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Showing posts with label entertainment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label entertainment. Show all posts

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Spectaculathon

A Night at the TheatreSo the roommate and I went to the inaugural performance of the shiny new Epic Theatre Company here in Madison on Saturday night, where they were performing "The Brothers Grimm Spectaculathon", and had a pretty good time, I must say.

First, the venue: the play was held in local software giant Epic's large convention building (nerdily named Voyager Hall -- everything there is nerdily named though), set up in a flexible hallway space rather than one of their theatre/convention halls, interestingly enough. Set design was extremely sparse and consisted of a small stage, black backdrop curtains and a sound booth in the rear. The audience sat on about 100, 150 portable chairs, comfortable models though, not the lousy wooden folding chairs you often get at community/school/church functions.

Secondly, the work: The Spectaculathon is a humorous mish-mash/retelling of (some) of the (apparently) 209 separate fairy tales collected by The Brothers Grimm. No wonder Fables never runs out of material...

The play tries to cover all the highlights, along with a mixture of the lesser known works, often contrasting the original versions of the stories both with their better known pop-culture derivatives (i.e., Disney) and with modern storytelling sensibilities as well (Why is Little Red Riding Hood so stupid anyway? And why do people keep going into the dark, dangerous, monster infested woods?).

The cast and crew were, according to the playbill as well as personal observation, a group of talented amateurs rather than professionals, which often made the resulting entertainment more rather than less impressive. In particular, the actor who played one of two Narrators, as well as two separate Grandmothers, is a man named Sean Mikles, whose bio indicates he was last seen on stage as an eight-year old.

Another of the male leads, who plays several incarnations of Prince Charming and, at one point, the entire principal cast of Cinderella (seriously), was also very quick-witted and memorable. I'd have his name here as well, but the playbill lists everyone other than the narrators as playing 'Various', which doesn't help to narrow it down (tsk tsk).

Spectaculathon was presented as a two-act event, and so, with a short intermission the entire thing was over in about two hours. This first play was free, proving that the Epic Theatre people intend to use the time-honored marketing strategy of drug dealers everywhere... usually a smart move.

I look forward to their next project.

A note on the audience, however: we went to the evening show on Saturday, in no small part, to attempt to avoid the matinee experience, but alas it was in vain. Small children were brought, audience members loudly nattered on during the show, and those of us in the back had to strain to hear during some of the first act over one child in particular who Just. Would. Not. Shut. Up.

Uggh.

Going out to public events is seemingly less enjoyable every year. I can't begin to describe the number of events I've had ruined by these people, almost all families with small children, who insist on dragging their brats along to every function, no matter the time of day or appropriateness of the subject matter. Society just doesn't impose any limits on these people and their spawn, and it's getting to the point where, honestly, you'd have more fun staying at home.

Which is a shame, because then we'd all have to miss out on things like the Epic Theatre Company. Just to satisfy the whims of a selfish few who insist on 'having it all'.

As a civilization, we really have to do something about that. If all culture and entertainment is destined to be reduced to a chatoic mass of screaming, wailing, sour-milk-smelling children, I suggest we just spike the communal Kool-Aid and get it over with now.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Mini-Entertainment Post

Mini-Entertaining

Raining McCain
Some people have been taking this as a joke, but I feel it's all to likely to be for real.

Either way, a surreal, stupefyingly bad-until-it's-hilarious Youtube campaign video for St. John McCain.

Enjoy.


Source: Matthew Yglesias

Stripper Funeral
At least I know what my brother-in-law's funeral will be like.

A MAN hired a stripper to perform at the funeral of his father - who happened to have a fondness for gentlemen's clubs, according to reports from Taiwan.
Taiwanese newspaper the United Daily News reported that Cai Jinlai had been promised a stripper for his funeral if he lived to 100.
Ted, time to rewrite your will.

Source: The Daily Telegraph

Horton Hears the Horror
The hand-puppet that you'd get if you crossed Apocalypse Now with Horton Hears a Who.

Mouthy
Ever wonder what 29k dollars worth of cursing looks like?

Look no further.
GMAC Bank is suing mortgage company HTFC for selling improperly secured loans, which lead to the hilariously blue and aggressive deposition from HTFC CEO Aron Wider. Wider dropped the f-bomb 73 times, frustrating the opposing counsel's attempts to get him to answer difficult questions like "Where are you currently employed?" Some of the more colorful and creative expletives from the testimony of Mr. Wider, who, according to his company website, serves as company Coprorate Information [sic], CEO / Senior Underwriter, and Radio Engineer, inside...
Q: My question is where are you currently employed.
A: I' m not. I just told [you] I work for free.
Q: OK. You're not employed by the HTFC Corporation?
A: Hit That Fuckin' Clown. That's what it means.
Portfolio.com notes that the classy Mr. Wider got hit by a $29, 000 sanction for his performance, despite his lawyer's claim that his abusive language was caused by an anxiety disorder.
There's more of course.

Source: The Consumerist

Music of the Washers
Tom Morris explores the world of hidden washer features.


Source: Youtube

Odd Anime
This has to be one of the strangest anime titles I've ever heard of, though it does serve to demonstrate the sheer range that Japanese animation has compared to American shows with regard to topics.
Baby and Me (Aka-chan to Boku)

Takuya would normally be an average 12-year-old kid, going to 6th grade and playing soccer with his friends, like he was only a short time ago. But tragedy struck his family a few months ago, and his mother, taking his baby brother Minoru for a walk in a stroller, was hit by a truck and killed. (Minoru wasn't hurt.)

Things have been rough since then. His father works hard to keep food on the table, and can't always be there for his son as he struggles to put the pieces back together. Takuya's days now consist of school, dashing off to day care to pick up Minoru, and trying to juggle caring for a toddler with homework and housekeeping. By the time night comes he's often passed out in exhaustion.
Yes, a long running animated tv series about... a kid who has to raise his kid brother.

It doesn't sound like my cup of tea, but man, compared to things over here, where it's either Disney or the latest toy promotion...

Source: Anime News Network

Ancient Anime
Two new 90 year old animated film shorts have been found in Japan, lingering in an antique shop of all places.
Yoshiro Irie, a researcher at Tokyo's National Film Center, has announced that two of the oldest Japanese animated films were discovered in an antique shop in Osaka in central Japan. In 1917, anime pioneer Junichi Kouchi released the two-minute "Nakamura Katana" silent short about a samurai's foolish purchase of a dull-edged sword. Fellow animator Seitaro Kitayama released "Urashima Taro," an adaptation of a folk tale about a fisherman traveling to an underwater world on a turtle, in 1918.
Man that's old.

Yes, that is my contribution to this discussion. "Man that's old". Get over it.

Source: Anime News Network

Bare BONES Site
See, because Bones is the name of the animation studio, and.... ok fine. At any rate, the people behind Full Metal Alchemist and Eureka Seven have a new show slated, and... judging by the art, it may be about killer molestor bugs, or... I have no clue. Honestly.
The Bones animation studio has pre-launched the official Japanese website for Bōnen no Xamdou — thus confirming the latest project from the animators of Fullmetal Alchemist and Eureka Seven. The website's underlying source indicates that Sony Music is hosting the actual website. Sony Music and Bones collaborated on Fullmetal Alchemist and Eureka Seven. The website promises that more details will be announced on April 10.
Yeah. What's worse is that the character in the art looks like the last male character lead, from Eureka Seven, only now a girl.

Which is just weird.

Sources: Anime News Network
Bonen no Xamdou

Sunday, March 2, 2008

Entertainment News

Very Entertaining

Na-Na-Na-Na-Na-Na-Na BATMAN
So, much as The Animatrix was a collection of anime and anime inspired shorts that bridged the gap between The Matrix and its sequels, Warner Brothers has commissioned the same umbrella group to make a Batman anthology set between Batman Begins and The Dark Knight. So far details are scant, but the pedigree is impressive.

As are the early PR stills.

I'm interested to see how the Japanese perspective on Batman will pan out. I already read Child of Dreams, the manga-style graphic novel by Kia Asamiya (most famous for doing Nadeisco, though he apparently also worked on the exquisitely old-school Project A-Ko). http://www.amazon.com/Batman-Child-Dreams-Comics-Paperback/dp/156389906X http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_A-ko

That was interesting, if a bit shallow. The art was very nice, it just needed a bit more oomph in the story department.

So I'll be waiting to see how the Batman-i-matrix works out.

Source: Animation Magazine

Another Memoir Hoax
So yet another highly improbable memoir has been exposed as a fraud, and an overly credulous publishing industry/reading audience as dupes.

Sigh.

BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- A Belgian writer has admitted that she made up her best-selling "memoir" depicting how, as a Jewish child, she lived with a pack of wolves in the woods during the Holocaust, her lawyers said Friday.

Misha Defonseca's book, "Misha: A Memoire of the Holocaust Years," was translated into 18 languages and made into a feature film in France.

Her two Brussels-based lawyers, siblings Nathalie and Marc Uyttendaele, said the author acknowledged her story was not autobiographical and that she did not trek 1,900 miles as a child across Europe with a pack of wolves in search of her deported parents during World War II.
Really.

People honestly believed, without evidence, that a small child was adopted by a pack of wolves, who she then convinced to act as her bodyguards on a 1900 mile trip across WWII Europe.

Seriously. They bought this.

Wow. People are so damn dumb.

Source: CNN.com

Well Now.
So Ellen Page, of Juno fame, has dropped out of Sam Rami's next horror movie project, written in the Army of Darkness era, titled "Drag Me to Hell".

Riiight.
Earlier this month we reported that Ellen Page had joined Sam Raimi's upcoming horror flick Drag Me to Hell. Although that was some of the most exciting casting news we've ever heard, Bloody Disgusting has confirmed that Page has dropped out of the film. The reason they were given is that "she didn't like the latest draft of the script", but as they speculate, that just seems like the public statement given in order to cover up the real story. Either way, this is sad news for Raimi's next flick.
So you have one hit indie film and you burn the biggest grossing director in Hollywood today, while passing up what may well be the next Evil Dead.

This does not seem like great decision-making to me.

Source: First Showing

PS: IMDB reminds me that she was Kitty Pryde in the ungodly terrible X-Men: The Last Stand, where, in a movie filled with cardboard cutout protagonists, she still set new records for bland.

Yeah. Raimi's better off.

Taxi to the Oscars
The Oscar-winning filmmaker who did Taxi to the Darkside has his sights set next on Jack Abrmoff and St. John McCain.
The filmmaker who won an Academy Award Sunday night for best documentary is next turning his attention to the Jack Abramoff scandal, including GOP presidential candidate John McCain’s role investigating the affair.

Alex Gibney, who made last year's "Taxi to the Dark Side," about the lethal interrogation of an Afghan taxicab driver by American military forces, told Politico his Abramoff film would be coming out later this year. Its tentative title: "Casino Jack and the United States of Money."

"The film should give viewers a greater understanding, in a blow-by-blow way, of how the political process works, particularly with regards to lobbying," Gibney says. "This movie will have it all: wild international intrigue, money changing hands in unexpected places, etc. It will be fun. As someone said about an earlier picture I made: 'It's a comedy that turns into farce and ends up in horror.'"

McCain "of course" comes up in the film, adds Gibney, who has "put the word out" to the Arizona senator’s presidential campaign for comment. "He certainly plays a role — he ran the [Abramoff] hearings, so he's unavoidably involved in the story. Then the questioning extends. Upon further investigation, one looks at his motives and things like that. I don't want to say much more than that, but he is a character in the story."
Since it's now been reported that McCain sat on emails implicating Abramoff in bribing the Republican governor of Alabama, it's not hard to see where this could be heading.

Poor St. John McCain.

Source: Politico

In The Basement
So it turns out Iran has one of the best and largest collections of modern art in the world, purchased with oil money by the Shah shortly before the Revolution. Who knew?
It's one of the finest collections of modern art anywhere in the world, but you won't find it in New York or Paris.

Dozens of works by the likes of Pablo Picasso, Andy Warhol and Jackson Pollock -- together valued at roughly $3 billion -- are locked in a basement in Tehran.

Only a handful of westerners have had an up-close look at the underground archives in Tehran's Museum of Contemporary Art. ABC News was granted exclusive access inside the vault that holds a priceless collection Iranian authorities choose to keep locked away.

What was revealed was astonishing: a series of paintings by Picasso; a wall's worth of pop art by Roy Lichtenstein; Warhol portraits of Jackie Onassis, Mick Jagger and Marilyn Monroe; a Diego Rivera self portrait; and a painting many consider to be the best Jackson Pollock outside of North America.

...

The collection was supposed to be a gift to the Iranian people. It was assembled by the Shah of Iran and his wife using public funds during the oil boom of the 1970s. Tehran's Museum of Contemporary Art was inaugurated in 1977, designed to be one of the world's landmark modern art institutions, with an international collection worthy of that ambition.

But just months later came the Islamic Revolution. The Shah was deposed, Ayatollah Khomeinei was became the country's leader, and in the Revolutionary, anti-American climate the museum's western art was banished to the basement.
Ah well. El Presidente will probably blow the collection to smithereens with a bunker-buster bomb anyway.

Source: ABC News

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

European Learning

Educational Issues

A pair of odd educational concepts from our European cousins across the pond.

Adopt the Dead
So President Sarkozy in France has been searching for issues to soften his image, after the country has gotten tired of him breaking off his marriage to sleep around with a supermodel instead of accomplishing anything in office.

You know you're doing a bad job when the French get picky about your mistresses; traditionally, the more the merrier, in Gallic politics.

At any rate, after tepid plans to curb urban poverty, improve mass transit and the like, Sarkozy has decided to move on to educational issues.

PARIS (Reuters) - French President Nicolas Sarkozy, facing a tide of criticism over his call for schoolchildren to "adopt" Jewish child victims of the Holocaust, hit back on Friday saying France had to raise children "with open eyes".

In a speech praising faith that also drew fire from secularists, Sarkozy told France's Jewish community on Wednesday that every 10-year-old schoolchild should be "entrusted with the memory of a French child victim of the Holocaust".

The proposal unleashed a storm of protest from teachers, psychologists and his political foes who said it would unfairly burden children with the guilt of previous generations and some could be traumatized by identifying with a Holocaust victim.

More than 11,100 French Jewish children were deported from France to Auschwitz and other Nazi death camps in eastern Europe during the German World War Two occupation.
Hmm. Yeah.

Interesting idea, and it's certainly worth noting that so much of France bowed to Nazi rule with barely suppressed glee.

On the other hand, it's also worth noting that two separate resistance movements fought the Nazis to the bloody death, one in each half of divided France. It's particularly worth remembering in light of the 'Terrorism is Bad and an Enemy We can Beat' rhetoric in the recent past. You know, as the Resistance in the north of France used every sneaky terrorist trick in the book to spill fascist blood.

A cause heartily endorsed by yours truly, for what little that matters.

Anyway, I dunno. The idea isn't as whacko as it sounds, but I think 10 is a bit young. This is more of a junior-high thing at the least.

You could also have them adopt a resistance fighter, and give a report on how their subject killed German occupiers with bombs or what not. That'd be nice. Broaden horizons and all that.

Source: Reuters

Imagine
So there's this guy, Luc Bernard, who's got a slate of independent games coming out for Nintendo consoles. He does what can be called Dark Fantasy, usually with a platforming game element.

His first game, Eternity's Child, concerns an 11 year old orphan, genocide, global warming, the near-extinction of humankind, transgender issues for children, etc. Another game he's working on is about a cellist who kills anything she touches, and her traveling companion, a robotic bunny/children's entertainer who, failing at showbiz, had to turn to cross-dressing prostitution.

So the guy is already going to a pretty dark place with his games. Which is fine by me.

The next one is likely to offend quite a few people though.
Luc Bernard, the mind behind the upcoming Wii-Ware title Eternity's Child is already hard at work on a new and what is sure to be a very controversial game or the DS. Imagination Is The Only Escape is the story of a young Jewish boy living in France during the occupation by the Nazis in World War II. In order to escape the horrors around him, he imagines a fantasy land that becomes the basis of the game's world. The adventure platformer will attempt to educate players on the atrocities experienced by many children during the time of the Holocaust.
"The sad thing is that videogames are still considered toys and not art, I hope that this game can show that games can be just as important as films."
Sounds like a darker version of Pan's Labyrinth perhaps.

To be honest, all three of his games sound like "Dark" reimaginings of previous works; Eternity's Child is A.I. (which was already pretty heavy), the Cellist story reminds me of Alice in Wonderland, and this latest one, as I said, Pan's Labyrinth.

The art is all his and all original though. I'm willing to give EC a try when it hits the Wii.

That being said, I do hope he can get his project mostly intact onto a console. It's a daring concept; I'd like to see if he can make a good game out of it as well.

Source: Kotaku

Saturday, January 26, 2008

More Enternews

Lots of Movies

New Bond Title
Ye gods this is too stupid for words.

IVER HEATH, England (AP) -- "Quantum of Solace" is the title of the new James Bond film, the 22nd Bond adventure.

The title was revealed to reporters Thursday at Pinewood Studios outside of London, where the movie is being filmed.


Quantum... of... Solace.

Bond, shark, waterskis.

Source: CNN.com

Cloverfield Sucks
So Cloverfield is making people sick.
ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- "Cloverfield" is the first adrenaline-pumping monster hit of the year, bringing in more than $40 million dollars on its opening weekend. The thriller is told from the point of view of five young New Yorkers using their handheld camera. But for some viewers, being "part" of the movie is making them sick -- literally.

Theaters showing "Cloverfield" are posting warnings of possible motion sickness.

One blogger on the popular movie database IMDB.com said, "I had to get up and leave the theater for nearly 20 minutes just to keep from hurling." Other moviegoers have reported being nauseated and dizzy.
If I paid full-price for a rubber-suit monster movie I'd be sick too, though for an entirely different reason.

Source: CNN.com

Adding to that a hilarious Lolcat.

The Ledger Effect
So Heath Ledger's death is ripping through the movie industry.
(CNN) -- Before he died, Heath Ledger had two films in production: "The Dark Knight," the latest chapter in the Batman saga, and "The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus," the latest film from director Terry Gilliam.

Ledger's death has affected both of them in different ways.

The actor, who died Tuesday of unknown causes at age 28, had finished filming "The Dark Knight" late last year. It's due to be released in July. But marketing of the film, currently in post-production, has been thrown into turmoil, the trade paper Variety notes.

The early push for the film has focused on Ledger's villainous Joker character, including a poster with a shrouded Joker scrawling "Why So Serious?" in blood on misty glass.

The film's studio, Warner Bros., recently restructured its marketing department, Variety reports, after the departure of the executive who helped create the "Dark Knight" campaign. (Warner Bros., like CNN, is a unit of Time Warner.)

The trade paper speculates that the marketing campaign will be changed abruptly.

...

Gilliam has had challenges before. During the making of his film "The Man Who Killed Don Quixote," the Monty Python troupe member coped with filming near a NATO shooting range, a flash flood and a star with a herniated disc, a final indignity that prompted financiers to pull the plug.

But nothing approaches Ledger's death. Indeed, part of the reason Gilliam was able to obtain the film's relatively paltry $30 million financing was because of Ledger's agreement to star, according to Variety.
Geez, Gilliam has just awful luck with behind the scenes film work. He might want to look into another profession with less risk, like chainsaw juggling.

Source: CNN.com

Terrifying Picture
Check out the art sample for this manga series.

Scary.

Source: Anime News Network

Humanoid
This on the other hand looks intriguing, in a hilarious bad 80s movie way.

Good thing it's a bad 80s movie.

Source: Anime News Network

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Pop Culture News

Random but Entertaining?

Presidential Paintball
So someone out there developed a paintball flash game starring various Presidential candidates fighting it out in the Oval Office.

Of course, this is a threat to morality and WON'T SOMEONE PLEASE THINK OF THE CHILDREN?

JANUARY 22--For the aspiring young assassin, a popular online games site offers kids the opportunity to assume the identity of a leading presidential contender and then shoot their political opponents in a series of armed confrontations in the White House. While the ammo is paintball, the game on the highly trafficked miniclip.com site allows kids to train a rifle scope on six presidential aspirants and squeeze off a hail of shots (which are accompanied with a rat-a-tat sound). The game, "Presidential Paintball," features six candidates in the crosshairs: Barack Obama; Hillary Clinton; John Edwards; Mitt Romney; John McCain; and Rudy Giuliani (it seems the game was developed before the ascension of Mike Huckabee). If a candidate wins a head-to-head confrontation, he/she advances to a new shootout, which occurs in various White House settings, including outside the Oval Office. When a candidate gets blown away, bloodlessly, a screen appears noting that they have been "eliminated," not killed. To better direct a fusillade, young gunmen can use their computer's mouse to place a crosshairs on a candidate's head or body. Of course, the imagery of Obama and Clinton, both of whom have been the target of threats and receive Secret Service protection, being targeted in such a manner--by children, no less--might be seen as troubling in some quarters.
Note the assumptions! This game is aimed at children! Because there's nothing kids like better than politics! Politicians are being 'targeted'! Because, you know, a flash game is a threat, let alone a serious threat, even when the game itself has taken great pains to be bloodless and basically non-violent.

On and on it goes. Yeesh. Yellowest of yellow journalism.

I should try this game, just to spite the reactionaries.

Reactionary Source: The Smoking Gun

What the...
This really speaks for itself.
Swedish police are quizzing "people of limited stature" with criminal records following a spate of robberies from the cargo holds of coaches - possibly carried out by dwarves smuggled onboard in sports bags.

According to the Sun, the gang responsible pack their vertically-challenged accomplices into bags and stick them in with other passengers' luggage. The undercover operatives then rifle the hold for valuables before resealing themselves in their hiding place, to be extracted later by another gang member at the coach's final destination.
Wow. Just... wow.

Source: The Register

Social Darwinism
So it seems that a bunch of idiots who were friends on a social networking site are/have been killing themselves.

Possibly just for attention.
Natasha Randall was 17, had a large circle of friends and was studying childcare when, without any indication that she was unhappy, she hanged herself in her bedroom.

Her death last Thursday was the latest in at least seven apparent copycat suicides in Bridgend, South Wales, that have alarmed parents, health authorities and police, who believe that they may be prompted by messages on social networking websites such as Bebo.

...

Copycat suicides are a well-known phenomenon but in Bridgend the tributes left on websites such as Bebo appear to have had a significant impact. Friends have set up memorial pages where wellwishers have posted messages or bought virtual “tablets” in a remembrance wall. The 19 tablets on Tasha’s memorial page include the messages “RIP chick”, “Sleep Tight Princess” and “Sweet dreams, Angel”.

David Gunnell, Professor of Epidemiology at the University of Bristol, said that research had shown a connection between reports of suicide in the media and copycat deaths, and it was likely that discussions of suicide on websites would have a similar effect.
WON'T SOMEBODY PLEASE THINK OF THE... morons?

Source: The Times Online

Heath Ledger
So it's old news by now, but Heath Ledger died, and the rumor mill suggests it was an accidental overdose of sleeping pills.

This may be one of those cases where in hindsight it seems obvious that there was a problem.
CBS 2 HD's Scott Rapoport spoke one on one with the actor back in December 2005 about his movie "Casanova."

The lost interview is even more eye-opening in light of Ledger's tragic death in New York City on Tuesday.

Jumpy, fidgety and biting his nails …

...

Ledger appeared uncomfortable that day, confined and twitchy.

He told Rapoport he'd been drinking red wine. There was a bottle of it in the interview room. It was 3 p.m.

...

It was one five-minute interview, a five-minute peek into a person's life.

There is no escaping how jumpy and jittery Ledger was during the interview. Perhaps a reason for that -- a chronic lack of sleep -- could account for his restlessness.

Ledger told the New York Times back in November he suffered from insomnia.

He said he'd recently tried a sleeping pill, which didn't work, so he took some more.
Lack of sleep really can drive people crazy after a while.

Though in this case it sounds like it was compounded by booze and pill popping.

One final note: Is it more ghoulish that they dug up this 'Lost' interview now, presumably for the first time, to capitalize on his death, or laudable that they didn't try to invade his privacy and paint him as a drunken whacko to begin with for sensationalist value?

Then again, perhaps he'd have gotten some help with a little public exposure.

UPDATE: Just in reference to the subtitle, I want to make it clear that I don't find Heath Ledger's death entertaining. He never did anything to piss me off, and wasn't a jerk, that I'm aware of.

Those idiots with their online suicide circle, on the other hand...

Source: WCBS TV

The Smithsonian Honors America's Greatest Warrior-Poet
Finally, the bravery of Stephen Colbert is being given its due public recognitiion.
"We agreed to go along with the joke and hang it for a short time in between the bathrooms," said museum spokeswoman Bethany Bentley. "Let me tell you two key things here: His portrait is not coming into the collection, and it's not hanging permanently."

That may come as a surprise to Colbert, who has campaigned for the honor and boasted on his Comedy Central show Tuesday night that his portrait was "hanging in the hall of presidents, just a few yards from the father of our country - exactly where I believe it belongs."


Colbert, who plays a pompous conservative talk-show host on "The Colbert Report" and recently tried to run for president as a Democrat, went to great lengths to persuade Smithsonian Institution officials he was worthy.

The portrait - actually three portraits in one - depicts a debonair Colbert standing at a fireplace in front of a similar portrait of himself posing in front of the same mantel with a third picture of himself.

...

"I don't mean to brag, but as it contains three portraits, my portrait has more portraits than any other portrait in the National Portrait Gallery," he said, adding, "All Employees must wash hands before returning to work."
Joke? Or long-overdue tribute to the Greatest Living American?

Source: The Associated Press

Monday, January 21, 2008

Entertainment News

I Think This Line Is Mostly Filler

Because We All Get Bored Sometimes

Hellboy II: The Golden Army Trailer
At first the trailer seems to imply that this movie will lack the wonderfully sly sense of humor that helped to make the first so great, but you get a taste of that by the end, for sure. The obviously increased budget and clout from Mr. Del Toro show in every frame here as well; the movie will be gorgeous, without a doubt.

Source: IMDB

Think Like a Dinosaur
Jumper is starting to look promising in spite of itself. Though as Adult Swim noted, with Hayden Christensen and Samuel L. Jackson facing off, it could be seen as a grudge match sorta movie.

Considering how Mace Windu died like a bitch in Ep III, I think that's only fair.

Oh yeah, the link. Here's an article on a discussion about teleportation and Jumper, held at MIT with people from the movie. Enjoy, or not.

Source: Computerworld

PS: The title refers to a sci-fi classic story about, amongst other things, teleportation. I don't expect Jumper to be nearly so philosophical though.

Refer to: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Think_Like_a_Dinosaur

Interesting Manga List
Some things I'm thinking about starting up.

After School Nightmare
Psychodrama with gruesome horror. Could be interesting.

Gyo
Fish with legs rise and attack Japan. Sounds like Innsmouth started a colony.

Totoro Statue Menaces Bus Stop
A guy in Japan put a statue of Totoro, the famed... whatever it is... from the equally famed children's movie, and tried to recreate a memorable scene by placing it at a bus stop, presumably to amuse the kids.

Or terrify them. Either way.

Source: Anime News Network

Pointless Simpsons Reference
I need to get a copy of this episode.

Source: About.com