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10-08-08 EUR ALL ON ONE PAGE(October 8, 2008)
HALLE BERRY IS ESQUIRE'S 'SEXIEST WOMAN ALIVE': Photo spread in Nov. issue. *Esquire magazine has crowned Halle Berry "Sexiest Woman Alive" on the cover of its upcoming November issue, which features a photo spread of the actress in various white tank tops. "Yeah, we are working on that!" he said at Elle's 15th Annual Women in Hollywood event in Beverly Hills, where Berry was honored on Monday.
*R. Kelly won $3.4 million in a lawsuit against his former tour promoter, but has yet to collect on the judgment. The singer's camp is now asking a Los Angeles court to assist him in tracking down the payments, reports the Associated Press. Singer Ne-Yo recently won a $700,000 judgment against Rowe after he sued because he was dropped from Kelly's tour after only two shows.
*Former "American Idol" finalist Paris Bennett, a.k.a. "Princess P," gave birth this week to a 5-pound, 15-ounce baby girl she has named Egypt. "I'm so excited to finally see my little angel – and man, does she have lungs on her," Bennett, 20, said of her newborn. "I guess she's gearing up to be the next American Idol." Paris announced her pregnancy in June, but chose not to reveal the identity of the baby's father. She told the Minneapolis Star Tribune at the time that he "chooses not to be in the public eye."
*Santa Barbara-based firm One Way Publicity is denying recent reports that Janet Jackson's brother Randy said in an exclusive interview with a Michael Jackson fan site that her recent hospitalization was due to vertigo.
*Sherri Shepherd went off on Elisabeth Hasselbeck Tuesday morning during a Hot Topics conversation about – what else – the presidential race between Barack Obama and John McCain. For the second day in a row, Hasselbeck suggested that Obama, the Democratic presidential nominee, has not been open about his past relationship with former 60s radical William Ayers. She also said it was inconceivable that Obama was unaware that his former pastor, Rev. Jeremiah Wright, "was a hatemonger." Co-host Whoopi Goldberg immediately checked her on the "hatemonger" label, saying in Wright's defense, "this person did not like America. As a black person, we are very, very lucky. You don’t see where that's relevant?"
Translation: John McCain’s first wife Carol, a successful swimwear model when they married in 1965, was disfigured in a car accident while her husband was in a POW camp in Vietnam. (Icy roads caused her car to skid into a telegraph pole on Christmas Eve, 1969. Her pelvis and one arm were shattered and she suffered massive internal injuries. To save her legs, surgeons had to cut away huge chunks of shattered bone, taking with it her tall figure. She was confined to a wheelchair, was forced to use a catheter and has walked with a pronounced limp ever since.) She hoped that news reports of her accident would not reach McCain at the infamous "Hanoi Hilton" because she didn't want to weaken his spirit. When McCain returned home in 1973, he began cheating on Carol and eventually divorced her in 1980 to marry Cindy (18 years his junior and the heir to an Arizona brewing fortune) one month later. Watch the Shepherd/Hasselbeck exchange here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_pSsxCHtiCQ
*Sean "Diddy" Combs gets his Rat Pack on in a new ad campaign for CIROC Vodka. Entitled "The Art of Celebration," Diddy is featured in a modern interpretation of the famous clique that included Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford and Dean Martin, while Sinatra's renowned "Come Fly With Me" plays throughout. [View clip here/below: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fF3G7vdM2UI]
*Jay-Z had to cancel the second of his two free concerts in support of Barack Obama's presidential campaign due to a rumored problem with his throat. According to Allhiphop.com, the mogul pulled out of his scheduled concert at the Bayfront Park Amphitheatre after fans had already arrived to the venue. “The whole concert has had to be cancelled because it was Jay-Z who pulled out. We haven’t been told why, but I’m sure all the fans want an explanation,” an anonymous Bayfront Park official speculated, according to the Web site. Event organizers initially tried to stall for time, telling the audience that the main attraction was just running late. But, eventually the bad news was delivered to concert-goers. 'WEIRD AL' PARODIES T.I.'S 'WHATEVER YOU LIKE': Release available exclusively on iTunes for two weeks. *"Weird Al" Yankovic is back, this time with a parody of the most popular song in the United States this week – T.I.'s current No. 1 single, "Whatever You Like."
*Kanye West has announced that his upcoming Def Jam album, "808s and Heartbreak," has an official release date of Nov. 25. The rapper broke the news Friday during a surprise appearance at T.I.'s MySpace-sponsored concert in Los Angeles. "We just finished the album. I just got back from Hawaii earlier today," he told the audience before breaking into a track titled "Heartless," which he confirmed is the set's second single. First single "Love Lockdown" has sold 402,000 digital downloads in just two weeks of release, according to Nielsen Soundscan, and debuted at a career-best No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100. In other Kanye news, the artist is making headlines for his comment to Ellen DeGeneres on her rather masculine fashion choices during a visit to her talk show. "You have really great style," the rapper told DeGeneres on Tuesday's broadcast. He then addressed the audience, advising them: "Seriously, this is one of the people you should look at when ever you're trying to figure out how to put together an outfit – especially for guys."
*The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday refused to hear arguments for a new trial for Mumia Abu-Jamal, the ex-Black Panther accused of killing a police officer.
*Hundreds of influential entertainment and sports lawyers, executives and celebrities will converge next month at the Black Entertainment and Sports Lawyers Association’s (BESLA) Conference in the Virgin Islands.
*In the new issue of Harper's Bazaar magazine, actress Drew Barrymore talks about how Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama made her cry. "When I heard him speak about a gay person never having to sit outside the hospital room with their loved one sick inside, I burst into tears because so many people I care about are homosexual and it was profound to have someone be sensitive to that," she says in November's issue. "That's the kind of world I want to live in, where we're not holding our own principles in judgment above someone or against someone." *Barack Obama is the world's preferred choice for president of the United States by far, according to the results of a first-ever global presidential poll conducted by Reader's Digest magazine and published in the November issue, on newsstands Oct. 21. The poll, part of the cover story "How the World Sees Us," surveyed 17,000 people in 17 countries, including the U.S. Regarding the question of which candidate they would vote for if they could, respondents voted overwhelmingly for Obama in every country polled, with the exception of the United States, where Republican John McCain was preferred over Democrat Obama by a narrow margin. More Obama-related headlines and interesting reading: Sarah Palin is a B**ch...There, I Said It By a blogger who claims to be an 82-year-old woman named Helen Philpot • I guess I hit a nerve with my little story about the Governor, but I just got so mad when my friend Margaret told me she was thinking about voting for McCain and thought Sarah was kind of interesting. Well, we’ve survived a lot of differences over the years so I guess we can survive this one. Indiana Republicans Making Voting Harder for Blacks By Zachary Roth, TPM Muckraker • Indiana is one of the key red states that Barack Obama has unexpectedly put in play this year. So it's not surprising that the GOP is pulling out all the stops to keep it in their column -- including, predictably, launching an effort to make it much harder for African-Americans to vote. GOP Files FEC Complaint about Obama's Fundraising By Jim Kuhnhenn, The Associated Press The Republican National Committee filed a complaint Monday alleging that Democrat Barack Obama's presidential campaign has received illegal contributions from foreigners and donations that exceed federal limits.
*Frank Lucas, the Harlem drug kingpin played by Denzel Washington in "American Gangster," is taking his rapper son Frank Lucas Jr. on a 20-city tour to speak out against violence, reports the New York Post. "Frank Sr. *Beyonce finally opens up about her wedding to Jay-Z in the new issue of Essence magazine, which features the singer on the cover. “…What Jay and I have is real. It’s not about interviews or getting the right photo op. *A criminal court judge began the non-jury trial Monday for Rev. Al Sharpton and seven others regarding the traffic-stopping protests over the fatal police shooting of unarmed New York City man Sean Bell. Led by Sharpton, hundreds of demonstrators blocked traffic at bridge and tunnel entrances on May 7. More than 200 demonstrators were arrested, with most of the cases having been dismissed. Sharpton, who claims his protests were peaceful, rejected an offer to plead guilty in exchange for time served — the 5 1/2 hours he was held after his arrest. *The Fort Scott Tribune of Kansas reports of the recent fifth annual Gordon Parks Celebration for Culture and Diversity. Friends and relatives of the late photographer and filmmaker gathered from across the country to discuss his life and legacy. The Fort Scott native became the first black photographer for Life magazine and first black director of a feature film during his lifetime. GOP BLAMES BLACKS FOR WALL ST. WOES?: Rep. Barney Frank claims conservatives are trying to pin problem on minority lending laws. *U.S. Rep. Barney Frank is furious at conservatives who are blaming the nation’s economic woes on black people who purchased homes under a federal program designed to help poor people. “This is an effort I believe to appeal to a kind of anger in people,” Frank, a Democrat who chairs the House Financial Services Committee, told a Boston foreclosure-prevention forum on Monday.
Probably until his wan baby face matures to the point it finally begins to lose its angelic air of innocence. Meanwhile, he remains the ideal foil to portray the nerdy nice guy opposite a relatively-savvy female lead, a role he reprises to perfection in Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist. Unfolding mostly in New York over the course of one very eventful evening, this tenderhearted teensploit based on Rachel Cohn and David Levithan’s novel of the same name asks one simple question: Can love blossom between a couple of club kids from Jersey on the rebound while they’re careening around town in a yellow Yugo which is repeatedly mistaken for a taxicab? At the point of departure, we meet Nick (Cera), a high school senior planning to attend Berklee School of Music. He is currently the bassist for an otherwise all-gay punk rock group currently called The Jerk Offs. Seemingly inconsolable, Nick spends most of his free time daydreaming about getting back together, leaving long messages on her cell phone, and making her CD mixes of songs she just tosses into the trash. Hoping to shake him out of the doldrums, his band mates book a gig in a dive in lower Manhattan. Tris is in the audience that evening and teases her gal pal Norah (Kat Dennings) about being alone. Weary of her “friends with benefits” relationship with a shallow, emotionally-distant social climber (Jay Baruchel), Norah impulsively announces that she already has a new beau. She then marches up to Nick as he comes offstage, and whispers, “Will you be my boyfriend for five minutes?” in his ear before planting a kiss on his lips. Dumbfounded, he goes along with ruse, a charade which ends up lasting until four in the morning. For they soon discover that they have something in common, an appreciation of “Where’s Fluffy,” an up-and-coming combo rumored to be playing an impromptu set somewhere in the city that very night. They gradually get to know each other during their ensuing search for the elusive Fluffy, an effort intermittently frustrated by an ever compounding comedy of errors, involving a car crash, a lost friend (Ari Graynor) and lots of bodily-function fare designed to trigger one’s gag reflex. A meandering Manhattan travelogue with a payoff worth the wait, some gross moments notwithstanding.
To see a trailer for Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist, visit:
The trouble is that his adventures rely on rabbit-out-of-the-hat revelations which retroactively render the rest of what you’ve just watched inconsequential. Consequently, Shyamalan’s critics have deemed him a one-trick pony undeserving of his lofty status as a cinematic genius. Now, perhaps in response to his detractors, he has crafted The Happening with a more-transparent, but equally-unsatisfying twist. The film opens in New York where we find pedestrians exhibiting bizarre behavior which starts with catatonia and disorientation and culminates with their calmly committing suicide. The setting quickly shifts to the Philadelphia classroom of science teacher Elliot Moore (Mark Wahlberg). He and the rest of the faculty are soon summoned by the high school’s principal (Alan Ruck) who informs them about the strange goings-on in Manhattan and summarily cancels classes for the rest of the day. It’s not long before the folks in Philly start becoming infected with the same self-destructive urges. So, Elliot and his pal, Julian (John Leguizamo), decide to make a break by train to a presumably safe haven in the country. En route, they pick up a couple of loved ones: the former’s estranged wife, Alma (Zooey Deschanel), and daughter, Jess (Ashlyn Sanchez). Together, the four then embark on a valiant struggle to survive the godforsaken plague. Besides telegraphing what’s really at the root of the ho-hum havoc, The Happening is beset by a host of flaws, most notably, wooden acting jobs by Zooey Deschanel and Mark Wahlberg who barely demonstrate the emotional range of the zombies everybody around them is turning into. Fair (1 star) To see a trailer for The Happening, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4fwccFTJIdo
"Learn to pause.... or nothing worthwhile will catch up to you." — Doug King
Oct. 8: Singer Fred Cash of the Impressions is 68. Activist Jesse Jackson is 67. Singer Robert "Kool" Bell of Kool and the Gang is 58. Singer CeCe Winans is 44. Singer Teddy Riley is 42. Actor Nick Cannon ("The Nick Cannon Show," "Drumline") is 28. WEBSITE OF THE WEEK Just Us Books - Creators of Black interest books and products for young people. Get more info here: www.justusbooks.com
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