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10-13-08 EUR ALL ON ONE PAGE(October 13, 2008)
JANET CANCELS HER RETURN CONCERT: Singer was due back on the road Saturday but ended up postponing again on 'doctor's orders.' *Janet Jackson was supposed to resume her Rock Witchu tour on Saturday in Connecticut, but that show became her sixth concert to be cancelled due to an illness she has yet to disclose. Reps at the concert's venue Mohegan Sun said the show has been postponed because of "doctors' orders," but tickets will be honored for a rescheduled date to be announced in the near future. The 42-year-old has been sidelined since she was briefly hospitalized on September 29th, just hours before a show in Montreal. The Grammy winner was forced to postpone subsequent shows in Philadelphia, Boston, Greensboro, N.C., Atlanta and Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
*Maxwell treated fans to several new songs during a Thursday night performance at New York's Radio City Music Hall that ended with actual panties being thrown on stage, reports Billboard.com. As part of his first tour in six years, the soulful crooner sang "Pretty Wings," "Bad Habits" and "Comb" from his forthcoming Columbia album "Black Summers' Night." No release date has been announced. "This song, it's about wanting to be with somebody but meeting them too early," Maxwell told the audience of "Pretty Wings." The moderately paced "Bad Habits" found Maxwell asking in the chorus, "Will you forgive me?," while "Comb" showcased a two-step drum pattern with a strong horn section and a smooth guitar roll, notes Billboard.
Manuel also tells E! Online the series should not be referred to as a "spinoff," stating: "I can definitely say that. This is a new series that is a separate world from 'Model' and will really help women try to elevate their lives." As for "Top Model," Manuel says they will remain with the series, which already has a contractual pickup for three more seasons. Manuel is the creative director of the show's photo shoots; Alexander is a runway expert who has been a judge for the past few seasons. "Model" airs twice a year on the CW. Although ratings have dropped in recent years, the reality show remains the network's highest-rated series.
*Keith Sweat has two sons with Lisa Wu Hartwell, an entrepreneur/socialite on the Bravo series "Real Housewives of Atlanta," but the boys will never be shown on the series because the singer refused to sign a waiver allowing them to be filmed. "It was great exposure," Hartwell says.
*Photos of Beyonce dressed as a street cop from the set of her video for "If I Were a Boy" flooded the Internet last month. Fans will finally get to see the look in its entire context with today's scheduled premiere of the video on MTV, BET, VH1 and Fuse. "It's kind of like 'Freaky Friday'," Beyonce tells Billboard of the concept behind her cop role in the clip. "In the beginning of the video, my husband makes me breakfast and he's excited about it, and I kind of don't have time to eat. As a police officer, I have a male partner and the video goes through our days. My husband's at work and has attractive girls flirting with him but he declines their advances. I have a guy flirting with me, and I flirt back." Beyonce says the clip will bring to life common things that men do to hurt their significant others, like not answering their phone. "It's about all of the little things that mean so much in a relationship," says Beyonce. "At the end of the clip, you realize that I was acting out his life, and it all starts over again. He was a cop and everything that happened was really him doing the same thing to me." A video for her other single, "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)," will also debut today via MTV, BET, VH1 and Fuse. Both songs were released to radio last week and are the first from her forthcoming, as-yet-untitled album, due Nov. 18 via Music World/Columbia.
*Earvin "Magic" Johnson is speaking out against two conservative radio hosts in Minnesota who suggested Wednesday that his HIV is fake. "We can't have people out here making false statements and putting out bad information, because this battle is too big when it comes to HIV and AIDS," Johnson told The Associated Press regarding the remarks of Chris Baker and Langdon Perry of KTLK in Minneapolis. "I poured my life into it and a lot of other people have poured their life into it, into getting out the right information so people can protect themselves and know what HIV and AIDS is all about." Baker responded, "Like Magic Johnson?" KTLK's apology statement said it recognized the seriousness of AIDS and the "great work" Johnson has done to call attention to the disease. Johnson, who was diagnosed with HIV in 1991, said his health is "wonderful." He also noted that he has HIV, not AIDS.
*Jennifer Lopez and her husband of four years, Marc Anthony, renewed their wedding vows in Las Vegas early Sunday morning in a spur of the moment decision. "They decided around 12:30 in the morning that they wanted to do it and started calling for ministers," a source told People.com. Two friends were on hand to witness the occasion, which took place at Caesars Palace's Forum Tower Penthouse at 3:15 a.m. Sunday. The service was officiated by Rev. Steven Smith. Before renewing their vows, the couple hung out at LAX Nightclub and The Bank, and also took in Criss Angel's new Cirque Du Soleil show Believe – all under the guise that they were in town celebrating Anthony's birthday from last month.
*Actor Jon Voight may be campaigning for Republican presidential nominee John McCain, but his famous daughter, Angelina Jolie, may be leaning toward Democratic candidate Barack Obama.
*Hundreds of voters in New York's upstate Rensselaer County were sent absentee ballots that listed the name of Democratic nominee Barack Obama as "Barack Osama," an error that recalls the name of 9/11 terrorist Osama bin Laden.
*The Reverend Al Sharpton was convicted last week along with seven others for disorderly conduct and blocking intersections, tunnels and bridges while leading protests against the 2006 police shooting of Sean Bell.
*In the November issue of Essence magazine, Star Jones opens up about her final days on ABC's "The View," saying of her former co-hosts "Those girls were hateful." Regarding her infamous dispute with co-host/producer Barbara Walters preceding her 2006 departure, Jones adds "Barbara set me up." Jones also talks to Essence about “falling into a depression” after losing her self-titled Court TV show last year; and her divorce from Al Reynolds, which was finalized in September. As for Reynolds' YouTube video in which he admits that he “still loves” Star, Jones responds: “I’m not in love with him.”
*Jamie Foxx is in final negotiations to join the Frank Darabont-directed film "Law Abiding Citizen," the Hollywood Reporter confirms. The Oscar winner will star opposite Gerard Butler in the psychological thriller about a successful assistant D.A. (Butler) who finds himself at the center of a vigilante plot hatched by a traumatized victim of the legal system (Foxx). Foxx's character is devastated to learn that, because of a plea bargain, one of his wife and daughter's murderers will be set free. So he unleashes revenge on the killers and those who made the deal. The actor next stars opposite Robert Downey Jr. in "The Soloist," directed by Joe Wright ("Atonement").
*The Barack Obama presidential campaign will pay NBC and CBS almost $1 million each for the campaign's half-hour ad buy in primetime on Oct. 29, according to documents obtained by the Hollywood Reporter.
*Philadelphia sports fans are known the world over for their booing, and GOP Vice Presidential nominee Sarah Palin got to experience it first hand at the Flyers hockey team's home opener Saturday night. As the self-proclaimed "hockey mom" from Wasilla, Alaska took to the ice with daughters Piper, 7, and Willow, 14, for the ceremonial dropping of the puck, a round of boos from the Wachovia Center faithful appeared to drown out the applause. [Click here to view: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g7TgDanmWkg] • Lynn Zinser's NYT hockey "Slapshot" blog: Palin was met with "resounding (almost deafening) boos from the Flyers crowd." • Fox Sports: "The crowd reacted with a mixture of cheers and boos at her appearance." • Associated Press: "The Alaska governor heard a few boos when she walked onto the ice Saturday night. But that soon turned to polite applause as she walked out to center ice." • Politic "The world's most famous 'Hockey Mom' was greeted, like most any politician likely would be at a Philly sporting event, with more boos than cheers."
*Former track-and-field star Tim Montgomery was sentenced Friday to five years in prison for dealing heroin to an informant while he was under federal surveillance.
*The 75-year-old woman in the red John McCain t-shirt who made headlines last week with her erroneous comment to the GOP candidate that Barack Obama is an "Arab" continues to believe that he is despite a "no ma'am" denial by McCain himself.
*Jamaican reggae star Alton Ellis, known as the "Godfather of Rocksteady," died of cancer over the weekend in London, a hospital spokeswoman told the AFP Saturday. He was 70. The singer-songwriter was diagnosed with multiple myeloma last year. He endured a round of chemotherapy and resumed his career before he collapsed during his final performance in central London in August. He passed away peacefully at Hammersmith Hospital, the spokeswoman said. Ellis moved to Britain in the 1970s and went on to record a string of hits spanning more than 40 years, including "I'm Still In Love," "Dance Crasher" and "I'm Just A Guy." The rocksteady style of reggae comes from a dance that was mentioned in the 60s Ellis song "Rock Steady." A successor to Jamaican ska, the rhythm is slower and more relaxed. Jamaican reggae singer Delroy Williams, a friend and colleague of Ellis' since the 1960s, described his voice as "the sweetest in the reggae world." ITTY BITTY BITS: Beasties' 'Vote' tour; Mariah's luggage; Robin Roberts' battle; Diddy's rotator cuff. *The Beastie Boys are taking Sheryl Crow, Norah Jones, Jack Johnson and Ben Harper on the road in the coming weeks for the Get Out and Vote tour. "This election is too important to stay at home," the rap trio said Friday, adding that they are endorsing Democratic candidate Barack Obama for president. An Oct. 28 show in Richmond, Va. will feature Crow, Jones, Johnson and Santogold, while Harper and Tenacious D will support in St. *The New York Post is reporting that Mariah Carey and new hubby Nick Cannon had so much luggage for their trip from Los Angeles to Las Vegas that they had to take it off of their chartered Gulfstream and fly it separately via Southwest Airlines accompanied by two members of her entourage. Carey was in Vegas to host a party at The Bank nightclub at the Bellagio last week. *In the current issue of People magazine, "Good Morning America" host Robin Roberts opens up about reaching an all-time low while undergoing chemo treatments for breast cancer. "I was in a really bad place," she tells the magazine. "I didn't want to fake it [on TV]." The 47-year-old decided to take off the last three weeks of the year to get more rest. She rebounded quickly after her year-end respite. "I think taking long walks really helped," she says. "And I circled January 10, the day of my last chemo treatment, on the calendar so I had a goal, an end in sight." *Sean "Diddy" Combs had surgery earlier this month to repair his right rotator cuff, reports People. The mogul has been seen in recent paparazzi photos with his left arm in a blue sling sporting a Barack Obama pin.
*Georgia congressman and Civil Rights leader John Lewis has accused the Republicans of "sowing the seeds of hatred and division," citing the increasingly volatile atmosphere at McCain-Palin rallies. Lewis said the GOP has created a mood similar to the one fostered by George Wallace, a former segregationist governor and presidential candidate. "As one who was a victim of violence and hate during the height of the Civil Rights Movement, I am deeply disturbed by the negative tone of the McCain-Palin campaign," Lewis said in a statement. "Sen. McCain and Gov. Palin are sowing the seeds of hatred and division, and there is no need for this hostility in our political discourse. "During another period, in the not too distant past, there was a governor of the state of Alabama named George Wallace who also became a presidential candidate. George Wallace never threw a bomb. He never fired a gun, but he created the climate and the conditions that encouraged vicious attacks against innocent Americans who were simply trying to exercise their constitutional rights. Because of this atmosphere of hate, four little girls were killed on Sunday morning when a church was bombed in Birmingham, Alabama. The McCain campaign reacted quickly to push back against Lewis' statement: Congressman John Lewis' comments represent a character attack against Governor Sarah Palin and me that is shocking and beyond the pale. The notion that legitimate criticism of Senator Obama's record and positions could be compared to Governor George Wallace, his segregationist policies and the violence he provoked is unacceptable and has no place in this campaign. I am saddened that John Lewis, a man I've always admired, would make such a brazen and baseless attack on my character and the character of the thousands of hardworking Americans who come to our events to cheer for the kind of reform that will put America on the right track. I call on Senator Obama to immediately and personally repudiate these outrageous and divisive comments that are so clearly designed to shut down debate 24 days before the election. Our country must return to the important debate about the path forward for America
During those formative years, he forged a very close bond with the man he called Pops (Charles S. Dutton), a coal miner who instilled both a solid work ethic and a quiet sense of dignity in his impressionable young grandson. Those character traits would prove to be priceless to Ernie in scaling the obstacles he would encounter just because he was born black in an age when intolerance and segregation were the order of the day. By the time his widowed mother (Elizabeth Shivers) remarried and regained custody of her son, he had apparently already developed not only the steely resolve to be the best, but also the temperament to test the country’s color-coded discrimination wherever he encountered it. Both his athletic prowess and his yearning for equality are the subject of The Express, a bittersweet bio-pic based on the best-selling biography of the same name by Robert C. Gallagher. The title comes from the nickname Ernie earned in high school in upstate New York, where he was dubbed “The Elmira Express” because of his considerable feats on the football field as a running back. Following in the footsteps of the legendary Jim Brown (Darrin Dewitt Henson) to Syracuse University, he went on to eclipse his predecessor, leading their alma mater to a national championship while becoming the first African-American to win the Heisman Trophy as the nation’s best football player. Though drafted by the Cleveland Browns, the glory was not to last, as Ernie would succumb to leukemia at the tender age of 23 without ever having a chance to play in the NFL. Directed by Gary Fleder, The Express does an excellent job of chronicling each of the critical touchstones in the abbreviated life of a role model worthy of emulation, whether he’s being refused accommodations in the South at a “White Only” hotel or being threatened on account of his skin color by fans from an opponent’s school. Considerable credit must go to Rob Brown for his convincing depiction of the film’s ill-fated hero as an endearing combination of integrity, vulnerability and sheer guts. Equally-effective are stellar support performances turned in by Omar Benson Miller as his teammate/buddy, Jack Buckley, and by Dennis Quaid as Syracuse Coach Ben Schwartzwalder. Another plus is the magical production’s recreation of the period via an appropriately retro musical score along with fitting backdrops, wardrobes, mannerisms and slanguage from the bygone era via painstaking attention to detail which only add to the picture’s palpable sense of realism. In sum, The Express amounts to a fine addition to the recent genre of socially-conscious sports flicks (ala Glory Road, The Great Debaters and Meet the Titans) which highlight individual triumphs not merely in and of themselves, but for the collective meaning of those historic moments to the masses of black people ever in search of civil rights. Excellent (3.5 stars) To see a trailer for The Express, visit:
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