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01-04-08 EUR ALL ON ONE PAGE(January 4, 2008)
EDDIE MURPHY MARRIAGE INVALID?: Island official says couple must live in region for 30 days before nuptials. *A rep for Eddie Murphy and Tracey Edmonds has responded to reports from Australian news sites that claim the couple's New Year's Day wedding on a private island off Bora Bora was invalid. People.com was the first to report that the couple exchanged vows in French Polynesia, but news.com.au cites a general law specialist who says the two were ineligible to be married locally because they had not lived in the region for at least 30 days, as French law requires. "You need to have residence for at least 30 days - one month in the island of Bora Bora for instance - and this has not been the case," general law specialist Malgras Benoit was quoted as saying. "If you want to get married in Paris you have to live in Paris for at least one month." "As is typical when couples get married in foreign countries, a legal ceremony will take place when they return to the U.S.," says Edmonds's rep. "The wedding that took place in Bora Bora was a ceremony to bind Eddie and Tracey spiritually in the presence of family and friends. The couple plan a legal ceremony as soon as they return to the States." In any case…
*Christopher "Play" Martin and a female companion were seriously injured when the SUV they were riding in was hit by a driver trying to escape the cops.
*In what appears to be a photo op, former B2K member Raz-B and his brother Ricky were captured by TMZ.com cameras leaving a restaurant in Los Angeles with their former manager Chris Stokes, whom the siblings had accused of sexual abuse just over a week ago. After Stokes and former B2K member Omarion vehemently denied Raz-B's allegations, the singer recanted and released a YouTube video apologizing. On Wednesday night, it appears as if Ricky has also backed away from his earlier story because the three were all smiles, hugs and pounds while leaving Mr. Chow's. View the footage here:
*Kanye West has posted an entry on his blog for the first time since his mother's death in November. The following message was accompanied by photographs of the rapper and Beyonce playing the popular Milton Bradley game "Connect Four" while backstage at Jay-Z's new 40/40 club in Las Vegas. THANK YOU FOR ALL YOUR SUPPORT. When I was in Europe I would play this game for hours and hours... it helped me zone out. Everybody would get involved... Derrick Dudley (Common's manager) and Consequence were the best other than me... I beat Lexi... Don C beat Jay... Tony Williams beat Common... but every now and then people would speak of this legendary connect 4 champion........... BEYONCE!!! I had 2 play her!...so last night at Jay's new 40/40 club in Las Vegas (which is sidebar, crazy big w/ 24krt gold flooring, Black Jack tables, $500 slot machines ,the biggest projection screen in the universe and the best turkey burgers I've ever had in my life) she beat me 9 times in a row! (and I didn't even spaz lol) here's a photo of the only game I won!
*R. Kelly's camp has responded to a lawsuit filed by former opening act Ne-Yo against the promoter of his Double Up tour. As previously reported, Ne-Yo and Compound Touring, which was responsible for arranging Ne-Yo's participation on the trek, have sued Rowe Entertainment in Los Angeles Superior Court claiming the singer's touring contract was breached when he was kicked off the 25-city outing after only two dates. "The idea that R. Kelly had anything to do with Ne-Yo being dropped from the Double Up tour is just plain silly," said the rep. "As we said at the time, Ne-Yo was dropped because of a contractual dispute with the tour promoter, and in fact Ne-Yo is not suing Kelly but only the promoter.
*Former Olympic champion Marion Jones says she should not have to be imprisoned for lying about steroids and check fraud because she's already been punished enough, reports the Associated Press. As part of the plea agreement, prosecutors suggested she be sentenced to six months in prison at most. In pre-sentencing papers filed Dec. 21 prosecutors said anything between no time and six months would be appropriate. As previously reported, that filing included a doping calendar from the files of the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative indicating Jones used several performance-enhancing drugs. Prosecutors said the evidence shows "a concentrated, organized, long-term effort to use these substances for her personal gain."
*Beyonce's legal team has announced that the appeal of a copyright infringement lawsuit brought against her and the co-authors of her Grammy-winning song "Baby Boy" has been shot down. The plaintiff, Jennifer Armour, claimed that her former manager submitted demo recordings of a song to Beyonce's father/manager Mathew Knowles (President, Music World Entertainment), representatives of Beyoncé's record label Columbia Records, a division of Sony BMG Music Entertainment, and others, in late February or early March 2003. She discovered in the litigation, however, that the writing and recording of "Baby Boy" was substantially complete before Armour claimed to have submitted her demo recording, Beyonce's lawyers said in a statement. In response to the appellate court's decision, Beyoncé said: "It's unfortunate that we had to endure this long legal process but I am hopeful this decision will allow all of us that were involved to finally move on." Defendants named in the lawsuit included Beyoncé, Jay-Z, Scott Storch, Robert Waller, Sony BMG Music Entertainment, Hitco Music Publishing, TVT Music, and Notting Dale Songs, all of whom were represented by Henry
*DMX, who has always claimed to be spiritual, tells MTV that he will take his relationship with God to another level with the release of his first gospel-rap album later this year. MARL SETS RECORD STRAIGHT ON 'VAPORS' CASTING: Juice Crew biopic early victim of rumors. Blackfilm.com had previously reported that Marley would be played by Gooding, while Banner would suit up as Biz Markie. The Web site also mentioned that "ATL" co-star Jackie Long would portray Big Daddy Kane and Keke Palmer was selected to play Roxanne Shante. However, Marl tells MTV that no definitive casting choices have been made. MARY J. BLIGE HAS BILLBOARD IN 'PAIN': Singer ends Josh Groban's five-week reign atop album chart. Plus, Flo Rida sets digital record. *Mary J. Blige has just scored the fourth No. 1 album of her career with 204,000 sold copies of "Growing Pains," according to Nielsen Soundscan.
On the Hot 100 singles chart, Flo Rida's "Low" remains No. 1 this week, and the track's 470,000 digital sales has set a single-week sales record, easily trumping the former title-holder, Fergie's "Fergalicious" at 294,000.
*A lawyer who represented Death Row Records mogul Suge Knight's is seeking to void a $130 million judgment against his client after claiming new evidence shows that the plaintiff, singer Lydia Harris, and her imprisoned drug-dealing husband, Michael, allegedly duped a Los Angeles judge into ruling against the rap mogul. According to the Los Angeles Times, Suge's ex-lawyer Dermot Givens has filed a motion claiming that Harris hid from the court that she had filed for bankruptcy five years before suing Knight and that she never claimed an ownership stake in Death Row during that legal proceeding. The motion also alleges that recent sworn testimony by the couple shows that Michael Harris was the true party of interest in her lawsuit against Knight.
*Singer Robin Thicke will discuss his interracial relationship with wife Paula Patton and the reaction of both families to their union on the new "TV One on One" premiering Sunday, Jan. 6 at 10 p.m. ET. VENUS AND SERENA TUNE UP FOR FIRST GRAND SLAM: Sisters win in two different tournaments preceding Australian Open. *Venus Williams beat up on her Chinese opponent Peng Shuai in straight sets Thursday at Hong Kong's JB Group Classic tournament, while Serena nursed herself back to health and beat Alicia Molik at the Hopman Cup finals, allowing the United States to advance within a 3-0 clean sweep of Australia. V. Williams, ranked 8th in the world, said she was delighted with her 6-1, 6-2 victory over Peng, considering she took some time off to graduate from design college. "I haven't been out there in a long time, and I had to fight for every point," she told reporters after the match. "But I felt like all the things I have practiced really paid off," she added. Meanwhile, S. Williams' 6-2, 7-6 (9-7) win over Molik on Thursday meant the U.S. could not be dislodged from the top of Group B, regardless of other results. After a delayed arrival due to illness, Williams opened her Hopman Cup in Australia with a narrow victory over Lucie Safarova on Monday, but felt her form improved against Molik.
• When asked about the questions if he is "black enough," Obama said: "As we've progressed over time, and people become more familiar with my track record, then they feel like this is the guy I'm going to vote for not because he's Black, but because he's got a track record and is working on racial profiling, and giving health care to kids, and dealing with wrongful convictions ... The other thing I've got to always say when people say, 'Are you Black enough?' is, 'Well, compared to whom?'"
*The New York Post has a rundown of Chris Rock's latest stand-up material, which debuted during the sold-out New Year's Eve launch of his comedy tour at New York's Madison Square Garden. Following a musical set from opening act Jill Scott, Rock took the stage and admitted he was a little "nervous." "I haven't done this in a while," said Rock, who was clad in a slick gray suit and brown silk shirt. But he quickly got down to business, covering every topic from Britney Spears to each presidential candidate's flaws.
*The New York Daily News is reporting that Jennifer Hudson was with her childhood sweetheart James Peyton at the Setai in Miami for her New Year's Eve performance, despite rumors that she is currently dating Kerry Rhodes of the New York Jets. *Wyclef Jean told a live MTV audience that "everybody" could come to his Saddle River, NJ home for a big New Year's bash. Needless to say, the former Fugees member was shocked to see that "everybody" had taken him up on the offer. After the MTV telecast, he arrived home around 1 a.m. to find more than 500 people partying at his mansion, reports Page Six. "There were hundreds and hundreds of cars parked all over," said one partygoer. "They had tents set up outside, but people were wandering around in his house, in the movie theater, in the kitchen. The cops came around 3 a.m. to break it up, it got so crazy." *Mariah Carey says she is certainly not a diva – but then again, it depends on one's definition of the word. "I've never done a diva-ish thing in my life," she tells Mirror.co.uk while at Club Tao in Las Vegas. "The definition of a diva is a woman who sings well, the second definition is a woman who's difficult to deal with. I hope I'm the first but I don't think I'm the second." *Jeffrey Wright, who played CIA agent Felix Leiter opposite Daniel Craig in "Casino Royale," will reprise the role in the next James Bond film, "Bond 22," reports Variety. Shooting began yesterday (Jan. 3) at Pinewood Studios in London. Directed by Marc Forster, the 007 effort also stars Mathieu Amalric, Giancarlo Giannini and Anatole Taubmann. Sony and MGM plan to release the film on Nov. 7.
*Thomas B. Edsall of The Huffington Post has written a column that suggests the almighty dollar sign led Magic Johnson, an early contributor to the presidential campaign of Sen. Barack Obama, to jump ship and back his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton. Under the heading "When Magic Backed Hillary, Did Money Buy Love?" Edsall writes: In late-March 2007, Earvin "Magic" Johnson made his first ever contribution to a presidential campaign -- $2,300 to Barack Obama. No formal endorsement accompanied the cash, but most political operatives thought that the famous Lakers point guard would be firmly in the corner of the first African-American to have a real shot at winning the presidency. On August 28, Johnson made the second contribution of his life to a presidential candidate. This time, however, the recipient was Hillary Clinton. Johnson gave her $2,300 for the primary election and another $2,300 to use in the general election, if she won the Democratic nomination. In addition, the contribution -- chickenfeed to someone of Magic's wealth -- was backed up with an all-star endorsement. After Oprah Winfrey, the richest African-American in the country, announced that she would hold a September 6 fundraiser for Obama at her Santa Barbara home, Magic countered with an offer to host a Clinton fundraiser at his Los Angeles house on September 14. As the two candidates competed for the support of black luminaries, Johnson announced that co-chairs of his Hillary event included Motown Records founder Berry Gordy, musician Quincy Jones, and music executive Clarence Avant. "Senator Hillary Clinton understands the domestic and international issues better than anyone," Johnson said in an August 12 press release announcing his fundraiser. "[Hillary] has the experience and knowledge to help lead our country and get us to a better place. We need a winner as our next president." On December 17 and 18, Magic joined Bill and Hillary for a tour of Iowa. Speaking in Davenport, Johnson infuriated Obama supporters when he told the crowd, "You don't want somebody in there that is young or a rookie at politics" -- a direct dig at Obama. What happened between Johnson's $2,300 contribution to Obama in March and his $4,600 donation to Clinton in August? Over the summer, a seemingly unrelated series of events intervened. In June, Johnson, who is an extraordinarily successful entrepreneur, began talks with billionaire Ron Burkle about forming a joint investment fund of $750 million or more to take advantage of the growing and lucrative markets in inner city and minority-owned businesses, according to Eric Holloman, president of Johnson's Canyon-Johnson Urban Fund. Burkle has been one of Bill Clinton's closest friends and supporters. Burkle and Bill Clinton were often seen together in and around Los Angeles, and Clinton frequently stayed at Burkle's mansion, which was the scene of much-reported partying. Burkle gave Bill Clinton a lucrative consulting job as a senior advisor to his investment firm, Yucaipa Companies. When Hillary announced, Burkle became a strong backer and encouraged Johnson to support her. Now, spokesmen for both Burkle and Johnson flatly dispute that there is any connection whatsoever between the Burkle-Magic investment partnership and Magic's Hillary endorsement. "There is no correlation at all between the [Johnson-Burkle] private equity fund and him backing Hillary Clinton," said Eric Holloman. "No one has told Earvin what to do since Pat Riley [former Lakers coach]. Earvin needs no more fame, no more money." Frank J. Quintero, spokesman for Burkle's Yucaipa Companies, described as "preposterous" any linkage between planning the fund and the endorsement. "Ron and Magic have been friends for a dozen years and have supported the same candidates," Quintero said.
Danny on Acting, Directing, and His Commitment to the Downtrodden and Disenfranchised *Born on July 22, 1946, Danny Lebern Glover was the eldest of five children raised in San Francisco by James and Carrie Glover, both of whom were postal workers. After graduating from George Washington High School, he attended San Francisco State University where his progressive political perspective was forged as a member of the Black Student Union. He developed an interest in acting in his late twenties, which is when he started studying at the Black Actors’ Workshop in San Francisco. Danny’s screen debut came in Escape from Alcatraz in 1979, though he found his breakout role as Moze opposite Sally Field’s Oscar-winning performance in Places in the Heart. His most notorious outing arrived in 1985 as Albert in Steven Spielberg’s screen adaptation of Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, The Color Purple. However, he is likely to be best remembered for the four buddy flicks he made with Mel Gibson during the run of the Lethal Weapon franchise. Plus, he has handled title roles as Nelson Mandela in Mandela, as Boesman in Boesman and Lena, and appeared in everything from Witness to Predator 2 to The Rainmaker to Beloved to The Royal Tenebaums to Manderlay to Shooter to Dreamgirls. Danny enjoys his best role in years in his latest film, Honeydripper, a historical drama set in the Jim Crow South. The movie has him re-teamed with iconoclastic director John Sayles and complemented in this endeavor by a very talented ensemble cast which included Charles S. Dutton, Mary Steenburgen, Lisa Gay Hamilton, Vondie Curtis-Hall, Stacy Keach, Keb’ Mo’, Sean Patrick Thomas and Yaya DaCosta. Danny Glover: Hey, Kam, how’re you doing? Kam Williams: Okay, and you? DG: Good! Good! KW: Thanks so much for the time. I really appreciate it. DG: Oh, you’re welcome. KW: So, what interested you in the script of Honeydripper? DG: Oh, man, it always starts with the story. This story was just so compelling, plus the period was fascinating, and I liked the way in which John Sayles, the director, was able to integrate the music with all the changes that were happening during that period. So, there’s not only the musical dynamics of it, and using music as a metaphor in some way to talk about change, the piano being superseded by the electric guitar and rock music etcetera, but also the way in which John has layered the story, and layered the characters. They have their own histories which reflect a much broader history of the changes which were about to occur. KW: What I appreciate about this film is how it recaptures a slice of African-Americana from a period during which black people’s existence was denied by the mainstream culture. As a child of the Fifties, I remember how people would yell for everybody to come when you just saw any black face on television. DG: Absolutely! And the images then on TV were stereotypes and buffoons. And the images of Africa were of Tarzan. So, I just think that there’s a way in which this film, in some sense, takes another step in terms of presenting people in real time in real life. And as we reflect upon that, we see the embodiment of not only the musical dynamic and changes that occurred within that period of time, but also we see the emergence of the social changes and the political changes that were happening as well. DG: Where’d you grow up? KW: In St. Albans, New York in the late Fifties. DG: Then you saw it happen during a different period but, yeah, you hit on the way all forms of music indigenous to black people have resonated, whether it’s blues, or jazz, or gospel music, how that forms a foundation and resonates in our lives. My dad was born in Kansas City, Missouri in 1919, at this moment in time when all this stuff was happening around music. And his life reflected that movement of music. So, music becomes something of a barometer for looking at the world and for looking at our situation through the music itself. KW: I spoke to John Sayles the other day, and find it interesting that this is his third film with an African-American ensemble, along with Brother from Another Planet and Sunshine State. DG: What I think is so wonderful about John is his historical relevance and reverence. You see, John really feels that, yeah, individuals may mark a moment, but things really happen with the collective movement of people. So, he’s able to identify, in his movies, this unique transition from the individual, as an individual lives his life, to what his life manifests in terms of the collective movement among a people as well. That’s unique, because he achieves this without being didactic, expository or rhetorical. KW: So, tell me a little about your character in Honeydripper, Tyrone “Pinetop” Purvis. DG: He’s an independent black businessman trying to save his business. First of all, this was a rarity in the South that we know in 1950. That’s one aspect. Hey, countless, young African-American men were trained in the navy or the army about radio. Here’s a guy who takes that technology and uses it as part of his artistic expression. How many men is he representative of? John gives him a back story, and one that is consistent with the historical evolution. And then my daughter [played by Yaya DaCosta] who decides that she has aspirations outside of the constraints and limitations that are placed upon young black girls in the South. She wants to go to beauty school… She wants to travel…She wants to see this… She wants to see that. These are little revelations which are manifestations not only of an individual’s identity and personality but are also reflective of a collective movement of people. KW: That’s why I appreciated Honeydripper. It tackles some sensitive social issues in a serious fashion, like how innocent black men used to be sentenced to chain gangs in the South to be exploited for free labor. Ordinarily, movies make light of it, such as that comedy Life, starring Eddie Murphy and Martin Lawrence. There, they treated blacks’ second-class status as a fait accompli and as something to joke about. That’s supporting the status quo, not challenging it. DG: Exactly. Supporting it, rather than questioning it and bringing to the world’s attention the real impact on us of various transgressions. These feelings and these emotions are repeated, because history is not merely individual stories, but it’s a collective story as well. KW: Well, I’m very eager to see the biography of Toussaint L’Overture you’re going to direct, starring Don Cheadle, Mos Def and Chiwetel Ejiofor. KW: There are almost no other black actors who have reached the prominence that you have who have remained very vocally and actively committed to progressive political causes. Where do you find the strength to persevere? DG: Well, the way in which artists’ careers suffered 55 years ago because of the House Un-American Activities Committee’s draconian measures and very Fascistic process of attacking creativity and their imaginations. Back then, unions were larger and more powerful. Social movements and ideological struggles were much more prominent, and a part of the social discourse. It doesn’t happen in the same form now, but today there are other subtle ways in which they attack the credibility of artists like Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins. KW: When you mention the House Un-American Activities Committee, it makes me think of Paul Robeson who was from Princeton, which is where I live. He was blacklisted back then. DG: We owe so much to Paul. He is definitely one of my heroes. Right at the top with Harry [Belafonte]. KW: Are you ever concerned about the toll that your activism might take on your career? DG: No. I tell people, “You can’t tell me who I can talk to. You can’t tell me what I can talk about. You can’t pick my friends. And in a democracy, you can’t tell me that I can’t talk about real issues.” They attacked us for being against the war, even though everybody’s against the war now. Today, a cat who’s in favor of the war is an anomaly. My critics have taken to attacking my relationships, but they have nothing to say about the substance of what I’ve had to say about the state of education, or about what’s happening with working people and in New Orleans. They don’t want to talk about that. KW: Yeah, they’ve been condemning you for your relationship with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. DG: Look here. Here’s a man who has African blood in him with whom I share things in common, such as how we feel about poor people. How come I can’t talk to him? How come he can’t be my friend? How come he can’t be my brother? Because you say he can’t? Because you don’t like him? KW: Let me ask you just a couple more questions. The Columbus Short question. Are you happy? DG: Yeah, I’m happy. I’m a grandfather, and I’m in love with him. He’s almost four and he’s my running partner. I’m trying to insert myself in his life every way I can. And he knows it. KW: And the Jimmy Bayan question. Where in L.A. do you live? DG: I live in San Francisco in the Haight-Asbury district. I grew up in the Haight-Asbury. KW: Thanks again for the time, Danny. Keep giving them hell and the best of luck with this film. DG: Thank you, baby. Bye now.
For movies opening January 4, 2008 by Kam Williams BIG BUDGET FILMS One Missed Call (PG-13 for mature themes, frightening images, terror, intense violence and some sexual material) Shannyn Sossamon stars in this remake of Chakushin Ari, a high attrition-rate horror flick from Japan about a traumatized young woman who’s afraid to answer her cell phone after several of her ill-fated friends receive messages accurately predicting exactly when and how they are about to die. With Edward Burns as the detective determined to crack the case.
INDEPENDENT & FOREIGN FILMS A Bloody Aria (Unrated) Appearances can be deceiving in this gruesome examination of bullying about a perverted music professor (Byeong-jun Lee) who kickstarts an escalating roundelay of revenge after making unwanted advances on his pretty protégé (Ye-ryeon Cha) while driving her to an audition. (In Korean with subtitles) The Killing of John Lennon (Unrated) Chilling bio-pic presumes to get inside the mind of Mark David Chapman (Jonas Ball), the deranged maniac who claimed to be inspired by the Devil and by the book The Catcher in the Rye to murder The Beatles’ John Lennon before then being instructed by God to plead guilty to the senseless killing.
"It was character that got us out of bed, commitment that moved us into action and discipline that enabled us to follow through." — Zig Ziglar: American author, salesperson, and motivational speaker
Jan. 4: Actress Jill Marie Jones ("Girlfriends") is 33. Jan. 5: Actor Ted Lange ("The Love Boat") is 60. Drummer George "Funky" Brown of Kool and the Gang is 59. Jan. 6: Singer Kathy Sledge of Sister Sledge is 49. Singer Eric Williams of BLACKstreet is 48. Director John Singleton is 40.
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Jan. 5, 1911: Fraternity Kappa Alpha Psi was founded at Indiana University. Jan. 6, 1820: The first organized emigration to Africa begins when 86 free African Americans leave New York Harbor aboard the Mayflower of Liberia. They are bound for the British colony of Sierra Leone. (Source:
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