) our video, all of these in other stories you can take for granted," Reiter said. "In this case, you can't." Besides Williams, NBC was sending half of the "Today" team — Ann Curry and Al Roker — along with Michelle Kosinski, Kerry Sanders and Ron Allen to Haiti. Williams reported by phone on MSNBC shortly before 3 p.m. EST, saying that from the air that "it was very plain that they are still dealing with an unraveling emergency. "For this disaster to hit one of the poorest nations of the world is almost perverse," he said. MSNBC received some criticism on Tuesday night for running two hours of Keith Olbermann's show where the unfolding disaster was not addressed. It's a recurrent issue for MSNBC, which stuck with taped programming on Chriuggs outletstmas as the story of the attempted terrorist attack unfolded. MSNBC said there was little hard information and few pictures of the earthquake to illustrate the story so soon after it happened. While Fox covered the earthquake extensively Wednesday, the network took time away to showcase its new employee: Glenn Beck talked with Sarah Palin about how each of them were popular Halloween masks last year.
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