Showing posts with label Entertainment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Entertainment. Show all posts

Saturday, 24 May 2014

Have you been watching … Gogglebox?

Channel 4's Gogglebox is reality TV for real: we watch people watching telly. But what makes it stand out is the sharpness of its sofa-based TV criticism.


In an age of on-demand television, Gogglebox really shouldn't work: a programme that watches people watching television, and then broadcasts it as entertainment. Yet, the third series of this glimpse into the nation's living rooms will come to a close this evening with its stars presumably contemplating the show's Bafta win; and Channel 4 admiring its excellent ratings.

We join 12 groups of friends and family as they slump on their sofas, and share their reactions to the week's telly – from EastEnders' Lucy Beale being murdered to 24, to Simon Cowell juggernauts. ("It's called Britain's Got Talent, not Britain's Got Talent and Emotional Issues.") Three series in and Gogglebox has grown in strength and confidence as regular "viewers" have become established characters, and new faces have been introduced.

For me, Leon and June Bernicoff, retired teachers from Merseyside, are the show's real stars. He sits slouched in his chair; she perches upright, ready to bat down the next bawdy remark Leon makes about Susanna Reid's legs or a sex scene in Ghost.

I've enjoyed Leon most when he's been watching party political broadcasts or Newsnight: he is supportive of gay marriage, Scottish independence and Britain's continued involvement in Europe. Shouting at the TV is one of life's great pleasures but so too is watching someone else berate Nigel Farage or "two dickheads" Gary Barlow and James Corden.

You start to watch other programmes with an eye to how the Goggleboxers will react, from The Island with Bear Grylls ("You'd think one of them would have smuggled in a box of matches.") to Eurovision ("I might start washing my clothes like that,"). Conchita Wurst was obviously going to cause a stir, baffling the majority of them, even if they did back her message of unity.

It's the product of tireless editing but the real joy of Gogglebox is that it feels authentic. This is how people really do watch telly; the stars of the show are sharing an experience, rather than trying to become famous. It helps, of course, that they also produce such honest and funny TV criticism. There is 14-year-old Amy Tapper's dismissal of Top Gear ("As pointless as pointless gets."), while elsewhere there are some home truths for Mastermind ("It's like, when the camera is on you, look as if a family member has died,"). Every one of the sofa-bound critics of Gogglebox has something to say. Except, perhaps, "silent" Jay, a member of the Woerdenweber family in Liverpool. Two series in and his only contribution has been in growing a bum-fluff beard.

Narrated alternately by Craig Cash and Caroline Aherne – a neat nod to the fact Gogglebox owes a big debt to The Royle Family – I do wonder about some of the newer families added to the Gogglebox mix. Are they quite as good as the others? I'm not sure the Moffatt family have truly clicked, with parents Mark and Betty seemingly tagging along reluctantly behind daughter Scarlett's witterings. Similarly, vicar Kate appears to have dragged husband Graham along for the ride: the highlight of their contributions coming from a pet dog. The third set of newcomers, Annie and Marc, have barely appeared.

Worries over these slow starts are, however, alleviated by the rise in popularity of those who made similarly underwhelming beginnings in series two. Both the Siddiqui family and Clacton trio Linda, Pete and George Gilbey, have provided regular highlights this series. Perhaps we just need to give the newcomers time to warm up?

So, have you been watching Gogglebox? Has the move to Friday nights worked? And what of the new characters? Who are your favourites and who needs the axe?

WATCH THE VIDEO







POST ORIGINATED FROM http://www.theguardian.com








TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   


Friday, 23 May 2014

Katie Piper's baby Belle provides pain relief after eye operation



Katie Piper cuddled up to baby daughter Belle for a sweet picture yesterday after undergoing an eye operation.

The inspirational model-turned-charity campaigner uploaded a picture to Twitter on Wednesday (21 May) showing herself sporting an eye patch and cuddling her tiny daughter.

Katie told fans: "I had a big operation at Centre For Sight today. No pain relief needed. My little lady takes all the pain away just by looking at me."

 Celebrity News
Katie Piper's baby Belle provides pain relief after eye operation
Published Thursday, May 22 2014, 11:05 BST  |  By Lara Martin  |  Add comment
Tweet 2
0
Submit
Katie Piper cuddled up to baby daughter Belle for a sweet picture yesterday after undergoing an eye operation.

The inspirational model-turned-charity campaigner uploaded a picture to Twitter on Wednesday (21 May) showing herself sporting an eye patch and cuddling her tiny daughter.

Katie told fans: "I had a big operation at Centre For Sight today. No pain relief needed. My little lady takes all the pain away just by looking at me."

Katie Piper poses with daughter Belle after having an eye operation, 21 May 2014

© Twitter / @katiepiper_


Katie has undergone a multitude of operations since suffering horrendous injuries in a 2008 acid attack. Her injuries including losing the sight in her left eye.

At the time, she said: "Of all my injuries, it's the damage to my left eye that has the most impact. The hardest part is not being able to see anything on one side. In crowded places it leaves me feeling scared and vulnerable."

Following stem cell treatment, the vision in her left eye was restored and the 30-year-old has said of Centre For Sight: "The improvement in my quality of the life the treatment had given me is priceless."

Katie became a first-time mother in March when she gave birth to daughter Belle Elizabeth





POST ORIGINATED FROM http://www.reveal.co.uk








TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   


EastEnders spoilers: 'Carter secret revealed' in tonight's episode, says Nancy actress Maddy Hill

There is another big Carter family secret being revealed in Thursday's episode, though, so that's another one to watch out for...'

EastEnders star Danny Dyer’s soap family looks set to be rocked in tonight’s episode as a Carter family secret is revealed.

Actress Maddy Hill, who plays the daughter of Danny’s character Mick and Kellie Bright’s Linda, also said she doubted Lucy Beale’s killer was one of the residents of the Queen Vic.

Speaking about upcoming plot developments, Maddy promised her character Nancy would soon be in the thick of the Walford action.

“There are Carter storylines where Nancy has to support the rest of the family coming up sooner, but after that, there'll be a window for Nancy's big storyline - so hold on for that!" she told Digital Spy.

She continued: "There is another big Carter family secret being revealed in Thursday's episode, though, so that's another one to watch out for..."

Asked whether Lucy’s murderer might be one of Nancy’s relatives, Maddy said: "I very much doubt it, based on what we've seen so far.

“I think Lee as the killer would be too obvious, but the only people who know for sure are the producers upstairs.

“The rest of us might not find out until February next year!"

Up for Best Newcomer alongside Coronation Street's Amy Kelly, Emmerdale's Michael Parr and Hollyoaks' Charlie Clapham at this weekend’s British Soap Awards, Maddy admitted the nomination came as a surprise.

"I've got absolutely no expectations whatsoever because I don't really know how the process works and what they base it on,” she said.

“Everyone in the category is really strong so I think everyone has got a really good shot."




POST ORIGINATED FROM http://www.mirror.co.uk












TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   


From There to Here; Horizon: The £10 Million Challenge – TV review



'Why, Mr Homegrown Drama Ambassador, with this three-part series written by Peter Bowker (of Occupation and Blackpool) that begins in 1996 with the Manchester IRA bombing, you are really spoiling us!"

It's called From There to Here (BBC1), and it's wonderful. Bowker's drama sets out to trace the repercussions of the blast for the city, and for the Cotton family, which includes Philip Glenister (as Dan), Steven Mackintosh (as Dan's shiftless brother, Robbo) and Bernard Hill (their eternally unimpressed dad).

For Manchester, what first appears to be a disaster soon turns out to have its upside as it becomes the catalyst for a £1.2bn regeneration of what I shall choose to annoy many, many people by calling the capital of the north.

For the Cottons, the outcome is less clear. Dan, restless in middle age and tired of piggy-in-the-middle between his father and the estranged Robbo, forms a friendship-with-benefits-shimmering-on-the-horizon with Joanne (an absolutely perfect performance from Liz White – tough and tender, wholly natural, wholly irresistible), a woman he rescues from the pub she was cleaning and he was drinking in when the bomb went off.

Robbo sees an opportunity to clear his debts with the local drug gang, by setting another "IRA" bomb off in his club and claiming compensation. And the patriarch has a stroke – although this may also have something to do with the row he had with Dan about the heavyhanded upbringing he gave his sons. "The IRA tried to kill me in the morning, you tried to kill me in the afternoon. I'd feel like shit if I were in your shoes, but we move on," he says to Dan, as soon as he's feeling a bit better. But a hospital visit from his Tory-voting, investment banking, PFI-and-private-equity-proselytising grandson Charlie galvanises him into looking anew at the moribund family business (a sweet-manufacturing company) and soon Dan finds himself embroiled in a new round of intra-Cotton politics – trying to save the business via Charlie's methods without alienating his hard-left daughter Louise (Morven Christie). Thus are the wheels set in motion for a cliffhanger ending which required the first, but still only a small amount of, willing suspension of disbelief, as Dan sat with Robbo's bomb on his lap, watching the clock tick down and murmuring, "You really need to tell me what to do", as Robbo Robbo-ishly dived for cover before it went – and boy, did it go – off.

Tune in next week if you want to find out who survived and who got splattered. But only if you like rich, confident, subtle, beautifully-written drama in which characters speak and act and crack jokes in bad situations just like real people do while it pursues the larger questions of what fate means, where hope goes and whether anyone – let alone football fans – has free will. Once again Bowker shoots, once again he scores.

Are you a genius of some stripe? Or someone who would like to play God with geniuses of many stripes? Either way, Horizon: The £10 Million Challenge was for you. To celebrate the series' 50th anniversary it launched a new Longitude prize. The original was a £20,000 purse offered by the good but baffled men of the British government in 1714 to anyone who could build a clock that could keep proper time at sea and so allow accurate navigation, domination of the seas and super-duper empire-building. It was won by Yorkshire clockmaker John Harrison.

Because humanity has progressed so remarkably well since then, the purse now stands at £10m and the problems to be solved are manifold. A sextet of presenters, including Dr Michael Mosley, delivered succinct and efficient little explanations for the need for a solution to antibiotic resistance, to global warming, dementia, paralysis, clean water scarcity and rising malnutrition. And – because this kind of thing is so much better left to people like me (who had to look up who won Euro 96 so that I could try to figure out where the plot of From There to Here was going, I shit thee not), since experts 'n' that are so elitist with their thinking and their learning and supple synthesising of lifetimes of accumulated wisdom – the public gets to vote on which one to tackle.

Anyone from around the world is able to submit his or her solution to whichever problem is voted the most pressing, and the £10m will be awarded to whoever is deemed – by a committee of specialists rather than vox pops by Fearne Cotton – to have succeeded.

Good luck to everyone, and here's to another half-century of Horizon. Nobody, at least not consistently, does it better.




POST ORIGINATED FROM http://www.theguardian.com








TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   


X-Men: Days of Future Past’ is fast, smart, and intermittently inspired

There’s only one great scene in “X-Men: Days of Future Past,” but it’s a keeper. A handful of Pentagon security guards have cornered the young Professor X (James McAvoy), Magneto (Michael Fassbender), and Wolverine (Hugh Jackman), and have opened fire; all appears lost. Just then the scene cranks to a standstill as the adolescent Quicksilver (Evan Peters) ambles about the room rearranging bullet trajectories, fists, and feet with bratty pleasure. In real-time, he’s moving too fast to be seen, but the movie lets us share this moment of empowered teen prankishness, Jim Croce’s “Time in a Bottle” playing archly on the soundtrack. This is what the new Spider-Man movie should feel like.

In all other respects — and aside from its criminal misuse of a Moody Blues album title — “X-Men: Days of Future Past” upholds the acceptably high batting average of Marvel’s second-tier movie franchise. (The first, and the company’s primary ATM machine, is “The Avengers” and its attendant spinoffs). “Days” is fast, smart, well-acted, and intermittently inspired, and if you don’t know or care who Beast or Blink or Storm are, you can safely skip it. Seven films in from 2000’s “X-Men,” the series is playing to the converted — which by now is almost everyone under 30.

The plot involves one of those time-travel loops that science fiction series go to when they get bored. “X-Men: Days of Future Past” begins where most modern blockbusters end — with New York City in ruins — and then proceeds backward. In this Apocalypse Next Week, an army of government-built robot Sentinels has wiped out the mutants and any humans whose DNA indicates they may someday have a mutant. Our mutant heroes hole up in a last bastion and, using the temporal-relocation powers of Kitty Pryde (Ellen Page), send Wolverine back to 1973 to stop the event that spooked humans into building the Sentinels in the first place: the assassination of their inventor, Dr. Bolivar Trask (Peter Dinklage), by the renegade shape-shifter Mystique (Jennifer Lawrence).
This means two things. First, we get a quartet of classy British thespians instead of a pair: McAvoy and Patrick Stewart as heroic Charles Xavier young and old and Fassbender and Ian McKellen as villainous Magneto sub and prime. Second: waterbed jokes. Under the direction of Bryan Singer — back behind the camera for the first time since “X-Men” and its initial sequel — “Days of Future Past” manages to spoof the polyester verities of the Me Decade while attending to the main order of business with grim, propulsive flair. As in 2011’s “X-Men: First Class,” the movie encompasses real-world events like the Vietnam War and the 1973 Paris Peace Accords without too much ahistorical disrespect. Anyway, it’s fun to watch a giant blue mutant (Nicholas Hoult) tear up the Champs Elysees.

There are the usual set-piece action sequences, envisioned with above-average flair: an assault on the Pentagon to free the imprisoned Magneto, a climactic donnybrook in which Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium takes a little airborne jaunt to see the White House. By contrast, the battle scenes in the day-after-tomorrow sequences feel distinctly sub-“Matrix,” with the android Sentinels chasing down a bunch of uninteresting random mutants: Iceman (Shawn Ashmore), Sunspot (Adan Canto), the portal-creating Blink (Fan Bingbing), the laser-shooting Bishop (Omar Sy). There’s a fellow named Warpath (Booboo Stewart), but I’m not clear on what his power is. Maybe finding lost car keys.

Where “Days” excels is in the comparative depth of its comic-book characters and the performances that bring them to life. (One exception: I love Peter Dinklage as much as the next “Game of Thrones” fanatic, but his Bolivar Trask is a dud.) McAvoy, always most watchable when playing conflicted wretches, puts some meat on the bones of the young Dr. X’s emotional crisis, and Jackman seems freed and fired up by the chance to star in a movie without the weight of a franchise on his shoulders. McKellen looks awfully tired by this point, but Fassbender makes the younger Magneto strappingly dangerous and genuinely unpredictable.
I do wish they’d found more for Jennifer Lawrence to do than run around in a blue nudie-suit and glower through her high kicks. The fact that one of the most mercurial young actresses of her generation is holding down not one but two mammoth entertainment properties seems a drag on her time, if not ours. In one scene, Mystique pulls Fassbender’s Magneto into a 1973 phone booth for an acrimonious chat about whether humanity deserves saving, and while it’s a fine, proficient bit, you can’t help thinking This is the best we can offer these two?

One aspect of the “X-Men” series that gets lost in this movie’s hullabaloo is its ongoing awareness of Otherness, of what it means to be different in a society hung up on normality. A potent metaphor and applicable to whichever group of social outcasts you choose, but not on the table this time. Instead — and it’s certainly a fair trade — “Days of Future Past” makes room for a deliciously bizarre extended cameo by Richard Nixon, played with beetle-browed brio by Mark Camacho. There’s even the briefly raised suggestion that the 37th president, among others, may have been a mutant with superpowers of his own. I guess those 18½ minutes of audiotape had to vanish somehow.



POST ORIGINATED FROM http://www.bostonglobe.com








TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   


Thursday, 22 May 2014

Celtic: Neil Lennon ends his four-year spell as manager




Neil Lennon has confirmed he has left Celtic after four years as manager following talks about his future.

It is understood that the former club captain had been considering his position for some time despite securing a third straight Scottish title.

"I have parted company with Celtic," the 42-year-old Northern Irishman said in a brief statement.

"The club are in a very strong position and I wish the fans and the club all the very best for the future."
 Lennon's statement came after Thursday morning meeting with his representative, Martin Reilly, and ahead of scheduled talks with Celtic chief executive Peter Lawwell.

"I can't thank Peter Lawwell and the board enough for their backing and support during my time as manager," he said.

Lennon took charge of the Glasgow club in 2010, leading them to three league titles and two Scottish Cups.

He also previously led Celtic to the Champions League last 16, with a victory over Barcelona in November 2012 being his side's most high-profile achievement.

However, he had concerns about his playing budget for next season and is believed to have been worried that his present side would be unable to negotiate three rounds of qualifying.

With Lennon having a rolling contract with Celtic, there has been annual speculation about his future and he is thought to have been close to leaving the club last summer before deciding to stay.
 West Bromwich Albion were believed to be aware of his availability previously before pursuing other targets but are again seeking a new manager after the departure of Pepe Mel.

Lennon has often expressed his desire to eventually manage in the Premier League in England but has been linked with the vacancy at relegated Norwich City.

Former Celtic defender Malky Mackay, sacked by Cardiff City last season, had been favourite to take charge at Carrow Road, but the Norfolk outfit have yet to make a move to appoint the former Watford boss.

Mackay will himself now be among those being linked with the vacancy at Celtic Park, although the bookmakers' favourite is former Hoops striker Henrik Larsson, currently in charge of Swedish outfit Falkenbergs.

Speculation had heightened this summer about Lennon's position after his assistant, Johan Mjallby, confirmed he was leaving the club to "seek some different opportunities".
 Lennon's representative, though, said that the Northern Irishman had "nothing lined up" at another club.

"Four years is a good spell to be manager of a club like Celtic, but now Neil wants to look ahead to the next chapter of his career," said Reilly.

"He just feels now is the time to move on to the next challenge."

A former midfielder who started his senior career with Glenavon in his homeland, Lennon played for Manchester City, Crewe Alexandra and Leicester City before joining Celtic in 2000.

He had a seven-year spell as a player at Celtic Park and returned as first-team coach in 2008 after short spells with Nottingham Forest and Wycombe Wanderers before taking charge in 2010 after a spell as caretaker.






( By Chris McLaughlin BBC Sport )

POST ORIGINATED FROM http://www.bbc.com









TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   


Jeff Seidel: Busy ice dancer Meryl Davis ready for vacation after another win



It’s finally over.

Meryl Davis has been on a long, continuous, four-month journey that took her from a gold medal at the Winter Olympics to a title Tuesday night on “Dancing With the Stars.”

And on Wednesday afternoon, after flying all night from California to New York City and appearing on a couple of TV shows, Davis took a moment to reflect.

She was exhausted, thrilled, grateful and sleep deprived.

“It’s means so much,” Davis said in a telephone interview. “It’s hard to let it sink in, especially now that ‘Dancing With the Stars’ is over, realizing everything that’s been given to me, everything that has gone on in the last four months has actually happened.
For months, Davis had been focused on winning a gold medal in ice dance with Charlie White.

On winning the Mirror Ball Trophy on “Dancing with the Stars.”

And performing in Stars on Ice, a 20-city tour around the country.

But now, it was all done. Her tone changed and she sounded like somebody who had just reached the finish line and realized she had won everything and wasn’t quite sure what to make of it.

“It’s hard to grasp,” she said. “How can one person possibly be so fortunate?”

She sounded genuinely blown away.

Perhaps she was being modest, but the answer is easy. It’s because she is so driven, talented and worked so hard.

“I’m definitely very grateful for all of these amazing experiences,” she said. “For the last four months now, it’s been amazing.”

After winning “Dancing With the Stars” with pro dancer Maksim Chmerkovskiy, Davis got on a private plane and headed to New York with the other dancers who finished in the top four.

“We literally changed our clothes and got on the plane,” Davis said.

She wore a T-shirt that read: “I love Monday nights.”

She was still wearing that same shirt when she rode through Times Square on a float, although she changed clothes for an appearance on “Good Morning America.”

“Not bad at all,” Davis said. “I’ll take it. It’s pretty exciting for a couple of months.”

During the show, she watched a taped message from White.

“I just wanted to say congratulations, Meryl,” White said. “No one knows better than me how much you deserve this. Through all the traveling, the sleepless nights, coming in here so early in the morning, you did everything with a smile on your face and inspired all of us. So thank you and congratulations.”

“Aww!” Davis said, smiling.

“Nothing but love,” said host Robin Roberts.

“Absolutely,” Davis said.

Then, Roberts got down to the nitty-gritty and asked the question millions of viewers wanted to know.

Are Davis and Chmerkovskiy dating?

“You weasel out of this question better than I do,” Chmerkovskiy said, looking at Davis.

And Davis started, well, weaseling, avoiding the question.

Part of the allure of the show was the sensuous, sexual chemistry between them.

“It was an incredible connection right away,” Chmerkovskiy said. “I don’t know why. We come from entirely different planets.”

After a dance, Davis and Chmerkovskiy headed to another show, “Live with Kelly and Michael.”

“You two are things of beauty,” Kelly Ripa said. “You look like you were born to dance with each other.”

“What are you going to do with your Mirror Ball Trophy?” asked Michael Strahan. “We just held it. That thing is heavy. What are you going to do with it? Next to your Olympic medals?”

“Yeah,” Davis said, breaking into a huge smile.

“I like you two as a couple,” Ripa said. “That’s all I’m going to say.”

Chmerkovskiy kissed Davis on the head and she rubbed his belly, totally comfortable playing her new sexy, sultry role.

Wait a second.

Where did that come from?

All of this sexiness?

About five months ago, I was at the Arctic Edge Ice Arena in Canton, preparing for the Winter Olympics.

“How would you describe Meryl Davis?” I asked her coach, Marina Zoueva.

“She has a unique look, unique personality,” Zoueva said. “For me, I call her Little Fluer.”

“Little Fluer?” I asked.

Marina spoke with a heavy Russian accent and struggled to pronounce some words.

“Flowwwwer,” she said, forcing it out slowly.

And it fit.

Beautiful. Classy. Elegant. Strong.

But nobody ever described Davis as sexy or sultry.

“She’s very quiet,” Meryl’s mother, Cheryl Davis, had told me, just a few days earlier. “She’s a perfectionist. I think people can take that the wrong way. She’s a very quiet girl.”

Davis was the girl next door from West Bloomfield, who grew up to be an Olympian. She had paired with White and they had been together since elementary school. They had grown close, like a brother and a sister. There was no question they loved each other, sticking together for so long. But there was no romance between them, even though some fans were obsessed with wondering.

White was dating Tanith Belbin, a former Olympic ice-dancing medalist, which he tried to keep secret.

If anything, going into the Olympics, Zoueva wanted Davis, 27, and White, 26, to be more sexy. More sultry in their routines.

So Zoueva tried to add an erotic flair to the middle of their free-dance program.

“It’s not natural for them,” Zoueva said.

How could it?

It would be like trying to act sexy with your brother or sister.

Ick.

Double ick.
A different Davis

But Davis changed over the last few months.

Something came out of her during this TV show and she started to act sexy, sultry and sensuous, while dancing with Chmerkovskiy.

“Did you know that was in her?” I asked her mother.

“No!” Cheryl Davis said with a laugh. “I had no idea. Are you kidding? I had never seen her dance like that.”

And I felt uncomfortable, even asking her about it.

“I apologize for saying this to you, her mom, but she looked so sexy,” I said.

“I know,” Cheryl Davis said. “He is bringing it out of her. The two of them together. I was very proud of her. It just shows me what she is made of. She is so strong and determined to do things right. She has always wanted to be artistic, she has always wanted to show that side of herself.”

Well, consider it done.

But why didn’t it ever come out on skates?

“We asked her about that,” Cheryl Davis said. “She said, when on the ice, the technical is what is important. You have to have the technical score. You have to watch your edges. You have to have everything in the right place. You practice the same dance for a year. It gets to the point where it’s robotic. It’s the same dance, all year long.

“But this is more emotional. She can let herself go and she’s not as inhibited.”

The most revealing part of the show was the small behind-the-scenes vignettes with Chmerkovskiy. We saw a playful side of Davis. We saw the intense side. And we saw how she connects with her partners.

During a modern dance Monday night, Davis and Chmerkovskiy writhed around the dance floor, as Davis wore a nighty.

“My jaw dropped,” I said to Jacqui White, Charlie’s mother.

“So did ours,” said Jacqui White, who has known Davis since she was a kid. “All of us were thinking the same thing. ‘Wow! Where did that come from?’ Not just me. Her parents. Everybody who knows her. She was so free, not a fear in the world, just having a great time and having a blast. It’s been fun and exciting, kind of a joyful feeling.”
Athletes dominate

“Dancing With the Stars” has turned into the place where sports and pop culture cross into each other.

Davis was the eighth athlete to win the show, which debuted on ABC in 2005. The others are Emmitt Smith, Apolo Anton Ohno, Helio Castroneves, Kristi Yamaguchi, Shawn Johnson, Hines Ward and Donald Driver.

“I think Olympians, in particular, have a great understanding of training,” Davis said. “It takes a lot of physical exertion. Whether you are a snowboarder or ice skater or a football player, you are used to waking up and expecting a certain amount of effort. Bringing that into the show is an advantage.”

Why do athletes do this show? The reasons are obvious. Some are trying to get back into the limelight. Some are trying to find a new audience. And others are trying to capitalize on their moment.

For Davis and White, it was a natural. They are dancers, of course. But this also was their best chance to capitalize on their gold medal. They have a small window to garner advertisements and endorsements. White finished in fifth place in a field of 12.

“It absolutely extends their awareness,” said David Schwab of Octagon, a company that helps brands figure out their celebrity strategy. “There were roughly 15-million people who watched them for 12 weeks. That’s about 180 million impressions on TV alone, let alone all the print coverage. Plus the fact that she’s in the newspaper every day or People magazine or on ‘Entertainment Tonight’ for a solid three-month run. I don’t know the numbers, but it’s certainly over a billion impressions.”

A billion impressions.

“I think it will help her from a business perspective,” Schwab said.

Her newfound sexiness makes her more marketable because she is proving to be an extrovert, a bigger-than-life personality, which is appealing to most brands.

But for now, the endorsements can wait.

Because Davis is going on vacation to Hawaii.

“Will you and Charlie ever skate together again?” I asked.

“Absolutely,” she said. “Whether it’s professional or shows, we haven’t decided yet. We have some time to figure that out. Charlie and I definitely intend to skate together for years to come.”

So this ending really isn’t an ending.

It’s just a well-deserved vacation.





POST ORIGINATED FROM http://www.freep.com








TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   


Wednesday, 21 May 2014

American Idol' recap: Jena Irene will probably win

The race for the next “American Idol” is going to be a tight one.

It’s not like either Jena Irene or Caleb Johnson dominated the final performance night. And since there isn’t really a demographic difference that gives one of them an edge, it really is up for grabs.

Jena Irene took two of the three rounds, though not by big margins. And sales would suggest that she is ahead since her “victory” single “We Are One” is the only one that charted on iTunes -- at a lowly No. 77, currently. (Compare that to “The Voice,” which occupied half of the iTunes Top 10 Tuesday after its final performance show.) However, history favors “Idol” contestants from the South -- 8 of the 12 previous winners have come from the South, including two from North Carolina, where Caleb hails from.

The race for the next “American Idol” is going to be a tight one.

It’s not like either Jena Irene or Caleb Johnson dominated the final performance night. And since there isn’t really a demographic difference that gives one of them an edge, it really is up for grabs.

Jena Irene took two of the three rounds, though not by big margins. And sales would suggest that she is ahead since her “victory” single “We Are One” is the only one that charted on iTunes -- at a lowly No. 77, currently. (Compare that to “The Voice,” which occupied half of the iTunes Top 10 Tuesday after its final performance show.) However, history favors “Idol” contestants from the South -- 8 of the 12 previous winners have come from the South, including two from North Carolina, where Caleb hails from.
Voting continues until 1 p.m.



ROUND 1: SIMON FULLER PICK The creator of “American Idol” chooses what the finalists sing.

Jena Irene, “Dog Days Are Over”: Jena tries to give herself a catch phrase in the middle of the Florence and The Machine hit, an ill-advised “LET’S GO AMERICA!” delivered in an odd scream voice. She does OK, but nerves get the best of her. “There were a few issues with breath control,” Keith Urban said. However, Jennifer Lopez said, “It was a really good start.”

Caleb Johnson, “Dream On”: This is a perfect fit for Caleb, allowing him to show off his power, nailing the high notes at the top of the Aerosmith song and getting Lopez and Urban to their feet. “That’s what you gotta do,” Lopez said. “This is the finale. This is it . . . You gotta carpe diem.”

ROUND ONE WINNER Caleb



ROUND TWO: Contestants pick

Jena Irene, “Can’t Help Falling in Love”: She did a lovely job of reworking the Elvis Presley classic, keeping the arrangement simple and letting her powerful voice sound pretty and vulnerable. Urban refers to Christina Grimmie’s version of the song on “The Voice,” though not by name, calling Jena a leader. “It’s overwhelming when you do that song,” Lopez said. “It makes me feel things. It makes me do things I’ve never done before.”

Caleb Johnson, “Maybe I’m Amazed”: His take on the Paul McCartney classic wasn’t quite as emotional as the first time he did it. It was good, but not great, which the judges picked up on immediately. “Your power is so undeniable,” Lopez said. “When that soul comes through, that’s the thing that gives the goosies.” Harry Connick Jr. and Lopez gave the first round to Caleb and the second to Jena, while Urban said Caleb won Round One and they tied in Round Two.

ROUND TWO WINNER Jena



ROUND THREE: Victory single

Jena Irene, “We Are One”: Her song choice was good, reminiscent of Of Monsters and Men, sounding both poppy and slightly alternative. She did a good job with it and that may be enough. “It suited you,” Lopez said. “I think it was a nice finish to the show.”

Caleb Johnson, “As Long As You Love Me”: This song is a mess and Caleb may have lost by choosing it. He sounded good in parts, but as a whole the melody just didn’t fit together. “It’s insane, I am dying to see what happen tomorrow,” Urban said. “Good luck, America,” Lopez said.

ROUND THREE WINNER Jena



SHOULD WIN ‘AMERICAN IDOL’ Jena

WILL WIN Jena

ACTUALLY WON ???




post originated from http://www.newsday.com







TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   


Mallory Edens reacts to NBA Draft Lottery experience

On Tuesday night, the Cleveland Cavaliers won the NBA Draft Lottery for the second straight year which landed them the No. 1 pick in the 2014 NBA Draft, but they weren’t the biggest star on the night. That honor belonged to Mallory Edens, the 18-year-old daughter of Milwaukee Bucks co-owner Wesley Edens.
The Bucks earned the No. 2 pick in the draft, while Mallory earned more than 20,000 new followers on social media.

It was really quite stunning.

As it turns out, Mallory Edens didn’t actually think she was going to be the Bucks representative for the lottery. When her father first mentioned the possibility to her, she thought that it was all a joke.

“He sort of brought it up in passing one time and I though he was joking and then here I am, so I suppose it wasn’t a joke,” Mallory told JSOnline.com.

“I was really nervous but really happy to get the second pick. I was extremely nervous, but it was really fun.”

The last time we saw this kind of reaction over a woman on social media was Katherine Webb. If Edens can flip her Internet stardom into more opportunities in her personal life, that is great for her.

“She’s definitely the more photogenic one, so I was happy to give it to her,” Madison Eden, Mallory’s older sister, said. “I could not be up there. She was amazing. … What a great way to start.”

In the meantime, we will all have to just sit back and be thankful that Wesley Edens let his younger daughter on the stage because it brought us some fantastic memes.



post originated from http://fansided.com







TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   


What will Sean say? Charlize Theron reveals son Jackson's nickname is 'the little Republican'... as he is always saying 'no'




Her beau Sean Penn holds famously left wing views.

So it would be interesting to know what he thinks of Charlize Theron's son Jackson being nicknamed 'the little Republican.'

The glamorous South African revealed the moniker had been coined by her A Million Ways To Die In The West co-star Seth MacFarlane due to the fact the two-year-old is always saying 'no.'

Speaking on Wednesday's The Ellen DeGeneres Show about how much she loves her adopted son, she said: 'He’s great. You know, he pretty much he's just…I just scored big time.

'He’s great. Seth calls him the little Republican. Cause he’s just always saying no.'

And despite the Family Guy funnyman attempting to play dumb on the matter, the 38-year-old actress insisted on spilling even more of the beans, this time about her boy's behaviour.

The Monster favourite said: 'No, no, no, no, no, no... Everything’s no.

'No, no, no, no, no, no…No, Seth, no. Mama, no. No. It’s a lot of that.'

And when Ellen pointed out it is when they start saying 'why' that the trouble really begins, she admitted that is one word he is yet to use.

She said: 'Not yet. No, he’s not there yet. He’s a little slow on the speech, but he’s hitting the no really well.'

The Young Adult star also said that while the youngster may not yet understand her job, he loves to see her on massive billboard posters.

Charlize said: 'I don’t know if he understands what I do, but he definitely knows when he see’s the billboards for the posters, you know for the movie.

'He knows that’s me. And he was on the movie when we were shooting so he saw me in the cowboy hat and everything.

 And I was driving him to kindergarten two days ago and we were stopping you know just as we were driving he was like "mama, mama, mama," pointing at the posters.

'There’s the one of all four of us and we were at a light and he said, "Mama where’s cowboy hat?" And I went "wow, that’s, that’s a big, that’s great" and then as I look back he has a big grin on his face and he just goes, "other lady princess"

'Ya. He thought Amanda (Seyfried) was a princess and his mom just wore a cowboy hat. That was it.'

Charlize has also just revealed how she and her latest lover gradually fell in love over the course of a 18-year association.

She said: 'If you have that kind of enduring friendship like we did, you value it and you don't want to just make an impulsive decision that can damage that.'

Sean, 53, is said to be hoping to whisk the former model down the aisle, but he may have a bit of a wait on his hands, as she previously said she would not tie the knot until gay marriage was legalised in the US.

post originated from http://www.dailymail.co.uk










TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   



The Voice Season 6 winner announced during 2-hour finale; OneRepublic, Tim McGraw, Coldplay perform



The three finalists battled it out Monday night and America voted to determine the winner of season 6 of The Voice.

Team Usher and Josh Kaufman were named the winners Tuesday night during the two-hour finale.

Special guests Coldplay, OneRepublic, Tim McGraw and Ed Sheeran also performed Tuesday night.

Christina Grimmie from Team Adam, Kaufman from Team Usher and Jake Worthington from Team Blake were vying to become the next winner of The Voice.

CONTEST: Michael Buble, Eric Church, Motley Crue, Jesus Christ Superstar at BOK Center and you could win a pair of tickets to each.



Copyright 2014 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.




POST ORIGINATED FROM http://www.kjrh.com






TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   


Christina Grimmie & Ed Sheeran Perform on 'The Voice' Finale

Christina Grimmie and Ed Sheeran perform “All Of The Stars” during day two of The Voice Season 6 Finale on Tuesday (May 20) in Universal City, Calif.

“THANK YOU ADAM LEVIINNNEEE!!!!! For wanting to sign me to yur label….bc after 5 years on YouTube, not a single label out there would sign me. And he has known me for only a couple months n wud you look at that. Adam BELIEVES in me, as did my Team Grimmie all these years,” the 20-year-old contestant wrote on Facebook during the show.
She added, “Also UHMM thank yu to my managers BRIAN AND MANDYYY who believed in me for 4 years now, SERIOUSLY GUYS WE HAVE ARRIVED!!! It’s music makin time!!!!! This moment. RIGHT NOW..IS THWJEKALWOJEBRJELAKAHDJAKAJDHKAKDJDKAKA THANK YU JESUS!!!!!!!! SO BLESSED TONIGHT!!!!!”

Later in the show, Ed wowed the crowd with a performance of his latest single “Sing”.


POST ORIGINATED FROMhttp://www.justjared.com







TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   


Who Won Season 6 of The Voice?

Posted May. 20, 2014 @ 12:01 am
Updated at 11:23 PM

    WARNING: The following story reveals the winner of The Voice's sixth season. Read at your own risk!]

    This season of The Voice's live shows started with a technical glitch and on Tuesday, they ended with one as well!

    Host Carson Daly revealed at the top of the hour that the iTunes results were taken out of the final equation for calculating the winner after Josh Kaufman's rendition of "Set Fire to the Rain" was mistakenly listed as an album instead of a song, which subsequently made it harder for fans to find and purchase. The malfunction generated heavy outcry on social media Tuesday, but Carson assured viewers that not including the iTunes numbers did not affect the final result.
    The two-hour finale was bloated with performances from the likes of OneRepublic, Justin Moore, Ed Sheeran, Alabama, Robin Thicke, Tim McGraw, Coldplay as well as a few hilarious segments centered on the coaches, such as the Usher-centered featurette moderated by none other than Robin Leach and our "favorite" Adam Levine-starring montage.

    In the last five minutes of the broadcast, Carson and the three final contestants got down to business to announce who won. Coming in third place was Christina Grimmie, the 20-year-old YouTube star from Marlton, N.J. from Adam Levine's team.
    Dancing with the Stars Season 18's sexiest costumes

    Coming in second place was ... Jake Worthington, the 17-year-old country singer from La Porte, Texas on Blake Shelton's team. His second-place finish means 38-year-old Indianapolis, Ind., native Josh Kaufman is the Season 6 winner of The Voice! As soon as Josh is announced as the winner, he and Jake embraced in a long hug on stage. And his coach, Usher, was equally emotional celebrating his first win in just his second season on the show.
    TVGuide.com readers correctly predicted the outcome for Tuesday's night results show. Josh led with 46 percent of the votes, Jake came in second with 29 percent of the votes, and Christina followed closely with 25 percent of votes.

    "I can't even talk," Jake told Carson as the credits rolled. "I'm overwhelmed. I'm surprised. I'm happy. I'm relieved."

  

POST ORIGINATED FROM http://bridgewatereast.wickedlocal.com







TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   


American Idol': It's all over but the counting

After a nearly year-long process that winnowed 75,000 people down to just two, the first night of the American Idol finale turned out to be an evenly matched competition. Going first: Jena Irene, the 17-year-old from Farmington Hills, Mich., who's the first female wild-card contestant to make the Top Two. Closing the show: Caleb Johnson, a rock belter who tried out for Idol twice before this year.

Ryan Seacrest billed the battle as "The Wild Card vs. the Wild Child" in front of 7,000 people at Los Angeles' Nokia Live.


The show broke down into three rounds. In the first, Idol creator Simon Fuller picked tunes for each contestant. In the second, they each reprised favorite performances from past weeks. Finally, they each performed the song that would become their "winner's single." And the one who wins, Seacrest announced, will release a debut album on Aug. 12, before the end of the summer tour. (Note: Idol made a similar promise last year, then didn't actually put out winner Candice Glover's album until February of this year.)

Jena won the coin toss and chose to go first. Here's how it went from there:

Jena Irene, Dog Days Are Over (Florence + the Machine).

The Florence + the Machine tune gives Jena the chance to showcase everything she has learned during the season. After strutting past the line of drummers, she works the entire edge of the stage and shows little to no effect on her vocal control. Later, she hits her knees for dramatic emphasis. She's off to a strong start.

"The way that you owned that stage is so good," Keith Urban says. "That's the sign of a real pro." He notes some adrenaline-related issues with breath control, but he's impressed. Jennifer Lopez adds, "I could feel the heebies-jeebies coming out. It's fine." Halfway through, she could feel Jena loosen up and get comfortable. Harry Connick Jr. praises her internal rhythm and the way she performed. Grade: A-

Caleb Johnson, Dream On (Aerosmith).


Fuller didn't give Caleb the most original choice in the world, but Caleb may not need it. Dream On is packed with dramatic moments and big notes, along with instrumental breaks that give the singer a chance to whirl his mic stand and let the fringe hanging from his sleeves fly. When it comes to Dream On, the only thing that really matters on Idol is getting the scream at the end right, and Caleb just tears that up.

"That's what you gotta do!" Lopez says. "You gotta come on, and you gotta deliver. You gotta seize the moment." Connick notes that he nailed the scream, but tells Caleb that on the early, lower parts, "you're like a GT that has so much power. Don't forget to take the same focus, the same energy you have on the end of the tune at the very beginning of the tune." Urban says Caleb had him from the opening phrase: "I thought the way that you arced the whole thing was exceptional." Grade: A

Jena Irene, Can't Help Falling in Love (Elvis Presley).


Pulling out the Presley tune was an inspired bit of magic a couple of weeks ago. But will it work as well the second time around, minus the element of surprise? It's still a lovely performance. It's also a big stylistic shift from her first performance, and staking out a wide range of musical territory might be a smart idea for the finale, when casual viewers may be tuning in for the first time in weeks, or maybe for the first time.

"I can very clearly hear the influence on this song," Connick tells her. What separates Jena from others is that she can set those influences aside and come up with something original and special. He thought it was beautiful. Without naming her, Urban notes that Jena inspired The Voice's Christina Grimmie to cover the song, and that ability to lead is the mark of a true artist. Lopez says, "Your soul comes through on that song when you sit at that piano. … It makes me feel things, makes me do things that I've never done before." Grade: A

Caleb Johnson, Maybe I'm Amazed (Paul McCartney).


Caleb's first pass at this song was perhaps his single most impressive vocal performance of the season. But after the histrionics of Dream On, frankly, McCartney's ballad comes off as a bit of a letdown. He still sings it well, of course.

Urban calls it a real, deep emotional song and cautions him not to get caught up in the gymnastic aspects of it. Lopez feels his power is undeniable, but "at the end of the day, when the soul comes through, that's what's going to really give the goosies." Connick shares their sentiments and compares Caleb and Jena to heavyweight fighters. He and Urban think Caleb won Round One, but Connick and Lopez think Jena Irene won Round Two. "I do not envy the voters." Grade: A-

Jena Irene, We Are One.

Jena's potential winner's single is a pedestrian dance anthem, as instantly forgettable as most Idol coronation singles (but not as embarrassing as some). On the low notes, Jena's voice disappears into the background, but it soars on the high ones. Again, she gladhands as many fans as possible on her way to a small circular stage in the center of the hall. "I think it was a nice finish to the show," says Lopez, noting that the judges have to hurry their comments. "It was just as strong as when you did it in the studio," adds Connick. "It's perfect for you," Urban says. "It's great." No, it's not, but you can't say that at this point in the competition. It's like calling every charge and hack in the final seconds of the NCAA tournament final. Grade: B

Caleb Johnson, As Long As You Love Me.

"We were looking for love in all the same places/ Infected with the same disease"? Surely I'm not the only one who hears those lines and thinks, "Ewwww." Musically, this is exactly the sort of music Caleb should — and probably wants — to do, but the song is flat-out dumb. The energy and the performance might just take him to the top tomorrow, though.

Connick starts: "The way I look at it, you're like Joe Frazier, Jena is like Muhammad Ali. This is a puncher vs. a boxer." Urban's dying to see what happens tomorrow night and congratulates him. Lopez says, "I felt that you put it all out there and you went for it." Maybe it's just me, but they seem to be trying really hard to avoid saying something negative about this performance while not actually complimenting him. Grade: B-


POST ORIGINATED FROM http://www.usatoday.com






TOP NEWS SITES


WORLD NEWS   ,   MSNBC NEWS  ,   FOX NEWS  ,   USATODAY NEWS  ,   


 
Design by Free WordPress Themes | Bloggerized by Lasantha - Premium Blogger Themes | Facebook Themes