Gillian Reagan
Articles by Gillian Reagan
Ally McBeal Guy Greg Germann to Star in Boeing-Boeing
Yesterday, 11:42 am
Remember greedy weirdo Richard Fish on Ally McBeal? He owned the Boston law firm filled with annoyingly quirky characters. His affinity for women with chicken-like "neck wattles"? Well, the actor who played Mr. Fish, Greg Germann, is still around. You might've seen him in Talladega Nights, the 2006 Nascar racing movie starring Will Ferrell that was actually pretty funny. But now you can see him on stage. He'll join the cast in the sex comedy of errors Boeing-Boeing starting Sept. 9, according to Playbill. The play won a 2008 Tony Award-winning Best Play Revival. read more »
New Media Breakthrough at the DNC: Going Live on Cells
Yesterday, 11:01 am
Big news events like the Olympics and the Democratic National Convention usually spark new media technologies and breakthroughs.
Here's one, pointed out to us by Lost Remote. Washington Post reporter Ed O’Keefe recorded the clip above using his cellphone and streamed it live onto WashintonPost.com.
"This is one of the first times a newspaper organization has had the ability to bring this level of live video coverage to viewers," according to a WashingtonPost.com publicist.
The Washington Post and Newsweek.com equipped its journalists with cell phones featuring an application produced by Comet Technologies. According to the company's Web site, the technology has been in development for four years and is the first and only technology that allows reliable video to be transmitted to and from common cell phones. Cool stuff.
Todd Solondz Set to Creep Us Out Again
Aug. 28th, 2008, 2:58 pm
Creepy director Todd Solodnz will be making another movie for the misanthropes. He just got financing for a kind of sequel to Happiness, the 1998 dark (dark!) comedy that haunted us for weeks thanks to its creepy masturbation scenes. A new indie production and finance company Werc Werk Works offered up the cash, Variety reports. But they can't even describe what it's about. Here's what they're saying: read more »
When Will Classic Movies Be Available On the Internet (Legally)?
Aug. 28th, 2008, 1:00 pm
Don't hold your breath on this one. Studios and TV stations are holding on tight to their catalogs, despite the fact that digital downloads of movies do well on paid services like iTunes (and can probably be found in pieces or in full on illegal download sites). Citizen Kane, The Godfather, Annie Hall, Star Wars, and many of the top 25 most successful movies at the U.S. box office aren't available online and they probably won't be any time soon.
Studio executives told Variety that many new movies are still being broadcast on pay TV, cable, and other networks. What about older titles? read more »
A New Kind of Keytar: JamLegend, Guitar Hero for the Internet
Aug. 28th, 2008, 11:54 am
Say good-bye to workplace productivity! JamLegend--a free, internet-based version of Guitar Hero--is totally going to be the new Scrabulous, allowing people to procrastinate and waste time at work and at home by....rocking out on their keyboards! Amazing! We may never work again.
TechCrunch tells us all about it. It's in private beta but you might still be able to play the initial version when you sign up with their secret code: TechCrunch. Once you pick a song and a difficulty level, the game begins. On your computer screen, notes flow down as dots on a guitar fret, and you have to be quick on the keyboard as they pass by. read more »
Still-er My Beating Heart! Ben Gets Museum Tribute
Aug. 27th, 2008, 4:30 pm
Oh we're sure the Museum of the Moving Image's board was just tickled about their choice for this year's honoree at their swanky 24th annual black-tie salute. Reuters says it's Ben Stiller, the guy who parodies last year's honoree, Tom Cruise, as TomCrooze, the actor's "stunt double."
So at Cipriani 42nd Street on Nov. 12, we expect to see one of these Tom Crooze clips in the tribute reel and maybe a few from his new movie with co-star Mr. Cruise, Topic Thunder.
Guggenheim Gets $1 Million Gift
Aug. 27th, 2008, 3:20 pm
The New York Times reports that the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation is getting a $1 million award for its coming exhibition “The Third Mind: American Artists Contemplate Asia, 1860-1989.”
The National Endowment for the Humanities is the gift-giver and will fund the exhibition, which will display loaned objects from European and Japanese museums, as well as other American museums and private collections. Artists inlcuding Georgia O'Keeffe, Ezra Pound, Jack Kerouac and Yoko Ono will be featured. You can check out the 270 works starting Jan. 30 through April 19.
Iraq Doc No End in Sight to Air on YouTube
Aug. 27th, 2008, 2:22 pm

If you're lucky, you can find a few clips of obscure documentaries and mainstream films on YouTube. But they don't stay up long because the site's police take it down because of copyright issues. But now YouTube is getting into the feature film screening business.
They're airing filmmaker Charles Ferguson's documentary No End in Sight between Sept. 12 and Nov. 1, according to Reuters. The documentary, about America's dubious decisions in the lead-up to the Iraq war, got an Oscar nod for best feature-length documentary and got the special jury prize at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival.
YouTube is taking a big step politically (releasing a film about Iraq during election season) and technologically. We wonder what else they'll be screening in the future...
Haley Joel Osment Sees Mamet People
Aug. 27th, 2008, 12:30 pm
You guys, Haley Joel Osment is 20 years old! 20! We'll always see him as the creepy kid who saw dead people in The Sixth Sense. God, we're old. Anyway, Mr. Osment is all grown up and making his Broadway debut in the revival of David Mamet's American Buffalo, according to BroadwayWorld. At least he still has those rosey baby-faced cheeks! He joins John Lequizamo and Cedric the Entertainer was junk shop workers who scheme to steal a rich man's coin collection. The show opens Nov. 17 at the Belasco Theatre.
Brooklyn Does Bendel
Aug. 26th, 2008, 10:10 pm
On a recent muggy Monday afternoon, Jill K. Davis, 26, a jewelry maker from Ohio, stepped into Fort Greene boutique Thistle & Clover and began laying out delicate earrings and necklaces on a pristine black-and-white table in the middle of the small space. With a wall of colorful silk dresses and dressy tops behind her, the boutique’s co-owner Camilla Gale, 24, picked up one of Ms. Davis’ rings adorned with a tiny, handmade sterling silver house featuring two windows and a teeny front door. “I had a couple who wanted that as an engagement ring because, they said, it was like they found a home in each other,” Ms. read more »
The Palladinos Blog Denver for EW
Aug. 26th, 2008, 4:20 pm
The Culture Czar has always had a soft spot for Gilmore Girls, the beloved mother-daughter dramedy that thrived on the WB channel for six seasons. In 2006, before the seventh season, the show's new studio and its creators, Amy Sherman-Palladino and her writer-producer husband Daniel Palladino, couldn't come to agreements on a new contract, and the couple left the show and left usheartbroken. Gilmore Girls' suffered and was cancelled last May, but we still DVR the repeats on the ABC Family Channel (every weekday at 11 a.m!).
So we're happy to report that the witty couple is still going strong and getting in on the action in Denver. They're guest blogging on Entertainment Weekly's PopWatch Blog during the convention.
"Our first impression of Denver: It's Reno, but bigger," starts out their first entry, titled "Insanity in Denver." They've been running into Christians in street malls and "feverish nutballs," as they put it. What about the Hillary supporters? read more »
Hollywood Is Nerding Out and Networking With Online Video Games
Aug. 26th, 2008, 1:10 pm
We imagine Hollywood wheeling and dealing to be much like what happens on Entourage. There's booze, lavish lunches and maybe even pool parties with pretty ladies. But the LA Times has the real scoop on how Hollywood is networking and making deals these days... through online video games.
Every Thursday night, up-and-comers in Hollywood calling themselves Nerd Poker, play an Xbox Live game together and sometimes end up making deals and connections. The 95-member strong group started two years ago when Misher Films executive Kevin Chang and Variety reporter Ben Fritz wanted to do a little online gaming without being taunted by teen nerds. So they started an online gaming group of their own and invited friends in the biz.
"While the aim was not necessarily to do business, I think the casualness and the lack of pretense made us all really close," said Mr. Chang told the LA Times. "And who wouldn't want to do business with friends?" read more »
Where to Watch the Convention Online
Aug. 26th, 2008, 11:23 am
While you can read plenty of Democratic National Convention live-blogging, commentary and video on the Observer Does Denver blog, you might want to check out these sites in another tab for live streaming video.
There is, of course, lots of live coverage from major network sites, including MSNBC, ABC News (via Yahoo News), CNN, and Fox News. CBS News' Katie Couric has been recruited to do special Web-only segments live from the convention. C-Span has a new video hub that incorporates YouTube videos and Qik livestreams. The Huffington Post is using Kyte's video service. You can get the live stream in high definition from the Democratic Party itself over at DemConvention.com.
The Washington Post and Newsweek teamed up for live-streaming convention coverage online from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. (for your end-of-workday internet fix) and again from 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. each night this week.
Director David Wain on Getting Girls in Wainy Days
Aug. 26th, 2008, 10:53 am
Director David Wain has had a cult following since his 1993 sketch comedy show The State, which he made with college buds Michael Ian Black and Michael Showalter. Wain obsessives followed him to summer camp for 2001's Wet Hot American Summer and then in 2007, they got a mixed-reviewed The Ten (the Czar interviewed Mr. Wain at the Sunshine theater when that movie came out). Now his fans have followed him to the internet. His web series Wainy Days is a minor hit on comedy site My Damn Channel, with more than 6 million viewers clicking over to watch him fail miserably at wooing women in five-to-six minute-long shorts.
The third season finale of Wainy Days "aired" yesterday and Wired interviewed Mr. Wain about the success of the web series and his new movie, Role Models, starring Paul Rudd (dreamboat) and Elizabeth Banks (fem dreamboat).
How does his real-life girlfriend feel about him making out with ladies and broadcasting it on the internet? read more »
NBC Loses Web Game in Olympics Coverage
Aug. 25th, 2008, 5:13 pm
Did you see the New York Times' positive coverage about web viewership of the Olympics "soaring"? Well, we beg to differ.
NBC was going for the gold (forgive us) with all their online coverage of the Olympics. They launched a brand new cross-browser, cross-platform, and cross-device plug-in website to cover the Olympics and unleashed more than 2,000 hours of online video. But they didn't even qualify to compete, according to recent numbers. Techcrunch tells us that Yahoo Sports beat NBCOlympics.com with an average of 4.7 million visitors a day versus 4.3 million, according to Nieisen Online. Yahoo didn’t even have video. Worse, NBC’s Olympics video ad revenues came to only $5. read more »
Is Damien Hirst Reinventing the Art Business?
Aug. 25th, 2008, 4:38 pm
That is what Melik Kaylan asks in this Wall Street Journal piece. He thinks international art star Damien Hirst is cutting out the middle men of the art world, gallerists, since he's decided to auction his pieces directly from Sotheby's (the preview for the Sept. 15 and 16 auction is happening in the Hamptons this weekend, btw). Is this just more evidence of Mr. Hirst's "titanic Duchampian originality, as if even the way he plans to sell his work is a radical new art form"? Or is he really upending the art market as we know it?
There is some speculation that this might be a pivotal moment, like the end of the studio system in movies or the continuing decline of the record labels in the music business.
It's A Boys' Life For Jason Biggs
Aug. 25th, 2008, 11:30 am
Jason Biggs long ago ditched the American Pie college humor crowd to take on more serious roles. But he won't be far from his frat boy past in his new part in a revival of Howard Korder's Boys' Life at Off-Broadway's Second Stage Theatre. Playbill is reporting that he'll play one-third of a college buddy trio, including Rhys Coiro (who has been spotted on HBO's Entourage as that crazy director guy) and Peter Scanavino (subUrbia, Shining City) who romp around New York in a kind of prolonged adolescence. Directed by Rent's Michael Greif, play previews will begin Oct. 2 with an official opening scheduled for Oct. 20. Get tickets before the planned closing on Nov. 9.
Springsteen to Close Down Yankee Stadium?
Aug. 22nd, 2008, 1:10 pm
Of course, the Yankees will try to upstage Billy Joel's final farewell to Shea. The New York Daily News is reporting that George Steinbrenner and son Hank want either the Boss or Paul McCartney to bring the stadium down in November. Sources close to both performers aren't aware of any negotiations. But Steinbrenner is a-brainstormin' nonetheless.
Hamptons Elite Get Hirst Auction Preview
Aug. 22nd, 2008, 11:56 am
Fancy Hamptons art fiends will be checking the mail early today, as Sotheby's is sending out exclusive invitations to a preview of their three-catalog sale of Damien Hirst's works. The actual auction takes place in London on Sept. 15 and 16. But on Aug. 28, Hamptons-dwelling VIPs will see 10 highlights from the "Beautiful Inside My Head Forever" auction at the East End of Long Island. The New York Sun reports that a reception will be at the Bridge Club, Bridgehampton.
Cynthia Nixon to Play Penny Arcade in British Show
Aug. 22nd, 2008, 11:33 am
If you've seen Cynthia Nixon looking busty and pouty in New York recently, it's because she's channeling Village performing arts fixture Penny Arcade. Ms. Nixon is currently shooting British ITV’s drama An Englishman in New York, a follow-up to the 1975 TV movie The Naked Civil Servant, according to Variety.
John Hurt reprises his role as English eccentric Quentin Crisp and follows his arrival in New York in the early '80s, where the flamboyant writer and raconteur was embraced by celebrities and artists.
New York Television Festival Premieres its Lineup
Aug. 21st, 2008, 2:55 pm
Attention all DVR addicts, the New York Television Festival is approaching (Sept. 12-17). Today, organizers announced their lineup for the 2008 edition of Premiere Week, featuring shows from ABC, Fox, CBS, the CW, NBC and HBO. It'll be like the upfronts for viewers instead of ad executives. There will be screenings of pilot episodes, followed by Q&As with actors and producers.
Some highlights?
On Sept. 12 at 8 p.m. ABC’s American remake of Life on Mars will have a preview. The show is about NYPD Detective Sam Tyler (played by Jason O' Mara) who finds himself transported from 2008 to 1973 during the tumultuous times of the Vietnam War, Watergate, women's lib and the civil and gay rights movements. read more »
Oscar Season Kickstarts! Frost/Nixon Trailer Released
Aug. 21st, 2008, 12:25 pm
Aaaaand they're off! We're barely out of summer blockbuster and silly movie season (Pineapple Express, anyone?) but the Oscar race is already on for the fall. Directors will be releasing their very serious and important films for the Academy's consideration. One of the first out the gate with a new trailer is Ron Howard's Frost/Nixon, based on the acclaimed Broadway play about reporter David Frost's televised talks with Richard Nixon after he resigned. Frank Langella is playing the fibbing president and Michael Sheen plays Mr. Frost. The movie will be in theaters Dec. 5, but slashfilm has the trailer for a preview.
Film Forum to Screen Restored Godfathers
Aug. 20th, 2008, 4:51 pm
Cinematical tells us that Film Forum will be screening newly restored 35mm prints of The Godfather and The Godfather Part II for three weeks beginning Sept. 12. There's no added footage or CGI effects (this ain't no big-time Star Wars re-release) but, rather, tastefully restored productions under the direction of director Coppola, original cinematographer Gordon Willis and film historian Robert A. Harris. You'll see Brando in a whole new light! read more »
Afternoon Blues Blaster: The Night of the Hunter on Hulu
Aug. 20th, 2008, 3:24 pm
Forget the afternoon coffee fix. How about some film noir for a pick-me-up? Hulu has posted a full version of Charles Laughton's 1955, genre-defining movie The Night of the Hunter. Nothing like Robert Mitchum as aself-appointed preacher/widow killer with LOVE and HATE tattooed on his knuckles to get your blood moving. The daymares will keep you from experiencing that delayed crash before work lets out. Hang in there.
Mamet's American Buffalo Roams to New Home
Aug. 20th, 2008, 12:28 pm
We told you about the revival of David Mamet's American Buffalo co-starring John Leguizamo and Cedric the Entertainer, and now we can report about its new home: the Belasco Theatre. American Buffalo takes over the stage from another Mamet play, Speed-the-Plow. That Jeremy Piven-starring production will move to the Barrymore Theater where Godspell was supposed to be performed. The Godspell production was postponed because of a financial fallout from an investor.
Directed by Robert Falls, previews of American Buffalo will begin Oct. 31 at the Belasco with an official opening scheduled for Nov. 17. Tickets will go on sale Sept. 4 through Telecharge by calling (212) 239-6200 or by visiting www.telecharge.com.
Stockard Channing, Martha Plimpton to Star in Pal Joey
Aug. 20th, 2008, 10:46 am
The Roundabout Theatre Company has just announced the casting for a new production of Pal Joey. Christian Hoff (Jersey Boys) will play Joey Evans, a lowlife nightclub entertainer who wants to own his own business. Stockard Channing (she's still got it) will play an older, married woman who he tries to seduce so she'll give him money to start his nightclub. Martha Plimpton (a two-time Tony nominee but we'll always remember her from the Goonies) will play Gladys Bumps, a chorus girl who dislikes Joey. Pal Joey was originally written as a series of awkwardly written letters published in The New Yorker in the late 1930s. The story takes place in Chicago. read more »
Fox Eyes Watchmen in Lawsuit Against Warner Bros.
Aug. 19th, 2008, 2:39 pm
Anyone who has seen Dark Knight (and that's every last one of us by now, right?) has seen the amazing, creepy, Smashing Pumpkins-soundtracked trailer for The Watchmen, a movie based on the late-80s graphic novel that redefined comics and superhero archetypes. Warner Bros. has finished shooting and is set to release the movie in theaters on March 6, 2009. But now Fox wants a piece of what looks to be a very big comic book movie pie and is battling about the Watchmen rights in court. Yesterday, a judge denied Warner Bros. the right to dismiss 20th Century Fox's lawsuit over the rights to the original graphic novel. read more »
Coen Brothers Cast Theater Actors for Serious Roles
Aug. 19th, 2008, 10:24 am
Michael Stuhlbarg is about to become A Serious Man for Joel and Ethan Coen. The brothers have penned a new movie and he's going to be their star. Mr. Stuhlbarg has been a fixture on New York theater stages, receiving a Tony nomination for his role in The Pillowman and recently starring as Hamlet for the Public's Shakespeare in the Park production this year. He's had some bit parts on Law & Order (like every New York actor), but now he'll get the chance to work on the big screen with the Coen brothers on their new dark comedy.
Fittingly, he'll play the title role as Larry Gopnik, a professor in the Midwest whose wife leaves him and his socially awkward brother (played by another prime casting choice, Richard Kind) won't move out of his house. read more »
John Leguizamo and Cedric the Entertainer Revive Mamet on Oct. 31
Aug. 18th, 2008, 6:15 pm
This Halloween, Mamet is returning to Broadway (again) with a revival of American Buffalo. Directed by Robert Falls, previews will begin Oct. 31 with a premiere set for Nov. 17. Latin "Sexaholic" John Leguizamo and "Original King of Comedy" Cedric the Entertainer will lead the cast about "the bungled heist of an old nickel by three lowlifes based in a Chicago pawnshop." According to press notes, the play suggests how the language and practice of American business and power politics are insidious forces in our society.
David Mamet's 1976 Obie Award-winning play, American Buffalo, originally opened at Chicago's Goodman Theater.
Actors At War: It's West Coast vs. East Coast in S.A.G. Labor Negotiations
Aug. 18th, 2008, 8:58 am
No, the Screen Actors Guild and the studios still haven't come to an agreement on a new contract, which expired June 30. Now the New York chapter of S.A.G. is getting mighty feisty with their Los Angeles leaders about finding a solution, or else. Yesterday, they sent out a biting statement, stating that S.A.G. leaders are "failing to bargain realistically" with the studios. They're demanding that they seek help from a federal mediator if contract talks don't progress by Aug. 25.
"Nothing is happening, and we're no closer to a deal today than we were six weeks ago," the New York members said in a statement, contradicting assertions by SAG Executive Director Doug Allen and President Alan Rosenberg that contract discussions with the studios were ongoing.
Weeds’ Southern Sprout
Aug. 14th, 2008, 9:28 am
Hunter Parrish, the blond cutie who plays Mary-Louise Parker’s increasingly hunky teenage son Silas on Showtime’s Weeds, moved to New York’s theater district just two weeks ago (his first time living in the city) with his 8-month-old Siberian Husky. He’s taking over the lead role as pensive student heartthrob Melchior in Spring Awakening, the Tony Award-winning rock musical based on the 1891 German play by Frank Wedekind. At the Eugene O’Neill Theater, where Mr. Parrish will make his Broadway debut on Aug. 18, the Plano, Texas, native seemed almost goofy, offering a hearty handshake, and donning bright blue Converse sneakers. read more »
George Furth, Sondheim Collaborator, Dies at 75
Aug. 12th, 2008, 12:55 pm
George Furth, a playwright who co-wrote musicals with Stephen Sondheim including Tony Award-winning Company, died on Monday in California at 75. He was hospitalized for a lung infection, but an exact cause has not been reported. Mr. Furth was a lanky, familiar character in many movies and tv shows including Blazing Saddles, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Murder, She Wrote, and Wings.
As a playwright, Mr. Furth reached Broadway several times, both on his own and as a collaborator. “Twigs,” his play about four women from the same family, all played by Sada Thompson, received mixed reviews when it opened on Broadway in 1971, though Mr.
Mary-Louise Parker Will Return to Broadway in Hedda Gabler
Aug. 12th, 2008, 12:10 pm
Seems like Showtime's Weeds stars have caught the stage bug recently. First, Hunter Parrish makes his Broadway debut in Spring Awakening on Aug. 18. Now Mary-Louise Parker, the MILF who plays his drug-dealer mom on Showtime's Weeds, will trot back onto Broadway too. She'll star in a revival of Henrik Ibsen's classic Hedda Gabler in January 2009 for the Roundabout Theatre Company. Previews are slated to begin on Jan. 6 2009 with an official opening on Jan. 25.
In Hedda Gabler, press notes state,"the newly-wed Hedda Tesman finds herself bored with married life to her scholar husband, George Tesman.
Theodore Solotaroff, Founder of The New American Review, Is Dead at 80
Aug. 12th, 2008, 11:23 am
Theodore Solotaroff, who in 1967 started The New American Review to shepherd in a new generation of writers and "new" journalists including Philip Roth, William H. Gass and Mordechai Richler in just the first issue, died on Aug. 8 at his home in East Quogue, N.Y. He was 80 and was suffering from complications of pneumonia, according to his son Jason.
Mr. Solotaroff was working as an editor and critic at opinion journal Commentary and the New York Herald's book supplement before pioneering the New American Review in 1967. The paperback literary journal, later called American Review, published E.L. Doctorow, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, William H. Gass, Michael Herr, Robert Coover, and Donald Barthelme,. He also ran an early excerpt from what became Philip Roth's novel Portnoy's Complaint.
Plum Sykes Writing Mogulettes Show for NBC
Aug. 12th, 2008, 11:07 am
Even as Candace Bushnell's NBC dramedy about powerful New York women Lipstick Jungle will return for a second season, Bergdorf Blondes author Plum Sykes is working on a new show called Mogulettes, about a group of women click-clacking their way onto airplanes instead of New York City streets. Variety reports:
"Mogulettes," which Sykes is penning with scribe Amy Harris ("The Comeback"), will center on jet-setting twentysomething women who have already become captains of industry. Show revolves around Eva, the beautiful and brilliant leader of a cosmetics empire.
Ms. Sykes originally brought a show based on her Bergdorf Blondes book to the WB a few years ago. But they passed. NBC seems to love it: "I think Plum has a unique insight into social dynamics in a way that she’s able to find these characters that are at once sympathetic and aspirational," producer Charlie Corwin told Variety.
Cruise's Thriller Movie Rewritten For Jolie
Aug. 12th, 2008, 10:46 am
Tom Cruise has had plenty of roles as an ass-kicking government agent (the Mission Impossible movies, Minority Report, um... does Top Gun count? ). But he has been flashing his funny bone more often these days. So he turned down producers after flirting with a new thriller project. Now the role of a CIA agent accused of being a Russian spy could be rewritten for Angelina Jolie, who is currently in close talks with producers. In her first part since having twins, the puffy-lipped actress will sweeten the title role in Edwin A. Salt.
Screenwriter Kurt Wimmer (Thomas Crown Affair, Equilibrium) will be turning Edwin into...Edwina? Philip Noyce (Clear and Present Danger, The Bone Collector) remains attached as director, according to Variety. read more »
Hair in Central Park Extended Through Sept. 7
Aug. 11th, 2008, 3:46 pm
Yay! More rock musical Hair for you! The Shakespeare in the Park production at the Delacorte Theater has extended its limited engagement to Sept. 7. It was originally set to run until Aug. 17. Then last week the Public extended it until Aug. 31. Now, there's an extra week to get your dose of peace, love and those hott Hair boys. read more »
Girl Talk Gets Dramatic, Plans 2012 Apocalyptic Last Show
Aug. 11th, 2008, 2:49 pm
Hipsters, start planning your pilgrimage. Greg Gillis, the much-buzzed about electro-dance Mash Up King, is planning a marathon, 24-hour final show on Dec. 21, 2012, which is considered the End of Days, according to the Mayan calendar.
"It's the day when solids become liquids and liquids become plasmas," Mr. Gillis told MTV News. read more »
Adrian Grenier Making Doc About 14-Year-Old Paparazzo
Aug. 11th, 2008, 2:28 pm
Adrian Grenier, the green-eyed Green-obsessed Entourage star, has announced the subject for his second documentary: a teenage shutterbug with a taste for celebrity.
Mr. Grenier will be directing a documentary called Teenage Paparazzi that revolves around his relationship with a teen photographer. He has been spotted carting Paris Hilton around for interviews, and Alec Baldwin, Whoopi Goldberg, Eva Longoria, Rosie O'Donnell and other celebrities will be featured, according to the Hollywood Reporter.
Mr. Grenier isn't just going to the celebs who are constantly bitching about being preyed upon. He'll also talk to some expert types and smarties including Noam Chomsky and Daily Show comedian Lewis Black about the culture of fame. read more »
Tori Spelling Pissed About 90210 Pay
Aug. 11th, 2008, 2:04 pm
Ah, while 90210 returns to TV this fall, so do the cat fights! Round 1: Tori Spelling vs. Jennie Garth and Shannen Doherty's paychecks! Nikki Finke at DeadlineHollywoodDaily is reporting that Ms. Spelling has been whining about the other original stars getting a bigger paycheck in the new series.
Insiders tell me that Tori was hired to reprise her role as fashion boutique owner Donna Martin for just "$10,000-$20,000" per episode. But then Jennie Garth and Shannen Doherty were signed for "$35,000-$50,000" a show. When Tori found out her former co-stars were getting paid way more than she was, she got pissed and demanded equal pay. But the network suits have refused. So now my sources tell me that Tori has pulled out of the series, which premieres with a 2-hour special on September 2nd. "She thought she deserved parity, and she's got a point," an insider explained to me.
Carla Bruni on The Clash
Aug. 11th, 2008, 12:38 pm
In April, we told you why New Yorkers care about Carla Bruni, 40-year-old model-turned-pop-star-turned-first lady of France. Now the "21st-century amalgam of Jackie O, Lady Di and J-Lo" is coming out with her third album, Comme si de rien n'était this week. The title translates to ''As if Nothing Happened,'' and it refers to the under-the-radar manner in which Bruni recorded the album over three weeks last winter, according to an article in Entertainment Weekly.
The reporter Missy Schwartz had a light-lunch kind of interview with Ms. Bruni, which resulted in lots of explanatory paragraphs and paraphrasing and not many quotations from Ms. read more »
The Police Raise $2.35 Million, Younger Listeners for Public TV
Aug. 11th, 2008, 12:00 pm
The Police held a benefit concert for New York's public television stations at Madison Square Garden on Aug.7. WNET and WLIW are psyched about the $2.35 million they raised (before expenses), but they are more excited about the prospect of that golden 20-and-30-something demographic flipping to their channels more often. The New York Times reports:
[I]t represents a new revenue stream for the stations and a chance to reach a younger demographic, said Neal Shapiro, president and chief executive of Educational Broadcasting Corporation, the station’s parent. Discussions with other music promoters and artists have already begun, he said. The final take will be higher by the end of the week: bidding on an auction of instruments signed by members of the band, which ends Thursday, has already surpassed $14,000.
Yowza! That'll fund a whole lot of documentaries on the Union Square green market! read more »
Remembering Isaac Hayes
Aug. 11th, 2008, 11:45 am
Soul icon, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer and funky Shaft theme writer Issac Hayes died Sunday at 65. His wife found him passed out near a treadmill at their home outside Memphis, and he was pronounced dead an hour later. The cause of death was not known, according to the New York Times. His Shaft song won an Oscar, his 1971 album Black Moses won a Grammy. He was a songwriter and performer for groundbreaking Memphis R&B label Stax Records, home of Otis Redding and Booker T. In the '90s, he popped back into pop culture as a voice for Chef on Comedy Central's South Park. read more »
Bernie Brillstein, Pioneering Manager and Producer, Dies at 77
Aug. 8th, 2008, 2:05 pm
Bernie Brillstein, the top Hollywood manager in the '80s and early '90s who launched careers for Lorne Michaels, John Belushi, Brad Pitt and Jim Henson, has died at 77. He had been suffering from complications stemming from double-bypass heart surgery in February, according to Variety. He was managing Mr. Michaels when Saturday Night Live premiered in 1975, as well as its breakout stars Mr. Belushi, Dan Aykroyd and Gilda Radner. Mr. Brillstein became an executive producer on many of his clients’ spinoff roles in movies after Mr. Belushi asked him help with The Blues Brothers in 1980. read more »













