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dodiana

Jasmine Guy: Then
As Whitley, the actress was usually the center of attention on the hit show A Different World (1987-1993).


Jasmine Guy: Now
The 46-year-old - who describes herself as an actress/singer/dancer/writer/producer - filed for divorce from her husband of 10 years in April. They have a 9-year-old daughter, Imani.
dodiana

Melissa Joan Hart: Then
The teen starred in the Nickelodeon classic Clarissa Explains It All (1991-1994).


Melissa Joan Hart: Now
The 32-year-old has stayed busy with TV movies, a marriage and two young sons, one of whom was born in March.
dodiana

Mayim Bialik: Then
The teen was the title character on Blossom (1991-1995), which co-starred Joey Lawrence.


Mayim Bialik: Now
The actress received a Ph. D. in neuroscience from UCLA and is married with a two-year-old son. The 32-year-old has made appearances on Curb Your Enthusiasm and Fat Actress.

dodiana

Jennie Garth: Then
The actress played Kelly on the teen soap Beverly Hills, 90210.


Jennie Garth: Now
The 35-year-old dropped out of an upcoming comedy pilot for CBS, possibly to star in the CW's 90210 spinoff.

dodiana
He Has Reason To Brag



The first review is in!

Kanye has kicked off his new "Glow in the Dark" tour and it is supposed to be on another level!

Actually, says the reviewer, "He not only took the concert experience to a new level, he took it to a new planet."

DAMN. We sooo need to go to this!
dodiana
Ripping Her A New One!



New York Magazine reviewed Heidi Montag's new Heidiwood line for Anchor Blue, and it's not pretty!

Their report in a nutshell is thatHeidiwood is overpriced hooker wear, the materials used were shoddy, and it all in all basically sucked.

The mag's guinea pigs said, "No self-respecting grown woman should allow herself to be seen in these garments' AND 'we looked like rejects from Rock of Love II with Bret Michaels; stick us on the hood of a car and Whitesnake would've appeared, guitars in hand.'

Maybe Heidi should rename her line HeidiHOwood????

[Image via WENN.]
dodiana
Save The Hollywood Sign!



A Chicago-based investment group, Fox River Financial Services, put up 138 acres of land above and to the left of the 45-foot-high "H" of LA's beloved HOLLYWOOD sign for sale last month for $22 million.

Residents are afraid mansions will be built there and will spoil the sign's uncluttered, postcard-perfect backdrop.

Also, there's concern that if some big private owner snaps up the land it may no longer be accessible to the hikers and sightseers who often climb the hill for solitude and a panoramic view of the Los Angeles basin.

LA Councilman Tom LaBonge is leading residents in a fight to protect the land.

"That is our Eiffel Tower. There is the Hollywood sign. There is the open space. And that's all there is. This is ours and it should remain ours," stated LaBonge.

We were shocked to hear the news! We always assumed all the land around the sign was protected by some historical landmark preservation ruling.

But, turns out the land was actually owned by the late billionaire Howard Hughes. Those Chicago based investors 'quietly' purchased the property from Hughes' estate for $1.7 million in 2002. Based on the bargain-basement price paid by the investors, the report asserts that the Hughes estate's trustees were probably unaware of what it was worth or too busy managing the billionaire's vast holdings to care.

Smells fishy to us! The investors bought the land for $1.7 million and are now selling it for $22 million?!

Ironically, the Hollywood sign was erected to drum up business for a real estate developer.

Who cares though, right?

It's one of the few things that defines the LA area, so let's help keep it the way it is!

[Image via Mavrix Online.]
dodiana
House Huntin'



They're engaged and now…they're moving in together!

Even though they were rumored to be shacking up last summer, the pair have recently been living apart.

Now, Jamie Lynn Spears and her babydaddy, what's his face, are house huntin' in Mississippi.

They supposedly made an offer of $300K on a three-bedroom house in the town of Liberty.

It's fancy! The house has got them marble floors and a game room!

An insider says, "Jamie Lynn is really excited over having a home of her own."

At least she's keeping the kid in Louisiana. Hopefully it will have a more normal life there - whatever "normal" is for the Spears family!

[Image via Mavrix Online.]
dodiana
Putting Them On Blast



The New Yorker has written one of the best articles on The Hills eva!

Here are a few of the HIGHlights from their piece:

- "Most of the conversations start with one or another of the girls asking Lauren what she did the night before, and, constant as the questions are, they seem to be asked not out of curiosity but out of obligation, as if the girls were being paid to ask—as, indeed, they are."

- "As for Lauren, she is smart enough to get as much gold as she can out of “The Hills” before it’s too late, and has started a fashion line, for which she has received, naturally, an undue amount of press attention, even though the clothes are sub-Old Navy in design."

- "I have yet to hear any character on the show say something interesting or funny…or see anything that expands my sense of what it’s like to be a young person in Los Angeles."

- "But The Hillsisn’t aiming to stimulate or inspire; I think people watch it mostly to figure out why they’re watching it. For younger viewers—who are the intended audience for the series—it may be a soothing fantasy about coming of age, and give them the sense that even after they leave their parents’ house they will still be the center of attention, the way these girls are.
dodiana
The Sophomore Jinx????



Two new Lily Allen songs have hit the Internet, and - in a surprising turn - she "leaked" them herself!

Click here to listen to the tunes!

Of the new songs, Lily says:

Eaaasssyy peoples,
So , I'm a blondie and loving it and I've been working hard in the studio. I posted a couple of new songs on the player for you all to have a listen to and get an idea of my new direction, they are just at a demo stage so don't be too hard on them. I'll probably swap some others around and play you stuff as I do it in the studio, like i did last time round. And ther'll also be a new mixtape soon, I hope you enjoy this shizzle. Aiiight
big kisss
lil x x

Thoughts on the new music??????

[Image via Mr. Paparazzi.]
dodiana
Wino Doesn't Love You Anymore



On/Off crack and heroin addict Amy Winehouse has been late on several occasions to visit her dear hubby in the slammer since his imprisonment last year.

Her lack of commitment to show up on time and visit with Blakey-poo has been the cause of many arguements between the two.

So, Thursday was Blake's birthday and he's turning 46 26. You'd think Amy would have gone to visit him, right?

Wrong!

Ms. Winehouse made no trip to see her man.

Let's hope this means she's finally getting over him and not that she was too high to remember his "special" day.

[Image via WENN.]
dodiana
Gossip Makes The World A Better Place!



An Irish university study found that gossip encourages people to be more generous.

Word!!!!

The study, published in the journal Evolution and Human Behavior, concluded: “It would appear that the threat of gossip only serves to promote generous behaviour when people are given the opportunity to enhance their reputation.”

Uhm, yeah, whatever that means!

In the experiment, they asked 72 college students to divide 10 tokens representing lottery tickets between themselves and a second person in whatever way they wanted.

People who knew that they would be 'talked about' gave more generously.

So what if it's self serving? Better to have some sharing than none at all!

The report also highlights previous studies that have showed that gossip also serves to help people build relationships and should be seen as a positive social skill. BUT, it is only when people are bad at it that it becomes a problem.

No problems here, then! We're good!
dodiana
Quote of the Day



"I have no relationship with either [Lindsay Lohan or Paris Hilton], even as far as my lifestyle or the music I listen to. They probably made music that fits with their lifestyle - 'Wouldn't it be great if I were dancing to my own song in 'da club'? But my album is more suited to my lifestyle. I live a very low-key life."

- Scarlett Johansson, tells the new issue of Spin, about her upcoming debut album
dodiana
They're Back!



For all you Simpsons fans living in Venezuela: good news!

The show is back on Venezuelen TV, though at a later time and only once a week.

Earlier this month, the government pulled Bart and family from its morning time slot cause it was 'bad' for kids. We all chuckled when they replaced it with the government approved show, Baywatch. We're guessing the guv liked the 'saving lives' angle of the booby, beachy show.

A government agency also announced this week that the home of The Simpsons in Venezuela, Televen, might be fined, taken off the air for three days or be forced to show programs chosen by the agency as punishment for keeping the 'toon in the morning after earlier warnings.

Will the hours of government mandated programming be filled with Chavez's home movies?

[Image via WENN.]

dodiana
Ca$hing In



Asslee Simpson's dadager, Poppa Joe, is already trying to whore out her unborn child!

That's what we love about him. He wastes NO time.

According to a magazine industry insider, Papa Simpson is asking for $1 million for an Ass cover story plus photos of the baby and an interview post pop.

Is Ass gonna get all that money and Joe gets his cut as manager??? Pete needs to get half!

U guys think AshWentzday's baby pics are worth a cool mill????

But, experts don't think they're worth all that!

One magazine editor is quoted as saying the pictures are worth "$60,000 maybe - but definitely not a million. The timing is a little suspicious. Her album (Bittersweet World) is dropping next week, and there was little to no interest until now. Ashlee's lucky she got pregnant, frankly." Ouch!

Money-hungry Joe is supposedly pimping out Ashlee's upcoming wedding as well. He's, of course, asking the mags to pony up stupid money for those pix, too!

Good luck dealing with the in-laws, Pete!

[Image via WENN.]
dodiana
Can Ya Handle It???


Click to Watch

Click here to watch Mariah acting in a preview of her new movie, Tennessee, premiering next weekend at the Tribeca Film Festival.

We're having Glitter flashbacks!!!!!!!

[Image via WENN.]
dodiana
How Fake Are They???? Let Us Tell You!



It's not a secret to media insiders that Spencer Pratt and Heidi Montag are in bed with one particular photo agency.

The pair arrange with their pap friends to stage "exclusive" photo ops - the exclusivity makes the pics more valuable - and then the couple split the profits with the pag agency.

However, Speidi sank to a whole new low yesterday!

Pratt and Montag and their paparazzi photographer staged lots of photos in New York City on Wednesday. Lots and LOTS.

The gruesome twosome went to Central Park and brought along several changes of clothes so that they could stage lots of "exclusive" pics with their house photog and make it seem like they were there more than one day. Plus, different outfit changes increase the likelihood that different media outlets will buy different pics.

And, gross as it may be, we've bought one of them!

We'd buy more pics from the same day with Speidi wearing their different outfits, but we don't wanna be wastin' our money on them.

Spencer and Heidi are just as fake OFF camera as they are on The Hills.

At the end of the day, though, the real question remains: do U really care that they're fake????

[Image via Pacific Coast News Online.]
dodiana
Love Is In The Air



Love, game, set, hookup!

Tennis sensation Serena Williams is getting quite cozy with hip-hop artist Common.

The pair were spotted last month at a Hollywood nightclub getting very chummy while out clubbing.

This past weekend, the two were club hopping once again, this time in Miami.

Serena and Common were spotted holding hands at a Knight's Head Microbrew party at South Beach's Mokai.

They were also spotted trying to get into Prive Nightclub. Unfortunately for the two, they were denied access. The reason? Common violated the dress code policy since he was wearing shorts.

Oh please, you know if Jay-Z showed up there in daisy dukes, they'd let him in!

Apparently, though, the two are really hitting it off. Common recently said "I'm attracted to women that are strong in the sense of who they are. I like women who have power to them, but can still be ladylike and that have their own dreams."

We give this relationship, 6 months. Max.

[Image via WENN.]

dodiana
Posh & Katie Kate



She's got no love for Katie Holmes anymore!

Victoria Beckham was out with her new bestie, Kate Beckinsale, last night.

Posh & Becks met up with the British actress, her husband and their mutual pal Eva Longoria for dinner at the Desperate Housewives star's new restaurant, Beso, on Wednesday night.

The outing was a pre-birthday celebration for Victoria, so TomKat's absence was especially noted!

Posh turns 39 today.

Happy Vday!

[Image via Pacific Coast News Online.]
dodiana
A $20 Million Bday Present



Hermione from the Harry Potter films, Emma Watson, turned 18 on Tuesday and received the best birthday gift anyone could ever ask for — access to the $20 million fortune she's earned acting in the HP movies.

That little witch won the lottery!

Watson has a good set of parents.

They made her sit through a series of lessons in money management given by Coutts bank (who also advise the Queen of England) in hopes that she'll learn a thing or two and won't blow through all that cash.

How refreshing! Child star parents who are responsible and don't mismanage their kid's earnings!

Wonder what will be her first big purchase with her new money????

Emma's Potter pal, Daniel Radcliffe, is worth an estimated $48 million.

It's sure profitable to be a wizard these days!

[Image via WENN.]
dodiana
'Koned!



Looks like hip hop 'bad boy' Akon has been blowing a lot of smoke up our a&%es.

The Smoking Gun has unearthed police, court and corrections records that prove the multi-platinum musician 'created a fictionalized backstory that serves as the narrative anchor for his recorded tales of isolation, violence, woe, and regret. Akon has overdubbed his biography with the kind of grit and menace that he apparently believes music consumers desire from their hip-hop stars.'

Liar liar pants on fire!

So, there was no conviction and he wasn't 'locked up' between 1999 and 2002.

Duped by marketing again, kids!

The Smoking Gun also expresses shock that the media, and especially the music press, failed to take 'Kon to task on his claim before they did!

Akon's manager declined the offer to comment on the exaggerated, embellished, and/or wholly fabricated claims SG discovered. His record rep failed to get in touch before the story went to press.

We're disappointed but not shocked.

C'mon…we live in a world where we have to ask if what we're watching on TV is reality or 'real' reality!

[Image via WENN.]
dodiana
'88 Minutes,' the Countdown to a Bomb



Whatever happened to Al Pacino? In "The Godfather," at the age of 32, he dominated with a glare, a stare and a buttoned lip. His Michael was the fulcrum upon which the movie (and the one that followed) pivoted and he made you feel so much more by showing so much less. It was a coiled, controlled performance, one of the greatest in American movies.

But a few years ago (I date it to 1995's "Heat") he seemed to change his theory: He got big, and the pictures got small. Now he's a blowhard, a scenery-guzzler, one of those loud and showy guys who seems to act more with his hair (it looks like a nuclear explosion in a feather factory) than his eyes. His lip is so far from buttoned it's a joke: Loose lips sink movies.

In "88 Minutes" he plays some kind of playboy-forensic psychologist-professor who, on the eve of the execution of the man whom he most famously testified against, receives a phone message that he has 88 minutes to live. Thus, in real time, he must find the putative killer and prevent his own death, even as, in the Seattle that is the movie's setting, bodies are being uncovered in crime scenes that so replicate those of the man Pacino testified against it suggests that he may have helped convict the wrong man.

Not merely Pacino's over-mannered, near-histrionic performance, but the movie itself could be characterized as busy, busy, busy. It's so full of plot twists and revelations and exploding sports cars that its very perkiness comes to seem comic. I loved an overwrought scene where Pacino races through a parking garage waving his badge and screaming "Halt, I'm a forensic psychologist for the FBI!" And if they don't halt, what's he going to do? Psychoanalyze them?

But the implausibility of it is only one problem, and the over-reliance on cellphone-delivered plot developments every six minutes is but one more irritation. There are so many others. The movie seems to have that Woody Allen old-guy's-vanity thing going on: The old lion is surrounded by beautiful younger lionesses, his hair a suspiciously dark color, his wardrobe too hip for anyone over 22, his car too quick for his aging reflexes. Then there's the structural deficiency of having the villain locked up on death row. That fellow, played by Aryan specimen No. 1 Neal McDonough, can't get around and do things, and must therefore exert his will by proxy. So the plot is left to turn on one of those bizarre human permutations where a lover of the condemned man does his bidding and since the bidding is so energetic (the conceit of the killer is that he suspends his victims from elaborate pulley systems), you're left to wonder if one person could do it all, much less that fast?

And the only way the filmmakers can keep McDonough in the movie is to make him accessible to TV interviewers (on the day of his execution) which leads to a preposterous encounter where the shrink and the killer debate each other on national TV.

I understand that the genre licenses directors and writers to stretch a truth for dramatic effect but in this case, the truth hasn't been stretched, it's been drawn-and-quartered.

88 Minutes (107 minutes, at area theaters) is rated R for extreme violence directed at women, brief nudity and language.
dodiana

The Forbidden Kingdom (2008)


The martial arts stars Jet Li, left, and Jackie Chan in their first movie together, “Forbidden Kingdom,” directed by Rob Minkoff.

At first glance “Forbidden Kingdom,” the first movie to unite the martial arts action stars Jackie Chan and Jet Li, might be mistaken for a pastiche of its genre. Its main character, a Boston teenager named Jason (Michael Angarano), is obsessed with kung fu cinema, and the ways of modern Hollywood might lead you to expect the filmmakers to mock, travesty or wink at this obsession.

Instead they — the screenwriter John Fusco and the director Rob Minkoff — clearly share it. And though it is an English-language film (albeit a heavily accented one), “Forbidden Kingdom” is a faithful and disarmingly earnest attempt to honor some venerable and popular Chinese cinematic traditions.

These include a plot that is at times so convoluted as to teeter on the brink of incomprehensibility, a heavy brocade of martial honor and blurry mysticism, and above all a lot of wildly inventive fighting. The battles were choreographed by Yuen Wo Ping, one of the supreme masters of the art, and shot by Peter Pau, whose credits as a cinematographer include “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.”

Filmed on Chinese locations and studio sets, the movie shows the lavish artificiality that is, in the currently booming Chinese film industry, a sign of authenticity. Mr. Chan made his name in scruffier, scrappier Hong Kong entertainments, but as he has aged into an international superstar, he has come to seem at home just about everywhere. Here he plays two roles: an elderly junk dealer in 21st-century Boston and an itinerant fighter, specializing in the “drunken fist” style of combat, in a mythic ancient China.

Mr. Li also plays two parts, both in the mythic past: the mischievous Monkey King (who uses — what else? — monkey kung fu fighting techniques) and a monk. After an inconclusive and thrilling battle — surely the high point of the movie — the monk and Mr. Chan’s character join forces to help Jason, who has been transported to their world by a magic staff that once belonged to the Monkey King.

An evil warlord (Collin Chou) stands in their way, as does a white-haired witch (Li Bing Bing). Accompanying the monk, the drunk and the kid from Boston is a young woman named Golden Sparrow (Liu Yifei), a fearsome warrior in her own right, who seeks to avenge the death of her parents.

There is both a surfeit of motives and a dearth of momentum driving the narrative of “The Forbidden Kingdom,” which often drags in the expository sections between set pieces. But many of the set pieces are dazzling, even if, by now, audiences may be a bit jaded by high-flying wire work and artful blends of computer-generated imagery and traditional production design.

Still, the film works well enough as a primer for latecomers and a fix for insatiable martial arts lovers. If you’ve never seen a movie like this, it might satisfy your curiosity; if you can’t get enough of this kind of movie, nothing I say about it would keep you away.

“The Forbidden Kingdom” is rated PG-13 (Parents strongly cautioned). It has many action scenes, some of them fairly brutal.

FORBIDDEN KINGDOM

Opens on Friday nationwide.

Directed by Rob Minkoff; written by John Fusco; director of photography, Peter Pau; edited by Eric Strand; music by David Buckley; action choreography by Yuen Wo Ping; production designer, Bill Brzeski; produced by Casey Silver; released by Lionsgate. Running time: 1 hour 53 minutes.

WITH: Jackie Chan (Lu Yan/Old Hop), Jet Li (Silent Monk/Monkey King), Collin Chou (Jade Warlord), Liu Yifei (Golden Sparrow), Li Bing Bing (Ni Chang) and Michael Angarano (Jason Tripitikas).

dodiana

Where in the World is Osama bin Laden? (2008)



“Where in the World Is Osama bin Laden?” is not so much a documentary as the movie equivalent of a nonfiction stunt book. You know the kind I mean: An author spends a year doing something just nutty and topical enough to earn a nice advance and shares the resulting insights with the public. And indeed Morgan Spurlock, the director of this film, has also written a tie-in volume that recounts, in somewhat greater detail than the movie, his half-joking search for the world’s most notorious terrorist. Mr. Spurlock, more so here than in his documentary “Super Size Me,” advances an essentially anti-political view of the world. It’s impossible to disagree with much of what he says in “Where in the World Is Osama bin Laden,” but it’s also impossible to learn anything about war, terrorism, religion, oil, democracy or any of the other topics a less glib, less self-absorbed filmmaker might want to tackle.
dodiana
Welcome ‘Visitor’ into your life


Stay a while: A lonely widower (Richard Jenkins) is reawakened to life by an intriguing Syrian woman (Hiam Abbass) in ‘The Visitor.’

From Tom McCarthy, writer-director of “The Station Agent” (2003), belatedly comes “The Visitor,” another modern-day fable about a life-altering encounter between strangers.

Meet Walter Vale (an excellent Richard Jenkins). Walter is a low-key, if not depressed, tenured economics professor at a college in Connecticut and a lonely widower who dismisses his piano teacher (theater legend Marian Seldes) in opening scenes.

When Walter, who keeps a mostly unused apartment in the West Village, returns to stay, he finds two strangers living in his and his late wife’s place, and suddenly his piano teacher’s admonition, “Make room for the train,” takes on new meaning.

The ######phorical “train” in this case is not the space beneath Walter’s curved fingers, but the interlopers Tarek Khalil (Haaz Sleiman), a friendly Syrian musician whose specialty is the African drum, and Zainab (Danai Jekesai Gurira), a beautiful, brooding Senegalese jewelry designer.

Tarek and Zainab, who are in the United States illegally, sublet Walter’s place from an unscrupulous real estate agent. Instead of banishing the desperate couple, Walter offers to let them stay until they can find somewhere else to live. His heart softens more when Tarek offers him drum lessons, and Walter, who has receded from society since the death of his wife, an accomplished pianist, begins to crawl into the light again.

After Tarek is detained by the police, his mother arrives and things get even more complicated, especially since the mother is played by Israeli-Arab beauty Hiam Abbass (“Satin Rouge”). Can you say, answer to a lonely middle-aged man’s prayer?

This offbeat tale of a middle-aged loner coming out of his shell and reawakening to life, as well as to the ugly political realities of post-9/11 America, is often charming and compelling. While it may lack heat, it should appeal to fans of McCarthy’s arthouse-pleasing previous effort.

Jenkins, a veteran character actor, may finally be a bit too recessive in the lead role. But Sleiman (“24”) is terrific as Tarek, a fan of Nigerian Afrobeat legend Fela Kuti, and Richard Kind of “Spin City” has a tasty cameo as Walter’s flamboyant neighbor. If you liked the somewhat similar, if superior “Starting Out in the Evening,’ you’ll like this “Visitor.”
dodiana

Lost souls share sweet treats on the road


Jude Law and Norah Jones bond over their broken hearts. (MaCall Polay/The Weinstein Co.)

"My Blueberry Nights" is Wong Kar Wai's first English-language movie. Perhaps not coincidentally, it's also his worst movie. If you're in the mood for love and for this director's luxuriant self-indulgence, though, it's a tonic nonetheless - a gorgeously shot road-movie trifle that requires some of our better-known actors and singers to swoon through Wong's relocated wonderland.

The first obstacle to surmount is singer Norah Jones in the leading role of Elizabeth, a heartsore young wanderer. Jones approaches the part from the side, as if it were a microphone and she weren't sure about the audience. She has a lovely, wide-eyed screen presence, but her character's passivity is only partly intentional.

Jude Law, by contrast, comes at the camera head-on, as movie stars are supposed to do. He plays Jeremy, a New York diner proprietor - stay with me now - who's nursing a broken heart and keeping his fellow romantics' keys in a cookie jar on the counter. Burned by her boyfriend, Elizabeth bonds over blueberry pie with this fellow lost soul before hitting the highway, "taking the longest way to cross the street."

It's quite possible that if you translated Wong masterpieces like 1991's "Days of Being Wild" and 2000's "In the Mood for Love" into English, they too would sound like the musings of an over-romantic girl diarist. Yet "My Blueberry Nights" is held together - just - by the director's love of achy-breaky pop torch songs and multi-level camera shots. At times it seems on the verge of becoming the movie Francis Ford Coppola wanted "One From the Heart" to be.

And Wong keeps tossing out casting surprises as Elizabeth waitresses her way through the bars and greasy spoons of Middle America. David Strathairn as a mournful alcoholic Memphis cop, Rachel Weisz as his slattern wife (she walks into the movie like a curse laid on your heart), Natalie Portman as a Vegas hell-raiser on a losing streak. The performances are all over the map - Weisz rises to a particular pitch of badness at one point - and, ironically, it's another singer who makes the sharpest impression: Chan Marshall, aka Cat Power, striding through in a neat cameo as Jeremy's ex.

The movie's been cut down by 20 or so minutes since its premiere at last year's Cannes, and whether that's Wong or Harvey Weinstein getting itchy with the scissors, I'm not sure it's for the worse. "Nights" is a thing of intoxicating surfaces, and a little of it goes a long way. Not since Josef von Sternberg directed Marlene Dietrich has a director thrown this much stuff between the camera and his cast, and Wong leans on his soundtrack a little too hard as well. I could have heard "The Greatest" one fewer time and Cassandra Wilson's spooky version of Neil Young's "Harvest Moon" one more.

Music and nostalgia are what fuel all this filmmaker's movies, though, even a half-baked translation like this one. Wong loves searching the human face for the pain underneath, and he fetishizes the rituals of thwarted desire. He's not above giving "My Blueberry Nights" a Hollywood ending (and a disarmingly tender one at that), but in all other respects these characters are locked in their creator's long-established private dance. As the diner owner tells the lady wanderer, "Don't blame the pie."
dodiana

The First Saturday in May (2007)
Trying to Get a Glimpse Inside the Sport of Kings



There are a lot of horses but absolutely no sense in “The First Saturday in May,” a glib, lazy documentary about six trainers on the proverbial road to the 2006 Kentucky Derby. This is, after all, a movie about horse trainers that tells you next to nothing about what horse trainers do besides stand around paddocks, issuing vague instructions to the grooms or staring nervously, wistfully and stoically at the racetrack. Do the trainers determine a horse’s feed or its racing schedule? Do they choose the drugs that are regularly pumped into these magnificent animals? Or do the owners make those calls? Don’t look here for answers.

These questions seem especially pertinent because one of the six trainers is Michael Matz, who trained Barbaro. On May 6, 2006, after having been raced only once in the previous 13 weeks, Barbaro won the Derby by a thrillingly wide margin; two weeks later he was run in the Preakness Stakes (the second race in the Triple Crown), where he sustained the leg injury that eventually led to his being euthanized. His death generated the usual blather: one so-called expert noted that all sports entail risk, while ignoring that it’s only animals that also risk being put down. But there was also some soul-searching from trainers and sportswriters who wondered if thoroughbreds were unnecessarily being placed in harm’s way.

Barbaro was apparently on a legal diuretic when he was raced at the Preakness. There is no evidence that drugs played a role in his injury. Yet the debate over racing thoroughbreds on any drugs is precisely the kind of issue that you would expect to be addressed — much less mentioned — in a documentary that features what would soon be the most famous dead horse in America since Ruffian, the spectacular filly who was fatally injured in 1975. Horse racing is a sensationally exciting spectator sport, of course, but it’s also a troubled one filled with dirty little half-kept secrets. Almost two horses die for every 1,000 starts in this country, which adds up to a lot of dead animals.

In making this, their feature debut, the brothers John and Brad Hennegan were not obliged to create a documentary about doping and death in thoroughbred racing. But given that they don’t address even the basics of horse training in a movie about horse trainers, you have to wonder what they thought they were making. They clearly enjoy the company of the trainers, some of whom come across rather better than others, notably Kiaran McLaughlin, who trained Jazil, the winner of the 2006 Belmont Stakes, the third leg of the Triple Crown. Yet the filmmakers remain strangely incurious about these six men, who have all staked their careers on expensive, scarily fragile, four-legged animals that they don’t own and, in some cases, seem basically indifferent to.

If Barbaro weren’t one of the main attractions in “The First Saturday in May,” and if his name weren’t being used in the marketing, the movie’s lapses might be forgivable. It would still be a bad documentary, marred by dribbling camerawork and pointless choices — a ha-ha scene of one trainer golfing with hard liquor and a fat cousin, filler images of Derby crowds in wacky hats and far too many shots of the trainers staring into the distance — but it wouldn’t smack of exploitation. Then again, given that one of the movie’s distributors is Churchill Downs Inc., which owns and operates racetracks and is the host of the Derby, it’s no wonder that this feels like a feature-length commercial for the horse racing industry. It is.

THE FIRST SATURDAY IN MAY

Opens on Friday in Manhattan.

Directed by Brad Hennegan and John Hennegan; released by Truly Indie. At Cinema Village, 22 East 12th Street, Greenwich Village. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes. This film is not rated.
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In ‘Idol’-like form, Leona Lewis wins big


‘SHY AND QUIET’ BUT NOT IN SONG: Lewis, whose debut album, “Spirit,” has sold 205,000 copies, sings in Italy. A March appearance on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” helped spur excitement, and her single “Bleeding Love” went to No. 1.

It's certainly a good month to be a diva.

Days before Mariah Carey is expected to storm the U.S. pop charts, import Leona Lewis has become the first British solo artist to make her debut at No. 1 on the Billboard tally, having sold 205,000 copies of her debut, "Spirit," according to Nielsen SoundScan.

Both artists, not surprisingly, have a connection to television juggernaut "American Idol," the vocal competition show that's become a consistent supplier of hits to the music industry. This was Mariah Carey week on "Idol," in which the remaining contestants tackled the songs of the pop superstar, and Lewis was the 2006 champion of similarly minded, Simon Cowell-produced British series, "The X Factor."

"A lot of people criticize these shows and ask if we'll ever find a truly international star," Cowell said. "Funnily enough, I said at the beginning of that particular year that my main purpose was to find an artist who could sell all over the world."

The soft-spoken Lewis, who worked odd jobs as a receptionist and waitress while pursuing a music career, said she was talked into auditioning for "The X-Factor."

"I had watched the show, but I never thought I was going to go and do it," she said. "But someone said I should just try it, and it was an opportunity. At the end of the day, you should take every opportunity that comes your way."

Although other winners of "The X-Factor" haven't been given a strong U.S. push, Lewis' "Spirit" has a contemporary R&B sound that should be familiar to American audiences. Smash single "Bleeding Love" is a slow-building Whitney Houston-influenced number, and more upbeat num- bers such as "Forgive Me" sprinkle in some hip-hop flourishes.

"I first studied classical, and then went into jazz and blues," said Lewis, who cites American vocalists such as Eva Cassidy and Minnie Riperton as influences and is signed to Cowell's Syco Music.

Lewis' "Spirit" also represents the first full-on partnership between Cowell and Clive Davis' J Records. Davis has overseen the careers of many an "Idol" superstar, including Kelly Clarkson and Daughtry, but he said that Lewis' television connection was being overblown in the media.

"I've never signed anyone from 'Star Search,' " he said.

Yet Davis and Cowell designated Lewis as a star-to-be and lined up A-list producers such as Akon and Stargate for her "Spirit." The album arrived on these shores after securing a No. 1 post in Britain, where it became the fastest-selling debut when it was released in November.

Soon after, Lewis performed at Davis' celebrated pre-Grammy party in February, an event that has helped launch the careers of Alicia Keys, Mario and Maroon 5, among others.

She also received almost constant praise on the Internet from gossip blogger Perez Hilton and benefited immensely from a March appearance on "The Oprah Winfrey Show", in which she performed "Bleeding Love." Soon after, "Bleeding Love" went to No. 1 on the U.S. singles charts.

This week, "Spirit" coasted to the top of the U.S. pop charts, easily leading the runner-up, George Strait's "Troubadour," which sold 59,000 copies. Beyond Lewis, other notable entries this week include actor-turned-singer Ray J, who lands at No. 7 (39,000 copies), and the CD release of the straight-to-Web effort from Nine Inch Nails, "Ghosts I-IV," at No. 14 (26,000 copies).

With Carey's "E=MC2" hitting next week's chart, Lewis isn't expected to repeat at the top, but her momentum shouldn't slow. Next week, she's set to appear on "American Idol."

"I feel like I'm just getting started," Lewis said. "People are just kind of hearing about me, and I hope this is setting me to do more things and have a long career."

Cowell described Lewis as "very, very, very shy."

"I don't need to name names," he said, "but you see a lot of these artists at the moment who are literally melting down in public. This girl is the complete opposite. She's a home-loving, quiet, shy person who loves singing. That's the end of it."

As for the criticism that "Idol" and its ilk put technique over artistry, Cowell has heard it. "I worry about this," he said. "I'm interested in the person as well as the talent. . . . I'm not interested in singing robots."
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Grinding out the shlock

It barely matters that "Zombie Strippers" is a tediously overextended satire. It's called "Zombie Strippers." For weeks when I've been bored at the gym, I'd think, "Zombie Strippers!" When I was bored on the train: "Zombie Strippers!" When I was bored of being bored, it was always, "Zombie Strippers!"



But when you're bored watching Jay Lee's ghetto-budget "Zombie Strippers," there's nowhere to turn. Shouting the title never quite prepared me for either how stripping zombies aren't as hot or as funny as I thought they would be or how quickly the movie's eager intelligence collapses on itself. The film is set in one of those post-apocalyptic nightmares. George Bush is serving a fourth term, and a government experiment has turned entire classes of people - "the homeless . . . illegals . . . the middle class" - into zombies (the original goal was to make them super-soldiers).

After a paramilitary, mock-action-movie prelude, Lee drops us into an underground gentleman's club, where backstage the women read Nietzsche and decry fatalism. A wired Robert Englund runs the club, and Jenna Jameson plays one of the ladies on his payroll. When one of the dancers takes the stage after zombification, the men in the audience go bananas. Suddenly, they prefer their live nude girls undead, and the other dancers consider turning into zombies, too.

Lee has crafted a sort of Marxist critique of the erotic arts by way of a tribute to shlock. Indeed, does the male gaze deaden the women it fixes upon? And would the women prefer death under those circumstances? That's dissertation stuff, but the entire cast and crew appears to be having a very good time helping Lee see it all through, anyway.

"Zombie Strippers" was shot on video so the gore glistens as brightly as the neon signs glow, and the production design is as witty as the dialogue. Everything in this movie seems to have been thoroughly worked out. It's just paced for traffic jams. "Zombie Strippers" is engorged with so many ideas - and so much pole dancing - that the whole thing capsizes under the weight of its glee. The film's joke about female enhancement stays afloat, though. Zombification has no apparent effect on implants. Skin and teeth decay. Fake breasts are forever.
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Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed (2007)
Resentment Over Darwin Evolves Into a Documentary


Ben Stein standing before a sculpture of Darwin in “Expelled.”

One of the sleaziest documentaries to arrive in a very long time, “Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed” is a conspiracy-theory rant masquerading as investigative inquiry.

Positing the theory of intelligent design as a valid scientific hypothesis, the film frames the refusal of “big science” to agree as nothing less than an assault on free speech. Interviewees, including the scientist Richard Sternberg, claim that questioning Darwinism led to their expulsion from the scientific fold (the film relies extensively on the post hoc, ergo propter hoc fallacy — after this, therefore because of this), while our genial audience surrogate, the actor and multihyphenate Ben Stein, nods sympathetically. (Mr. Stein is also a freelance columnist who writes Everybody’s Business for The New York Times.)

Prominent evolutionary biologists, like the author and Oxford professor Richard Dawkins — accurately identified on screen as an “atheist” — are provided solely to construct, in cleverly edited slices, an inevitable connection between Darwinism and godlessness. Blithely ignoring the vital distinction between social and scientific Darwinism, the film links evolution theory to fascism (as well as abortion, euthanasia and eugenics), shamelessly invoking the Holocaust with black-and-white film of Nazi gas chambers and mass graves.

Every few minutes familiar — and ideologically unrelated — images interrupt the talking heads: a fist-shaking Nikita S. Khrushchev; Charlton Heston being subdued by a water hose in “Planet of the Apes.” This is not argument, it’s circus, a distraction from the film’s contempt for precision and intellectual rigor. This goes further than a willful misunderstanding of the scientific method. The film suggests, for example, that Dr. Sternberg lost his job at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History because of intellectual discrimination but neglects to inform us that he was actually not an employee but rather an unpaid research associate who had completed his three-year term.

Mixing physical apples and ######physical oranges at every turn “Expelled” is an unprincipled propaganda piece that insults believers and nonbelievers alike. In its fudging, eliding and refusal to define terms, the movie proves that the only expulsion here is of reason itself.
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Daniel Radcliffe stars in Masterpiece's 'My Boy Jack'
The enlistment of Rudyard Kipling's son anchors this drama of a family in wartime.


IN WAR: Daniel Radcliffe, left, stars as John/Jack, who joins the military with the help of his father, Rudyard Kipling (portrayed by David Haig). Kim Cattrall also stars.

"My Boy Jack," a "Masterpiece Classic" presentation premiering Sunday on PBS, owes its existence to the actor Edward Herrmann having once suggested to the actor David Haig that he resembled Rudyard Kipling. From that slow-germinating seed, Haig eventually wrote a play about Kipling and his son, John, who died in the First World War just after his 18th birthday, and that eventually became this film.

It is sumptuous in the way one wants these English period pieces to be, with green countryside, good contemporary detail and scenes filmed at Kipling's own house in Sussex. The source material limits it as a story somewhat, but the scenes play well and are full of nice human moments. It's an actors' picture -- not surprising, given the author's day job.

Perhaps best known here, to the extent he's known here at all, as the blustery Det. Inspector Derek Grim in the Rowan Atkinson police sitcom "The Thin Blue Line," Haig has written himself a good role, with room to be big, small, broad, subtle, sincere and self-deceiving. (And he does resemble Rudyard Kipling.) He has clearly thought Kipling through: It's difficult to re-create any actual person's inner self, but the bigger the real-life model -- and the more experts there are to cavil -- the more crucial it is to base the interpretation on the facts.

The other characters -- Kipling's American wife, Carrie (Kim Cattrall, quite good); daughter Elsie (the excellent Carey Mulligan, recently of "Northanger Abbey"); and son John/Jack (Daniel Radcliffe, Harry Potter himself) -- are more pliable; they bend to the needs of the story. They've been conceived to create conflict that may not have existed in the genuine Kipling household but allows Haig to move ahead with dialectic -- the positive-negative charge that makes the picture move. This isn't a biographical film so much as a family drama into which historical figures and events have been folded, and which might apply to other fathers and sons and other families in other wars. (You could call it timely, or timeless.)

John wants to join the military -- war is in the air, all his friends are enlisting -- but is rejected for his terrible eyesight; Kipling is his booster and not entirely welcome coach. "I can't bear being gee'd up and encouraged," John tells Elsie.

Like many 17-year-olds, he yearns to leave his parents' house, to put some distance between himself and an opinionated father not stingy with advice. Kipling meanwhile regards getting his son into the service as a kind of shared project, a bonding experience, like building a model plane. When Kipling finally pulls the strings that allow John into the Irish Guards, he tells him, "I wish I could be in your shoes now." Mother and sister are less enthused. Father will have cause to wonder whether he was the agent of his son's demise.

A defender of colonial paternalism even as the sun is setting upon the empire upon which the sun never set, Haig's Kipling is a little ball of compressed energy, coated in British reserve, whether speeding in his Rolls-Royce, campaigning for military conscription, or reading his Just-So Stories. (Some of his best scenes are with children; he has a soft center.) Later, despite his best efforts, he will deflate. Haig is brilliant in these moments.

The Elijah Wood of his generation, Radcliffe has begun to look beyond the Big Franchise. Here he smokes and drinks and wears a mustache -- which certainly distinguishes him from Harry Potter, but also has the possibly intentional ironic effect of emphasizing rather than disguising his evident youth. (He is not yet 19.)

The lieutenant's cap he wears seems pointedly too big, so that he looks, appropriately, like a child dressed up in Daddy's clothes. He seems even smaller in the trenches, all mud and rain and bad words. Radcliffe does some nice work here; he will doubtless overcome his child stardom.

dodiana
Sarah Jessica Parker Ramps Up the Fabulous

Sarah Jessica Parker got some amusement from her own reflection — or just checked to see if there is anything in her teeth — while shooting a commercial for Cidade Jardim in NYC yesterday. Her indie film Smart People didn't score big at the box office last weekend, but this fabulous outfit is a reminder of all the Sex and the City madness coming our way. Plus, it's not like SJP worries herself with silly things like how much money a movie makes. She recently said, "I try my best to pay no attention because you just simply cannot control it. It’s not like worrying about being good, which you can actively participate in." Even though she's already at peace, hopefully all the excitement and hype surrounding SATC is still a little bit exciting for Carrie.


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Paris's BFF Search Might Be Harder Than She Thought

Paris Hilton waved goodbye to her hotel in London, looking like a billboard for the United Kingdom, but we guess that's better than dressing as a walking advertisement for herself. While she continues to smile and live it up overseas, things aren't going so smoothly with her reality TV show back in the states. Apparently the idea of being Paris's BFF isn't as appealing as the heiress had hoped, and the audition turnouts have been a bit lackluster. Naturally, Paris is already trying to save face, but we'll just have to wait and see what happens when the show finally hits the small screen.


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Where’s Kimmy Gibbler?




The former cast of Full House hung out at a charity event last night at LA’s Beverly Wilshire. It still boggles our mind that the Olsen twins fit right in with this group.

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Lindsay Lohan's Latest Addiction

While Lindsay has finally added jeans back into her wardrobe (so long leggings) there are a few things that never seem to change. LL was spotted at the hair salon for the second time in as many days, leaving with a slightly less wavy 'do yesterday afternoon. Seriously, she's there like every...single...day. If it's keeping her out of trouble then I guess it's okay but it's not a cheap habit... neither are her many designer handbags (today she's showcasing the latest Miu Miu It bag). Must be nice.


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'Gossip Girl': Season's final five episodes will be available on TV only



How old school of The CW! The network announced today that fans will have to turn on their TVs if they want to watch the season's final five episodes of Gossip Girl. The freshman drama, which returns to the schedule on April 21, will not be available for streaming via the network website (though the episodes will be up for sale via iTunes).

"Gossip Girl is an extremely important show for The CW and we feel it can be a signature breakout for its return," says Paul McGuire, a CW spokesman. "This is an experiment for us."

In addition to its regular Mondays at 8 p.m. time slot, Gossip Girl repeats will continue to air on Sundays at 6 p.m. The net says it will also bolster its online Gossip Girl content over the next month by streaming interviews with Gossip executive producer Josh Schwartz and scenes from future story arcs. The first 12 episodes of drama are still available for streaming on CWTV.com.
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Britney Hits the Studio "Just for Fun"

Britney Spears has apparently decided her body wasn't the only thing in need of a little fine-tuning.

E! News has confirmed that the "Gimme More" singer is taking voice lessons and has spent the last two days in a Burbank, Calif., recording studio to work on getting her voice back into fighting shape.

Spears, whose 2008 didn't exactly get off on the right foot, careerwise, is not working on anything official, a source close to the 26-year-old comeback kid told E! News, but instead is just looking to enjoy herself right now.



"She's doing it just for fun," the source said. "She's just sitting at the piano, singing a little. She's just in there to have some fun. It may lead to something down the road, but right now this is just part of her staying on the right track."

Spears is also said to be spending time under the tutelage of voice coach Ron Anderson, who, according to his professional website, has worked with the likes of the Red Hot Chili Peppers' Anthony Kiedis, Chris Daughtry, Avril Lavigne, Björk, Paris Hilton, Paula Abdul, Pink, Shania Twain, Usher and Tori Amos, among others.

Blackout, Spears' fifth studio album and her first in four years, was released in October and sold 290,000 copies its first week out of the gate to land at No. 2 on the Billboard 200, the first time one of her studio efforts didn't debut at No. 1.
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Suri Cruise Turns 2 Years Old



Last year, Suri Cruise celebrated her first birthday with a lunch at her parents' compound in Los Angeles, where members of both the Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes clans gathered to dine on pizza and cupcakes from a Beverly Hills bakery.

This April 18, as she turns 2, it seems that the birthday girl got an early start on gathering her presents.

In January, as her mother was promoting her movie Mad Money in Manhattan, Suri and Katie managed to hit toy heaven – better known as FAO Schwarz – where Tom threw Katie her own birthday bash in 2005.

As history has proven, birthdays bring about awfully big celebrations in the Cruise family. Whatever the plans this year, Happy Birthday, Suri. And a pinch, to grow an inch.
–Stephen M. Silverman
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Lindsay Lohan to Dad: Stop Talking to Reporters



Lindsay Lohan has heard just about enough from her father.

"I just wish that he wouldn't go and talk to the media," she said Friday on radio's The Billy Bush Show. "It's not attractive to me, it really upsets me and I wish he would stop. ... I love my father. I just don't know why he's doing what he's doing. It's a weird situation, very odd."

Michael Lohan, 47, has frequently commented on his 21-year-old daughter's eventful life and that of their family, most recently talking about his divorce from Lindsay's mother Dina and the upcoming E! reality show Living Lohan with Dina and younger daughter Ali, 13.

Lindsay, meanwhile, told Bush's syndicated radio show she's not involved in Living Lohan – but isn't against it.

"Let them take the distraction away from me for a bit, it would help," she said.

And, she adds, don't dismiss the possibility of a possible appearance.

"Never say never. I don't know," she says. "It's my family, and I support them in many ways."

New Album
Lohan, meanwhile, is recording a new album – and don't look for angst-ridden songs reflecting her recent troubles, including an arrest and a stint in rehab.

"I've gone through so much and I think publicly people have seen that and I don't find that fascinating anymore," she says. "I think it's kind of over with because that's not where I am in my life, so I want it to be a fun record, I want it to be free-spirited and I want it to represent me in my life now, which is happy."
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Deborah Gibson: 'Scary' Stalker Won't Slow Her Down



Deborah Gibson is speaking out about the man who allegedly stalked her earlier this April.

In her restraining order application filed on Tuesday, Gibson, 37, alleges that Bassas Jorge Puigdollers has continually shown up at Gibson's hotel and house. The last straw was when Puigdollers came to her home and knocked on her door.

"That was crossing a line, so that was really scary," she tells PEOPLE. "I am a single female, so I reacted like anyone would and called 911. I'm very good at reacting calmly in the moment, but then I fall apart later."

Police detained Puigdollers, but did not charge him with any crime.

Stalking scares aren't new to Gibson. In 1989, Robert Bardo shot actress Rebecca Schaeffer at her Los Angeles home. At the time of his arrest, his wall was adorned with pictures of Schaeffer, fellow pop star Tiffany – and Gibson herself.

"I was very young at the time, but it was scary, because I realized that whether you live or die can come down to security," says Gibson. "This woman answered her door and was killed. From then, I've always had good security. I can't let it slow me down."

Possibly Broadway
Right now, the singer is in talks for Broadway roles, but plans to spend this summer mentoring young artists. She has created a youth camp called Camp Electric Youth to "mentor and coach talented young artists to hone their craft."

She's also joining forces with former teen heartthrob Joey Lawrence as judges for the online talent show, Total Pop Star, where contestants vie for recording contracts by submitting audition videos. And next up? A three-week gig at Harrah's Casino in Atlantic City, where she will sing her pop hits and Broadway standards.

"I've got a lot going on," she tells PEOPLE. "So I just put the whole incident behind me and do what I have to do."
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Halle Berry Makes Movie-After-Baby Plans



New mom Halle Berry is making plans to return to work, signing on to star in and produce the psychological drama Frankie and Alice.

No shooting date has been set. This is the first film deal announced since Berry, 41, and boyfriend Gabriel Aubry, 32, welcomed daughter Nahla Ariela Aubry last month.

Frankie and Alice is the story of a woman struggling with a multiple personality disorder who is haunted by a racist Caucasian alter-personality, according to Variety.
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Foxy Brown's Emotional Release from Prison



After eight months in prison – including 40 days in solitary confinement – rapper Foxy Brown was released Friday.

Brown, 29, left the Rose M. Singer facility at Rikers Island Correctional facility in New York at 12:05 p.m., and was greeted by a swarm of photographers and fans as she exited a white Rolls Royce Phantom on the Queens side of the Rikers Island bridge.

"I feel good," she said to the crowd. "I'm back home." Brown, wearing a brown leather blazer, a gold cross, blue jeans, and a brown Fendi head scarf cried as she hugged friends. She even singled out a couple people, saying, "These are my two number one fans. They are like family."

After the teary reunion, Brown's entourage went to LaGuardia Inn so the rapper could talk to the press.

"My family never missed a visit in eight months, ever. I cried coming out. I didn't cry coming in. There's a big difference. I believe that God put me there for a reason, Incarceration is serious," she told Access Hollywood. Adding that the first place she wanted to go after her "learning experience" was church. "He got me through," she said.

Later Friday Brown was spotted buying a pocketbook and two pairs of shoes at a store called Signature in Harlem near the Apollo Theater, where she was again mobbed by fans and photographers.

Her History
The rapper, born Inga Marchand, was sentenced to a year in prison last September for violating the terms of her probation stemming from an altercation over payment for a manicure with two employees at a New York nail salon in 2004.

While on probation, she was arrested twice last year, for throwing her BlackBerry at a neighbor, and for scuffling with an employee at a beauty-supply store in Florida.

Despite the early release, Brown's stint in prison was rather rocky. In November 2007, she received 76 days in punitive isolation for various offenses, including shoving another inmate during a fight – but served only 40 days for good behavior.

Brown's next album, Brooklyn Don Diva, is set for a May 13 release. She's also shopping a reality TV show, according to her publicist.
dodiana
Hilary Swank Has No Eyebrows



Hilary Swank and Richard Gere arrive in Toronto, Canada on Thursday to shoot their new film, Amelia.

But where were Hilary’s eyebrows?? Did they fly away??

Swank, 32, will play the title role in the the upcoming biopic about the famed lost female aviator Amelia Earhart. (She disappeared while flying over the Pacific Ocean in 1937 in an attempt to make a flight around the world.) Gere, 58, will play her husband, publisher George Putnam, who led a rocky relationship with the pioneering pilot. Mira Nair (Vanity Fair) will direct.
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Ugly Betty Video Podcast — FIRST VODCAST!


Click to watch
Costars Becki Newton and Michael Urie present the first-ever “Ugly Betty” Video Podcast.

The pair do a little song and dance inside the studio of the show’s composer, Jeff Biel. Cameos are made by David Blue, who plays Cliff, the boyfriend of Marc St. James (Urie) and Eric Mabius (magazine publisher Daniel Meade). Watch the video below!!!!!

Ugly Betty returns with all new episodes on Thursday, April 24 @ tease.gifM ET/PT on ABC. Episode “Twenty-Four Candles” kicks off the first of five new eps. Get Ugly, Grey and Lost with ABC on Thursdays!!

P.S. It’s America Ferrera’s 24th birthday today. HAPPY BIRTHDAY, AMERICA!!!!!

YOU READY FOR BETTY?
dodiana
Shia LaBeouf Punches Cate Blanchett



Shia LaBeouf whacks Cate Blanchett in the face in this new movie still for Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.

In the movie, Blanchett, 38, plays villainous Russian agent Irina Spalko. LaBeouf, 21, plays Mutt Williams, a motorcycle-riding greaser and Indiana’s sidekick.

For three more new movie stills, check out IESB.net. There’s also one picture here of Indy and Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen) in quicksand with Mutt on his way to helping them out.

Harrison Ford is also on the cover of this week’s issue of Entertainment Weekly. Check out the cover story at EW.com.

Just one more month until Crystal Skull is released — May 22!
dodiana
Evan Rachel Wood Gets the Woody Allen Treatment



Evan Rachel Wood shoots scenes for her new romantic comedy in New York City’s Chelsea neighborhood on Friday.

Woody Allen is directing it and details are under wraps. It’s temporarily called “Woody Allen’s Summer Project”.

The film also stars Patricia Clarkson, Ed Begley Jr. and Larry David. The Tudors’ Henry Cavill is also rumored to be part of the cast.

And ERW reportedly said the following recently…

Says Rachel Evan, “People always call out, ‘Hi Rachel.’ I hate it. I’m not Rachel. That’s my middle name. They’re all dyslexic. Can’t they see Evan comes before Rachel?”

Wood ‘n Woody!
dodiana
Elton John Feels Liz Hurley’s Baby Bump?



When Elizabeth Hurley was at the Breast Cancer Research Foundation’s Party in NYC on April 8, Elton John rubbed her tummy and raised eyebrows as if feeling a baby bump, reports Life & Style Weekly.

Elton John is such good friends with Liz Hurley, he gave her away at her wedding to businessman Arun Nayar last year.

“Elton kissed and hugged Elizabeth and congratulated Arun,” says the witness. “They seemed to be giggling over their little secret.” So far Liz, 42, has kept quiet about whether she’s expecting. But the actress, who has a 6-year-old son, Damian, with film producer Stephen Bing, wore a tummy-covering sari to the event and, says the witness, abstained from alcohol. “She carried her clutch in front of her belly, but you could still see a little bump.”
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Channing Tatum Suits Up for G.I. Joe



Character shots for the upcoming G.I. Joe movie have been released, and here's Channing Tatum well-armored (maybe a little too well-armored for some) as Duke.


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Get Some Rest

Heroes star Milo Ventimiglia and his Divide Pictures producing partner (and good friend) Russ Cundiff have collaborated on a comic book project that will be released by Devil's Due Publishing later on this year. Milo and Russ are currently in NYC promoting the release of this new comic book series, entitled Rest, at New York Comic Con. Here is the cover artwork for the first book in the series:



Heroes star Milo Ventimiglia is to feature in a series of comic books. The actor, who plays Peter Petrelli in the NBC drama, has signed a deal with Devil's Due Publishing to create a four-issue miniseries called Rest. He and producing partner Russ Cundiff will develop the books via their Divide Pictures company, with Mark Powers (Drafted) attached to write them from a story by Mike O'Sullivan. The issues will focus on the dangers of staying awake as the Ventimiglia-inspired central character becomes embroiled in a conspiracy between a malevolent pharmaceutical firm and the US government. The project will be unveiled at New York's Comic-Con today and published in the autumn. If successful, the books may be made into a TV show or movie, reports Variety. Ventimiglia can currently be seen in medical thriller Pathology.

As if Milo weren't enough of a superhero already, now he will live on in comic book form as well ... I love it! The comic book series will debut as a limited edition ashcan preview at NY Comic Con but a formal introduction issue will be released this summer. Geeks all around rejoice ... a successful comic book launch may lead to a TV show which would be very cool. I'm excited to check it out -- more Milo, more Milo, more Milo smile.gif
dodiana
Free As A Bird Foxy

Foxy Brown is finally free after serving only 8 months (which included 40 days in solitary confinement) of a 1 year jail sentence for assaulting two different people last year (she assaulted a neighbor with a BlackBerry and beat the hell out of a nail technician over a $20 manicure). She was sprung from her NYC jail this afternoon in a teary and emotional media blitz that was sure to be recorded for use in her upcoming reality TV show, which will prolly also chronicle the release of her next album, Brooklyn Don Diva, on May 13. Here are a few pics of the newly freed Foxy:


Photo credit: Splash News

After eight months in prison – including 40 days in solitary confinement – rapper Foxy Brown was released Friday. Brown, 29, left the Rose M. Singer facility at Rikers Island Correctional facility in New York at 12:05 p.m., and was greeted by a swarm of photographers and fans as she exited a white Rolls Royce Phantom on the Queens side of the Rikers Island bridge. "I feel good," she said to the crowd. "I'm back home." Brown, wearing a brown leather blazer, a gold cross, blue jeans, and a brown Fendi head scarf cried as she hugged friends. She even singled out a couple people, saying, "These are my two number one fans. They are like family." After the teary reunion, Brown's entourage went to LaGuardia Inn so the rapper could talk to the press. "My family never missed a visit in eight months, ever. I cried coming out. I didn't cry coming in. There's a big difference. I believe that God put me there for a reason, Incarceration is serious," she told Access Hollywood. Adding that the first place she wanted to go after her "learning experience" was church. "He got me through," she said. Later Friday Brown was spotted buying a pocketbook and two pairs of shoes at a store called Signature in Harlem near the Apollo Theater, where she was again mobbed by fans and photographers.

Well, I'm glad that God was there in prison with her (tho he must've been otherwise occupied when she assaulted another inmate and was forced to serve in solitary confinement) cuz I really hope she's finally learned her lesson. Am I totally convinced that Foxy's ass beatin' days are over? Not really ... but I do think she'll be on her best behavior for some time. You're free, girl ... stay out of trubs.
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