Friday, October 18, 2013

TV Premiere Week's DVR Winners and Losers




This story first appeared in the Oct. 25 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine.


Advertisers still might be buying network time based on Nielsen's live-plus-3-day ratings, but the Big Four are pushing a full week's worth of DVR viewing more than ever with the arrival of 2013 premiere week's live-plus-7 returns. And for good reason. The latest numbers show all broadcast nets are even with or better than last season's premiere week thanks to increases in time-shifted viewing. Fox and CBS, both down in initial returns, are in the black with NBC and ABC, while early successes Sleepy Hollow, Agents of SHIELD and The Blacklist assert their status as formidable newbies and CBS' The Big Bang Theory surges past Sunday Night Football for demo dominance.


PHOTOS: 81 of Fall TV's Biggest Stars: THR's Exclusive Portraits


WINNERS


The Big Bang Theory (CBS)


Premiere episode up 41 percent to an 8.6 in 18-to-49 -- a series high and better than Sunday Night Football.


Agents of SHIELD (ABC)


Biggest premiere of the season jumps another 49 percent to a 7.0 adults 18-to-49 rating.


Sleepy Hollow (Fox)


Up 71 percent to a 5.3 rating in the second episode.


STORY: 'Sleepy Hollow' Is DVR's Most Improved, While 'SHIELD' and 'Big Bang Theory' Top Premieres


Elementary (CBS)


Up 67 percent to a 3.5 rating.


New Girl (Fox)


Up 62 percent to a 3.4 rating.


The Blacklist (NBC)


Up 45 percent to a 5.5 rating.


STORY: TV Ratings: 'Voice' Tops Monday as 'Castle,' 'Dancing' and '2 Broke Girls' All Improve


LOSERS


Back in the Game (ABC)


Rises only 14 percent to a 2.5 rating.


Bob's Burgers (Fox)


Up only 13 percent to a 2.5 rating.


The Good Wife (CBS)


Gains 33 percent to a 2.0 rating.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/news/~3/RcVDiBCruQ8/tv-premiere-weeks-dvr-winners-648780
Similar Articles: steve bartman   Columbus Day 2013   911 Memorial   alyssa milano   Don Jon  

Vice President Biden welcomes back EPA workers with muffins (Los Angeles Times)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS Feeds and Widgets via Feedzilla.
Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/334704711?client_source=feed&format=rss
Tags: Kendrick Lamar   once upon a time   joe flacco   Iggy Azalea   tibetan mastiff  

Wait Until Dark: Theater Review




Michael Lamont


"Wait Until Dark"




The Bottom Line


Creaky suspense machine operates smoothly thanks to a well-lubricated refurbishment. 




Venue


Geffen Playhouse, Westwood (runs through Nov. 17)


Cast


Alison Pill, Adam Stein, Mather Zickel, Rod McLachlan, Matt McTighe, Brighid Fleming


Playwright


Frederick Knott, adapted by Jeffrey Hatcher


Director


Matt Shakman




Recently blinded Susan (Alison Pill, of The Newsroom) is first manipulated and then terrorized in her basement apartment by three con men searching for a lost doll of great value that had been unknowingly slipped to her absent husband. Insecure and not a little bitter, the vulnerable Susan must muster her resources to outmaneuver her tormentors, turn her disability to advantage, and survive.



This 1966 success by Frederick Knott (Dial M for Murder) originally starred Lee Remick and Robert Duvall under the direction of Arthur Penn (just before he started work on Bonnie and Clyde). It was filmed the following year with Audrey Hepburn (her last hit) and Alan Arkin, becoming a local theater staple, an early HBO canned version and a misbegotten 1998 Broadway revival with Quentin Tarantino. In short, this is a vehicle that has been around, with so many miles it might readily be consigned a junker.


PHOTOS: Exclusive Portraits of 'The Newsroom' Cast


It’s unclear why the Geffen would be so keen to put it back on the road, but they’ve gone about it intelligently by commissioning the incredibly prolific playwright and serial adapter Jeffrey Hatcher (Compleat Female Stage Beauty, A Picasso, Tuesdays with Morrie, Cousin Bette, The Government Inspector) to rejigger the engine and director Matt Shakman, invaluable founder of the eminent Black Dahlia Ensemble, to guide it round the track. The period has been transposed back to 1944 from 1966, given a wartime light-noir patina, and the brownstone relocated from the Lower East Side to Greenwich Village. In a sense, by positioning the setting as more antique, the story’s datedness becomes more palatable with the distance.


More interestingly, Hatcher and Shakman are unafraid to recognize that the plot machinations can be baldly apparent, so their take is not unlike those repurposed urban spaces that retain the visible industrial pipes and paraphernalia as a design statement. While the audience may well see some (or most) of the twists coming, that anticipation becomes a part of the thriller mechanism, adding a meta-tinge that lends some ersatz contemporary fizz.


PHOTOS: Broadway Musicals That Have Sung Their Way to the Big Screen


While television has mined most of its inspirations for innumerable episodics, Wait Until Dark remains unquestionably a sturdy construction, no longer surprising yet still satisfyingly tense, evergreen clever, with gratifying thematic undercurrents. Especially upfront, there is a surfeit of prolix exposition, which Shakman sagely keeps breakneck – even unto risking a missed point here and there. He has also loyally kept faith with longtime design collaborators, yielding a satisfying cohesive vision for the piece, with a terrific set and spot-on costumes. Nevertheless, for all the sumptuous mounting and the ingenious lighting gambits, one could still imagine it being nearly as effective as a radio suspenser, as heard by the heroine.


Susan remains a swell role (Remick was nominated for a Tony, and Hepburn for an Oscar), which the reliably talented Pill instills with a distinctive individuality. As the cunning, sadistic Roat, Adam Stein has fun with the hoarier conceits of impersonation and villainy, though his personal best moment on opening night was an improvised cover for a prop failure that lent an inadvertently nihilistic cast to the climax, serendipitously endowing him with a moment of anguished pathos.


Everyone else plays stoutly to type in a patented Forties manner that enjoyably never lapses into the overdone. (Mather Zickel, as the husband’s service buddy, is especially on-point as an ambiguous nice guy.) Unfortunately, the trademark violent shock of the final confrontation no longer has any traction after countless repetitions have reduced it to the show’s most expected trope.


Venue: Geffen Playhouse, Westwood (runs through Nov. 17)


Cast: Alison Pill, Adam Stein, Mather Zickel, Rod McLachlan, Matt McTighe, Brighid Fleming


Director: Matt Shakman


Playwright: Frederick Knott, adapted by Jeffrey Hatcher


Set designer: Craig Siebels


Costume designer: E.B. Brooks


Lighting designer: Elizabeth Harper


Music & sound designer: Jonathan Snipes


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/reviews/theater/~3/KoJ_EmEc2eg/wait-dark-theater-review-649379
Category: mlb   apple   von miller  

Thursday, October 17, 2013

E! Orders 'Rich Kids of Beverly Hills' to Series



E! has picked up another aspirational unscripted series, ordering eight episodes of Rich Kids of Beverly Hills for a January 2014 premiere.



The reality show will follow five well-funded L.A. friends who have already achieved "social media infamy" by advertising their lifestyles on Instagram and Twitter. Beverly Hills, which has no relation to popular Tumblr Rich Kids of Instagram, comes to E~! from ITV Studios America in association with Leepson Bounds Entertainment.


“These kids are larger than life personalities who are charismatic, shockingly wealthy and born into lifestyles that are outrageously spectacular,” said E! programming and development executive VP Jeff Olde. “They live a fantasy life on a scale that you just can’t turn away from and then they document it all via social media.  But at the core, I think viewers will be drawn into the fact that they are genuinely good friends who still have to navigate friendships, relationships and life-- but they get to do it all in luxury cars, yachts and private jets, which is really fun to watch.”


The cable network is clearly angling for a strong social component in the new series, as each of the five participants -- Dorothy Wang, Morgan Stewart, Brendan Fitzpatrick, Roxy Sowlaty, Jonny Drubel -- has linked Twitter and Instagram handles in the order announcement.


David Leepson, Gennifer Gardiner and Doron Ofir serve as executive producers.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/live_feed/~3/lCO4ihoviTE/story01.htm
Category: Million Muslim March   Apple.com   Xbox One Release Date   JJ Cale   Royal Baby Pictures  

APNewsBreak: New charges in Blackwater shootings

FILE - In this Sept. 25, 2007 file photo, an Iraqi traffic policeman inspects a car destroyed by a Blackwater security detail in al-Nisoor Square in Baghdad, Iraq. The U.S. Justice Department has brought fresh charges against former Blackwater Worldwide security contractors over a deadly 2007 shooting on the streets of Baghdad. The jury indictment announced Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013 charges four men with voluntary manslaughter and other crimes. The case stems from the shooting of 17 Iraqi civilians. Blackwater security contractors were guarding U.S. diplomats when they opened fire at an intersection. Their lawyers have said the insurgents ambushed the guards. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed, File)







FILE - In this Sept. 25, 2007 file photo, an Iraqi traffic policeman inspects a car destroyed by a Blackwater security detail in al-Nisoor Square in Baghdad, Iraq. The U.S. Justice Department has brought fresh charges against former Blackwater Worldwide security contractors over a deadly 2007 shooting on the streets of Baghdad. The jury indictment announced Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013 charges four men with voluntary manslaughter and other crimes. The case stems from the shooting of 17 Iraqi civilians. Blackwater security contractors were guarding U.S. diplomats when they opened fire at an intersection. Their lawyers have said the insurgents ambushed the guards. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed, File)







FILE - In this Thursday, Sept. 20, 2007, file photo, Hassan Jabir lies in a hospital bed after he was wounded when guards employed by security company Blackwater opened fire at Nisoor Square in 2007, in Baghdad, Iraq. The U.S. Justice Department has brought fresh charges against former Blackwater Worldwide security contractors over a deadly 2007 shooting on the streets of Baghdad. The jury indictment announced Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013 charges four men with voluntary manslaughter and other crimes. The case stems from the shooting of 17 Iraqi civilians. Blackwater security contractors were guarding U.S. diplomats when they opened fire at an intersection. Their lawyers have said the insurgents ambushed the guards. (AP Photo/Khalid Mohammed, File)







FILE -In this Sept. 20, 2007, file photo Hassan Jabir, 37, recovers from gunshot wounds in a hospital in Baghdad, Iraq, received in his car in the Mansour neighborhood when guards in a U.S. State Department convoy opened fire, shooting him four times. The U.S. Justice Department has brought fresh charges against former Blackwater Worldwide security contractors over a deadly 2007 shooting on the streets of Baghdad. The jury indictment announced Thursday, Oct. 17, 2013 charges four men with voluntary manslaughter and other crimes. The case stems from the shooting of 17 Iraqi civilians. Blackwater security contractors were guarding U.S. diplomats when they opened fire at an intersection. Their lawyers have said the insurgents ambushed the guards. (AP Photo/ Khalid Mohammed/File)







(AP) — The Justice Department on Thursday brought fresh charges against four former Blackwater Worldwide security contractors, resurrecting an internationally charged case over a deadly 2007 shooting on the streets of Baghdad.

A new grand jury indictment charges the men in a shooting that inflamed anti-American sentiment in Iraq and heightened diplomatic sensitivities amid an ongoing war. The men were hired to guard U.S. diplomats.

The guards are accused of opening fire in busy Nisoor Square on Sept. 16, 2007. Seventeen Iraqi civilians died, including women and children. Prosecutors say the heavily armed Blackwater convoy used machine guns and grenades in an unprovoked attack. Defense lawyers argue their clients are innocent men who were ambushed by Iraqi insurgents.

The guards were charged with manslaughter and weapons violations in 2008, but a federal judge the following year dismissed the case, ruling the Justice Department withheld evidence from a grand jury and violated the guards' constitutional rights. The dismissal outraged many Iraqis, who said it showed Americans consider themselves above the law. Vice President Joe Biden, speaking in Baghdad in 2010, expressed his "personal regret" for the shootings.

A federal appeals court reinstated the case in 2011, saying now-retired Judge Ricardo Urbina had wrongly interpreted the law.

Prosecutors again presented evidence before a grand jury, and U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth gave the Justice Department until Monday to decide what to do with the case.

The defendants include Dustin Heard, a retired U.S. Marine from Knoxville, Tenn.; Evan Liberty, a retired U.S. Marine from Rochester, N.H.; Nick Slatten, a former U.S. Army sergeant from Sparta, Tenn., and Paul Slough, a U.S. Army veteran from Keller, Texas.

Slatten is charged with 14 counts of voluntary manslaughter and 16 counts of attempt to commit manslaughter; Liberty and Heard are charged with 13 counts of voluntary manslaughter and 16 counts of attempt to commit manslaughter; and Slough is charged with 13 counts of voluntary manslaughter and 18 counts of attempt to commit manslaughter. All four were also charged with one count of using and discharging a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence.

They were charged under the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act, a statute that allows the government to prosecute certain government employees and contractors for crimes committed overseas. Defense lawyers have argued that statute does not apply in this case since the guards were working as State Department contractors, not for the military.

Heard's lawyer, David Schertler, said in an email he was disappointed with the prosecution, which he believes has no merit.

"We will continue to fight and defend Dustin Heard's innocence and honor until he is fully exonerated," he said.

Lawyers for Slough and Slatten declined to comment. Liberty's lawyer did not respond to requests for comment.

In a statement, U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr. said the prosecution "demonstrates our commitment to upholding the rule of law even in times of war and to bringing justice to the memories of those innocent men, women and children who were gunned down in Baghdad more than six years ago."

Prosecutors last month agreed to dismiss their case against a fifth guard, Donald Ball, a retired Marine from West Valley City, Utah. A sixth guard, Jeremy Ridgeway of California, pleaded guilty and is awaiting sentencing.

The Justice Department had earlier dropped Slatten from the case, but after the appeals court decision reinstated the prosecution, the government said he remained a defendant.

The company formerly known as Blackwater Worldwide is under new ownership and is now headquartered in Virginia. It had changed its name to Xe Services, but the company was sold to a group of investors who then changed the name to Academi.

Blackwater founder Erik Prince is no longer affiliated with the company.

In moving forward with the case, the government will seek to overcome some of the legal problems that have dogged the prosecution. The case ran into trouble because the State Department promised the guards that their statements explaining what happened would not be used for criminal prosecution. The guards told investigators that they fired their weapons, a crucial admission. Because of a limited immunity deal, prosecutors had to build their case without those statements, a high legal hurdle. In dismissing the case, Urbina said prosecutors had read the statements, reviewed them in the investigation and used them to question witnesses and get search warrants.

Court documents also reveal conflicting evidence, with some witnesses saying the Blackwater convoy was under fire and others saying it was not.

___

Follow Fred Frommer on Twitter: http://twitter.com/ffrommer and Eric Tucker at https://twitter.com/etuckerAP

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-10-17-Blackwater%20Prosecution/id-90840361ffc2491f9aa926cd0ceb8ae6
Similar Articles: Bosses Day 2013   Dusty Baker   amanda knox   savannah brinson   Jennifer Rosoff  

Thursday Morning Political Mix


Good morning.


The newspapers hit the front porch this morning with a familiar thud. (Yes, some of us still like the feel of paper in the morning.)


"SHUTDOWN ENDS" shouted The Washington Post.


"REPUBLICANS BACK DOWN, ENDING BUDGET CRISIS" The New York Times intoned.


And online (yes, some of us also like the morning glow of our devices), the post-shutdown/debt crisis postmortems were piling up like so many pages of regulations in the Affordable Care Act.


But first, the details, quickly:


  • Congress, with alacrity, late Wednesday passed a debt and spending bill that Obama signed shortly after midnight today. Here's a breakdown of the 285-144 House vote.

  • Federal workers, about 450,000 of them, were expected to be back at their jobs today, joining the 1.3 million who worked during the 16-day shutdown.

  • And the U.S. government is funded through Jan. 15; its borrowing capacity raised through Feb. 7. A good Washington Post Q&A helps sort out the deal's details.

Now, to the fallout.


First, a right hook from conservative radio talker Rush Limbaugh. He's in the small but vociferous camp critical of Republican leaders for not continuing the doomed shutdown/default brinksmanship. Here's what he had to say:




"And what they've ended up doing is creating one of the greatest political disasters I've ever seen in my lifetime, simply because they failed to show up" Limbaugh said. "Then when they finally did make a play of showing up, they didn't have the guts to stick with it."




There's more of that out there from the Tea Party wing of the GOP, including Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, who led the insurgents' failed effort to link Obamacare defunding to the budget deal. He turned on his own party colleagues in the Senate, telling conservative radio host Mark Levin that Senate Republicans blew it when they "didn't stand united alongside House Republicans."


But the preponderance of commentary from Republicans, and conservative Republicans, is far different.


Kevin Williamson, writing for the conservative National Review, says he sees one overarching lesson from the manufactured crisis: Want to win the big government arguments? Nothing beats a majority. Win gains in the Senate, take the White House and then govern.


Here's Williamson: "For all the counterfactuals — 'If only my guy had been the nominee,' 'If only a Republican would make this speech,' 'If only my pet constitutional amendment with zero chance of passing would be submitted nonetheless,' 'If only my magic-bullet tax plan would be adopted,' etc. — the lesson of the shutdown showdown is that there really is no substitute for winning. Job No. 1 is ensuring that the Democrats control no larger a share of Senate seats than they do of state legislatures. That, and the long, dreary business of responsible governance."


At the American Spectator, Ross Kaminsky's piece carries this headline: "For serious Republicans, yesterday's agreement couldn't have turned out worse." He calls on GOP Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin to take the lead in coming budget negotiations and urges Republicans to let Obamacare continue its "inevitable collapse."


"Obamacare will tell its own sad story," he says, "letting it do so is the best way for American voters to hear the story in a way they will believe."


And Kaminsky, who respectfully called out conservative groups like Heritage Action for pushing the doomed no-compromise strategy, urges Cruz to "play along" with Senate Republicans — good luck on that — and says House Republicans must try to regain "some standing, some moral authority, a public sense of being something more than a bunch of undisciplined radicals."


And, finally, New York Times columnist Ross Douthat held nothing — or little — back in his late-night blog post, "A Teachable Moment." Douthat, co-author of Grand New Party: How Republicans Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream, decried what he characterized as the mentality that drove the shutdown "a toxic combination of tactical irrationality and the elevation of that irrationality into a True Conservative (TM) litmus test" and its persistence. And he warned party populists about the peril of pulling "this kind of stunt again."


Here's Douthat: "So for undeluded conservatives of all persuasions, lessons must be learned. If the party's populists want to shape and redefine and ultimately remake the party, they can't pull this kind of stunt again. If the party's leadership wants to actually lead, whether within the G.O.P. or in the country at large, they can't let this kind of stunt be pulled again. That's the only way in which this pointless-seeming exercise could turn out to have some sort of point: If it's long remembered, by its proponents and their enablers alike, as the utter folly that it was."


We'll give the last word to the ever entertaining, like him or not, Barney Frank, the former longtime Massachusetts congressman.


House Republicans, he muses, must be smoking something. "One of the causes that I've been pushing is to legalize the smoking of marijuana by adults instead of locking them up," he said during an appearance on MSNBC. "And apparently that may be more widespread among the Republican House members than I had thought, because that's the only explanation I can think for this particular extreme mellowness that they are [showing]."


Also worth a read, the Wall Street Journal's Gerald Seib, on whether the point Republicans made was worth the price.


In other news, Newark Mayor Cory Booker, 44, a Democrat, was easily elected to the U.S. Senate Wednesday, becoming the first black senator from the Garden State. He'll be one of two African Americans in the upper chamber.


His morning after tweet: "Have great dreams & bold ambition but never forget that the biggest thing you can do in any day is a small act of kindness, decency or love."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2013/10/17/236169038/thursday-morning-political-mix?ft=1&f=1003
Similar Articles: Nate Burleson   emmy awards   rosh hashanah   Austin Mahone   oj simpson  

Angry Nerd</em>: Need an Idea for a TV Show? Just Steal a Classic Story!

Angry Nerd: Need an Idea for a TV Show? Just Steal a Classic Story! | Underwire | Wired.com










Hunky time-traveling Ichabod Crane has made Chris Baker lose his head. Why is every other TV show an updated version of some classic fairytale or children’s story?

















 


Source: http://feeds.wired.com/c/35185/f/661370/s/3291205f/sc/38/l/0L0Swired0N0Cunderwire0C20A130C10A0Cangry0Enerd0Etv0Enetworks0Eare0Erunning0Eout0Eof0Eoriginal0Eideas0C/story01.htm
Category: 2020 Olympics   aaliyah   Whitey Bulger  

Sony Shingle Toro Takes Israeli Singing Format 'Rising Star' for Italy




"Rising Star" has been a TV and second-screen hit in Israel.



COLOGNE, Germany – Toro Produzioni, the Italian production company controlled by Sony Pictures Television Group, has snapped up local adaptation rights to Rising Star, the hot new singing format from Israeli group Keshet Media.



The Italian deal follows similar format agreements for Rising Star with RTL for Germany, France's M6, Russia's Rossiya1 and Nordisk for Scandinavia.


PHOTOS: 81 of Fall TV's Biggest Stars: THR's Exclusive Portraits


The singing competition show, which has been a huge ratings hit on Keshet 2 in Israel, uses innovative voting technology that allows viewers to vote live for their favorite contestants live via a second screen app. The vote count is tallied live during a contestant's on-air performance and determines the outcome of the show. 


Toro is the go-to producer in Italy for music competition shows. The local producer of The Voice, the company recently acquired adaptation rights to the French classical music competition program Grande Battle.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/television/~3/D5yjyKMz6u8/story01.htm
Tags: breast cancer awareness   Namaste   katy perry   Kidd Kraddick   jimmy fallon  

'Fifty Shades' fallout: Sources cite script showdown

Movies











11 hours ago

Image: Charlie Hunnam

Frazer Harrison / Getty Images file

Actor Charlie Hunnam, who currently stars on "Sons of Anarchy."

Universal Pictures and Focus Features haven't yet resorted to posting a woman-seeking-man personal ad on Craigslist. But in the wake of Charlie Hunnam's abrupt departure from "Fifty Shades of Grey" — after what sources say was increasing conflict with the high-profile film's creative team — the studio is left to scramble desperately for another actor to star opposite Dakota Johnson in the role of billionaire S&M fan Christian Grey so the project can meet a looming Nov. 1 start date.

PHOTOS: Stars Misaligned: Charlie Hunnam Quits 'Fifty Shades' and 15 Other Casting Near-Misses 

Universal chairman Donna Langley, producers Michael De Luca and Dana Brunetti, director Sam Taylor-Johnson and author EL James are said to have drafted a list of four men they want to read for the role. Although the list is being kept under NSA-level secrecy, THR.com revealed Oct. 13 that British TV stars Jamie Dornan, 31, and Christian Cooke, 26, are among the targets. Both actors came close to capturing the part the first time around but lost to Hunnam because the "Sons of Anarchy" star is a bigger name. ("True Blood's" Alexander Skarsgard also is being considered.)

Image: Jamie Dornan

Getty Images file

Actor Jamie Dornan.

Dornan could be emerging as a front-runner. Born in Northern Ireland, he's a former Calvin Klein model, dated Keira Knightley for two years and played Sheriff Graham on the first season of ABC's "Once Upon a Time." According to a source, Dornan was contacted by Langley even before Hunnam officially dropped out Oct. 12. But a Dornan confidant says no overtures had been made at press time to the actor, who stars in British series "The Fall," on which he plays a killer terrorizing Belfast. The fact that Dornan's wife, actress-singer Amelia Warner, is pregnant also could complicate matters.

PHOTOS: Top 10 Fan Favorites for the Cast of 'Fifty Shades of Grey' 

The last thing Universal wants is another actor to emerge as its "Fifty Shades" protagonist only to waffle. The studio is reeling over Hunnam's exit less than three weeks before the start of production. Sources say his discomfort with the hoopla around the project had been mounting for at least four weeks before he bailed, which officially was blamed on his "Sons" schedule not allowing him time to prepare (the FX series wraps production Oct. 22). After signing Sept. 2, Hunnam faced a public frenzy on social media sites, where fans of the book congregated to fawn over and complain about his casting. Universal was forced to hire bodyguards for the actor at a recent "Sons" premiere, and two appearances to promote the show were canceled — one at Goulet Motosports in Hawkesbury, Ontario, on Sept. 14, and one at Rocky's Harley-Davidson in London, Ontario, on Oct. 13.

In addition, Hunnam, who also is a writer (he penned the gothic horror screenplay "Vlad" for Brad Pitt's Plan B and Summit Entertainment), is said to have submitted his own very detailed script notes on Kelly Marcel's adaptation of the runaway best-seller. The notes were well received, according to sources, but that only led to Hunnam seeking further script approval, which was denied. "That's Charlie, that's who he is. He's particular," says one source.

STORY: Charlie Hunnam Drops Out of 'Fifty Shades of Grey' Movie 

According to another source, Hunnam, who was to be paid about $125,000 for the film, began butting heads with the creative team, including Taylor-Johnson. The conflict reached a fever pitch in early October, though everyone involved thought the issues had been resolved. But the discord spiked again Oct. 11. Hunnam's team at CAA and Brillstein Entertainment Partners strongly advised him to stay on the project for fear that his exit would embarrass Langley — new to the chairman job — and burn a bridge with one of the major studios. That same day, Universal hired writer Patrick Marber — no stranger to taboo sex themes with his Oscar-nominated screenplay "Notes on a Scandal" — to do a polish and bolster the characters. But by then, Hunnam, whose heart it seems never was in the project, had decided to decamp. The next morning, the studio announced his departure, and James tweeted, "I wish Charlie all the best." Universal and CAA declined comment.

Hunnam isn't the first actor to have doubts about playing the dungeon-loving Christian Grey. James' first choice, Robert Pattinson, never engaged with producers. Garrett Hedlund was heavily courted this summer and even received an informal offer, but the "Tron: Legacy" star passed in July because he couldn't connect with the character. Now he is in Australia to shoot the Angelina Jolie-directed "Unbroken."

EXCLUSIVE: 'Fifty Shades' Movie Hires Writer for Script Work

Fortunately for Universal, its leading lady, Johnson, 24, remains firmly in place, ready to take on the virgin-turned-sexpert Anastasia Steele, a role that has greater dimension than the Grey character. But with the clock ticking, the start of production likely will need to be pushed back at least a week. Still, the studio says it remains committed to making its Aug. 1, 2014, release date.

For her part, the ever-involved James (she has approval rights on cast) is in Los Angeles the week of Oct. 14 as the hunt for a new Christian Grey continues. As the author writes no fewer than 44 times in "Fifty Shades": "Oh my."

Borys Kit contributed to this report.








Source: http://www.today.com/entertainment/fifty-shades-fallout-sources-cite-charlie-hunnam-script-showdown-8C11401094
Related Topics: Miss World 2013   emily blunt   Bill De Blasio   Placenta   tiger woods  

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

“Slumdog Millionaire” Star Freida Pinto Plays Stripper In Bruno Mars’ “Gorilla” (VIDEO)



1x1.trans Slumdog Millionaire Star Freida Pinto Plays Stripper In Bruno Mars Gorilla (VIDEO)


Freida Pinto, most known for her role as Latika in “Slumdog Millionaire”, has showed off a very different side of herself in Bruno Mars’ new video for his single “Gorilla”.


The 28-year-old actress writhes around a stripper pole in the provocative video released on the singer’s Facebook page on Tuesday.



Freida plays the sultry Isabella, a stripper in a seedy bar, as Bruno Mars sings on stage.



Bruno and Freida are later shown making out in the backseat of a car.



Pinto has yet to comment on the surprising video, but she posted the link to it last night on her Twitter page saying, “Got to admit this was a hard secret to keep! X o.”


Freida is seen striding onstage and taking his guitar from him, before pouring tequila on it and lighting in instrument on fire.


The roof sprinkler comes on and Freida stands there in her underwear as the water rains down on her.


1x1.trans Slumdog Millionaire Star Freida Pinto Plays Stripper In Bruno Mars Gorilla (VIDEO)


Pinto, who got her start alongside boyfriend of five years Dev Patel, 22, in the Oscar-winning 2008 film “Slumdog Millionaire”, has been spicing up her image lately. She appeared on the cover of Vogue India’s October issue with her legs open in a very suggestive pose.


Pinto has yet to comment on the surprising video, but she posted the link to it last night on her Twitter page saying, “Got to admit this was a hard secret to keep! X o.”


Click thumbnails for larger pictures



Images: wenn.com/YouTube


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/stupidcelebrities/~3/WW6IssivZOs/
Category: Eminem Rap God   Henry Bromell  

U.S. farm bill negotiators may begin work next week


By Charles Abbott


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - House and Senate negotiators could meet for the first time next week to work on the new $500 billion U.S. farm bill, more than a year past due and repeatedly delayed by House Republican plans for steep cuts in food stamps for the poor.


The bill is also expected to cut funding for conservation programs but expand by $1 billion a year the federally subsidized crop insurance program, which now costs around $9 billion annually.


"Depending on the House and Senate schedules, the first, formal conference meeting could be scheduled as early as next week," said an aide to House Agriculture Committee chairman Frank Lucas. Under congressional protocol, Lucas will chair the conference committee formed to write a compromise bill between the House and Senate versions.


If Congress is not in session next week, the negotiators may not meet until the following week, said two other congressional staff workers.


The first meeting of House and Senate conferees is a milestone that marks the final round of work on major legislation. Commonly, a final version emerges within a few weeks.


Lucas says he is confident of consensus on a five-year bill.


Analysts said it will be difficult to reconcile the dramatically different proposals for food stamps.


House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Virginia spearheaded the Republican drive to tighten eligibility rules for food stamps, ending benefits to nearly 4 million people in 2014, and save $39 billion over 10 years. His targeted cuts are nearly 10 times the amount proposed by the Democrat-run Senate, which focused on closing loopholes on utility costs.


The Republican-controlled House defeated its initial version of the farm bill, with $20 billion in food stamp cuts, because the cuts were too small to satisfy Tea Party-influenced conservatives. Democrats voted solidly against the cuts.


By comparison, disagreements over agricultural programs appear easier to resolve although some are lightning rod issues.


The Senate, for example, would require farmers to practice conservation to qualify for premium subsidies on crop insurance and would reduce the subsidy for growers with more than $750,000 adjusted gross income a year. Both ideas are anathema to Lucas.


The Senate backs stricter limits on who can collect farm subsidies and how much they can get per year. And it says the support prices in the House bill are so high they might result in farmers aiming for a subsidy payment rather than a profit in the marketplace.


Rice and peanut growers say the Senate bill is skewed in favor of corn and soybean growers in the Midwest and that they get a fairer deal in the House bill.


An expanded and stronger crop insurance program was the top goal of farm groups in the bill. The House and Senate bills would do that through a "supplemental coverage option" that is an insurance policy covering up to 90 percent of normal revenue from grains and oilseeds.


Cotton growers would get their a revenue insurance program intended to resolve a World Trade Organization ruling against the U.S. subsidies now in place. Brazil brought the WTO case against the United States a decade ago and has not said if the new scheme is satisfactory.


(Reporting by Charles Abbott; Editing by David Gregorio)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/u-farm-bill-negotiators-may-begin-next-week-195110755--sector.html
Category: The Walking Dead Season 4   tom hanks   Scandal   alexis bledel   ashton kutcher  

Apple Will Announce the New iPads on Oct. 22nd

Apple Will Announce the New iPads on Oct. 22nd

As was foretold by the ancients, Apple will hold its holiday iPad jamboree on October 22nd. We'll see some new tablets, sure. But there also might be a trove of other odds and ends awaiting us next week.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/xDtceDvAev0/apple-will-announce-the-new-ipads-on-oct-22nd-1445584009
Tags: denver post   Obama Syria   Blackboard   Desiree And Chris   BBC  

World stocks muted as US debt deal deadline looms

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — World stock markets fluctuated between gains and losses Wednesday as a deadline for divided U.S. lawmakers to agree on a higher government borrowing limit drew ever closer.


Unless Congress acts by Thursday, the government will lose its ability to borrow and will be required to meet its obligations by relying on cash in hand and incoming tax receipts. That could mean the U.S. is unable to repay holders of Treasury bills that mature in coming days, or that it could miss interest payments on longer-dated Treasurys, and would be in default on its debt.


In early European trading, Britain's FTSE 100 was down 0.4 percent at 6,521.86 and Germany's DAX fell 0.1 percent to 8,792.94. France's CAC-40 was 0.7 percent lower at 4,226.88.


But U.S. stock futures made modest gains, auguring well for trading on Wall Street. Dow futures were up 0.4 percent at 15,155 and S&P 500 futures also gained 0.4 percent, to 1,699.30


In Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 rose 0.2 percent to close at 14,467.14 while Hong Kong's Hang Seng dropped 0.5 percent to 23,228.33. China's Shanghai Composite fell 1.8 percent to 2,193.07. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 added 0.1 percent to 5,262.91.


Stock indexes in Singapore, Malaysia, New Zealand and the Philippines eked out modest gains.


"The market is still relatively calm waiting for the storm to hit tomorrow, when the U.S. will reach its debt ceiling and then default will follow and all hell will break loose," said Francis Lun, chief economist at GE Oriental Finance Group in Hong Kong.


"Everybody is thinking the inevitable now. It is inevitable that the U.S. will miss an agreement before the deadline," he said.


Tuesday on Wall Street, stocks were flat or down all day Tuesday, but the size of the losses waxed and waned depending on which politician was giving a press conference about the budget impasse. The market closed with its first loss in a week. Yields on short-term government debt rose sharply as investors worried about the possibility of a default.


Many market commentators still hold out hope that reason will prevail and Democrats and Republicans will reach a deal at the last minute. But another reason for pessimism was that any deal reached this week might simply set up another showdown a few weeks or months down the road.


Lawmakers are also trying to agree on ending a partial government shutdown that has resulted in many Federal workers idled without pay.


In the energy markets, benchmark crude for November delivery was steady at $101.21 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.


The euro rose to $1.3532 from $1.3522 late Tuesday in New York. The dollar rose to 98.41 yen from 98.22 yen.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/world-stocks-muted-us-debt-deal-deadline-looms-093149434--finance.html
Similar Articles: First Day Of Fall 2013   Manny Diaz   grandparents day   Hyon Song-wol   Miley Cyrus Vma 2013  

Praise for those who cross shale's fault lines


Americans may not know it but other countries with shale deposits of gas or oil now look to the United States for leadership on two fronts:


One, how to best use the techniques of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”). And two, how to resolve the competing values of even tapping this abundant source of petroleum.


In large part because of fracking, the US is now on course to become the world’s largest producer of oil and natural gas, creating jobs in many areas and a hope of energy security for the nation. But the US has only begun the difficult task of finding a consensus on whether fracking’s hazards outweigh its benefits, and what to do about those hazards, such as methane release and water pollution.


Both sides in the debate have long armed themselves with studies, polls, pressure groups, and even movies to promote or prohibit fracking. Local citizens living over shale formations are often at a loss, perhaps fearing the potential health effects while eyeing the potential wealth bonanza.


But some courageous individuals in the energy industry and among environmentalists have reached out with respect and dispassion to listen to each other in hopes of finding a fact-based consensus.



Last spring, for example, a coalition of gas developers, green activists, and foundations started the Center for Sustainable Shale Development to certify fracking companies that want to implement high standards for protecting air quality, water resources, and climate.


The center’s aim is to imitate the success of the independent certification regime for green buildings known as Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, or LEED. The first certifications are now in the works.


Another example is a law passed last month in California that strikes a middle ground in both allowing and regulating fracking. With the state’s Monterey Shale formation perhaps able to produce 15.4 billion barrels of oil, Gov. Jerry Brown (D) backed the measure, taking a moderate approach in balancing contending interests.


Only two years ago, California passed a law requiring the state to be using 33 percent renewable energy by 2020. But in now setting up a favorable regulatory scheme for shale oil production, it is showing how one state can have a healthy debate over rational management of productive resources and the environment.


Local differences in shale exploitation – such as geological structure and water resources – almost dictate local or state solutions on whether to ban it (as New York has done twice) or to regulate fracking with effective rules. The quality of the debate – a dialogue among listeners rather than a Washington-style clash of power plays – could serve as a model as more countries move to either tap this resource or ban its use.



In August, another consensus-seeking group, the Shale Gas Roundtable, issued a 139-page report with a number of recommendations. One of its strongest suggestions is to set up a fund to do independent research on shale exploitation. Too many studies are funded by the industry or environmental groups, leading to a perceived bias in much of the data.


Trust is the first requirement in resolving such disputes. The past year has seen the US make great progress in settling the future of shale fuels. Other nations are watching, eager for a model on how to deliberate the value of shale in both its possible harms and expected benefits.



Related stories


Read this story at csmonitor.com


Become a part of the Monitor community


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/praise-those-cross-shales-fault-lines-211925350--politics.html
Tags: Krokodil   Jonathan Ferrell   allen iverson   Anna Kendrick   Rosy Esparza  

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Help Make Daniel Radcliffe's Sex-Filled Kickstarter A Reality


In the latest 'After Hours,' the 'Kill Your Darlings' star and his co-star Dane DeHaan need your help.


By Kevin P. Sullivan








Source:
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1715610/daniel-radcliffe-sex-filled-kickstarter.jhtml

Tags: The Blacklist   Emmys 2013   Brant Daugherty   Lee Westwood   Rachel Jeantel  

Rihanna -- Moves Into NY Penthouse After LA Scare


Rihanna
Moves Into NY Penthouse
After LA Scare


1015_rihanna_soho_house_launch
Rihanna is moving into a swanky $14 mil apartment in NYC -- after fleeing L.A. in the wake of two break-ins at her West Coast home -- but she's not giving up on L.A. entirely.

 

The 4600 sq. ft. penthouse apartment is in a luxury building in SoHo.  Rihanna's renting it for 39k a month, but the crib was recently on the market -- with a $14.6 mil asking price.

The 2-story home is stark white ... with 13' ceilings, concrete floors and views of the Empire State Building, and the NY skyline.

We're told Rihanna will still keep a place in LA -- NOT the Palisades home that was burglarized -- but will spend most of her time in NYC.





Source: http://www.tmz.com/2013/10/15/rihanna-rent-new-york-apartment-penthouse-palisades-la/
Similar Articles: dallas cowboys   Canelo Vs Mayweather   Electric Zoo   Joanna Krupa   Michael Girgenti  

House GOP unveils counter to Senate debt plan

Speaker of the House Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, walks away from the microphone during a news conference after a House GOP meeting on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2013 in Washington. The federal government remains partially shut down and faces a first-ever default between Oct. 17 and the end of the month. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)







Speaker of the House Rep. John Boehner, R-Ohio, walks away from the microphone during a news conference after a House GOP meeting on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2013 in Washington. The federal government remains partially shut down and faces a first-ever default between Oct. 17 and the end of the month. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)







Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, with House Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., right, walks to a meeting of House Republicans at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2013, as a partial government shutdown enters its third week. It is not yet clear how Boehner and tea party members in the House majority will respond to the Senate's Democratic and Republican leaders closing in on a deal to avoid an economy-menacing Treasury default and end the partial government shutdown. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)







House Budget Committee chairman Rep. Paul Ryan walks to a House GOP meeting on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2013 in Washington. The federal government remains partially shut down and faces a first-ever default between Oct. 17 and the end of the month. (AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)







(AP) — House GOP leaders Tuesday floated a plan to fellow Republicans to counter an emerging Senate deal to reopen the government and forestall an economy-rattling default on U.S. obligations. But the plan got mixed reviews from the rank and file and it was not clear whether it could pass the chamber.

The measure would suspend a new tax on medical devices for two years and take away the federal government's contributions to lawmakers' health care and top administration officials. It would also fund the government through Jan. 15 and give Treasury the ability to borrow normally through Feb. 7.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said he's "trying to find a path forward" but that "there have been no decisions about exactly what we will do." He told a news conference, "There are a lot of opinions about what direction to go."

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., involved in negotiations with Senate GOP Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, blasted the House plan as a blatant attack on bipartisanship.

"It can't pass the Senate and it won't pass the Senate," Reid said.

The move came as a partial shutdown entered its third week and less than two days before the Treasury Department says it will be unable to borrow and will rely on a this cash cushion to pay the country's bills.

The House GOP plan wouldn't win nearly as many concessions from President Barack Obama as Republicans had sought but it would set up another battle with the White House early next year.

"The jury is still out," said Rep. Michael Burgess, R-Texas.

Rep. Walter Jones, R-N.C., said he was not sure he could vote for the plan because it did not address the debt. "I have to know a lot more than I know now," he said.

The House move comes after conservative lawmakers rebelled at the outlines of an emerging Senate plan by Reid and GOP leader McConnell. Those two hoped to seal an agreement on Tuesday, just two days before the Treasury Department says it will run out of borrowing capacity.

The White House and Democrats quickly came out against the Republican plan. Obama planned to meet with House Democratic leaders Tuesday afternoon as negotiations continue.

"The latest proposal from House Republicans does just that in a partisan attempt to appease a small group of tea party Republicans who forced the government shutdown in the first place," said White House spokeswoman Amy Brundage. "Democrats and Republicans in the Senate have been working in a bipartisan, good-faith effort .... With only a couple days remaining until the United States exhausts its borrowing authority, it's time for the House to do the same."

"GOP's latest plan is designed to torpedo the bipartisan Sen solution," tweeted Rep. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md. "Plan is not only reckless, it's tantamount to default."

Political pressure is building on Republicans to reopen the government and GOP leaders are clearly fearful of failing to act to avert a default on U.S. obligations.

Republicans are in a difficult spot, relinquishing many of their core demands as they take a beating in the polls. Rep. Steve Southerland, R-Fla., led GOP lawmakers in several verses of "Amazing Grace."

"We have to stick together now," said Rep. Pete Sessions, R-Texas.

Like the House GOP bill, the emerging Senate measure — though not finalized — would reopen the government through Jan. 15 and permit the Treasury to borrow normally until early to mid-February, easing dual crises that have sapped confidence in the economy and taken a sledgehammer to the GOP's poll numbers.

"There are productive negotiations going on with the Republican leader," Reid said as he opened the Senate Tuesday. "I'm confident we'll be able to reach a comprehensive agreement this week in time to avert a catastrophic default."

On Wall Street, stocks were mixed early Tuesday, with investors somewhat optimistic over a potential deal.

"We're willing to get the government open. We want to get the government open," Scalise said. "Hopefully they get something done that addresses the spending issue."

The competing House and Senate plans are a far cry from the assault on "Obamacare" that tea party Republicans originally demanded as a condition for a short-term funding bill to keep the government fully operational. It lacks the budget cuts demanded by Republicans in exchange for increasing the government's $16.7 trillion borrowing cap.

Nor do either the House or Senate frameworks contain any of a secondary set of House GOP demands, like a one-year delay in the health law's mandate that individuals buy insurance.

Another difference between the Democrats and Republicans involves a Democratic move to repeal a $63 fee that companies must pay for each person they cover under the big health care overhaul beginning in 2014. Unions oppose the fee and Senate Democrats are pressing to repeal it, but House Republicans are positioning to block them and Senate Republicans are adamantly opposed as well.

Democrats were standing against a GOP-backed proposal to suspend a medical device tax that was enacted as part of the health care law, but might not be able to win a floor vote since many Democrats oppose the tax too.

Democratic and Republican aides described the outlines of the potential agreement on condition of anonymity because the discussions were ongoing.

But with GOP poll numbers plummeting and the country growing weary of a shutdown entering its third week, Senate Republicans in particular were eager to end the shutdown — and avoid an even greater crisis if the government were to default later this month.

Any legislation backed by both Reid and McConnell can be expected to sail through the Senate, though any individual senators could delay it.

But it's another story in the House. Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, signaled that conservative members of the House were deeply skeptical. He said any bill had to have serious spending cuts for him to vote to raise the debt ceiling and said he thought Obama and Treasury Secretary Jack Lew had more flexibility than they had said publicly.

"No deal is better than a bad deal," Barton said.

In addition to approving legislation to fund the government until late this year and avert a possible debt crisis later this week or month, the potential pact would set up broader budget negotiations between the GOP-controlled House and Democratic-led Senate. One goal of those talks would be to ease automatic spending cuts that began in March and could deepen in January, when about $20 billion in further cuts are set to slam the Pentagon.

Democrats also were seeking to preserve the Treasury Department's ability to use extraordinary accounting measures to buy additional time after the government reaches any extended debt ceiling. Such measures have permitted Treasury to avert a default for almost five months since the government officially hit the debt limit in mid-May, but wouldn't buy anywhere near that kind of time next year, experts said.

The House GOP plan would repeal the extraordinary measures, which would make the Feb 7 date a hard deadline to revisit the fight.

___

Associated Press writers Donna Cassata, David Espo, Henry C. Jackson, Julie Pace and Alan Fram contributed to this report.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-10-15-Budget%20Battle/id-6daa38af517348c3b65aa723fee09a92
Similar Articles: trent richardson   christina aguilera   egypt   Hugh Douglas   Best Song Ever  

Exhibit: Blumenfeld was pioneer of modern photo

PARIS (AP) — A new exhibit on fashion photographer Erwin Blumenfeld, which showcases his dark and experimental side, positions him as one of the greatest and most undervalued photographers of the 20th century.


Blumenfeld made his name with snaps that graced the covers of fashion magazines such as "Vogue" and "Harper's Bazaar" from the 1930s to the 1950s.


But the exhibit at Paris' Jeu de Paume, which opens Oct. 15, shows this to be only one of the many faces of the German Jew who fled Nazi Europe and whose most acclaimed pieces sought to dehumanize Adolf Hitler.


The exhibit of some 300 works also puts together black and white photos that used influential experimental techniques with infra-red and frames in the negative, as well as several sections of abstract female nudes.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/exhibit-blumenfeld-pioneer-modern-photo-140533275.html
Category: EBT   New 100 Dollar Bill   miami dolphins   green bay packers   cedar point  

Va. race previews shutdown politics for 2014

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Playing out just across the Potomac River from shutdown central, the Virginia governor's race has turned into a real-time test of Republican and Democratic positions in the congressional budget battle raging in the nation's capital.


With polls indicating more public resentment toward Republicans than Democrats, the federal work stoppage directly affecting thousands of Virginia residents has forced Republican Ken Cuccinelli on the defensive while giving Democrat Terry McAuliffe an opening in a race that had been neck-and-neck for months.


Now, public and internal surveys show voter support has started breaking McAuliffe's way, with the Democrat leading by 8 percentage points in a Quinnipiac University poll released Thursday. The same poll showed that by a nearly 3-1 majority, Virginians opposed Congress shutting down the government in a fight over President Barack Obama's health care law.


The outcome of the Nov. 5 election in this swing-voting state could provide clues about how the issue will play in next fall's House and Senate midterm elections — and give both parties a road map as they fight for control of Congress.


Cuccinelli, the conservative state attorney general, has sought to carefully distance himself from House GOP leaders and tea party lawmakers without alienating his conservative core supporters or moderate independents — particularly in the affluent and fast-growing Washington suburbs.


Earlier this month, Cuccinelli called on congressional Republicans to drop their insistence that Congress dismantle the health care law as a condition for reopening the government. Two days later, he appeared at a conservative Christian group's fundraiser that Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, also attended. But Cuccinelli didn't make any public mention of Cruz, the tea party hero who led the Senate GOP's effort to defund the health care law.


Cuccinelli has lambasted McAuliffe for saying he wouldn't sign a Virginia budget that didn't include a Medicaid expansion, the mechanism the health care law uses to extend coverage to the poor.


To people in Virginia, Cuccinelli said, McAuliffe's position amounts to "a government shutdown."


McAuliffe is a former national Democratic Party chairman and a friend of former President Bill Clinton and his wife, former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. McAuliffe has been stoking the notion — on the campaign trail and in TV ads blanketing the state — that Republicans are to blame for the shutdown and that Cuccinelli is no different from those whose demands helped trigger it. He's sought to link Cuccinelli to the tea party and paint him as too ideologically extreme for Virginia.


"I wouldn't even be in the same room with Ted Cruz with the damage he has brought to so many Virginia families," McAuliffe said. "And if I'd gone to the room, I'd tell him to stop using a government shutdown as an ideological bargaining chip."


The arguments are salient in this state, which is home to many federal employees and receives the most military spending per capita in the nation.


Cuccinelli's political adviser, GOP strategist Christopher J. LaCivita, acknowledged that the shutdown has created a challenge for his candidate at a critical time, saying, "We don't get to talk about the good stuff Ken would do as governor."


Josh Schwerin, a senior aide to McAuliffe, said the shutdown played right into his candidate's key argument against Cuccinelli and the tea party: "They're more concerned about pushing their ideological agenda than solving problems."


Downright nasty now, the race has been very negative from almost the start because it pitted two deeply unpopular candidates against each other.


Majorities of Virginia voters long have viewed Cuccinelli and McAuliffe in a negative light, and both brought considerable political baggage into this fall's only competitive governor's race.


Cuccinelli is testing the notion of whether a Republican as conservative as him can win in a swing-voting state.


He was the first attorney general in the nation to challenge the new health overhaul law. A global-warming skeptic, he mounted a two-year inquest into whether a former University of Virginia climate scientist used manipulated data to land federal grants. And only weeks after taking office, Cuccinelli warned Virginia's public college officials that they could not enact policies against discrimination toward gays that are tougher than state law, an action Gov. Bob McDonnell, a fellow Republican social conservative, rescinded.


As attorney general, Cuccinelli pressured members of the State Board of Health to reverse their decision to exempt existing abortion clinics from new regulations that hold facilities where a certain number of abortions are performed to the stringent architectural requirements of hospitals. The board ultimately decided to apply the standards to existing clinics.


Since March, Cuccinelli has been dogged by his ties to a wealthy benefactor whose more than $145,000 in personal gifts and loans to McDonnell and his family remains a subject of federal and state criminal investigations. Cuccinelli accepted $18,000 in gifts from that benefactor, Jonnie R. Williams, chief executive of a Virginia-based nutritional supplements company.


The governor's scandal not only stained Cuccinelli, it drowned out his campaign's message throughout the spring and summer, and it sidelined his most formidable advocate and fundraiser, the sitting governor.


McAuliffe, with his vast national network of donors, has raised nearly twice as much as Cuccinelli.


But he's had his own troubles.


McAuliffe headed a small electric-car company that bypassed Virginia to set up operations in north Mississippi two years ago. Now federal authorities are investigating the company's use of a federal program that grants visas to foreign investors who put at least $500,000 into qualifying American-grown business ventures. McAuliffe was the company's chairman for three years before quietly stepping down after declaring his candidacy last November.


Last week, McAuliffe's name surfaced on a list of investors with a Rhode Island estate planner who is now jailed for using the stolen identities of terminally ill people to secure annuities on them without their knowledge, then collecting insurance benefits when they died.


There is no allegation of wrongdoing by McAuliffe or that he or other investors knew of efforts to defraud the terminally ill. McAuliffe said he was only a passive investor and unaware of the scheme.


The Associated Press last Wednesday initially reported McAuliffe was accused in court documents of having lied to a federal investigator looking into the benefit scheme, but then said the reporting was wrong and withdrew the story. The documents referred to someone by the initials "T.M.," but did not identify McAuliffe as that person.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com/va-race-previews-shutdown-politics-2014-061656473--election.html
Related Topics: calvin johnson   Heisenberg   Eiza González   david wilson   Ncaa Football Scores  

Einstein on the Beach: Opera Review


The Bottom Line


For a work that is now 37 years old, "Einstein on the Beach" remains challenging and utterly modern.



One of the most famous but little-seen American high art totems of the modern era, Einstein on the Beach, alit in Los Angeles for the first time for three performances over the weekend. Presented by LA Opera and defined as such by its creators, it is less an opera than an acute sensory occasion, an uninterrupted four hours-plus cascade of pulsating Philip Glass music, extraordinary stage pictures courtesy of Robert Wilson, arresting movement and choreography by Lucinda Childs, and meanings that percolate, confound, sometimes bubble to the surface and often elude. For a work that is now 37 years old, it remains challenging and utterly modern. And quite something to behold.



Between its debut at the Avignon Festival in 1976 and the present incarnation, Einstein was mounted just two other times -- in 1984 and 1992 -- and had only ever been presented in the United States in New York City and at Princeton. The 2012-14 tour started in Ann Arbor and had made 10 previous stops (including Toronto, Brooklyn and Berkeley in North America) before the Los Angeles engagement. At this point, the only remaining destination is Paris in early January, and, as Wilson and Glass are both in their seventies, there can be little doubt that this will be the last time the venture will be undertaken by its creators.


What Einstein would be like interpreted by other hands is as puzzling as the most abstract and abstruse interludes in the work itself. Even now, this is a piece in which the spectator is neither encouraged nor expected to find literal or even symbolic meaning in anything in particular; one is advised to just go with it to avoid to frustration and the accusation of being too conventionally minded. Why does a big locomotive steam engine come on and offstage? Why do we spend several minutes watching a large illuminated beam be raised with agonizing slowness from a horizontal to a vertical position? What is the relevance of the two big courtroom scenes? What does Einstein being on the beach have to do with anything? Why is David Cassidy referenced numerous times? Did Clint Eastwood get his idea about the empty chair from the conspicuous one here?


As an Einstein virgin, these and dozens of other odd notions entered and collided within my head while I eventually settled into a state of what I can best gauge as moderate bliss. To a great extent, the mellow mood is created by Glass's score, which runs up and waterfalls down scales in endless repetitions that are nonetheless subtly altered and staggering to consider when being played onstage by violin virtuoso Jennifer Koh (made up with wild hair to resemble old Albert, a fiddle player himself), who concludes her tour de force by sticking her tongue out at the audience.


Glass' relentless arpeggios and propulsive energy creation, I decided in due time, represent the audible correlative to the constant bombardment of atoms the nature and potential of which Einstein was forever weighing. The furious violin playing is the musical equivalent of Einstein's writing of formulas, while the assertive jazzy sax solo that ultimately erupts out of the mass of churning sound is Einstein's mental breakthrough and the explosion of the nuclear age.


Ultimately, it seems to me that the secret of Einstein, what binds it together and makes it cohere, is the push-and-pull between the ultra-discipline and order of its artistry and the inchoate nature of its subject. Once I embraced the experience on those terms, much of the work seemed clear and the mysteries remained, well, mysteries. And exquisitely rendered ones at that in a production where not a note, gesture, word, glance, prop, lighting cue or effect was out of place.


 


Dates: October 11-13


Venue: LA Opera


Director/Set and lighting designer: Robert Wilson


Music and lyrics: Philip Glass


Choreographer: Lucinda Childs


Conductor: Michael Riesman


250 minutes


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/reviews/theater/~3/Us4FF1lkypU/einstein-beach-opera-review-648319
Category: mrsa   foxnews   Nothing Was The Same Leak   nfl   college football