Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Al Feldstein Dead: Former Mad Magazine Editor Dies At 88

NEW YORK (AP) — Before "The Daily Show," ''The Simpsons" or even "Saturday Night Live," Al Feldstein helped show America how to laugh at authority and giggle at popular culture.



Millions of young baby boomers looked forward to that day when the new issue of Mad magazine, which Feldstein ran for 28 years, arrived in the mail or on newsstands. Alone in their room, or huddled with friends, they looked for the latest of send-up of the president or of a television commercial. They savored the mystery of the fold-in, where a topical cartoon appeared with a question on top that was answered by collapsing the page and creating a new, and often, hilarious image. Thanks in part to Feldstein, who died Tuesday at his home in Montana at age 88, comics were more than escapes into alternate worlds of superheroes and clean-cut children. They were a funhouse tour of current events and the latest crazes. Mad was breakthrough satire for the post-World War II era — the kind of magazine Holden Caulfield of "The Catcher In the Rye" might have read, or better, might have founded.



"Basically everyone who was young between 1955 and 1975 read Mad, and that's where your sense of humor came from," producer Bill Oakley of "The Simpsons" later explained.



Feldstein's reign at Mad, which began in 1956, was historic and unplanned. Publisher William M. Gaines had started Mad as a comic book four years earlier and converted it to a magazine to avoid the restrictions of the then-Comics Code and to persuade founding editor Harvey Kurtzman to stay on. But Kurtzman soon departed anyway and Gaines picked Feldstein as his replacement. Some Kurtzman admirers insisted that he had the sharper edge, but Feldstein guided Mad to mass success.



One of Feldstein's smartest moves was to build on a character used by Kurtzman. Feldstein turned the freckle-faced Alfred E. Neuman into an underground hero — a dimwitted everyman with a gap-toothed smile and the recurring stock phrase "What, Me Worry?" Neuman's character was used to skewer any and all, from Santa Claus to Darth Vader, and more recently in editorial cartoonists' parodies of President George W. Bush, notably a cover image The Nation that ran soon after Bush's election in 2000 and was captioned "Worry."



"The skeptical generation of kids it shaped in the 1950s is the same generation that, in the 1960s, opposed a war and didn't feel bad when the United States lost for the first time and in the 1970s helped turn out an Administration and didn't feel bad about that either," Tony Hiss and Jeff Lewis wrote of Mad in The New York Times in 1977.



"It was magical, objective proof to kids that they weren't alone, that ... there were people who knew that there was something wrong, phony and funny about a world of bomb shelters, brinkmanship and toothpaste smiles. Mad's consciousness of itself, as trash, as comic book, as enemy of parents and teachers, even as money-making enterprise, thrilled kids. In 1955, such consciousness was possibly nowhere else to be found."



Feldstein and Gaines assembled a team of artists and writers, including Dave Berg, Don Martin and Frank Jacobs, who turned out such enduring features as "Spy vs. Spy" and "Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions." Fans of the magazine ranged from the poet-musician Patti Smith and activist Tom Hayden to movie critic Roger Ebert, who said Mad helped inspire him to write about film.



"Mad's parodies made me aware of the machine inside the skin — of the way a movie might look original on the outside, while inside it was just recycling the same old dumb formulas. I did not read the magazine, I plundered it for clues to the universe," Ebert once explained.



"The Portable Mad," a compilation of magazine highlights edited by Feldstein in 1964, is a typical Mad sampling. Among its offerings: "Some Mad Devices for Safer Smoking" (including a "nasal exhaust fan" and "disposable lung-liner tips"); "The Mad Academy Awards for Parents" (one nominee does her "And THIS is the thanks I get!" routine); "The Lighter Side of Summer Romances;" and "Mad's Teenage Idol Promoter of the Year" (which mocks Elvis Presley and the Beatles.)



Under Gaines and Feldstein, Mad's sales flourished, topping 2 million in the early 1970s and not even bothering with paid advertisements until well after Feldstein had left. The magazine branched out into books, movies (the flop "Up the Academy") and a board game, a parody of Monopoly.



But not everyone was amused.



During the Vietnam War, Mad once held a spoof contest inviting readers to submit their names to FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover for an "Official Draft Dodger Card." Feldstein said two bureau agents soon showed up at the magazine's offices to demand an apology for "sullying" Hoover's reputation. The magazine also attracted critics in Congress who questioned its morality, and a $25 million lawsuit in the early 1960s from music publishers who objected to the magazine's parodies of Irving Berlin's "Always" and other songs, a long legal process that was resolved in Mad's favor.



"We doubt that even so eminent a composer as plaintiff Irving Berlin should be permitted to claim a property interest in iambic pentameter," Judge Irving Kaufman wrote at the time.



By Feldstein's retirement, in 1984, Mad had succeeded so well in influencing the culture that it no longer shocked or surprised: Circulation had dropped to less than a third of its peak, although the magazine continues to be published in local editions around the world.



Feldstein moved west from the magazine's New York headquarters, first to Wyoming and later Montana. From a horse and llama ranch north of Yellowstone National Park, he ran a guest house and pursued his "first love" — painting wildlife, nature scenes and fantasy art and entering local art contests. In 2003, he was elected into the Will Eisner Hall of Fame, named for the celebrated cartoonist.



Born in 1925, Feldstein grew up in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn. He was a gifted cartoonist who was winning prizes in grade school and, as a teenager, at the 1939 New York World's Fair. He got his first job in comics around the same time, working at a shop run by Eisner and Jerry Iger. One of his earliest projects was drawing background foliage for "Sheena, Queen of the Jungle," which starred a female version of Tarzan.



Feldstein served in the military at the end of World War II, painting murals and drawing cartoons for Army newspapers. After his discharge, he freelanced for various comics before landing at Entertainment Comics, whose titles included Tales From the Crypt, Weird Science and Mad. Much of Entertainment Comics was shut down in the 1950s in part because of government pressure, but Mad soon caught on as a stand-alone magazine, willing to take on both sides of the generation gap.



"We even used to rake the hippies over the coals," Feldstein would recall. "They were protesting the Vietnam War, but we took aspects of their culture and had fun with it. Mad was wide open. Bill loved it, and he was a capitalist Republican. I loved it, and I was a liberal Democrat."



___



AP writer Matthew Brown in Billings, Montana contributed to this report.

Disney's New Roller Coaster Revealed In POV Video Of Seven Dwarfs Mine Train Ride

Walt Disney World's newest roller coaster is opening in the Magic Kingdom later this spring, but you can ride it right now in this first-person POV video released by the company on Wednesday.



The Seven Dwarfs Mine Train features new audio animatronic characters that use computer graphics to give them a full range of facial expressions.



A video released by the company on Tuesday shows the effect up close.



The new coaster is being billed as a family ride with a height requirement of just 38 inches, or just a tad higher than the 35-inch requirement for the Barnstormer, the park's "kiddie" coaster.



Disney hasn't announced an opening date for the Mine Train yet, but it won't be the only new ride in the Orlando area this summer. Universal Studios is preparing to expand "The Wizarding World of Harry Potter" to include a recreation of Diagon Alley as well as rides based on Gringotts Bank and the Hogwarts Express.



Looks like it's a good time to be a fan of theme parks.

Conversations with Newcomer Dylan Gardner, Funk Volume's Danien Ritter and Black Stone Cherry's Chris Robertson

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Introducing Popster Dylan Gardner



Mike Ragogna: Dylan, you have a new album Adventures In Real Time, and you had more than 100 songs to start with. How long did it take to write those 100 songs, and how did you whittle them down for this album?



Dylan Gardner: I started writing songs in 2010, and we finally picked a selection in 2012. So I had this giant arsenal of songs because I soon discovered I was prolific, which probably stemmed from the fact that since the day I was born, I kind of had this undying energy to always do something creative before I went to sleep, otherwise I felt like I didn't do my duty as a human that day. Which is kind of like how it is now, because I really can't sleep at night unless I've done something creative that day. It's just the way I'm wired. So I had all these ideas, and the nice thing about starting from scratch is there's nothing to be nervous about; every idea I have is the first idea I'm having at the time. I had to start somewhere, so the songs I was first writing didn't really sound like they are now, but they were slowly getting closer and closer. Around 2012 when I met my manager Geoffrey Weiss, we took a look what I had at that moment. We were looking at all the songs, and the funny thing is that people think that the first album is all the material you've had a long time to write, but most of the songs that are on it I wrote just a couple weeks before we picked the list; out of the 100 songs, "The Actor" and "With A Kiss" were a little bit old, but otherwise all the songs were right before we put out the album. The nice thing about picking out of all that material is that you get to have the best material - you don't just write twelve songs and put the album out and find out that four of them could have been better and one's of them terrible; it's the nice thing of being able to have a well-rounded album, and that's why every time I do the next batch of albums, I write 40 or 50 songs, so you always get that good selection. It's a trick I heard about - I know Matthew Sweet did it for his album Girlfriend, and that's always been like my secret.



MR: I imagine you had some help as far as advice from both your manager and the co-producer John Dragonetti, right?



DG: Totally, yeah. Geoffrey has a golden ear. He knows when he hears a hit, so I write the song, I record the song, I have my feelings about it, I send it to him. I could spend all day coming up with different songs I like at the moment, stuff that I just wrote, so I just say [to Geoffrey] "Send me an email and compile what you think will be good for the first album." So he sends me a list back and I agreed with all of them; he picked "The Actor" which was a song that was about a year old that no one said anything about because it was a pretty desolate song. I said to him, "Should we go with that?" He said yes and I trusted him, and so far he hasn't been wrong about a single thing. We took the songs over to Dragonetti while we were in the process of looking for producers, and Dragonetti kind of came in spontaneously. Geoffrey was calm all along, but this was my first album, so I was gunning for these kinds of producers that would cost millions of dollars. He introduced me to Dragonetti and immediately we took the song "I Think I'm Falling For Something" over to his house and he demoed it - did his sonic textures to it, the drums the bass and filled in all the "color" and everything on it - and I went over there the next day and he'd completely hit it out of the park and it sounds exactly like does on the record now. He got it pretty close, within about one day's work, so I thought "Okay, this is a no-brainer, he's obviously going to be the producer. He has that same inner-child-like spirit that I do in my music, and you can hear it, and it connects. He really helped bring out the greatness in a lot of those songs, too. He added so many little things that you only hear once in a song that really make it special, some stuff that I didn't even hear until it was being fixed. The album definitely couldn't have been what it is without them.



MR: What inspired you to celebrate The Beatles breakup anniversary?



DG: Well, we were all sitting around brainstorming with a marketing team about "What would be a good idea for some web content?" because we were starting this campaign of promoting the album and trying to get out there, so I told them that every day I sing about twenty Beatles songs and I like to practice albums in full length, and I can play any Beatles song, you name it. So they asked what was coming up with the Beatles, and I said "Well, they broke up in April," so we ended up picking side two of Abbey Road because that was the last thing that they did. "Let It Be" came out last, but the last Beatles album recorded was Abbey Road, so we decided on that. I went to work on it, and someone came up with the hashtag "Dylan breaks up The Beatles" which kind of made it a no-brainer that it was really something special. Originally I wasn't going to do it on all these different instruments, but as soon as that idea happened, I thought, "I have about ten or eleven instruments I could do it on." Because my parents were in the process of looking for a house in Los Angeles, which is where I am now - we were still in Arizona at the time - the entire house was empty and full of boxes, so I took a camera that they had, and set up all the shots, did two takes of each song and put them all together and hopefully it turned out cool - I was really proud of it. I enjoyed it very much, and it's not going to be the last time I do that.



MR: So introducing Dylan Gardner to the world, in the video and in the first line of the first song of the album, you're making that Beatles connection.



DG: It's a good thing. I love The Beatles!



MR: [laughs] How did Conan O'Brien's Team Coco come across your "Let's Get Started" video?



DG: I'm not sure, actually. I have a newly acquired marketing team that's helping me with promoting this album, and Team Coco came through with them. I was screaming around the house, I was super excited.



MR: Where'd you get your pop sensibility?



DG: I think it's a combination of growing up listening almost completely to '60s classic rock because my dad was in a cover band of oldies music, and mostly The Beatles. Then once I became a teenager and really got into the internet, the entire multiverse was at my fingertips and I could look anything I wanted, and I was able to completely binge on any musical genre there was. When I started writing, it was all pretty strictly '60s music, but after a couple months, this kind of "poppiness" came into it almost naturally. I don't remember having a certain goal of writing it, but pretty soon it started to form its own thing and become more and more unfiltered from me, and what I would do is stop trying to write songs and just let songs come to me, which is what I do now. Melodies enter my head that are unexpected, and I never know when I'm going to get them. Sometimes I bite my nails at night because I don't know if they're going to come again, but they always do. So the stuff that's coming, I'm not over-thinking it, and the nice thing is that Geoffrey always knows what's the right direction to steer in, and he has a giant record collection at his fingertips. I also don't like to insult people's intelligence; I don't like the pop songs that are "guilty pleasure" listening, where you finally accept that the song exists the fifth time you listen to it. I want a celebration of great music. I guess the pop sensibility came from the combination of the music that's coming out now that I've studied very hard, and respecting the music that was out before I was born.



MR: Do you have a goal on where you want to go with your music, beyond this first album?



DG: Well, I'm already working on the third album. One thing that not a lot of people know is that I'm constantly about an album-and-a-half ahead of what's actually out. Where do I want to go? I'd say [in the direction of] more mature; every time you write new stuff it gets more mature, kind of the way that The Beatles evolved this great arc in their music that ended in Abbey Road, but they started all the way at "Please Please Me." And it's almost like two different bands, but not really, and it's kind of like taking its audience on an adventure, and my main goal is to have this giant career that, at the end of my life, I can look back on this spanning discography of really great music, and hopefully we took every step the right way, and went out on a high note. If you've watched Breaking Bad, I'm sure everyone in that cast has a really good feeling that the show went out on a high note. So I don't know musically where it's going to go. I do know the next album's more mature and in my opinion even better, I'm pretty proud of it. And the third one I'm working on is even better than that!



MR: How disappointed is your father that you took a career in music, when he wanted you be a doctor, or a lawyer?



DG: [laughs] Actually he had the same ambition that I did. He was in a band in the '80s called The Kind, which was kind of a power-pop legend around the mid-west, but never expanded like Cheap Trick did. He had the same ambition I did; he left home when he was 18 and he wanted to do music. His problem was he started writing songs late, I don't know how old he was, but he definitely wasn't as young as I was. It's too bad his band didn't get bigger because I love his band. But he's supported me since day one, since the first song I wrote, and so has my mom. My brother's been playing drums for me since I first picked up a guitar.



MR: Is that your brother on the video?



DG: Yes it is.



MR: Dylan, what advice do you have for new artists?



DG: I studied like a college professor on how to make a second album. So many people put out a first album, and it has all this ambition and all this drive, and the second album is that minus the ambition and drive, and most of the time you can always hear it, and it never follows it up [the first album] in the right way. But the right way to do it is to study what made the first album special, and apply that kind of drive as if the next album is your first. You almost ignore that the first album exists - while keeping in mind that it does - and you can't alienate everyone, so you have to work on what makes it better. For new artists, I always think if they're really serious about an album discography and not just singles, it'd be like building your music as a story. You've introduced characters to people, the first time they're meeting them, and it's like "What are they gonna do next? Where are they gonna go?" They have to go somewhere. But the main thing is to have the same drive and focus that you had during the first album. The other thing was that I never stopped writing the entire time that the album was going on. Writing is like a muscle you have to work out, you can't stop for a long time and then start again, because it's going to take you a little while to get going again. I've been going nonstop since 2010, which is why I'm able to write so much. So my advice to artists would be just to have that energy and focus and determination, and the work will follow.



MR: So what does the immediate future look like for Dylan Gardner? Are you going to be touring and supporting the album in various ways?



DG: Hopefully I'm going to be doing everything. I'm pretty poorly-travelled - I'd like to see the entire world. Right now in a way it's sort of a social campaign to get us off the ground, to get people pre-ordering the album, and when it comes out, I'd love to tour, and I'd love to promote the album for the rest of my life because it's what I really want to do. Every day it seems like it's a little bit closer to doing that.



MR: I wish you all the luck with this album and your career. You've got a really solid debut album, and at seventeen, what a great job you did. This is probably the strongest debut album I've heard this year.



DG: Thank you.



Transcribed by Emily Fotis





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A Conversation with Funk Volume's Damien Ritter



Mike Ragogna: Damien, what is the state of rap these days?



Damien Ritter: Rap is actually in a great position. Now that artists have tons of tools to connect with their fans directly, they have the freedom to take risks, to make the music they want to make, distribute it to their fans and get a response. They no longer need to wait for a label to take a chance on them. I think this is helping bring diversity back to hip hop.



MR: The label you co-founded, Funk Volume, focuses on rap and Hip-Hop. How did it originate?



DR: Hopsin had always wanted to start his own label, but the label didn't actually start until 2008. At that time I had gotten laid off from Deloitte Consulting, and my brother, SwizZz, said that he wanted to drop out of UC Irvine and focus on music. He also told me that his friend from high school, Hopsin, was in a bad situation being signed to Ruthless Records because they weren't doing much to support his development. We all met up and Hop and I decided that I would handle the business side of things and he would handle the creative.



MR: What do you think your label is contributing to the genre and is there a mission statement?



DR: There is not an actual mission statement, but we are trying to contribute to bringing diversity back to hip hop. Every time we bring on an artist we ensure the artist is very good AND that we are capturing a new demographic and that the artist represents a new voice. We want to make sure that by the time we have 10 artists and I ask anyone if they like hip hop, if they say yes, then there is someone on the label that they are a fan of.



We are also constantly expressing the value of hard work. It has taken a lot of work to get to this point. Most times you see artists celebrate the fruits of the labor, but the journey is dismissed. When this happens young people can forget that it takes hard work to be successful.



MR: How does the label function on a daily basis?



DR: We don't yet have the need for an office so I work from home. Hopsin and SwizZz record at their homes. Dizzy and Jarren record in different studios in their respective cities. We have a weekly conference call every Tuesday to keep everyone up to speed on everything that is going on. All the guys are working on different things, but it's important that everyone knows what everyone else is doing. Besides myself I have an assistant, business manager, lawyer, website admin, and a company that does our fulfillment and distribution.



MR: You've been having some success with acts like Hopsin and Dizzy Wright. What was it about these acts and any others you want to mention that attracted you to get involved with them?



DR: I don't consider myself to be some great A&R person, but I feel like when artists have "it", then it stands out. All of the guys we have are extremely talented. It was not only my opinion, but I saw how fans reacted to them. They have been rapping for 10+ year, so they have taken the time to hone their craft. They have a great live show, good work ethic, and are able to check their egos at the door [most of the time=].



MR: What projects are coming down the pike?



DR: Dizzy Wright just released an EP called State of Mind. It held the #1 spot on the iTunes hip hop chart for the first week. Jarren Benton and SwizZz should have projects coming out, but they have yet to be titled.



MR: What advice do you have for new artists?



DR: Pay attention to the numbers! The fortunate thing about the Internet is that we can get instant and quantifiable feedback that will give you a REALISTIC picture of where you are. BUT you have to be willing to listen to them. If you release a video today and it gets 100 views, and you release a video next year and it still only gets 100 views, then you need to figure out what is wrong. Either 1) you aren't getting your music in front of the right people OR 2) your music just doesn't resonate with people. Those are the only two options. Use the numbers to help make decisions so that you don't spend your life going down a path that maybe wasn't meant for you.



MR: Is there anything you want to achieve creatively on a personal level, as Damien Ritter?



DR: In music, I just want to build the dopest team of artists possible and serve as a catalyst in helping them reach their life goals. Outside of music I have a lot I want to accomplish. Funk Volume Fitness is a health and wellness business that is in the works. We have a community service initiative called "Funk Volume in the Community" that I want to turn into an actual non-profit. I would also like to open up a school one day.



Want to go down the rabbit hole a bit more? Check these out...

















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A Conversation with Black Stone Cherry's Chris Robertson



Mike Ragogna: Chris, you and the gang have been busy recording a new album and touring. What was it like sharing a bill with Lynyrd Skynyrd and Bad Company?



Chris Robertson: To be able to get up every morning and know that we would get to go play some songs and when we were finished Bad Company and Lynyrd Skynyrd would follow was absolutely amazing. Skynyrd is my favorite band ever and Paul Rodgers is one of my favorite singers ever. To be able to share the stage with living legends was The coolest thing ever for us!!



MR: How about a tour of the band's new album Magic Mountain?



CR: This new album is the most honest and truest representation of Black Stone Cherry to date. It encompasses every emotion we've felt over the years and has a little something for everyone.



MR: What's the creative route like these days--writing and recording--for you and the band, and were there any surprises along the way during the process?



CR: We've been doing this long enough now that there aren't many surprises when writing and recording. More than anything we really push each other to make everything the best it can possibly be from the performance to the songs!



MR: Is there anything happening internally with the band, any kind of interesting interpersonal dynamics that are changing or evolving as the band becomes more successful?



CR: Nothing because of success, but some of us are married now and have kids so that changes your outlook on everything. But we are still the same four dudes who started this band in high school.



MR: What are a couple of the biggest changes that have happened with the band since your self-titled album and the giant hit "Stay" you guys wrote that The Florida Georgia Line took to #1 for four weeks?



CR: The biggest change for us is that we are all not 20 years old anymore. Haha. We are still the same dudes like I said. We have been very fortunate though to have such great artists like FGL and Skynyrd record our songs and to have the success we have had. It's also cool to get paid to play music!



MR: What's the relationship between Skynyrd and Black Stone Cherry that they record and perform your songs?



CR: Those guys kind of embraced us as the next generation of southern rock which was the coolest thing ever for me considering they are my favorite band of all time! And the fact they did that song is amazing. Funny enough they didn't know that the song had anything to do with us when they first heard it!



MR: "Me And Mary Jane" is your latest single. What inspired it?



CR: Ben came in to practice with the intro riff and the song kind of fell into place from there. It was one of those fun songs that seem to write themselves.



MR: What advice do you have for new artists?



CR: Practice, play shows, always be grateful and repeat this process every single day!



MR: Is that the same advice you'd give BSC when they first started out?



CR: Yes and there are no truer words to live by. We were told to always have time for everyone because if you see them on the way up you will see them on the way down. In life in general I feel it is best to always treat everyone the way you would want to be treated!



MR: What's the future looking like for the band?



CR: Touring, touring, and more touring. That's what we do. We will be on the road for a long time!

The Power Struggle Behind the Sterling/Stiviano Tape

It's been in the news for nearly a week now. The bigoted, racist and misogynistic words of Donald Sterling (he admits it), owner of the LA Clippers basketball team, were (not secretly) recorded by his girlfriend/archivist then "leaked" to the press. The storm of outrage doesn't show much sign of abating.



Sterling has a well-documented history of discrimination against Latino and black families in his rental properties, so in retrospect, his words merely reflect those actions. In fact, the jaw-dropped shock in the reactions of some observers is more surprising -- as if actions don't reveal the man.



What no one seems to be talking about here is the context of the vile and indefensible conversation. Caught on tape is a Donald Sterling who was not thinking about how his words would affect the players on his basketball team. He was not thinking about how his comments would play in the ears of the famous athletes he was disparaging. He didn't give a single thought to how his words would hurt the significant portion of the population he disparaged, or the rest of the population who consider it at least poor form to be racist.



His only concern was how his words would change the behavior of the woman in the room, V. Stiviano. Beautiful, mixed-race, and less than half his age, Stiviano was Sterling's archivist, chef, stylist, director of his charitable foundation, and lover. Listening to that taped conversation, though, I think the dynamic might have been more complicated. What we hear is a pattern of manipulation through gifts and verbal abuse.



In a 2003 lawsuit, Sterling and his wife filed against another mistress, Sterling is clear about who is in charge.



It was purely sex for money, money for sex, sex for money, money for sex... I was paying her. It was in exchange for sex. It wasn't a gift. I wasn't giving her money without her performing something for me. And if it wasn't good, I wouldn't give her anything. It was money for sex. How can you say it was a gift? If a man has an affair with a prostitute, is that a gift? It is not a gift.





Now Stiviano is being sued by Rochelle, Sterling's wife of 50 years. Mrs. Sterling calls Stiviano a "gold digger," demanding Stiviano sign over the deed to a condo and the many other high-priced "gifts" Mr. Sterling gave her. Stiviano's defense documents almost laugh at the accusation, as if anyone could overwhelm the "iron will" of "one of the shrewdest business men in the world."



On one hand we have a powerful man willing to bend the rules and ignore the basic humanity of some people just on the basis of skin color. On the other we have a woman with no record of higher education who's only known definition of success is popularity. Who, do you think, is the vulnerable party here?



I'm wondering where the line is. What is the difference between "gold digger" and "I just bought you a car so you owe me your time and attention"? Where is the tipping point between "I hate seeing you with black people," and "I hate you because you're with black people"? (And how long before that slides over into "I hate you because you're black"?)



I can't defend Stiviano's life choices. By 31-years-old most of us have figured out that our knight in shining armor is never married to someone else -- and that money, although fun, isn't the answer to anything except bills. But, when all you have is what's been "given" you, sometimes the only thing you have to fight with are the words of your lover throws at you first.

My Conversation with Robin Roberts: 'Everybody's Got Something'

Veteran broadcaster and Good Morning America anchor Robin Roberts joins me tonight. A broadcaster for more than 20 years, Roberts has earned multiple Emmys and done extensive reporting around the globe. After overcoming breast cancer and, five years later, a rare blood disorder, she writes in her memoir, Everybody's Got Something, that she discovered she was much stronger than she thought.



In the following clip, Roberts reflects upon the inspirational journey she experienced with her sister, Sally-Ann, who donated the bone marrow that helped save her life.







For more of our conversation, be sure to tune in to Tavis Smiley tomorrow tonight on PBS. Check out our website for your local TV listings: http://ift.tt/10FrxTZ.

Here's How Connie Britton Really Feels About That Michelle Obama Cameo

Things are about to get crazy!



"Nashville" is back tonight with a brand new episode and while the series might be winding down the drama is definitely heating up. Last week, the cast recorded a special live performance shot at the Ryman Auditorium, and fans can expect even more action in tonight's episode.



Connie Britton spoke to HuffPost TV about the season so far, that special Michelle Obama episode and why fans should brace themselves for the Season 2 finale.



On working with Michelle Obama

"It was an amazing episode," Britton said when asked about the first lady's lauded cameo. "My character Rayna puts on a concert at an army base. We shot at Fort Campbell which is right outside Nashville and we shot this incredible performance for the troops. It was such an amazing day."



Britton also gave us a glimpse of the role the first lady has on the show. "Michelle Obama recorded a message for the troops, so its a pretty exciting episode," Britton said. Fans should also get ready for the show to pick up the pace heading towards the season finale.



"Really everything leading up to the finale is very exciting," Britton said. "We're really just going to be moving crazily to the finish line and the season finale is going to be spectacular."



On how Season 2 might end

The last time we saw Rayna, the country crooner was going on national TV to address her "baby daddy" issues and come clean to Deacon about why she kept Maddie a secret all those years. But Britton says the next few episodes are going to focus less on family drama and more on Rayna's music career.



"This whole season for Rayna has been about her creating her new label and what we start to see as we get to the season finale is that everything, especially after everything that's happened with Scarlett, everything is riding on her album release," Britton said. "We're going to watch Rayna doing everything that she can to make a great performance. The season finale we get to see her be really victorious with that."



As to what fans can expect from the season's final episode? "There's definitely a twist in the season finale that even when I read it in the script I was very surprised," Britton said. "I think the audience is going to love it."



The actress also revealed her plans for after the show ends its sophomore season which include a new film with Tina Fey and Adam Driver and continuing to be an ambassador for the Ponds skincare brand.



Check out our full interview with Connie Britton, above.


Perez Hilton Opens up About the 'Magical' First Year With His Son And Life as a Gay, Single Dad

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There's a lot of insight in a little Twitter bio. Celebrity blogger and TV personality Perez Hilton's (@PerezHilton) reads first and foremost, "a proud dad."



It's a shock to many, yet Perez says, "What surprised me the most about being a dad was how much it surprised other people." His son, Mario Armando Lavandeira III, born via surrogate, is now a beautiful 14-month-old.



Looking back he says, "When news first broke that I had a son, I was a trending topic on Twitter for over a day. Some of the reaction was negative, but it didn't bother me. Most, however, was positive. Children bring people together. There is a bond parents have with other parents."



While his public persona was a mix of gossip and glam, Miami-born Mario Armando Lavandeira Jr., professionally known as Perez Hilton, insists he always had the ideal of family at his core, in part from his Cuban upbringing.



Perez felt destined for fatherhood and was open about his love of children and desire to have a baby. In fact, he wrote a children's book, The Boy With Pink Hair, which was released in 2011.



So now, on the subject of having a second child, it isn't as surprising when Perez says, "I would be blessed to have more children! Having more kids would make us all happier!"



I wanted to get in-depth with the iconic blogger about the past year of his life as a single, gay dad living in New York and had the opportunity in a candid and thoughtful interview. He opens up about dating and relationships, the joys of parenthood, concerns about discrimination, balancing work and family, as well as the future sexual orientation talk with his son.



Single Dad and Dating?

"I'm not seeing anyone at the moment. But I'd like to be seeing a great man! I've definitely raised the bar for potential paramours after having a child," says Perez.



It's not in his proactive framework to sit back and put off what he wants most. He creates his destiny when he can. The 36-year-old decided not to wait for a husband to start his family.



In terms of a husband, the realization is, "I can't control when or if that will happen! I am hopeful that's in my future, but it's not a certainty."



Then he muses about the joys and challenges of being a single dad:



The joy of being a single dad is getting the love of my son every single day... and the biggest challenge is I put more guilt and pressure on myself because I am his only parent. As a result, my life completely revolves around him. What will make him happiest. And that includes me not being away or traveling as much as I used to. I still have to take the occasional work trip, but we have never been apart longer than two days.





The New Sex Talk

For this generation, the birds and the bees talk has expanded. I wondered at what point Perez is going to have the sexual orientation talk with Mario. "When he asks," responds the proud dad simply. "That will probably be sooner than I would have anticipated telling him. Besides, my son will just always know."



For many supporters of gay rights, it's an exciting time of progress now, but also setbacks. I ask Perez how he feels about the state of society and the world Mario is going to grow up in. He remains cautiously optimistic: "It's my hope that there is not just tolerance, but acceptance and equality nationwide! Soon! We're far from that now."



Old Friends: New Friends

Sometimes when people become new parents, their set of friends changes. Maybe because they want to hang out with other overtired, overwhelmed people like themselves, there's a changing of the guard.



"I haven't changed or dropped any friends. I've made more," explains Perez. Yet one of the biggest challenges he faces right now is not knowing many other parents with children the same age as Mario:



He doesn't have any little buddies yet, unfortunately. So, to make sure I exposed him to other kids his age I have signed him up for a bunch of classes, almost all of which I take him to myself. He has different classes -- from baby gym, to swimming, to music -- every single weekday. He loves it! And I do too!





A Changed Man

The paradox of parenting is that while it can be a soul-soothing experience, it can also be a stressful and exhausting one.



Perez explains how baby Mario has changed his personality for the better: "I'm a lot calmer since having my son -- more centered -- grounded. My son is like an anchor! He's a constant reminder of what matters most!"



He also discusses his biggest frustration as a parent which is learning how to cope with being more tired and stressed: "It's not easy. But the biggest joy from being a parent is knowing my son is happy -- that smile -- and that makes all those difficult and trying days so much easier."



He also adds, "Each day gets better! That's been another surprise. How much more fun it gets with every passing day... This past year with my son has been magical."



The Preschool Ordeal



My biggest worry now is preschool! It's such an ordeal in New York City. So I'm trying to be proactive. I've enrolled him into a pre-preschool program and am just being as informed as possible and working every angle for him.





Perez also says he tries not to think about how his celebrity affects him and his son since it's out of his control: "I just sincerely hope -- especially in regards to education and the competitive school system here in NYC -- that my son isn't discriminated against or rejected because I'm his dad."



Career Dad -- What's Next?

PerezHilton.com is one of the most popular online celebrity news sites with over 300 million hits a month. There are also spin-offs including: Perezitos (kid-focused), TeddyHilton (pet-focused), CocoPerez (fashion) and FitPerez (fitness).



What's next for Perez Hilton career-wise? "I'd love to find a regular home on television. I love doing it and think I'm good at it. And, of course, still making all my websites a huge focus -- as always."



Yet his attitude toward work has changed since becoming a father. He emphasizes, "I still work insanely hard, but I no longer let work consume me. My life is more rounded and full."



The Best Advice He's Received And The Best He's Got To Give

Out of all the advice new parents receive, there's usually one recommendation that stands out from the rest. For Perez it's something his pediatrician said: "She told me not to over-think things. Books don't have answers. Every child is different. And no one knows your child -- what they want and need -- better than you do."



Perez also has advice for those who want to have it all: a successful career and family. "Just do it," he says. "Don't wait for that which you want. Human beings are incredibly resourceful. You will find ways to make it work!"

Jon Lajoie Begs "Please Use This Song" For Your Product's Commercial

Please use this song in your commercial.

I need the money, so please use to sell something.





These desperate words, sung by Jon Lajoie to the tune of exhausted strums and snare hits, sums up everything we have ever known and could ever hope to know about music written exclusively for commercials. Whether it's a fast-food franchise, office supplies or a new hair dye, Lajoie doesn't care. He will take anything because the man's gotta eat. While "your brand here" is plastered all over anything that can be labeled in the video, Lajoie, being the little devil that he is, incepts us in the last seconds.



Rihanna's Nude Photo Just Got Censored By Instagram

On Tuesday, April 29, Rihanna posted her cover for French magazine Lui to Instagram. The photo, shot by Mario Sorrenti, featured the singer opting out of a hand bra, revealing her nipples.



For anyone who follows Rihanna on Instagram, the only shocking thing about the Lui cover was the fact that she is wearing a bucket hat. Instagram, however, felt the image was a violation of its nudity policies, suspending Rihanna's account until the photo was removed.










According to TMZ, Instagram further threatened to permanently shut down her account, with unnamed sources noting that they would respond in a similar manner given future violations.



Now, there's a conversation to be had here about the issue of over-sexualizing the nipple. Caitlyn Becker sat down with Huff Post Women Editor Emma Gray and Director and Producer of "Free The Nipple" Lina Esco to do just that, and both emphasized that this is clearly an artistic, non-raunchy photograph, which should not have been grounds for censorship.



Anyway, after you have your own intellectual conversation about sex positivity, please enjoy Rihanna's perfect response to the controversy:



Shailene Woodley Cries While Getting Her Hair Chopped Off For 'Fault In Our Stars'

And you thought the "Fault In Our Stars" trailer was rough ...



In a new video posted by MTV, Shailene Woodley can be seen crying as she gets her long and luscious locks chopped off for her role as cancer-stricken teen Hazel Grace Lancaster in the upcoming flick, based on the best-selling young adult novel by John Green.



In the clip, Woodley is clearly emotional as her hair stylist takes a scissor to her thick locks. "I have to see it! I have to see it!" she shouts as her stylist hands her chunks of hair. "Oh my God! I might cry so hard you guys."



The 22-year-old actress originally cut her hair in August of last year, tweeting a photo of her transformation shortly after.










She donated her hair to an organization called Children With Hair Loss, which makes wigs for kids who lost their hair due to cancer treatment or other diseases.



"Now, I love it," she told USA Today of her short 'do recently. "It's just free and fun and loud."



shailene woodley

Kevin Smart: Touring Teen Drummer Shares His Secrets

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Kevin Smart, an 18 year-old drummer from the East Coast, has become one of the most sought out, in demand musicians today. He's currently touring with all the big names.



Kevin Smart knows that your dreams really can come true! All it takes is passion, dedication and sometimes a streak of luck. This kid has so much excitement built into him that I thought my chest was going to explode from the pounding of my heart! Or was that from the pounding of Kevin's drums? Yeah, yeah, that was a lame joke, but hey, I still got a smirk out if it.



Kevin is a role model for the youth generation. He's a clean cut guy with a great attitude and has strong school and work ethics. Even though he has a crazy schedule, he keeps his feet solidly planted on the ground.



You realized your love for drums in high school and switched over to the School of Rock. How'd you hear about this school?



My mom actually found out about the School of Rock from an ad in the local newspaper. At first, I didn't want to join because I was shy. My mom signed me up anyway so I started attending the next week. The School of Rock was an extracurricular activity, so I've been attending the same high school for the past four years.



What was your very first drum set?



I started drumming at eight years old when I received my very first Pearl drum kit.



Do you have any siblings?



I do not have any siblings. If I were to have a sibling, I doubt they would want to put up with the noise I make all day on the drum kit haha.



What did it entail to be accepted into the Pearl Drum family?



Being accepted into the Pearl Drum Family was truly a blessing. My manager sent an email over to Pearl one day in October of 2013. I didn't know that he did at the time. He then forwarded over the acceptance email as a surprise. I remember I was in biology class and I was really excited. Being part of the family entails special artist pricing, invitations to conventions, and much more!



Which drummers are your greatest influence? Why?



The most influential drummers to me are Travis Barker and Tony Royster Jr. They both have extreme energy and great playing abilities which I really look up to.



Why did you choose Jake Miller's single "A Million Lives" as a drum cover to post? How did it catch Jake Miller's attention?



I choose to cover it as an informal "audition." I really enjoyed Jake's positive music. My friend, Scott Nebb, who is Jake's tour manager showed the video to Jake immediately after I uploaded it. Jake tweeted me back minutes later expressing that he really enjoyed the cover.



There have been times when you were on tour and missed months of school at a time. How does that work? Do you have a favorite school subject not music related?



My guidance counselor, teachers and the school administration have worked with me to put a plan in place when I'm on tour so that I can complete all the work and submit it via email during my absence from school. My favorite subject in school is definitely history. I always enjoyed learning about the past. I graduate in June of 2014!



What are your favorite tech toys?



I am literally addicted to Apple products. I'm always on my iPhone and Macbook.



Who would you like to give a shout out to?



I would like to shout out Andrew Amendola (Guidance Counselor) and Sally Fazio (Vice Principal) for assisting in making school and touring work out together!



What bad habits do you have?



I like to take naps after school and then I usually end up staying up all night which messes with my sleeping schedule haha.



What are your pet peeves?



One of my biggest pet peeves is when someone drives less than the speed limit. Drives me crazy haha. Get it?



How do you stay grounded or do you have a big ego?



I stay grounded because I feel as if I'm just doing something I love just like anyone else. When someone has a big ego, I don't want to deal with him or her at all.



What was your favorite song as a child?



That's hard. Ocean Avenue by Yellowcard has always been a sing along anthem since I was seven years old.



How many pairs of sticks do you take on stage with you? Ever break a stick during a performance?



I usually bring three pairs of sticks on stage. I used to break sticks all the time. I learned over time how to not break sticks every show to save money haha.



Check out Kevin Smart's Upcoming Tour Dates w/ Jake Miller:



May 3rd - Big Guava Festival in Tampa, FL

May 17th - Skate & Surf in Asbury Park, NJ

July 2nd - Summerfest in Milwaukee, WI





Check out Kevin's Website and Twitter & Instagram: @PopPunkBro. Photo by River Clark.

Bryan Cranston Produces A New Comedy For Sony's Crackle

Hailee Steinfeld Will Be In 'Pitch Perfect 2'

Welcome to Barden, Hailee Steinfeld! The Oscar-nominated actress will appear in "Pitch Perfect 2," according to Variety. The news was confirmed by Elizabeth Banks, who will direct the sequel:












The film's Twitter account also verified the report.












"Pitch Perfect 2" is currently filming in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and is scheduled to hit theaters May 15, 2015. Original stars Anna Kendrick, Rebel Wilson and Brittany Snow will reprise their roles for the new film.

Shirtless Guy Asks Reporter On Date During Live Interview. Oh, And Also During A Fire.

During a live KTLA report on the blazing wildfire in Southern California Wednesday, one interviewee took the opportunity to take care of business.



"Wow, you're super pretty. Wanna go on a date sometime?" he asked the woman interviewing him.



Also, he was not wearing a shirt.



Clearly, the dude could not care less about the wildfire happening right in his neighborhood.



"What do you think of [the fire]," the reporter asked.



"It's pretty cool," Shirtless Guy responded.



WATCH:







(h/t: Gawker)

5 Retro Hawaii Songs To Rock Out Your Cookout

Now that the emotional roller coaster known as the polar vortex has finally thawed (freeing us up to panic about El Niño), we're more than ready to reconnect with our grills over an outdoor barbecue -- but what to play?



Not surprisingly, a guy in the state with an endless summer (looking at you, Hawaii) has it figured out. Roger Bong (yes, that's his real name) has blogged about the Aloha State's musical b-side, or what he calls Hawaiian rare groove music. He put together the below playlist for outdoor get-togethers and sunny, feel-good vibes.



The songs are so great, Bong says, because "you could have them on in the background and not notice, but at the same time, they’ll somehow influence your mood." They came out of the '70s and '80s, before the DJ reigned over the night and Waikiki clubs booked 15-member bands. These are bands with horn sections and background singers, like Hawaii versions of Barry Manilow's "Copacabana" and the Bee Gees.



A great cookout soundtrack, according to Bong, has a "tropical feel to it, but it’s also innocent, friendly and optimistic. I think all those, for me, tie into having a barbecue with your friends for the summer, when the weather’s great and you're cruising."



What are you waiting for? Get outside and turn it up.



1. Summer, “Weekends" (1979)







2. Al Nobriga With Island Company, "Break Away (I'd Rather Be Sailing)" (1977)







3. Chucky Boy Chock And Oahu Brand, "Strumming Along" (1979)







4. Tender Leaf, "Countrieside Beauty" (1982)







5. Olomana, "Sunny Days" (1980)







Or stream the whole mix here.

Tunisia Turns To 'Star Wars To Boost Tourism

TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) — Two dozen white-clad Imperial Troopers and other Star Wars characters marched Wednesday down a stately, tree-lined avenue in Tunis — a site where activists once fought riot police during the 2011 Arab Spring revolutions.



The empire was not striking back against the poster child for Arab democracy — just an innovative campaign to encourage tourists to return to this sunny desert-and-beach nation in North Africa. "We came here to Tunis to help save the Star Wars sites in Matmata and Tozeur and convince people to return to Tunisia," said Ingo Kaiser, head of a Star Wars fan club in Europe, referring to the movie sets that are slowly being covered up by sand in the Tunisian desert.



He wore the khaki overalls and large helmet of the two-legged AT-ST machines that battled rebels in the forest of Endor in the 1983 film "Return of the Jedi."



A huge screen broadcast scenes from the Star Wars films as the thronging crowds snapped photos of the costumed Star Wars characters.



"It's the first time such an even has happened in Tunis, it's really impressive," said Asma Souissi, a 19-year-old student. "It opens up new horizons for Tunisia."



After long-time President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali was overthrown in 2011, Tunisia was rocked by labor unrest, terrorist attacks and political assassinations. That devastated Tunisia's key tourism sector, which contributes 7 percent to the country's GDP and employs 400,000 people.



So the Tunisian National Office for Tourism teamed up with the country's new Star Wars fan club to stage the country's its first Star Wars encounter. Fan clubs from Europe took part in Wednesday's parade and screenings of the Star Wars films will take place at the desert movie sets over the next few days.



"We did this campaign to take advantage of these sets, which are unique in the world — the only sites from the movies remaining," said Zied Chargui, director of the National Office of Tunisian Tourism.



The campaign began with Tunisia's own video of Pharrell Williams' popular "Happy" song featuring Star Wars characters dancing around Tunisian tourist sites and the movie sets. The video has been viewed 1.7 million times since it was posted in March — and was tweeted by Williams himself.



"It created a global buzz, which makes us very happy," said Chargui.



The original 1977 Star Wars was filmed in Tunisia, with protagonist Luke Skywalker's home planet borrowing its name of the nearby town of Tatouine. Tourists can even stay in the Sidi Driss hotel in Matmata where Skywalker grew up.



New sets were built for the 1999 "Phantom Menace" film as well as its 2002 sequel. The seventh episode in the Star Wars franchise is expected next year but it is not filming in Tunisia, apparently due to concerns about stability. Some scenes are now being shot in Abu Dhabi and the cast was announced to great fanfare on Tuesday.



The Tunisian tourism industry nearly collapsed in 2011. In the past few months, there has been a return to stability and a renewed effort to bring back tourists, but the 6.2 million arrivals in 2013 are still 9 percent less than 2010.



"This event will give a boost that Tunisian tourism really needs — it is something new and a sign of opening up to the outside," said travel agent Rene Trabelsi, who is involved in the annual Jewish pilgrimage to the Tunisian island of Djerba. Restrictions were recently eased on Israelis seeking to make the trip.



"It's our first convention and we will see if we can make it annual," said Ameur Abderrahman, director of Tunisia's year-and-a-half-old Star Wars fan club.



The campaign also involves an effort to save one of the sets, which is being engulfed by a sand dune. A crowdsourcing website seeks to raise $188,000 to clear away the dune and restore the fictional settlement of Mos Espa from the 1999 film.



Chargui, the head of the tourism office, said Wednesday's march was only the first in a series of new promotions.



"There are many young Tunisians with many ideas — and when we finish with Star Wars, then you will see others," he said.



____



Schemm reported from Rabat, Morocco.



____



Links



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Jamie Foxx Puts A Charge Into 'The Amazing Spider-Man 2'

NEW YORK (AP) — Jamie Foxx, who stars in "The Amazing Spider-Man 2," knows something about the double-life of a superhero.



Though he's 46, Jamie Foxx was only born 25 years ago. Named Eric Bishop at birth, he adopted the stage name at a Texas open mic, choosing a gender neutral moniker since women were chosen quicker at the comedy club. "When I go home, I'm Eric Bishop," says Foxx. "And then when I go out, I put my cape on and I'm Jamie Foxx." He smiles and summons a sonorous Superman entrance: "I'm Jamie Foooxx! I'm here to save the world!"



But being "Jamie Foxx," he grants, can be exhausting: "You have to know how to pull back, especially for me because sometimes I'm constantly on."



So it's fitting that when the makers of "The Amazing Spider-Man 2" needed someone to play energy embodied, they turned to the perpetually "on" Foxx. In the film, which opens Friday, he plays Max Dillon, the shy Oscorp electrical engineer who's transformed into the villain Electro after falling into a pool of electric eels.



Foxx's highly charged personal energy takes many forms. He's a stand-up, a sketch comedian (see: "In Living Color" or his 2012 stint hosting "Saturday Night Live"), an Oscar-winning dramatic actor (the Ray Charles biopic "Ray"), a chart-topping pop star, and now he's a member of the Marvel universe.



"He's a performer in the deepest sense of the word," says "Spider-Man" director Marc Webb. "When we were on set shooting three weeks at night in Times Square in the cold, he would get out and do Michael Jackson in the center of Times Square in his Electro outfit. The first day on set, he comes in and he just holds court. He does five minutes of stand-up that he's improvising right there."



In a recent interview, Foxx casually displayed his versatility, peppering his otherwise thoughtful conversation with bursts of impressions: the boxer Mike Tyson (he wants to play him in a biopic), a hint of President Barack Obama, a hysterical version of the comedian Mo'Nique ("Hey, baby, let me tell you somethin'!"), a Peter O'Toole-like English accent to talk about winning an Oscar.



"That's my whole life, mimicking," Foxx says. "It's what I do."



He also switches into Will Smith to explain why he wanted the part of Electro, recalling a conversation between the two in which Smith befuddles Foxx by traveling to Russia to sell a movie.



"I'm like, 'Why are you'll going to Russia? I'm going to Detroit,'" says Foxx. "But what he was doing was opening it up for a person like me to be able to go to these places."



For Foxx, the globally popular "Spider-Man" is a way to sow a worldwide audience. The actor believes he landed the part because of the huge international success of Quentin Tarantino's "Django Unchained," (it made $262 million overseas), which Foxx calls a "reset button" on his career.



"In our business, we say, 'How do you travel internationally?' — especially for an African-American kid," says Foxx. "So 'Django' gave me a huge international look so now we're talking about taking 'Annie' down the streets of Rome, down the streets of Paris, down the streets of Singapore."



"It's an opportunity to put a flag down," says Foxx, who this December stars in an update of "Annie" with Quvenzhané Wallis and produced by Smith. "I'm just laying down stakes."



If proving to be a box-office draw internationally has sometimes been challenging for African-American actors, so too has entering the historically Caucasian realm of comic-book movies. Electro, who first appeared in a 1961 comic book, is a white man in print.



There was a small amount of backlash from some fans when Foxx was cast. Says producer Avi Arad: "There were still some rednecks in there."



But for Arad and producer Matthew Tolmach, Foxx was an obvious choice. Aside from his talent, Arad says Foxx brings a "morale value" to a long production.



"He does capture the spirit of the franchise," says Tolmach. "He gets people excited about what we're doing."



Foxx spent hours in makeup to daily transform into the blue Electro (an update of the green-and-yellow suit of the original), and studied Clint Eastwood for a menacing, gravelly voice. Webb, though, says Foxx also wanted to make "a visual statement" with his sheepish, bespectacled Max Dillon as "the first African-American on camera with a comb-over."



Foxx had been in line to play Martin Luther King Jr. in a biopic written and directed by Oliver Stone (who directed Foxx in "Any Given Sunday"), but that project fell apart over disputes over the script with King's family. "Not everyone wants to show every side of every hero," says Foxx.



For now, Foxx is happy playing the villain. He hopes Electro turns up in the planned "Sinister Six" spinoff.



"I know that electricity, you can't kill it," he says. "It just goes in a different place."



___



Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://ift.tt/xCXBuG

5 Of Bob Hoskins' Most Memorable Roles

The stout, explosive Bob Hoskins had a British belly-fire that roared through four decades of film, television and theater.



Though the 5-foot-6 actor was short, he was impossible to miss in even brief supporting roles. The London-raised Hoskins, who died at age 71 Monday night after a bout of pneumonia, embodied a Cockney toughness, but had the range to be much more. He was a pit-bull capable of ferocity, swagger and timidity, alike, commanding the screen with a distinctly non-matinee idol appearance. "My own mum wouldn't call me pretty," he once said.



Hoskins took on many figures of history, including Churchill ("World War II: When Lions Roared"), but usually played tiny dictators: Mussolini ("Mussolini and I"), J. Edgar Hoover ("Nixon"), Lavrentiy Beria ("The Inner Circle"), Nikita Khrushchev ("Enemy at the Gates") and Manuel Noriega ("Noriega: God's Favorite").



But he will be best remembered for his more working-class characters: thugs with tenderness and sentimental ex-cons. The critic Pauline Kael once compared the bald, bullet-headed Hoskins to a "testicle on legs," though she was a fan: "This short, chunky actor is a powerhouse."



Here are five of Hoskins' most memorable performances:



— "The Long Good Friday" (1980): In one of the very best British crime films, Hoskins plays Harold Shand, a London gangster whose big plans to develop London's docklands unravel when a mysterious enemy begins shooting up his crew. Shand desperately tries to keep a deal with the American mafia together, but his dreams of becoming high-class are destroyed. John Mackenzie's film (which also featured Helen Mirren and the screen debut of Pierce Brosnan) was Hoskins' breakthrough and a widely considered crime classic, rich in the atmosphere of Margaret Thatcher's Britain.



— "Mona Lisa" (1986): Hoskins plays a petty hood with a temper who is assigned by his mob boss (Michael Caine) to chauffeur a high-end prostitute (Cathy Tyson) in Neil Jordan's romantic crime drama. A relationship grows between the two, and Hoskins alternates between the rage of an ex-con and the devoted sensitivity of an innately good-hearted man falling in love. His performance earned him an Academy Award nomination for best actor.



— "Who Framed Roger Rabbit" (1988): Possibly Hoskins' most famous role was not one of his finest performances. Acting alongside both human and cartoon, he often (understandably) appears lost in Robert Zemeckis' technical landmark. But playing a hard-boiled private eye prejudiced against "toons," Hoskins, in his first leading role in Hollywood, holds the schizophrenic movie together.



— "Felicia's Journey" (1999): In Atom Egoyan's adaptation of William Trevor's novel, Hoskins plays a lonely catering manager who befriends a traveling Irish girl (Elaine Cassidy). He turns out to be a predator of young girls, a creepy, villainous role that Hoskins nevertheless imbues with humanity.



— "Last Orders" (2001): It's one of the six movies that starred both Hoskins and Caine, another regular to British noir. In it, Hoskins plays one of the mates to Caine's gregarious London butcher, who dies and leaves wishes for his ashes to be scattered at sea. The film, adapted from Graham Swift's novel, follows the friends' memory-filled journey to carry out the orders.



___



Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://ift.tt/xCXBuG

James Franco Says He Never Had Sex With Lindsay Lohan

James Franco really wants the world to know he did not have sex with Lindsay Lohan, despite the appearance of his name on her leaked sex list.



During a very candid interview with Howard Stern on Wednesday, April 30, Franco explicitly denied having sex with the troubled 27-year-old actress, calling her "delusional" if she thinks they slept together.



"I never had sex with Lindsay Lohan," he told Stern. "It's a lie: I will swear on my mother’s life that I never had sex with her."



The 36-year-old did cop to kissing her, but didn't exactly have fond memories of the experience.



"All right, we maybe kissed … it was lame," said Franco. "I can’t believe she put me on that private list. She’s so delusional!"



This isn't the first time Franco has denied alleged intimacy with Lohan. During his last interview with Stern in March 2013, the actor dispelled similar rumors, telling the radio host that the two had been friends, and that she had made several moves on him.



"I don't like to brag about it," Franco said. "I don't know how that got out. She was having issues even then, so you feel weird. Honestly, she was a friend. I've met a lot of people that are troubled and sometimes you don't want to do that."



That friendship seems to have run its course, as Franco told Stern, "Every time I've brought her into my life … it’s turned really lame."









Jen Foster Rocks 'SHE4ME' Marriage-Equality PSA and More (AUDIO)

2014-04-29-HUFFJen.jpgThis week I talked with singer/songwriter Jen Foster about the "SHE4ME" marriage-equality PSA that is airing on Logo TV. The 30-second spot features clips from "SHE4ME," the superb, award-winning marriage-equality music video set to a remix of Foster's iconic lesbian anthem "She." The song has been a favorite within the lesbian community for over a decade and is often used in commitment ceremonies. Renowned music producer Eve Nelson (Chaka Khan, Nicki Minaj) reworked the song for the new, fabulous video, which was directed and produced by the legendary Nicole Conn (Claire of the Moon, Elena Undone, A Perfect Ending). Foster, who makes a cameo appearance in the video, also served as executive producer along with Marriage Equality USA and Melke Pty Ltd.



I talked with Foster about what she hopes to accomplish with "SHE4ME," and about her spin on LGBT issues. When asked about her personal commitment to LGBT civil rights, she stated:



My personal commitment is on a personal level. When I first started writing songs in high school, I was feeling like an outcast, and I was always drawn to the kids that also felt like outcasts. So my personal commitment has always been just to put out music that's honest about these subjects. I've written about bullying. I've written about equality, but from a very personal level, because I don't think you can preach to people in a very clinical way about that; you have to come from personal experience. So that's sort of my contribution, but I'm definitely committed to it, and committed to standing up for the right for everyone to be themselves and to love who they naturally love.





LISTEN:








Jen Foster has a list of musical accomplishments that should leave most artists satisfied, but after years of owning her own record label (Fosterchild Records), writing and recording four solo projects, touring and playing festivals across the country, writing music for film and television and growing an ardent fan base, she strives for more. Besides the ShE4ME project, Fosterchild Records has spearheaded several other projects that align music with charitable causes. Foster is passionate about The Writer's Share, a songwriter series at the Bluebird Café in Nashville, Tennessee, in which she brings together high-profile artists and writers, including Richard Marx and Keb' Mo, to raise money and awareness for the TJ Martell Foundation for Cancer, Leukemia and AIDS. In 2013 her "Christmas Time Is Here" video raised funds for Hope for Paws, the animal-rescue nonprofit organization. Foster also serves on the board of directors of the Nashville Songwriter's Association International. Currently she is working on a new song entitled "Not So Different," which she hopes to align with a cause, and an album to be released in 2014.



For more on Jen Foster, visit jenfoster.com.



Listen to more interviews with LGBTQ leaders, allies, and celebrities at OUTTAKE VOICES™.



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The Mystique of Batman

A lot has certainly happened during this month of April 2014, all about news of the current clash existing between Disney/Marvel and Warner Bros./DC Entertainment film studios. It all began after the April 4, 2014 release of Captain America: The Winter Soldier. It opened big, and as of April 27, 2014 according to Box Office Mojo, Cap 2 so far has earned an impressive $645,359,241 worldwide. Thus, while Cap 2 was earning cash, the entertainment media is still dealing with news ever since mid-March 2014 of the two film studios expected release dates, as Disney/Marvel announced Cap 3 to open on May 6, 2016, the same day as Warner Bros./DC to open Batman vs. Superman. Now there is reaction to news just last week, shortly after Chairman of Disney studios, Alan Horn, voicing Disney's struggling with the decision of Cap 3's release date. This news was reported by Variety reporter Brent Lang, and documented in an informative web article on April 22, 2014 titled, "Disney Has Doubts About 'Cap 3' Release Date?" by Adam A. Donaldson at NerdBastards. Yes a lot has happened all in just one month.



Then just yesterday I posed a question to a nice gentleman who is an admitted Marvel guy, as I asked, "If both film studios stick to their guns, which film would come out on top?" The Marvel guy quickly answered Batman vs. Superman without hesitation. I followed by asking why, to which he then said, "Superman is too iconic." This flies in the face of some in the entertainment media who still believe Disney/Marvel has nothing to lose; understandably basing their belief in that Disney/Marvel studio is currently the top entertainment franchise. Furthermore there's the still current web article by El Mayimbe on April 22, 2014 titled, "Disney Mad Scared To Put 'Captain America 3' Against Batman Vs Superman,' at Latino-Review. For within the web article Mr. Mayimbe states that every poll he's seen online thus far including at Latino-Review, after asking the question, "...which movie folks are going to see first: Captain America 3 or Batman vs. Superman, hands down the victor has been the latter."



Superman may be the most iconic of all superheroes, given the fact that he's the first, and this also supported by the Marvel guy I spoke to. But I suspect the interest in the Man of Steel 2 film more so has to do with Batman. This I had surmised in my previous HuffPost April 24, 2014 blog titled, "Captain America vs. Batman and Superman: A Heavyweight Bout," as I mentioned that a Batman and Superman film may prevail over Cap 3 for two reasons. The first reason would be Batman having durable star-power clout, and the second would be Christopher Nolan's bona-fide street cred. Nevertheless I now offer a third, and that's Batman's mystique.



According to the definition of the word mystique, it means, "...an aura of mystery, power, and awe that surrounds a person or thing." That definition came from an online source, along with an online Merriam-Webster source giving its definition of mystique as, "...a special quality that makes a person or thing interesting or exciting." Whereas Superman may have iconic status going for him, Batman has mystique and boatloads of it.



Batman has undeniable mystique power, far more than any superhero ever created before or since. The mere fact that he has no superpowers to speak of, unlike Captain America and Superman, is the source of his greatest strength which is a combination of a superlative intellect, street-smarts, and a highly trained body all marshalled by an unstoppable will. Author Daniel Wallace also concurs in his book titled,Batman: The World of the Dark Knight, for within he states, "All of Batman's most amazing feats, from his combat mastery to his detective prowess, are the products of a brilliant mind." Then Mr. Wallace further adds about Batman's ability to retain what disciplines and secrets he's learned, his ability as an escape artist to free himself from restraining devices within seconds, as well as his ability to understand at least a dozen world languages such as Russian, French, German, Japanese and Cantonese.



This man known to the world at large as a playboy multi-billionaire CEO of a multinational corporation, a product of having his parents mercilessly gunned down, has forged himself into a lethal weapon of mind and body. Bruce Wayne/Batman has mystique. So all of that taken together is why if both studios do in fact stick to their guns on their May 6, 2016 release date, that a Batman vs. Superman film would be very hard to beat.

'Pawn Stars' Game Show Coming

Good news "Pawn Stars" fans: Your favorite show is getting a spin off.



History is set to announce "Pawnography", a game show version of its long-running hit "Pawn Stars".The half-hour show will be set in Las Vegas and taped in front of a live studio audience. In each episode, contestants will compete against each other and the "Pawn Stars" cast in rounds of trivia questions that escalate in difficulty. At stake are cash prizes and coveted items from the World Famous Gold & Silver Pawnshop co-owner Rick Harrison’s personal collection. In each episode, Rick and Corey Harrison, along with Chumlee Russell, will “vigorously defend their treasured items from confident and brainy contestants.”

Lorde and Hiromi in Concert

You don't want to hurt me,

But see how deep the bullet lies.

Unaware I'm tearing you asunder.

There is thunder in our hearts.

Is there so much hate for the ones we love?

Tell me, we both matter, don't we?


Kate Bush, "Running Up That Hill"





When I first read about Lorde on October 1st 2013 - even though the article was written by Jon Pareles who I greatly admire and respect - I quickly dismissed her.



"What can a 16 year possibly have to say?" I thought.



Obviously, at 47, I have grown old, crotchety, jaded, weary and wary. I recalled all of the hubbub about Norah Jones' first album. I remembered literally running to Tower Records to buy the CD and returning it a few hours later. "Vacuous," "lifeless," "insipid" were the only words that sprung to mind. Firstly, the young woman had no life experience to sing about; secondly it was immediately obvious that her father's genes were passed primarily to her astonishingly soulful half-sister, Anoushka Shankar.



Nonetheless, twelve years later - trying to be open to new experiences, doing my best shed my jadedness - after winning a Grammy award, I ordered Lorde's "Pure Heroine" from the local library (in order to avoid having to return it to Amazon).



But as soon as I put it on I found the tones and rhythms and lyrics of "Pure Heroine" to be exquisitely delicious. Honestly, it is the tastiest album I have encountered since Gaslight Anthem's "Handwritten."



Unfortunately, though, I had the same experience with Lorde as I had with Gaslight Anthem. I listened to "45," "Handwritten," "Desire" and "Mulholland Drive" over and over and over for months when suddenly the brilliant idea popped into my head to check out their live act. I saw that they weren't coming to Los Angeles for some time so I decided to watch their live performance at Coachella on Youtube.



I almost fell out of my chair.



Soulfree, talentlite, stupidly-sober, consistently off-key, hipster-wankers, phoning-in a performance that's as exciting to watch as watching someone meditate. Not once did any of them look at each other or revel in each others' musicianship. Zero camaraderie - actually negative camaraderie. The sum was actually lesser than the parts. Much less. Much much less.



The opposite of love isn't hate. Love and hate are two sides of the same coin. The opposite of love is indifference.



Mick and Keef. Pete Townsend and Roger Daltrey. Liam and Noel Gallagher. They famously hated each other at times but that only added to their rocking live performances.



However, the hipster-wankers from Gaslight Anthem were completely indifferent to each other. Insouciant bordering on comatose. The bass player bopped around a little on his own, but the other members of the band were automatons.



The album "Handwritten" is a production masterpiece. I would stack the four above-mentioned studio songs right up there with Bruce Springsteen's finest four live recordings any day for pure spirit, unadulterated passion, angst, and fury. Listening to those songs at a decent volume is like walking through a fucking tornado. And yet, watching them performed live was as much fun as an eye exam.



Just to make sure I wasn't completely delirious I re-watched Led Zeppelin's "Live at the Royal Albert Hall" concert from 1970. Watching Jimmy Page and Robert Plant perform together is like watching the head and tail of a snake. Yes, alcohol and heroin may have been contributing factors to their mystical union, but isn't that exactly part of the Dionysian, cathartic ritual included in the price of admission to a concert?



Rock 'n Roll means "us" against the world, "us" against "the man," "us" against the establishment.



But actually, Gaslight Anthem IS the establishment. Highly highly glossy, corporate, studio songs that evaporate into thin air when played live.



Sadly, this is the same phenomenon I experienced when I made the mistake of watching Lorde perform live. "Buzzcut Season," "Ribs," and "White Teeth Teens" are some of the most gorgeous, poetic, lovely, and smartest songs ever written. The girl is clearly a genius. Not artificially precocious, simply light years beyond her physical age.



And yet, watching her sing along to backing tracks of herself made me want to drink bleach.



For the love of god, Lorde, would you please hire some back-up singers!?! Rehearse with them. Go out and get drunk with them (when you reach the legal age to drink in a five years). Ride for days on a tour bus with them. Play board games with them. Watch bad reality television with them. "We've got Richard Pryor on the video..." sang Jackson Browne about the tour bus camaraderie. And then put those singers right at the front of the stage off to the side and sing with them, sing to them, sing through them.



Does it not seem both cheap and narcissistic to sing along to pre-recorded backing tracks? Is there not something shameful about Britney Spears' lip-syncing? Do we not find it pathetic when it is revealed that a singer has been caught lip-syncing?



And all of this was made much worse for me by attending Hiromi's mind-bending concert. If I had Hiromi's vocabulary of riffs and harmonies in my head for just one day I could die a happy man. Watching her play "Brand New Day" with Simon Phillips on drums and "Anthony Jackson" on bass, I was catapulted out of my seat like Billy Preston in "That's the Way God Planned It" from "The Concert for Bangladesh." The music physically lifts him up, transports him to the middle of the stage, and dances his legs.



If you don't know what I mean just watch Ani Difranco play "Shy" or Patti Smith play "Summer Cannibals" and you'll watch the songs flow up through their bodies and be released into the world through their mouths. It is their bodies that are singing. Their bodies are singing. Not just their mouths. In comparison, watch Brian Fallon from Gaslight Anthem sing "Mulholland Drive" and his body is merely a podium for his face.



Hiromi's non-verbal communications with Simon Phillips and Anthony Jackson - raised eyebrows, tiny smiles - were joyous, gleeful shared surprises of the embodiment of musical notes ripping through the air between them. The three of them reveled in the magic they were able to create through the distillation of their combined fire, heart, and brains. If you know anything about music, if you truly love music, just listen to this recording of "Brand New Day" a few times. If the ersatz steel-drum crescendo at the end doesn't make you bop your head and tap your fingers then I'm afraid you are legally dead.



Again, the trick to transcendent music is camaraderie. The sum is GREATER than the parts. Much greater. The magic is created by human beings working in harmony, in symphony, together.



So Lorde, please go to a Hiromi concert, hire some back-up singers, and become the Kate Bush of your generation (but don't be afraid to fly - it's actually quite a silly phobia when you realize that more people die every year falling in their bathtubs then in plane wrecks).



Because, when it comes down to it, Lorde, it's still us against them, us against the royals. That's what delicious music is truly about... communion... feeling that our united harmonious voices will enable us to overcome whatever is confronting us... us against them... running up that hill...

D.L. Hughley Accused Of 'Endangering The Lives Of Black Women' After Controversial Domestic Violence Comments

Just days after the announcement of Columbus Short’s dismissal from ABC’s hit series, “Scandal,” comedian D.L. Hughley has landed himself in hot water for recent comments he made regarding Short's ongoing marital woes with estranged wife, Tuere Tanee Short.



During a recent segment on his Radio One show, “The D.L. Hughley Show,” the 51-year-old questioned the validity behind Short’s misdemeanor spousal battery charge, in which the actor reportedly choked his wife while she was sleeping.



“The star of one of the hottest dramas in the country, chokes the f*ck out of his wife? That doesn’t ever happen. I don’t think it happened first off. Like the time Warren Sapp was getting ready to do the Super Bowl and some broad said that he raped her. There are just as many examples of women lying on men in the middle of divorce proceedings to get what they want as there are men who actually do anything. My point is if he did what she’s alleging he did, she could still get all that she’s going to have and not bring it up now when it damages his market value that she’s going to be impacted by. If he loses that job nobody’s living in Calabasas anymore.”



“I guarantee you, three years from now she’s going to be thinking, ‘Damn, I should have shut the f*ck up…women always running out the mouth when they shouldn’t.’... This bitch was thirsty. The bitch was thirsty. What, she gone go back to dancing? She gone f*ck her money up?”





The audio clip, which has since been removed from the show's hosting site, has drawn a hailstorm of criticism, prompting a Change.org petition, urging Hughley to publicly apologize for “endangering the lives of Black women who may be victims of domestic violence by encouraging them to remain silent.”



For more information about the petition click here.



Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) for the National Domestic Violence Hotline.