Sunday, 24 August 2008

Jessica Simpson Wants You To Drink Beer

...more Jessica Simpson �

Jessica Simpson has been announced as the new face of beer brand Stampede Light Plus.


In addition to appearing in ads, Jessica will as well take a 15 percent stake in the brewery.


"As an enterpriser, I am always looking for slipway to diversify my portfolio with honorable ideas and good people," The Dukes of Hazzard star reports.


The new brew is hyped up for being jam-packed with vitamins to support an active lifestyle and so is not just a beer-belly poison.


"Yes, I work out and take up care of myself, just I as well like a cold beer once in a patch," she aforesaid to Dallas Morning News.


And selling beer is non the only product Jess is currently flogging.


She also has a shoe

Friday, 15 August 2008

Madonna, Guy Richie overcharge customers

London (ANI): Queen of pop Madonna and her husband Guy Ritchie''s London pub is to be investigated by trading standards officials amid allegations of unfair pricing strategies. The couple bought the 18th Century Punchbowl pub nigh their home in London''s Mayfair six months agone for a reported 2.5 meg pounds.

Now, customers at the pub have accused the landlords of having two different pricelists for drinks - one for locals and another for tourists. And it is also claimed that the price lean is not displayed in the prevention for customers - a legal demand. Westminster Council has instantly launched an inquiry into pricing at the souse, which is regularly visited by Madge and Guy and has been victimized by stars including Robert De Niro, Barbra Streisand, and Al Pacino.



More information

Thursday, 7 August 2008

Stefan Grossman

Stefan Grossman   
Artist: Stefan Grossman

   Genre(s): 
Jazz
   Blues
   Other
   



Discography:


Guitar Landscapes   
 Guitar Landscapes

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 10


Hot Dogs   
 Hot Dogs

   Year: 1972   
Tracks: 12


Shining Shadows   
 Shining Shadows

   Year:    
Tracks: 11


How To Play Blues Guitar   
 How To Play Blues Guitar

   Year:    
Tracks: 13


Duets-From Tape   
 Duets-From Tape

   Year:    
Tracks: 12


Bottleneck Serenade   
 Bottleneck Serenade

   Year:    
Tracks: 12




Guitarist, educator and historian Steffan Grossman was a bookman of acoustic blue devils and religious doctrine singer/guitarist Rev. Gary Davis. Beginning when he was 15, Grossman studied with Davis on weekends, expenditure octet to ten-spot hours at his





Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs And The Stanley Brot

Friday, 27 June 2008

Film and TV production lagging in Canada

It's all quiet on the northern front as SAG talks continue





TORONTO -- Canadian studio operators are eyeing the horizon for U.S. film and TV shoots like sailors lost at sea as the SAG contract talks in Los Angeles put a damper on production here.


"The studios that we're talking to about potential for work have all made it quite clear that they are not going to be greenlighting pictures until the SAG (deal) is worked out," Toronto Film Studios president Ken Ferguson said Friday.


TFS has the TV pilot "Warehouse 13" shooting on one of its soundstages, but otherwise it's Canadian series that dominate the local scene.


"I've never seen Toronto this slow at the end of June," said Paul Bronfman, CEO of production equipment supplier Comweb Group.


The one Canadian bright spot production-wise is Vancouver, where U.S. TV series provide welcome work for worried production crews.


"We feel fortunate to have the business hat we have, but we're concerned that people might be out of work again, which isn't good for the industry at any time," said Peter Leitch, president of Mammoth and North Shore studios in Vancouver.


The Mammoth and North Shore studios have "Night at the Museum 2" and U.S. series including ABC Family's "Kyle XY," Sci Fi Channel's "Stargate Atlantis" and USA Network's "Psych" in production after recent renewals.


Studio operators report some exploratory phone calls from U.S. producers anticipating a possible return to production here in the fall, but the consensus is that producers, by their current inactivity, are sending a message to SAG about their resolve.



See Also

Thursday, 19 June 2008

Studios revving up retro

Period films will dominate fall release schedule





NEW YORK -- For those ready to move past the endless stream of dark dramas from fall 2007, get ready for a new barrage -- from the 1960s, the 1940s and the 1780s.


Studios are preparing to unleash a hailstorm of period movies -- in broad terms, films set in an era other than the current -- in the fall, at times turning the multiplex circa 2008 into a veritable cinematic museum.


The films range from large studio productions (Universal/Clint Eastwood's 1920s missing-child drama "Changeling" and Fox/Baz Luhrmann's World War II epic "Australia") to specialty releases (Searchlight's midcentury Southern tale "The Secret Life of Bees" and Miramax's 1960s Catholic-school drama "Doubt"). They veer from costume dramas (the 18th century Keira Knightley quill-and-wig extravaganza "The Duchess") to political sagas (Ron Howard's "Frost/Nixon") to 1950s family dramas (the Sam Mendes-Leonardo DiCaprio collaboration "Revolutionary Road") to biopics (Gus Van Sant's "Milk") to yet more WWII throwbacks (Ed Zwick's "Defiance," Mikael Hafstrom's "Shanghai" and Spike Lee's "Miracle at St. Anna").


"It seems like Hollywood is merging with the History Channel," media critic Robert Thompson noted wryly.


The latest wave of period movies is notable for several reasons. These movies are coming all at once -- scores of pictures crammed into a period of just 10 or 12 weeks. The stakes and expectations are higher because the overall number of fall specialty releases is expected to be down by as much as 25% from the nearly 70 titles released last year. And these period films are being released as questions linger from last season about whether the audience can find enough with which to identify in fall releases.


That combination is enough to make some executives nervous. "It's a lot of period movies, and it's going to be a question of who'll be able to connect," said one high-ranking specialty exec releasing a period film.


Nonetheless, development execs point to reasons why historical is suddenly fashionable despite the risks.


In a time when summer releases have trumped fall movies on spectacle, they say, it's a chance for films to chisel out a new niche. Boxoffice Mojo president Brandon Gray suggests that period pictures are in effect the fall's answer to the summer tentpole.


"A movie set in period can be a selling point because it transports you to another world without being a fantasy or relying on big special effects," he said.


Period movies can also allow a story to be told in ways that contemporary-set movies can't tell them. "In a period movie you can strip out modern American irony and ambiguity and get away with it," Thompson said. "A contemporary movie that has absolutes would seems old-fashioned. But if you set it during a previous time, you can make it credible."


Last year, such movies as "Michael Clayton," "Rendition" and "In the Valley of Elah" took on current issues through a contemporary lens. This crop looks at equally large themes -- the corruption of power ("Changeling"), the innocent victims of war ("Australia," "St. Anna," "Defiance") and the slipperiness of truth ("Doubt," "Frost/Nixon") -- but uses the distancing mechanism of period.


But for all the advantages, will consumers bite on stories that often take place before many of them were born? Execs acknowledge the challenges.


"The situations won't be as relatable, so you need to find something relatable that transcends the era," said Fox co-president of theatrical marketing Pam Levine, whose company will try to turn "Australia" into a wide play.


Marketing guru Terry Press, who at DreamWorks successfully marketed such period films as "Gladiator" and "Seabiscuit," also sees a fine line. "You don't want to confuse period with old-fashioned (in your marketing). That's the quickest way to lose a big part of the audience."


For a "Gladiator" spot, DreamWorks cut footage from the film with NFL highlights to give it a modern feel. Miramax, which undertook a similar promotion for "Gangs of New York" under the Weinsteins six years ago, will try to bridge the historical and modern in "Brideshead Revisited," the class-themed WWII movie. "We want to show people that the issues of class and being an outsider are still very relatable today," Miramax marketing chief Jason Cassidy said.


No matter how the material gets played, though, there might be a commercial ceiling. Notes one development exec, "American audiences like occasional period movies, but they do want them every weekend?"



See Also

Saturday, 14 June 2008

Anna Sjalv Tredje

Anna Sjalv Tredje   
Artist: Anna Sjalv Tredje

   Genre(s): 
Ambient
   



Discography:


Tussilago Fanfara   
 Tussilago Fanfara

   Year: 1977   
Tracks: 4




 





Bijan Chemirani and Ross Daly

Sunday, 8 June 2008

Yazoo

Yazoo   
Artist: Yazoo

   Genre(s): 
Other
   Pop
   Dance: Pop
   



Discography:


Dont Go   
 Dont Go

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 2


Upstairs At Eric's   
 Upstairs At Eric's

   Year: 1986   
Tracks: 11


You and Me Both   
 You and Me Both

   Year: 1983   
Tracks: 12