![]() Sat, Nov 7, 2009
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11-07-08 EUR ALL ON ONE PAGE(November 7, 2008)
ELECTION NIGHT WITH THE OBAMAS: People magazine in hotel suite with entire extended family.
*The new will.i.am video celebrating Barack Obama's victory that was supposed to debut on his Web site Wednesday – but didn't – will now make its premiere this afternoon on "The Oprah Winfrey Show," reports the Associated Press. The Black Eyed Peas leader had said "It's A New Day" would debut on dipdive.com the day after Obama was elected. A rep for the artist Will.i.am's now says the Chicago-based talk show will broadcast the clip, with other celebrities on hand. Will.i.am became a part of 2008 election lore when he debuted the video "Yes We Can" in February to millions of online views. Several stars including Ryan Phillippe, John Legend, Scarlet Johansson appeared, reciting lines from an Obama speech over will.i.am's music.
*Beyonce says she is ready, willing and able to do whatever necessary for President-elect Barack Obama on Inauguration Day in Washington. "I'm there. I can't wait," she told the Associated Press. "I feel like all of us, we're ready to do whatever we have to do. Whatever they want The singer said she already had to cancel a promotional trip to Japan to plug her new album, "I Am ... Sasha Fierce" so that she could remain in the U.S. on Election Night. Most important, Knowles said, is that the newly elected president has provided inspiration for African Americans. "My nephew, who is 4, when we say, 'You can do whatever, you can be whatever,' it's not cliche," she explained. DIDDY WAS 'STRAIGHT UP CRYING' TUESDAY NIGHT: Bad Boy mogul celebrates Obama's win and his birthday at NY nightclub. *Sean "Diddy" Combs began Election Day with cameras following him into the voting booth in Manhattan to cast his ballot for Barack Obama. By the end of the night, after Obama's win, he was in tears. "I was straight up crying," he confesses to People.com. "I was with my kids. It was a beautiful thing. I just thank God my prayers were answered."
*Suddenly free from an agreed-upon gag order, Newsweek has unleashed a ton of information about former GOP vice presidential pick Sarah Palin now that the campaign is over, including her alleged inability to understand that Africa is a continent, not a country. "There was great concern in the McCain campaign that Sarah Palin lacked the degree of knowledgeability necessary to be a running mate, a vice president, and a heartbeat away from the presidency," said Fox's Carl Cameron, citing Newsweek. "We're told by folks that she didn't know what countries were in NAFTA, the North American Free Trade Agreement -- that being Canada, the US, and Mexico. We're told she didn't understand that Africa was a continent rather than a country just in itself ... a whole host of questions that caused serious problems about her knowledgeability," said Cameron. "She got very angry at staff, thought that she was mishandled... was particularly angry about the way the Katie Couric interview went," he continued. The magazine reported Wednesday that Palin once greeted John McCain's male campaign staffers wearing nothing but a towel. At the GOP convention in St. Paul, Minnesota, Steve Schmidt and Mark Salter went to Palin's room to brief her. After a minute, Palin came into the room with a towel wrapped around her body, and another on her wet hair, the magazine reported. Newsweek also revealed that Palin spent more on shopping sprees at high-end department stores than originally reported.
*Acclaimed author and Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison said she decided to endorse Barack Obama for president back in January because of his literary knowledge and abilities. Morrison said she received a phone call from Obama seeking her support during the primaries. But before they got into politics, the author and the candidate had a little chat about literature. "He began to talk to me about one of the books I had written, 'Song of Solomon,' and how it had meant a lot to him," Morrison told the Associated Press in a postelection interview from her office at Princeton. Morrison finds herself wondering how some of her late friends would have reacted, like James Baldwin ("How I miss him now," she says), who in the 1960s had scorned as condescending Robert Kennedy's prediction that the United States would have a black president in 40 years. Were "Invisible Man"
*Hours before CNN announced Barack Obama had become the first black President of the United States, another bit of history was made at the network thanks to new age technology and guinea pig, will.i.am. The Black Eyed Peas front man appeared in CNN's New York set via a hologram image generated from 25 high-definition cameras that surrounded him in a tent at Chicago's Grant Park. The cameras duplicated his moving image in much the same way as a flight simulator would. On-screen, it appeared he was standing and talking to CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer.
*As Barack Obama was making history Tuesday night as the nation's first African American man to be elected president, some fashion critics admit being distracted by the dress worn by his wife, Michelle. Described by the President-elect as his "best friend" and "love of his life," Michelle Obama appeared onstage at Tuesday's Grant Park rally in Chicago wearing a black cardigan over a scoop-neck black sheath with splashes of red in the upper and lower half separated by a band of black at the hips. The outfit was a slightly modified version of a dress presented by designer Narcisco Rodriguez in September for the 2009 spring season, reports Agence France Presse. In other Michelle Obama news, the future First Lady chatted with current First Lady Laura Bush by telephone on Wednesday, according to Obama's spokeswoman. The incoming Obama thanked Bush "for the grace and strength she's demonstrated as First Lady and expressed appreciation for her guidance in the coming months," the spokeswoman said in a statement.
*MTV.com points out that the theme music used to close speeches given Tuesday night by both President-elect Barack Obama and former GOP nominee John McCain were from films starring Oscar winner Denzel Washington. The Web site reported: McCain left the Arizona stage to part of Hans Zimmer’s score from “Crimson Tide.” The 1995 Tony Scott film focused on a career Navy man (Gene Hackman), labeled a maverick by some, who is stripped of his authority and ultimately beaten by a young black guy, somewhat new to the scene (Washington). Then there was Obama, who left the stage to the strings of Trevor Rabin’s score from “Remember the Titans.” The 2000 Disney/Bruckheimer joint? MORE CELEB OBAMA CELEBRATIONS: Snipes, Whitaker, Star Jones, Reggie & Kim K., and more; plus, Pitt and Oprah discuss missing each other in Grant Park. *Michael Jordan, Russell Simmons, Wesley Snipes, Bob Johnson and Butch Lewis were at Diddy's big birthday bash/Obama watch party Tuesday night at a club in New York when the Illinois democrat was elected president. According to Page Six, "A huge roar shook the dining room" where they had all gathered to watch the returns. Jordan and Snipes later partied at Tenjune with fellow Chicagoan Larenz Tate, Knicks Jared Jeffries and Jerome James, and "Last Comic Standing" host Bill Bellamy, the surprise emcee for the night who shouted with excitement: "We are officially a country of change." Meanwhile, Forrest and Keisha Whitaker, Common, will.i.am, Star Jones, Hill Harper and Kevin Liles (Warner Music VP) celebrated Barack Obama's victory until 4 a.m. at The Underground in Chicago, Page Six reported. In Los Angeles, Kim Kardashian and her boyfriend Reggie Bush, both Obama supporters, ended up in a heated argument over some of his policies following his announcement as president.
*How much political humor can be squeezed out of a Barack Obama presidency without being politically incorrect, or insensitive to race? The issue was brought before a panel of experts Wednesday night under the title "We Have a Winner," which took place at 92nd Street Y on Manhattan's Upper East Side as part of the New York Comedy Festival. "The Daily Show" co-creator and political humorist Lizz Winstead, who hosted the debate, shrugged off the suggestion that the president-elect was too tough a target for real punchlines, according to the Hollywood Reporter.
*Mos Def is wanted for arrest in Las Vegas after an alleged scuffle with a photographer at a fashion trade show in August. Cops say 60-year-old photographer Volker Correl was snapping photos at the Men's Apparel and Garment Industry Convention in Vegas when the artist allegedly ripped the camera from around his neck.
*CNN anchor Anderson Cooper has professed his love for Bravo's reality show "The Real Housewives of Atlanta" and his favorite housewife, NeNe Leakes, on two separate talk shows within one week. MASE EXPANDS CHURCH INTO PHOENIX: Former Bad Boy rapper builds upon Atlanta location. *Rapper-turned-preacher Mason “Mase” Betha is building a second branch of his El Elyon International Church (EEIC) in Phoenix, Arizona, reports Allhiphop.com. The former entertainer says the second church falls in line with his plan to expand his ministry beyond its Atlanta location. Mase, who retired from rap in 1999 after declaring himself a born-again Christian, said he picked Phoenix after making several recent trips to the city. LISA BONET STRUGGLED WITH TV RETURN: 'To have my face reinstated in minds and homes once a week was an intense decision.' *Former Cosby kid Lisa Bonet says her decision to return to television – in a recurring role on the ABC cop drama "Life on Mars" – was not an easy one. "To have my face reinstated in minds and homes once a week was an intense decision," says the notoriously press-shy actress and mother of 19-year-old Zoe and 16-month-old Lola with boyfriend, actor Jason Momoa. The couple is expecting their second child in January. Although she's uncomfortable around the press, Bonet takes full advantage of the People interview to squash a widespread rumor that she also has a son.
*BET J bridges the worlds of music and virtual reality to bring viewers its first ever awards show, the BET J Virtual Awards, slated to premiere on BET J on Tuesday, Nov. 25 at 8:30 p.m. ET.
*Danity Kane singer Dawn Richard is side-stepping rumors that her attempts to go solo caused the pop outfit to fall apart. The group, put together by rap mogul Sean "Diddy" Combs for his reality TV series "Making The Band," was reportedly left with only two remaining members after Shannon Bex left and singers Aubrey O'Day and D.
*Funk veteran George Clinton and percussion maven Sheila E will venture out of their comfort zones along with five other stars in the third season of CMT's singing competition series, "Gone Country." Rounding out the cast are former Miss USA Tara Conner, singer Taylor Dayne, Monkees lead vocalist/drummer Micky Dolenz, actor Richard Grieco and "American Idol" first-season runner-up Justin Guarini. The contestants will spend two weeks working with songwriters on a country tune. The celebrity judged by host John Rich as the most prepared to impress a country audience will record and release their single to country radio.
*Japanese Olympic officials fear the election of Barack Obama as U.S. president could make his home city of Chicago the favorite to host the 2016 Olympic Games and harm Tokyo's bid. Tokyo, Chicago, Madrid and Rio de Janeiro are the four cities in the running to host the 2016 Games. "I wonder how IOC members will react when Mr. Obama appears in a presentation for Chicago," Japanese Olympic Committee President Tsunekazu Takeda told Japanese media Wednesday. The IOC will name the 2016 host at its general assembly in October next year. "Mr. Obama is popular and good at speeches, so things could get tough for Japan," said senior JOC board member Tomiaki Fukuda. *Former NBA star Kevin Johnson became the first black mayor of Sacramento, Calif. Tuesday night. The one-time All-Star point guard for the Phoenix Suns defeated two-term incumbent Heather Fargo in a run-off election. Johnson, a 42-year-old Democrat with conservative social views, was endorsed by fellow NBA heavyweights Shaquille O’Neal, Magic Johnson and Charles Barkley. He wants to raise the profile of his hometown and bemoans his city’s image beside the likes of Los Angeles and San Francisco. “We should be a destination place,” he said leading to the election. *Venus Williams won her third successive match in the WTA year-end championships in Doha Thursday, solidifying her spot in Saturday's semi-finals. The Wimbledon winner beat Russian world number two Dinara Safina on Tuesday, Olympic champion Elena Dementieva on Wednesday, and her sister Serena Williams, the US Open champion, on Thursday. The elder Williams sister will reach the last four of this event for the third time in her career. *Lewis Hamilton thanked McLaren personnel for helping him become Formula One's youngest champion, saying he plans to spend the rest of his career with the team. The 23-year-old Briton drove around the lake at McLaren's technology center Wednesday in an F1 car and received a big ovation from many of the 1,000 employees. Hamilton, who has a $120 million, five-year contract with McLaren, said he couldn't envision driving for another team. Hamilton's visit came the same day he received a congratulatory message from Queen Elizabeth II. He returned to Britain after finishing fifth in the Brazilian Grand Prix on Sunday, taking the season title by one point ahead of race winner Felipe Massa of Ferrari.
*Oprah Winfrey told her audience Wednesday that she had no idea whose shoulders she was resting on when cameras caught her bawling during Barack Obama's speech Tuesday night in Chicago's Grant Park. The media, however, has identified him as an Obama campaign worker from California. Co-worker Karen Wark says the man in pictures is Sam Perry, who worked at the Silicon Valley for Obama office. Wark couldn't give other details about Perry or his trip to Chicago. Oprah thanked the guy she called "Mr. Man" for letting her cry on his shoulder. *The New York Post is reporting that Curtis Scoon, once a suspect in the 2002 murder of rap legend Jam Master Jay, is shopping a screenplay about another infamous Queens slaying. Scoon, who was never arrested in connection with Jay's killing, tells Page Six he's pitching a story based on Police Officer Edward Byrne's 1988 shooting death in the line of duty. Scoonhas recently worked as a co-producer on BET's "American Gangster." *Award-winning playwright and performer Anna Deavere Smith concludes a 3-day run of her new one-woman play, The Arizona Project, exploring "women's relationships to justice and the law," tomorrow (Nov. 8) in Phoenix, AZ. The play was commissioned by Bruce Ferguson, director of Future Arts Research (F.A.R.), a new artist-driven research program at Arizona State University. According to a statement, it "was inspired by an ongoing series of initiatives of the advocacy group Arizona Lawyers Honoring Justice Sandra Day O'Connor." Smith presents "several interwoven monologues in this one-woman performance, drawing verbatim from a series of interviews she conducted over the course of three weeks in 2008." *TMZ.com is reporting that "Deal or No Deal" models Claudia Jordan, Aubrie Lemon and Lauren Shiohama have sued Nervous Tattoos photo agency claiming it hired them for an Ed Hardy billboard but were never paid the promised $600 for the one day shoot. In the lawsuit filed Wednesday in L.A. County Superior Court, the three suitcase holders are also seeking $54,000 in penalties.
*Thriller – Live, a touring musical celebration of the career of Michael Jackson, will begin performances at the West End's Lyric Theatre Jan. 2, 2009, prior to an official opening Jan. 21. The limited run will play through April 12. In a press statement, producer Nicol of Flying Music said, "Thriller – Live is an uplifting, feel-good show with incredible choreography and sensational songs that everyone knows and loves — it's just the sort of escapist entertainment people need to take their minds off how tough life is at the moment. Songs in the show include "I Want You Back," *Citi, through its partnership with Live Nation, is giving its cardmembers the chance to win exclusive access to music superstars Mary J Blige and Nickelback. From Nov. 9 through Dec. 28, every time cardmembers use participating Citi credit cards they will automatically be entered for a chance to win two Grand Prizes - joining Nickelback on their next North American tour for a backstage experience in three cities or joining Mary J Blige in the studio during an exclusive recording session. Full details and additional information will be available at www.stories.citicards.com.
*Barack Obama has yet to be sworn in as the 44th U.S. President, but various groups are already using the Internet to gather support for his impeachment. Yet another Facebook group, "Impeach Barack Hussein Obama," has 160 members. It decries that Obama "has voiced support for various unconstitutional programs such as the assault weapons ban, universal healthcare, and various schemes for wealth distribution."
For movies opening November 7, 2008 by Kam Williams
BIG BUDGET FILMS The Boy in the Striped Pajamas (PG-13 for mature themes) Holocaust drama about the 8 year-old son (Asa Butterfield) of a concentration camp commander (David Thewlis) whose forbidden friendship with a Jewish boy (Jack Scanlon) interned on the other side of the fence leads to devastating consequences. Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa (PG for mild crude humor) Animated adventure finds the colorful menagerie of domesticated New York zoo animals again struggling to survive in the wilds of the African jungle. Voice cast includes Cedric the Entertainer, Sacha Baron Cohen, Jada Pinkett Smith, Chris Rock, David Schwimmer, Ben Stiller, Will I Am, Tommy ‘Tiny’ Lister and the late Bernie Mac. Role Models (R for nudity, profanity, sexuality and crude humor) Sean William Scott and Paul Rudd co-star in this shock comedy as slackers sentenced to 150 hours of community service as mentors to a couple of impressionable youngsters (Christopher ‘McLovin’ Mintz-Plasse and Bobb’e J. Thompson). Soul Men (R for nudity, sexuality and pervasive profanity) Samuel L.
Eden (Unrated) Romance drama, set in Ireland, revolving around a woman’s (Eileen Walsh) desperate effort to save her disintegrating marriage when her husband (Aidan Kelly) of ten years starts hanging out in pubs where he has his head turned by younger women. Gardens of the Night (Unrated) Gillian Jacobs and Evan Ross co-star in this harrowing drama about a couple of traumatized 17 year-olds struggling to survive on the streets after enduring years of abuse in captivity as the sex slaves of a child molester (Tom Arnold) Cast includes John Malkovich, Harold Perrineau, Jeremy Sisto and Cornelia Guest. The Guitar (R for nudity, sexuality and profanity) Nothing left to lose musical drama about a just-dumped, recently-fired, terminally-ill woman (Saffron Burrows) who decides to max out her credit cards while on a self-indulgent spending spree during her last days on Earth. House (R for terror and violence) Spooky slasher flick, set in rural Alabama, about two couples on the run from a maniac bent on murder who end up fighting for their sanity and survival in a haunted house in the middle of the woods. Cast includes Allana Bale, J.P. Davis, Michael Madsen, Leslie Easterbrook, Julie Ann Emery and Bill Moseley. JCVD (R for profanity and violence) Jean-Claude Van Damme plays himself in this crime comedy about an aging action star who lands back in the limelight when he ends up in the middle of a real-life hostage drama. Pray the Devil Back to Hell (Unrated) Feminist documentary chronicles the extraordinary efforts of the group of visionary women who spearheaded the peace movement which led to the end of Liberia’s decades-long civil war and the rise to power of Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, Africa’s first elected female head of state. Repo! The Genetic Opera (R for profanity, sexuality, drug use, graphic violence and gore) Sci-fi horror flick, set in 2056, about an enterprising biotech company which turns from savior to monster during a planetary epidemic when it begins repossessing transplanted organs from patients who can’t pay their medical bills. Cast includes Paris Hilton, Paul Sorvino Joan Jett and Bill Moseley. Stages (Unrated) Dysfunctional family drama, set in Amsterdam, explores the strained relationship of a divorced couple (Elsie de Brauw and Marcel Musters) who continue to squabble while sharing concerns about their troubled, 17 year-old son (Stijn Koomen). (In Dutch with subtitles) The World Unseen (PG-13 for sexuality, violence and mature themes) Homoerotic drama, set in South Africa under apartheid during the Fifties, about the forbidden love which unexpectedly blossoms between an East Indian café owner (Sheetal Sheth) and a pregnant, married woman (Lisa Ray) also of Subcontinent extraction.
Nov. 8: Actress Alfre Woodard is 56. Singer Diana King is 39. Nov. 9: Rapper Pepa of Salt-N-Pepa is 40. Rapper Scarface of Geto Boys is 40. Singer Sisqo (Dru Hill) is 31.
Ladies, do you need another pair of shoes? If so, here's a site with shoes in all colors and styles (www.headoverheelzonline.net/).
Nov. 8, 1938: Crystal Bird Fauset becomes the first black woman elected to a state legislature in the U.S. acquiring this distinction by being named to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Nov. 9, 1922: Dorothy Dandridge was born on this day in Cleveland, Ohio. She became the first black woman to be nominated for an Oscar for the role of Carmen in “Carmen Jones.” (Source: www.BlackFacts.com)
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