Quantcast
Channel: Entertainment - Latest News, Photos And Videos
Viewing all 38214 articles
Browse latest View live

A Goodbye After 20 Years of Directing Late Show With David Letterman

$
0
0

In the early evening of May 20 the words "used to be" will be grafted to the end of my name. Around 5:30, I will ask CBS Technical Director Tim Kennedy to "please fade to black." Later I will remove the few remaining personal items from my sunny office with the four windows and set out to civilian life. When my feet touch 53rd street I will take my place among "ex" ball players, "former" Congressmen and "used to be" ship captains. I will be referred to as "the former director" of Late Show with David Letterman. Along with the name change, comes the surrender of an all-access pass to New York City.



Consider the sound of six hands clapping. In March of 2012, the cast of the Broadway show Once was booked on Late Show. On the Friday before the appearance, I walked eight blocks south to the Bernard B. Jacobs Theater with a Late Show producer and my assistant. We sat in the darkened house as Cristin Milioti, Steve Kazee and the entire cast treated us to a very private performance of "Falling Slowly." We were invited onstage where these big-time performers warmly introduced themselves and asked if "we would like to see it again?" "Ah, thank you. We'd love to see it again."



Show business is filled with effusive strivers who realize their dream and can't stop telling you about it. Sorry, but yes, there was a younger version of me from the north shore of Staten Island desperate for a one-way ferry ride. Manhattan scared me -- it was loud, uncomfortable and uncaring, and, for reasons thousands of smarter people have tried to explain, absolutely magnetic. I had no choice. I needed to step off on the New York side and stay there.



One arctic January night, I rode the ferry again but this time I "owned" it. Late Show needed a new opening montage and I was given the resources and creative freedom to light up a boat named "The American Legion". After crossing the harbor with the ferry's captain, I grabbed a taxi to the West 30th street heliport where a pilot and camera crew harnessed me to the floor of a helicopter that was missing its doors. We did multiple passes across the bow of the ferry that was following a route and speed I requested. Later we buzzed the icons. I got a close look at the rivets dotting the roof of the Chrysler building and dangled my feet over the spiky crown of the Statue of Liberty. "Big deal" you say, "directors get to do that stuff all the time." True, but on what scale and how often? I was in show business every day for 20 years or 1040 Sundays if Billy Crystal is counting. I had a blast. If things didn't go well on Tuesday (they often didn't), I had the rest of the week to get it right (I often didn't.)



When my time at Late Show ends I will have directed over 3700 broadcasts, three openings and dozens of single camera shorts. I was treated to a private tour of the Empire State Building. I rode in blimps, police cars and the back seat of a taxi with Buzz Aldrin, who listened politely as I explained how to hold a pen in zero G. I had free run of Yankee Stadium and was part of a group that convinced George Steinbrenner to berate our Stage Manager, Biff Henderson. Mr. Steinbrenner turned out to be a great guy but the people around him seemed very nervous.



I put in hundreds of miles wandering the city streets with writers and camera crews in search of "found comedy". On one of the many days when the funny refused to reveal itself, a call was put in to City Hall. Forty five minutes later, we were standing on the porch of Gracie Mansion as Rudy Giuliani lectured us about the waters of the Long Island Sound, the Harlem River and Upper New York Bay converging off his front yard to form the currents of Hell Gate. He reminded me of a know-it-all uncle.



If Joaquin Phoenix can romance an operating system, can I love a building? In 1992 I was invited to abandon my comfortable union gig in the art deco halls of NBC and travel a few blocks west to a smelly, broken down theater that saw its glory days in the 1960s. There was no guarantee of long-term employment, but there was the opportunity to help refurbish of one of the world's most famous stages. Money blew down Broadway as the corporate might of CBS dragged a neglected ocean liner out of mothballs and made it seaworthy again. It was intoxicating. A dazzling broadcast facility was dropped into a swirl of fresh plaster, deep pile carpeting and velour seats. Everything was new; everything was possible.



I roamed the grand old building unchallenged, no one told me to leave (actually there was one time in 2003, long story). Instead stagehands and security people acknowledged me with snarky, absurd salutations that can only be traded among people who've shared changes of seasons and cycles of life. I've crawled through every accessible inch of The Ed Sullivan Theater. I've examined the pumping system that tames the stream running beneath the building and I've spied the plump rats who shared the stage with Letterman. I've climbed the sketchy iron ladder to the roof and stepped out a restaurant window onto the iconic marquee where Paul McCartney marked his return with a summertime street concert. I've pondered my good fortune in front of the René Bouché pencil drawing of Ed that hangs in the inner lobby and I've seen the looks of reverence from the many people I've taken through the place.



In October of 2002 Warren Zevon showed up for rehearsal; he was dying from mesothelioma. This was his last Late Show appearance and final public performance. He would be dead in less than a year.



Warren was a Late Show regular and covered for Paul Shaffer during the rare times Paul was unavailable. He was one of those guys you never saw coming. He didn't enter a room -- he appeared. On this day a rolling silence announced Warren's arrival. He took in our frightened, sad faces for a few perfectly timed beats and said, "I think it's the flu." Later, Warren and Letterman had a compelling and surprisingly amusing conversation during which Warren shared that he may have "made a tactical error in not going to a physician for 20 years." With the time he had left, Warren told us he intended to "enjoy every sandwich." He performed three songs, focusing every witness to a deep look at the abyss.



Each day, Late Show started with a blank page that demanded to be filled. There were plenty of smart ideas, but we often resorted to spectacle. We broke windows, blew up pumpkins and spilled thousands of marbles from seven floors up. We hosted presidential candidates, presidents and former presidents. (There's that "former" word again.) We re-enacted the Civil War and marched Marines under our marquee and through the aisles of the theater. We watched Philippe Petit take a wire walk 14 stories above an airbag that the city demanded, but he assured me would do nothing to save his life.



And then there are the folks, the humans who kept the assembly line moving. Late Show is populated by smart, stylish people with wicked senses of humor and impossibly fast minds. They gorge on popular culture and carry generous supplies of intuition and insight. Somehow they soldier on through jealousy, rage, dysfunction, cancelled guests, evolving technology, relentless scrutiny, tardy rock stars, fierce competition, 4 am calls, failed comedy ideas and a very demanding boss. They are clever, resilient and, at their core, among the most decent people you could ever hope to meet.



And then there's Letterman -- someone who relentlessly drove himself and the rest of us to the outer envelope of effort and clear thinking. In a random close encounter you're likely to be charmed -- what a great guy, so well-informed and so interested in what I have to say.



I grew up around funny people. Sarcasm and irony was my native language, finesse was an alien concept. Humming just beneath the surface of banter and insults was a bond allowing us to endure life's cruelties with silliness. Funny people are strong. They counter fear and the indignities of living by surfacing the ironic, the ridiculous and the unexplainable. If tragedy is never taken seriously, then nothing can be tragic, fear is eliminated. To be in the presence of funny people is effortless and exhilarating, to be around people trying to be funny requires you to pay attention -- it's work.



.



When Dave was still at NBC hosting his 12:30 show, there were lavish Christmas parties. He'd buy out the Rockefeller Center Skating Rink and staff and crew would eat, drink and skate together. It was magical. Imagine sliding around on that famous ice minus the crowds, while envious tourists studied us from the plaza above.



As the evening wore on, small support clusters gathered to strategize about the best moment to approach Dave. We all wanted a little face time to register gratitude and maybe say something clever. People agonized over when to make the move and what to say. It was like lining up to visit Santa Claus, except Santa was a moving target, easily irritated and there would be no sitting on his lap.



It didn't feel right to bother him while he was skating; you weren't going to interrupt him while he was eating and there was never an easy way to join a conversation he was having with someone else. I was new to this world and couldn't reconcile the degree of angst hovering over the room. Smart people were struggling to measure the conditions of saying "thank you" to their boss at the company Christmas party. It seemed way too difficult but, like everyone else, I was thrilled to be included and desperately wanted to be invited to the next party and beyond.



As I silently raged against my diffidence and fear of celebrities, I was steadily reminded by more experienced partygoers that "you have to go up there." Time was running short. When I spied a gap around his table, I jumped. It was like stepping off the wing of a shrieking airplane. Beyond the pressure of coming up with something smart to say was the added burden of being evaluated by a gaggle of eavesdroppers who would overhear my remarks and report to the rest of the party. There would be judgment.



Before I was frightened off by the intense, narrow eyes that screamed "Oh God, here's another one," I stuck out my arm and said "Well Dave, it's time for the annual hand shake." I was sure that lampooning the absurdity of it all was something he'd appreciate. Turns out I was very wrong. Professional funny people don't like wise guys. My stab at neighborhood humor was met with soul-searing silence. "Thanks for everything," I stammered as he reflexively gripped my hand. "No Jerry, thank you," came the kind-of-loud reply. I slithered away reduced. I spent two agonizing hours trying to get it right and he dropped me with four words and a scowl. I wanted to stick my head in a bucket.



Spread over 25 years my Letterman encounters, occasionally direct sometimes by proxy, were dominated by similar miscues, garbled intentions and remorse. I never seemed to say the right thing, but the stakes got higher -- I was the director, perfectly positioned to screw things up and I often did. Despite an earnest desire to please, I never left work thinking I got it right.



Among Dave's many gifts is the uncanny ability to turn the simplest task into something unwieldy. Watch him dial a phone or attempt a tweet. He's also someone who can stare down the barrel of a single camera and distill the most complex human frailties with sideways insights that are hysterical and ultimately reassuring. The maddening part is the impossibility of predicting which version you're going to get.



Long before Paris Hilton, the obnoxious Housewives or the family Kardashian was Dave, antagonizing Bryant Gumbel with a bull horn or taunting General Electric's upper management with a gift basket. Dave pioneered reality television. If he was happy, you knew it and there was no escaping the times he was pissed. Search the night he announced the birth of his son or the time someone accused him of being a "non-voting Republican."



Brilliant writers showered him with scripts, concepts and set ups. Most pitches were rejected and the rare ones to make it through were drastically altered. Even the best ideas were a threat to his effort to spill his thoughts out in real time. The memorable nights were when he was on a rant or a roll and the vitriol or joy flowed fresh from his uniquely wired brain. While he filleted himself in pursuit of perfection, David Letterman harbored a deep disdain for anything suggesting rehearsal. The observations, the comedy, the biting conclusions had to be conjured in the moment. This was not a teleprompter guy, if it was being read, it wasn't a conversation, and if it wasn't a conversation you're not a broadcaster.



Dave is painfully self-aware. He lives in a state of perpetual examination and is incredulous that others don't make the same effort. If they did, the world wouldn't be populated by so many fools. He is easily the fastest knife in any fight and lights, microphones, cameras and direction only interfered. He was impossible to please, and if you stumbled into doing something right, he was convinced it would lessen your next effort. Was it simply some noble, Midwestern work ethic? I may never know.



Dave possessed a fierce drive to honor his opportunity. He threw everything he had at the show and left nothing on the table. Defying an earlier generation of generic NBC executives, David Letterman did become the uncontested heir to Johnny Carson. He walks off with his dream fully realized. He also gave me and many others a shot at their own professional dreams. The entertainment business is deep with people who passed through Dave's world and have gone on to considerable success.



Now it's time to hand the keys to a new owner. One day you're a big shot with fat budgets and vast resources and the next day you're not. Like the high school we leave behind or the vacated summer rental, someone kind of like you will occupy the space that was once yours and create memories of their own.



When Warren Zevon was leaving the theater that early autumn evening the impossible silence returned. The stage was dim and the theater's ghost light was in place. As Warren gingerly lowered himself into the backseat of a town car, Stagehand Kenny Sheehan attempted a goodbye -- "We'll see you around, Warren." A weary grin came to Warren's face as he reached for the door. "Yea, I'll see you somewhere."

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


Letterman VHS Tapes

$
0
0
Growing up, there were three shows my dad watched. The first was All Creatures Great & Small, a quaint PBS program about a veterinarian in the U.K. countryside. To my sister and me -- then elementary school age, at best -- it was gruesomely dry.

The next was The Rockford Files, starring the recently deceased James Garner. Buoyed by Garner's wry charisma, the show was acceptable to us kids; if we were denied to watch Sesame Street, the casual swagger of Jim Rockford was a reasonable substitute. (I also remember my curiosity that Rockford's father -- Noah Berry Jr. -- was in real life the nephew of Wallace Berry, aka Long John Silver and The Champ. In hindsight, it was a strange thing for a kid to take interest in, but then again I watched those old adventure movies on AMC.)

Finally, my dad loved David Letterman. It's been at least a decade since DVDs, Netflix and On Demand definitively made VHS obsolete, and yet my childhood home still is filled with lingering tapes marked "LETTERMAN". Back then, it was common to open up the VCR-looking to watch Batman or Little Mermaid -- and find one of my dad's Letterman tapes, having been programmed to tape last night's show. Naturally, technology has evolved so much that a person today would never go through the process of setting a VCR to record a program, or leave the television set to a specific channel. It's one of those things lost to time, but I will always associate David Letterman -- retiring Late Night legend -- with very specific memories of growing up in the early 90s.

Having watched his shows throughout my entire life, I've been reflecting on his legacy, like many others. As Senator Al Franken points out, mawkish sentiment is undoubtedly the last thing on Letterman's agenda. Still, like Garner's passing, the conclusion of Letterman as a public figure reminds me of what these men meant to my dad, and by extension, me.

Both were wise asses, although while Letterman -- in his heyday -- could be mean, Garner rarely was. While Garner grew up in Oklahoma, Letterman embodies Midwestern droll; I think both men's geography informed their personas and made them such wonderful outliers in the world of entertainment. Ironic yet relatable, Garner and Letterman typify the kinds of qualities I saw in my dad: approachability, expertise, calm.

Letterman was also my gateway into a number of performers and interests I still value. Like The Simpsons, watching Letterman elevated you with silly, referential knowledge. Without Late Night or the Late Show, there's a universe of talented folk I simply wouldn't be familiar with: Andy Kaufman, Chris Elliott, Harvey Pekhar, even Paul Shaffer. These are men I learned about watching clips of Letterman. Regardless of his broader cultural impact, there are particular people I will always associate with watching Letterman on VHS.

I think that's kinda cool, and special.

It's mostly nostalgia, but there's something to be said about losing figures like Letterman. Although his prickly moments have been well-documented, there's also a workmanship and basic integrity he's come to represent. People have pointed out his major achievements, and most iconic interviews -- Cher, Drew Barrymore, Joaquin. They've talked about how his sensibility changed the comedy landscape, and ushered in a new ethos. That's all true and fine although to me misses a fundamental and personal point.

When you're little, you have no clue how mundane moments compound to shape you into the person you are to become. Ordinary rituals and little memories like those VHS Letterman tapes mean so much more now that I'm an adult, especially with my dad having been gone ~18 months. Watching Letterman (and the Rockford Files) at the time felt like something to passively endure and -- maybe -- enjoy when the TV was commandeered. Now I recognize their true value: as unlikely vessels to bond over with my dad.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Meg From Across the Street Remembers Her David Letterman Days

$
0
0
Meg Parsont, an occasional guest star on David Letterman's original NBC program, is momentarily stumped when asked how she'd advise the talk-show host to fill his retirement years after his last late-night show airs on CBS on Wednesday. "I don't know ... get a pair of binoculars and take up bird-watching?" she suggests, laughing.

Perhaps birds sprang to mind because, in 1992, Letterman arranged to have a hawk fly through her window and into Parsont's midtown Manhattan office. By then, Parsont had made cameos on Late Night with David Letterman for two years. As head writer Steve O'Donnell told People Magazine in 1991, while looking for "dumb ways to kill network time," he realized he could see into the offices in the high-rise building across the street from Letterman's studio on West 49th Street. A list of phone numbers was procured and Letterman dialed randomly. The first person to pick up was Parsont, a young publicist for Pocket Books.

"At first, I did assume it was a phony phone call. That's the cynical New Yorker in me," she remembers. "But Dave said, 'Turn around and look out the window and you'll see all our colleagues in the NBC building waving at you,' and there were many, many people waving in their windows."

Parsont estimates that she appeared on the show -- mostly via phone, but occasionally in the studio -- 30 times over three years. "I never knew in advance when they were going to call. It was truly spontaneous," she says. Her colleagues, however, would sometimes be tipped off because Letterman staffers would come over ahead of the call. "They'd be standing outside in the hallway equipped with whatever props were on the ticket for that day and we would start our conversation and next thing I knew, they would come in with bags and bags of Nerf balls" to be thrown out her window, Parsont says. She also tossed beach balls, flower petals and water balloons from the 14th floor for Letterman's cameras... "only soft things."

"They had to let in a live turkey once because, Larry 'Bud' Melman [real name Calvin DeForest] was sent over dressed as a Pilgrim and he was with a farmer who had brought a live turkey. I had the Harlem Boys Choir in my office, I had [actor] Billy Dee Williams in my office," Parsont recalls. "The time that he would call was 5:30. It really didn't cut into the work day," she says with another laugh. "I want make that clear!"

Letterman and Parsont would also chitchat on air. He would inquire about her then-boyfriend Tony, though he insisted on calling him Timmy. On the day of the hawk flight, Letterman suggested that presidential candidate Paul Tsongas was guilty of "weenie behavior," and Parsont exclaimed, "I think they're all guilty of weenie behavior!"

When Letterman moved to CBS and a new studio in 1993 -- and Late Night became Late Show with David Letterman -- the calls and stunts came to an end. Parsont says she didn't miss her bit of fame. "It really was fun, but I never thought, 'Oh my gosh, this is the life for me.'"

Parsont still lives in Manhattan, working as a publicist for publishers including Abrams and Phaidon. She has something of a specialty in coffee-table books. A favorite in recent years was a photo retrospective on the career of another funny man, "Weird" Al Yankovic, whom she describes as "a lovely person, not that weird at all." She's been married to actor/singer/lawyer ("in that order," she specifies) Daniel Katz for nearly 13 years; they met while playing softball. Katz is a great gift-giver, Parsont says, but it's hard to top the time that Letterman got a city permit to stop traffic in order to send a marching band down 49th Street for Parsont's birthday.

"My husband has tried and he's done very well," Parsont says with a certain understatement that endeared her to Letterman and his viewers. "But that was kind of big deal."

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

BookFilter Exclusive: Naomi Novik On Her Acclaimed New Fantasy Novel "Uprooted"

$
0
0
2015-05-20-1432080411-5705581-timthumb.jpg

UPROOTED
By Naomi Novik
$25 (hardcover); Del Rey

Naomi Novik is one of the most successful fantasy authors of the past decade. She splashed onto the scene in 2006 with three books published in three months on the venerable Del Rey imprint, making Novik an immediate critical and commercial sensation. The Temeraire series combines the Napoleonic Era with dragons in a manner both witty and insightful. (When your beast of burden is a talking, fire-breathing dragon, questions of self-determination and slavery become a lot more interesting.)

Even before the first book was published, it was optioned by director Peter Jackson (more on that in a minute). But other stories, other ideas have pushed their way in as Novik builds to the ninth and final volume of the Temeraire tales, due out in 2016. One idea in particular wouldn't go away and the result is Uprooted, a stand-alone fantasy out now to considerable critical acclaim. Her peers in particular have praised it, with everyone from Ursula K. Le Guin to Lev Grossman to Tamora Pierce (the author Novik read in the school library as a child, rather than going out to play during recess) chiming in.

Novik sat down with BookFilter to discuss her new book, her childhood, how her parents met and separated and met again across the sea, a lost novel and much more. Head to BookFilter for the complete interview. Highlights are below.

Based on the Polish and Russian fairy tales her mother read to Novik as a child growing up in Staten Island, Uprooted begins in classic fashion with a corker of an opening line: "Our Dragon doesn't eat the girls he takes, no matter what stories they tell outside our valley." Novik has you immediately and never falters. The novel begins with a ritual: the once-a-decade ceremony when the local wizard (nicknamed the "Dragon") chooses a young maid to take away to his tower, where she serves him in ways the locals can't imagine but spend an awful lot of time trying.

Everyone simply knows the beautiful and winning Kasia will be chosen and yet it's our narrator Agnieszka that the Dragon almost reluctantly takes. From the fate of Agnieszka to the fate of her valley to the fate of the kingdom and indeed the world, the scope of this story slowly but inexorably expands. So does the magic, whether the highly detailed, scientific magic of the Dragon or the more creative, "instinctive" magic that Agnieszka soon proves adept at.

The medieval world Novik creates is as rooted in reality as her Napoleonic one. But unlike most fantasy, what you remember best is not the world but the vivid and complex characters. In what is ultimately a rather remarkable novel, there are no genuine villains. Oh there is danger and evil aplenty (as symbolized by the malignant Wood that encroaches on Agnieszka's valley); armies clash, people struggle for power and so on. But time and again Novik reveals characters driven not by a black heart but by sincere if sometimes misguided impulses. Indeed, nothing is scarier than someone doing great evil for what they consider a higher purpose. In shortUprooted is the best and boldest novel she's written. So far.

NAOMI NOVIK ON HOW TO GET AN AGENT IN TWO EASY STEPS

Novik is one-half of a publishing industry powerhouse. She's an acclaimed, best-selling author and a champion of online fan fiction (where Novik got her start) via the Organization For Transformative Works. Her husband Charles Ardai is an Edgar Award-winning author in his own right as well as the founder of the pulp fiction imprint Hard Case Crime. Here Novik tells how they met and her fortuitous path to getting an agent.



NAOMI NOVIK ON BREAKING INTO THE FEDERAL RESERVE

Novik grew up in the 1970s surrounded by numbers and science. Her parents were steeped in them while working on computers after emigrating to the US from Eastern Europe. Here Novik describes making like Matthew Broderick and playing early online games by remotely accessing the Federal Reserve computers.



NAOMI NOVIK ON NOT TALKING ABOUT THE MOVIE VERSION OF TEMERAIRE

The Temeraire series was optioned by Peter Jackson about a decade ago. Novik remains a huge fan of the director, but after years of enthusing about the potential for a movie or TV series or something, Novik suddenly clams up politely when the issue is broached yet again. Given the length of time that has passed, outsiders can only surmise that the option has lapsed or someone else is circling the project or something is about to be announced...or that a project that would be ridiculously expensive and difficult to mount may simply be on the backburner for years to come. You decide.



This much is clear: Novik is not a one-trick pony. Her Temeraire series was a clever idea: The Napoleonic Era! And dragons! Of course! But it is the execution that makes it an ongoing pleasure. (The final book will be out in 2016.) And with Uprooted just released to acclaim and numerous other stories bursting to get out (led by an idea that springs from The Secret Garden), we can safely say Novik won't be one of those authors who builds one great world and then gets trapped in it. Temeraire is just the beginning. Head to BookFilter for the complete, in-depth interview.

Thanks for reading. Michael Giltz is the founder and CEO of BookFilter, a book lover's best friend. Head to BookFilter if you want to find more great picks in every category. You'll discover smart picks by our crackerjack staff, not crowd-sourced reviews saying -- yet again -- hey, you should read "The Girl On A Train!" (I mean, you should, but you knew that already, didn't you?) You'll know what just came out in stores, get great ideas for what to read next or find a smart and affordable gift in every category. If you're a super-fan of cookbooks or history or mystery or you name it, come to BookFilter and you can browse through lists of every release in every category and do your own filtering!

Note: Michael Giltz is provided with free galleys and final copies of books in the hope that he'll review or write a story on them. He receives far more copies of books than he could ever cover.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Todd Haynes at Cannes: New Film "Carol" Stuns With Elegance

$
0
0
I last saw Todd Haynes thirty years ago in a semiotics class at Brown on "Pastiche and Parody". I remember him as the intent red-haired young man, always leaning forward, with two hands pressed on the desk, as he dialogued with professor Silverman about Baudrillard. He delivered his oral presentation on Genet with the same serious intensity.

2015-05-20-1432104725-5192815-toddhaynes.jpg

I glimpse him again, thirty years later, on the top terrace of the Cannes Palais, overlooking the Riviera. His new film Carol has just premiered here in Cannes to rave reviews. The red hair is now tinged with grey; the intensity has expanded into a relaxed grin. Perhaps the new jovial ease comes not only by the passing of decades, but by the phenomenal success of his film. Todd laughed heartily as he greeted journalists, who all enthused about the breathtaking beauty of his film, opining that it may win the great prize this year at Cannes.

For Carol, the story of a love affair between a young pretty shop clerk (Rooney Mara) and a wealthy unhappy housewife (Cate Blanchett), set in 1950s New York City, stuns with its sensuousness, reminding one of the Hollywood cinema of old, where the camera takes time with lingering shots on characters, turning them into stars. Based on a Patricia Highsmith novel The Price of Salt (1952), the story begins (after a flash-forward) with the timid young clerk spotting the wealthy commanding lady in a department store as the latter shops for a Christmas present for her daughter. We follow the clerk's sensitive still eyes as she stares with rapture at the mink coat, the elegant gloves, the sweep of coiffed blonde hair. Desire--glamour--is born from the gaze. We too become absorbed in watching.

2015-05-20-1432104834-3263087-toddhaynesthetwomeeting.jpg

In fact, the gaze becomes the cinematic theme of the film. Acclaimed cameraman Ed Lachman films Therese, the shop clerk, with her eyes peering mournfully out a rainy window; he films her (after the two women have become friends) gazing obsessively at Carol's gloved hands on a steering wheel, as the two take their first drive together. In turn, Carol--when the dynamics shift--stares longingly at Therese's fleeting figure through the reflecting glass of a cab window. For the duration of the film, the two women alternately "look" at each other--their hands, their mouths, their eyes--with nothing short of obsession. This is desire, this is love.

2015-05-20-1432104779-5247655-toddhaynesCateatglass.jpg

It is a love that is forbidden: lesbianism in the 1950s. Therese herself does not even know what to think of her overwhelming feelings of desire. She queries her boyfriend: "is it possible to love....a woman?" The climax of the film is a run-away road trip, with the two women escaping from social constraints into their own romantic world, going from one hotel to another, much like the celebrated escape of Humbert Humbert and Lolita. Throughout, we have a sense of secretive simmering passion--and taboo.

It is clear that the movie carries a social-political message, about societal controls on people's sexual intimacy, and the risks of choosing an alternative life style. Both women risk being ostracized--or worse--because of their affair. Yet what makes the movie outstanding is not the political message, but rather the alluring aesthetics of each shot: the snow falling on the wintry street; the landscape of Cate Blanchett's emotionally charged face; the eerie quiet in Rooney Mara's elegant eyes; the 1950s decor of Carol's mansion; the browns and greys of Therese's modest tenement apartment. The pace of the movie is quiet, pure, undisturbed by anything that is not essential to the story (and thankfully, as this is the 1950s, no cell phones, no texts, no "noise"). We are fixated on two characters, one story.

It is a movie that will remind many a spectator of the first time he or she fell in love.

But maybe it's not so simple.

I asked Todd if it was that simple. Could it be that his semiotics background, back at Brown, informs theoretically the way he construes the "construction of desire" (a term we often discussed in class) and "the gaze"? In Highsmith's novel, much is made of this "gaze" by the lower-class woman on the upper class.

Todd laughed --facetiously quoting an Irigaray feminist text we had read in class thirty years ago---and then immediately gave a serious (and unexpected) response.


"What is interesting to me about Highsmith's novel is that it basically links the desiring subject to the criminal subject because both are overproductive minds. The criminal narrator of Highsmith's Strangers on a Train is similar to Therese's mind in The Price of Salt as both have the same furtive hyperactive quality. Here the crime is love, and love is illegal. Therese cannot find the words for her desire; it is beyond syntax. She cannot piece it together. She is butting up against language and meaning and what she knows to be possible [in her social sphere]. When the two women finally do make love, then the desire comes into form: it can be stated."


Leaving the Derridean theory (quickly) aside, Todd turned to what seemed to be most at stake in this film for him: the shift of power from Carol, the wealthy middle-aged woman, to Therese, the enamoured petite young clerk.


"Carol is the emblem of the privileged class, a perfect manifestation of female glamour and elegance that disarms Therese and initially furthers her anxiety about who she is. Carol is a construct of Therese's imagination. In this film, we are always in the point of view of the more amorous character: the disempowered person. We shoot through windows and glass, to make you think of the act of looking and looking back, with people positioned on either side of the glass. When we think of our love affairs, our most memorable ones are those that put you on the side of the weaker and desiring subject."


I asked Todd why he, a gay male director, so often privileged the disempowered woman as the main character in his films, from his Barbie Doll Karen Carpenter to the paranoid allergic housewife in Safe.

"Stories about marginal women," he explained. "Are more interesting than films about men; they contain the limits of social burdens; women's lives are more burdened by society, in the choices they make, as they carry on the institutions of the family, satisfying men. There is less freedom in their lives. In films about men, you can pretend that these limits can be escaped [with heroic vanquishing stories] but not so much with women. Filming women allows me to show how we all share these restrictions."

As for the wonderful road trip--which adds such sparkle to the film--this too has a political undertone:

"The road trip is essential to the novel and the film, in that it is the only place where we think we are free from the constraints of society."

And yet the film has a fresh revolutionary undercurrent--and an exhilarating conclusion. The power dynamics between Carol and Therese eventually shift, as do as well their positions in society. As Todd noted: "Therese changes! She grows up, and by the end," he laughed warmly. "She wears a full skirt!"

In fact, Therese, the disempowered girl, [warning: plot spoiler!] , becomes, by the end of the film, an established confident photographer, her success launched by the photos she has taken of Carol during their road trip, photos that frame her face and body, putting the glamour in perspective.

It is her gaze that now dominates.

Some critics have asserted that the film is appropriately called "Carol", as Cate Blanchett's acting is extraordinary, but for me, the film could have been called "Therese", as I could watch the film over and over, just to observe her mysterious watching eyes.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The Cannes Diaries 2015: The DPA Gifting Lounge Top Ten Must Haves

$
0
0
2015-05-20-1432107920-5460638-IMG_1344.JPG Usually visiting the DPA Gifting Lounge in Cannes is a treat and a welcomed oasis of treats and beautiful things to behold for this overstretched writer in need of some serious rest. But this year, Nathalie Dubois-Sissoko provided so much more than that. The woman is exceptional in every way and amazingly enough, when I visited her and spent a leisurely hour in her company, she was running two concurrent lounges. One here in Cannes and the other on the opposite side of the world, in Las Vegas, for the Billboard Music Awards. When her day ends on the Croisette, she retires to her suite in the Carlton hotel and begins the day in Vegas, via Skype. She makes my days seem like a vacation on the Riviera.

This year, Dubois-Sissoko celebrates ten years of DPA. For this special year, she upped the octane and decided that one event, during the most glamorous, media-covered festival in the world, just wasn't enough. And surrounded by beauty products, home enhancements and fashion, she created two lounges. Twice the fun, twice the celebrities but also twice the work.

I asked Dubois-Sissoko to disclose her ten mantras for her tenth anniversary, but alas, my recorder gave out that day and the recording has gone lost. What I remembered are five wonderful and inspiring quotes from a woman who never ceases to amaze me, personally and professionally.

Nathalie Dubois-Sissoko's Top Five Favorites from Cannes this Year:

The InterContinental Carlton Hotel -- "I love this place," admitted Dubois-Sissoko, "I keep coming back here and I love everything about it, the restaurants, the lobby, the rooms and the vibe." She continued, "the staff here know me and this year I made the choice to stay at the hotel, since I've got so much work with the Billboard lounge in Vegas." Dubois-Sissoko disclosed that her day ends when she falls asleep from exhaustion, around five p.m. Las Vegas time. You do the math on what that is here in Cannes...

Bees -- Yes, those bees. The Carlton has apiaries now, with honey-producing bees, which Dubois-Sissoko enjoys watching just outside the window of her suite. "I love everything that is pro the environment and this makes me feel like I'm staying in a hotel that feels the say way I do."

The weather in Cannes -- This year I'll admit we've been super lucky with the abundance of sunshine and warm temps. "It makes my job so much easier," admits Dubois-Sissoko, "because it's easier for celebrities to visit the suite, but also if I feel a bit tired after a long day, I can have a coffee on the terrace of the Carlton and voilà, I'm reinvigorated by the beautiful balmy weather."

The products in the DPA Lounge -- There are a lot of personal favorites for Dubois-Sissoko among her clients in Cannes and when I met her she was wearing jewelry by Arido and Dominique Denaive Paris, mixing it up with her usual French flair.

Mad Max and Tom Hardy -- While it's usually difficult for Dubois-Sissoko to get away to watch a film or two, this year she made it a point to attend the red carpet premiere of the much-anticipated Mad Max: Fury Road. Good thing too because the next day hottie Tom Hardy showed up at DPA and, in Dubois-Sissoko's words is, "super sweet and really really handsome, such a nice guy!" Personally, I've found it funny that people are calling the film "feminist propaganda." Really?! Well it's about time, after all the masculine propaganda...

Check out the slideshow below for all my favorites from the DPA Gifting Lounge in Cannes.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Ex Machina Movie Review: Should We Be Scared?

$
0
0
There are many reasons to be impressed with Ex Machina, the recently released, exceptionally well-done sci-fi thriller directed by Alex Garland, starring Oscar Isaac, Domhnall Gleeson and Alicia Vikander. Most notably, however, is its ability to be both ordinary and unique at the same time.

As any good futuristic, mystery thriller does, Ex Machina forces viewers to question who knows what, who's outsmarting who and what - or who - is real, perceived or imagined, holding its audience in a controlled suspense throughout.

A deeper dive into the core of the movie, however, reveals a strikingly smart, unique and profoundly powerful exploration into the very essence of existence, weaving together thought-provoking questions on everything from philosophy to psychology, language to sexuality, religion to death and art to technology.

Caleb, an eager, young and intelligent coder for Bluebook - the "world's most popular Internet search engine" - is chosen as the winner of a weeklong visit to the remote estate and research facility of Bluebook's CEO, Nathan, a technology titan and prodigy who began writing code at the age of thirteen.

Upon learning that Nathan has created a female robot named Ava, Caleb is tasked with performing a "Turing Test" through a series of interviews to determine whether she demonstrates true AI (artificial intelligence) - that is, whether she can think and feel for herself, or whether she is simply simulating human emotion ("simulation vs. actual," as they say).

Likening Ava to a computer who can play chess, Caleb reminds us that the real question is not whether she can have a conversation (knows how to play chess), but whether she demonstrates awareness of her own mind and those of others (a computer that knows its playing chess and knows what chess actually is). Simply put: if Ava has consciousness.

From the first moment Ava appears on screen, there's little doubt that she exhibits humanlike qualities - designed with a humanoid face, hands and feet that are attached to a half-transparent, half-mesh body structure. With each interview session, however, we quickly come to realize just how advanced of an AI Ava is, challenging Caleb to reveal more of himself since a one-sided conversation is "not the foundation upon which a friendship is built" and throwing some of his words back at him in a playful, yet earnest manner.

Her ability to question, reason and assess Caleb is uncanny, and perhaps an indication that we shouldn't underestimate her humanlike qualities: "What will happen to me if I fail your test?" "Do you have someone who switches you off if you don't perform as you should...then why should I?"

It is the intellectual, philosophical and at times humorous dialogue between Caleb and Nathan between interview sessions that form the crux of this film. While their conversations are not overly long - and never boring - the ideas expressed and questions posed are difficult to fully digest in 5-minute scenes, leaving viewers with much to ponder upon the film's conclusion.

"Can you give me an example of consciousness - human or animal - that exists without a sexual dimension?", Nathan asks Caleb in response to his question on why he created Ava with sexuality.

Showing him a painting of "automatic art" by Jackson Pollock - the "drip painter" who let "his mind go blank, and his hand go where it wanted...not deliberate, not random, someplace in between" - Nathan asks Caleb to "engage intellect" (a reference to Star Trek) and reverse the challenge: what would happen if Pollock couldn't paint anything unless he knew exactly why he was doing it?

"He never would have made a single mark," Caleb replies. Precisely. "The challenge", Nathan says, "is not to act automatically. It's to find an action that is not automatic. From talking, to breathing, to painting." A point he uses to reiterate that, just as Ava was "programmed to be heterosexual," Caleb, too, was programmed a certain way.

The philosophical underpinnings don't stop there. Reminiscent of Plato's "Allegory of the Cave," Caleb recalls a story of Mary in the black and white room, who's spent her entire life in black and white and experiences color for the first time after stepping outside.

"The point is to show the difference between a human mind and a computer," Caleb says. "The human is when she walks outside and the computer is Mary in the black and white room."

The film would not be complete, of course, without some mention of the future and the impact of AIs on humanity - an increasingly relevant question for us to ponder, as the creation of a "real" Ava becomes ever more plausible in our world of rapid technological advancements.

"One day the AIs are gonna look back on us the same way we look at fossil skeletons on the plains of Africa...an upright ape living in dust with crude language and tools, all set for extinction," Nathan says. "Don't feel bad for Ava, feel bad for yourself, man."

What is consciousness? How does experience relate to consciousness? How do we define humanity? Is human thought the only kind of thought? Is sexuality inextricable from interaction? Are we being watched? Can we control technology or will it eventually control - maybe even overpower - us? These are just some of the questions that Ex Machina - which comes from the Greek term "Deus Ex Machina" meaning "God from the machine"- leaves us with.

But, maybe the most important question is the one that Nathan poses to Caleb in response to why he created Ava in the first place.

"That's a weird question - wouldn't you if you could?"

It's a question certainly worth pondering.

This post originally appeared on Katharine's blog All Things Good. Follow All Things Good on Facebook and Twitter.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The Maron/Maron split

$
0
0
2015-05-20-1432138450-1714359-Maron2122.jpg


No one is more surprised to find Marc Maron sitting securely atop a tidy little media empire than Maron himself.

As his self-titled series on the IFC channel, Maron, enters its third season, there's a marked fork in the path between the fortunes of Marc Maron, the TV character, and Marc Maron, the actor who portrays him.

"Yeah, we've gotten Maron into kind of a pickle," Maron says by telephone from his Los Angeles office. "By the end of this season, he's not in very good shape. We'll have to do a fourth season just to bring him back."

As opposed to Maron himself, whose recent past includes a 2013 comedy album and TV special, both called Thinky Pain, and a 2014 book (Attempting Normal). And whose future includes a talk-show/documentary hybrid for Vice called Portraits.

That's not to mention the twice-weekly podcast (which has turned into a radio show) that launched it all, WTF with Marc Maron, the root of all the attention.

"It's all pretty much beyond what I ever hoped for," Maron says. "It's astonishing, really. I'm just grateful I'm able to earn a living."

This interview continues on my website.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


The Top Ten Most Stressed-Out Characters in Movie History

$
0
0



Stress kills, goes the old saying, and can cause a host of maladies before it does. Hypertension, heart disease and even Bruxism, otherwise known as grinding of the teeth, can be its unfortunate byproducts. In that spirit, here are 10 examples of stress in on-screen, and its most masterful portraits.



1. Jack Lemmon--Save the Tiger (1973)
Jack Lemmon took home a Best Actor Academy Award for his incendiary turn as Harry Stoner, a once-prosperous businessman who finds his carefully-tailored life crashing down around him. His garment business in downtown LA is going bust, his marriage is dead in the water, and the crazy hippies who hitchhike on the Sunset Strip just don't match his WW II era sensibilities. When Harry decides to have his business "torched" for the insurance money, he goes on a self-destructive odyssey through early '70s LA. His word association game with a cute hippie chick after an ocean-side tryst is one of the most heartbreaking scenes in movie history.



2. Anne Hathaway--The Devil Wears Prada (2006)
Anne Hathaway cemented her star status with her performance as Andy Sachs, a sweet-natured recent college grad who lands a seemingly dream job as assistant to legendary fashion magazine maven Miranda Priestly (Meryl Streep, playing a version of Anna Wintour). The sheer hell that Hathaway is put through during the film's 109 minute running time results in one of the great cinematic meltdowns, showing that Hathaway had chops to spare matched up against the iconic Streep.



3. Frank Whaley--Swimming With Sharks (1994)
This indie film hit, which many consider Prada's predecessor, is also one of the best show biz satires in recent years. Frank Whaley plays Guy (a metaphorical name if ever there was) a freshly-minted film school grad who gets his dream job as assistant to Buddy Ackerman (Kevin Spacey), a legendary and notorious studio boss who heaps abuse upon those around him worse than any Marine Corps drill sergeant. When Guy finally snaps, he literally takes Buddy hostage and turns the torture tables.



4. Melanie Griffith--Working Girl (1988)
The film that started it all, Mike Nichols' blue chip satire stars Melanie Griffith as Tess McGill, a blue collar secretary from New Jersey whose lack of formal education doesn't keep her from hiding her native smarts and ambition. When her shrewish boss Katharine Parker (Sigourney Weaver) steals one of Tess' ideas and passes it off as her own, Tess turns the tables when Katharine is laid up after a skiing accident, finding both business and personal chemistry with exec hotshot Harrison Ford, one of the Reagan era's great Cinderella stories takes off.



5. Faye Dunaway--Network (1976)
Paddy Chayefsky and Sidney Lumet's biting indictment of television culture has become less satirical and more reality as the years have passed. Faye Dunaway's Oscar-winning portrait of soulless network exec Diana Christensen, a woman so obsessed with her job that she can't stop talking about network ratings during sex with May-December lover William Holden, has entered the pantheon of Greatest Movie Characters of All-Time. Never once during the movie's two hour running time do we see a single cell in Diana relax or take a breath, particularly when she's mercilessly exploiting mentally ill news anchor Howard Beale (Peter Finch, also an Oscar-winner) as the "mad prophet of the airwaves."



6. Edmund O'Brien--D.O.A. (1950)
Few things are more stress-inducing than knowing you have only hours to live. This is what ails accountant Frank Bigelow (Edmund O'Brien) after a weekend bender in San Francisco wakes him up with the worst kind of hangover: a dose of lethal poison. Frank must track down his killer as the clock inside him ticks down mercilessly.



7. Gene Hackman--The French Connection (1971)
Gene Hackman's Oscar-winning portrait of dogged cop Popeye Doyle, a virtual sociopath who is often more detestable than the criminals he's tracking and busting, is one of cinema's great angry men. When slippery French heroin kingpin Alain Charnier (Fernando Rey) gives Popeye the slip in the Big Apple, his boss takes him off the case after a botched stakeout. After a hitman (Marcel Bozzuffi) working for Charnier nearly ices Popeye with a sniper rifle, one of the greatest car chases in film history ensues. Popeye's angry snarl never ceases, to the film's final frames.



8. Gregory Peck--The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1956)
Gregory Peck's portrait of Tom Rath is the best portrait of American post-WW II life and identity of its time. Tom struggles financially to support his wife (Jennifer Jones) and children, in finding a new, higher paying job, and finds himself being shaken down by both his wealthy grandmother's former servant, as well as one of his former army comrades (Keenan Wynn) who knows a dark secret Tom keeps. A primary influence on Mad Men, with Tom Rath clearly an inspiration for Jon Hamm's Don Draper, The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit remains a touching portrait of a good man trying to hold it all together.



9. Marlon Brando--Last Tango in Paris (1972)
Marlon Brando had a major comeback in 1972 after a long professional drought, landing leads in The Godfather and this controversial, X-rated classic. Brando's portrait of Paul, a recently-widowed American expat in Paris is like watching an open wound crawl his way through the vestiges of his life. When Paul encounters Jeanne (Maria Schneider) in a seedy Paris apartment building, the two engage in a torrid sexual affair based on total anonymity. Paul's sorrow never lessens as his anxiety increases, resulting in an escalating abusive relationship with the fragile Jeanne, and a devastating climax.



10. Quentin Tarantino--From Dusk Till Dawn (1996)
Tarantino wrote, as well as co-stars, in this wacky crime/horror hybrid directed by Robert Rodriguez. Q.T. and George Clooney are Richard and Seth Gecko, two career criminals. While Clooney's Seth is purely a thief, Quentin's Richard is a full-stop psycho, whose seemingly calm demeanor can suddenly explode into a homicidal rage that will turn any human in his path into a grease spot. Seth is in such a constant state of stress, in fact, that Richard must remind him to wear his mouth guard, as he suffers from persistent Bruxism.


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Movie Review -- Tomorrowland... Hang in There

$
0
0
Tomorrowland begins when Academy Award winner George Clooney enters the story perhaps twenty minutes in. Gorgeous George bursts on the screen and makes it all happen with his quirky, thoughtful, quizzical caring reactions. His ability to listen and his cockamamy facial expressions say more than the dialogue. He makes Tomorrowland. Disney's science fiction fantasy is slow in its set up that reverts to the past then zippidy do da's into the future with Tim Mc Graw holding down the present. Yawns can happen early on, but if you hang in there you will be mesmerized by the creative minds at work that blast off midway through the film. There is a bit of the Wizard of Oz and a bit of Hugo. Surprises keep happening and move the plot along like a beautiful flower blossoming. Two-time Oscar winner Brad Bird directs this mystery, adventure which is also written by Bird, Jeff Jensen and Damon Lindelof.

The plot begins in the past. Boy genius Frank (Clooney played skillfully as a child by Thomas Robinson), fails at his experiment to fly with a jet pack into space, but instead flies into a corn field. An adult Frank meets up with Casey (Britt Robertson), a precocious teen filled with a scientific knowledge and together they take off on a journey to unlock the secrets of a mysterious place called Tomorrowland. A sophomoric thesis and a lecturing of 'let's save the planet' routine are worthy of stuffing your ears with cotton during their preaching, but please ignore and enjoy the splendor of the special effects and fine acting. Clooney is top notch. Britt Robertson a distant third and a robot named Athena (Raffey Cassidy) steals the acting kudos.

Tim Mc Graw is fine as Casey's pop and the talented Hugh Laurie plays a monstrous Nix, a character determined to destroy Earth. Just ignore the plot and enjoy a child's fantasy with space ships contained within the Eiffel Tower and a spooky farm houses filled with computers and technology worthy of the CIA (shades of Enemy of the State). This is a fun movie. Don't look too closely, but sit back and enjoy. And you, too, will have a good time. You do not need to be seven to have a good time viewing Tomorrowland.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Rupert Jee Picks His Favorite 'Late Show with David Letterman' Moments

$
0
0
In September 1993, The Late Show with David Letterman did a segment called "Meet the Neighbors" where they visited Hello Deli owner Rupert Jee. His deli was right around the corner from the main entrance of the Ed Sullivan Theater, and just next door to the theater's stage door.

Over the course of several decades, Jee has been a Late Show staple and game for a variety of endless, wacky and lovable shenanigans. And his appearances have made him famous. "It's really sad for me knowing that Dave will be retiring" said Jee, who estimates that he has made about 200 Late Show appearances over 22 years. "Dave's creative and unorthodox approach has created a new standard in late night entertainment. His DNA is apparent in almost all talk shows. Although he will be riding into the sunset, his legacy will be firmly rooted in this industry. And the neighborhood will never be the same with Dave leaving."

Jee shared his favorite Late Show moments. To see them all, click on this Parade.com story.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

A-Sides With Jon Chattman: Standing Out With Lauriana Mae and Erica Glyn

$
0
0
2015-05-20-1432144669-4173589-loriannajonshootmepeter.jpg
Photo by shootmepeter.com


There's something so very retro about Lauriana Mae, yet something so contemporary. She's sort of like Amy Winehouse blended with some added R&B undertones... Okay, never mind, forget it. Comparisons are subjective, so I'll stop right there and just say this Jersey-native is a standout on her own. Her vocals are strong, unique and can be heard on her recently-dropped City of Diamonds EP. That, by the way, is a follow-up to her 2011 well-received Love Mae EP.

Mae gets her originality -- vocally and personally -- from a mixed bag of musical tastes that were tossed her way as a kid by her mother and family. A veteran of the church choir, she honed her skills there while listening to a pair of "Bills": Billy Joel and Billie Holliday. She finds herself lyrically and vocally attracted to both. Yet, she's inspired by contemporary artists, obviously -- including those she's already collaborated with: B.o.B. and Action Bronson. Late last month, the singer/songwriter performed "Ya Neck" at Primary Wave's "A-Sides Studio," and crushed it. She also sat down for an interview that can best be described as "fun" and "cute." I have nothing to do with the latter adjective. Anyway, watch on. (Filmed by shootmepeter.com.)

"Protect Ya Neck"


Click here for the A-Sides exclusive interview with Lauriana Mae.

Like Mae, New York City-based Erica Glyn stands out in a field of non-standees. A better opening sentence? Methinks, yes. But, here we are. Anyway, Glyn is a multi-talented singer, songwriter and producer who easily stands out in a crowd of blended-in artists. The traditional "singer/songwriter" tag is usually associated with a girl or guy and her/his guitar, but Glyn takes that stereotype and steps on it with proverbial pumps. A mix of rock, psych, and strong vocals is what pushes Glyn above the rest of the pack. Did I repeat the first two sentences, but present them slightly differently? Perhaps, but it's true.

Glyn just dropped her Dollars For Thieves EP, and it's indie rock in its purest form: She writes, she produces and she records. In addition to DIY, she's performed with everyone from St. Vincent to Citizen Cope, and as an engineer, worked with everyone from Hillary Clinton to Stephen Colbert. Anyway, watch her perform a track below and talk about awesome stuff. (Filmed by shootmepeter.com.)

"Beautiful"


Watch the exclusive A-Sides interview with Erica Glyn.

--

A-Sides "Delve Into Twelve" Countdown
Each week A-Sides unleashes its top 12 tracks of the week AKA the "Delve Into Twelve" based on the following contributing factors: songs I'm playing out that particular week no matter when they were released (think overlooked songs, unreleased tracks and old favorites), songs various publicists are trying to get me to listen to that I did and dug a bunch, posts and trends I've noticed on my friends' Facebook walls and, most importantly: what my toddler is currently enjoying thoroughly with an assist from my newborn.



About A-Sides with Jon Chattman:
Jon Chattman¹s music series features celebrities and artists (established or not) from all genres performing a track, and discussing what it means to them. This informal series focuses on the artist making art in a low-threatening, extremely informal (sometime humorous) way. No bells, no whistles ‹ just the music performed in a random, low-key setting followed by an unrehearsed chat. In an industry where everything often gets overblown and over manufactured, Jon strives for a refreshing change.

Stay Connected:
http://ThisIsASides.com

https://www.facebook.com/ThisIsASides
https://twitter.com/thisisasides

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Television Talker Michael Essany's Name Resurfaces in Debate Over the Future of Late Night

$
0
0
While still in his early teens, Michael Essany was publicly hailed by a venerable tapestry of entertainment and broadcasting icons as the future of late night chat shows - in both the U.S. and U.K.

From Kevin Bacon and Nigella Lawson, to Mila Kunis and even a smattering of world leaders, for close to a decade, everyone wanted to talk to Michael Essany, a broadcaster who rose to fame for launching a television chat show while just twelve years of age.

By the age of 21, Essany- who was later named "One of America's Most Remarkable People" by A&E Biography -- had secured deals with E! Entertainment Television and BBC4 to bring his intelligent interviews and topical comedy to millions of viewers across two continents.

So enamored of his talent and tenacity, TV producer and recent Celebrity Apprentice winner Leeza Gibbons offered to executive produce Essany's program. Speaking to the elusive "it factor" that TV hosts either have or don't, Gibbons once told Fox News that Essany definitely has "it."

For a time, say sources at NBC, Michael Essany may have even been seriously considered behind closed doors as a possible replacement for Jay Leno prior to the infamous ill-fated stint of Conan O'Brien as host of the legendary comedy program.

2015-05-15-1431671129-788799-MichaelEssany.jpg
Michael Essany (left) pictured with former Biggest Loser trainer Jillian Michaels (Right)" Copyright © EM Events, LLC

But around 2005, Michael Essany vanished almost entirely from public view. So where did he go exactly? Speaking with Essany this week, it was difficult for the famously talkative TV star to express himself. His voice was gone - the product of a swollen throat and faltering immune system.

"I never should have interviewed Tom Brady," Essany quipped. "The guy must have deflated my immune system."

While saying that he's "fine" and just needed some rest, sources at E! and Essany's alma matter, Valparaiso University, assert that the famous former TV talker's health has been in decline for several years. He has reportedly had surgery multiple times on his ears and throat resulting from chronic infections and immune system-related matters.

Essany, a married father of two, confirmed that while he hasn't exactly been healthy as a horse, he is definitely on the mend.

Of course, looking at his long list of accomplishments over the past decade, one would never think the now 32-year-old has missed a beat. In 2005, Essany graduated magna cum laude from Valparaiso University with a B.A. in political science. He went on to serve as Vice President of a commodities trading outfit for 5 years. His various books, including Reality Check: The Art and Business of Producing Reality Television, have been big successes. A bestselling author, Essany would later become editor-in-chief and managing editor to a number of prominent online news platforms and blogs, including MMW - owned by Los Angeles, California-based mobileStorm.

Essany cites working with esteemed leaders in their respective fields as part of his "ongoing education and preparation for what's next."

"From Leeza Gibbons in the entertainment space to Jared Reitzin in the business of mobile marketing, I've been immensely fortunate to learn from leaders, entrepreneurs, visionaries, and some of the most creative people on the planet," Essany says, noting that he is always eyeing the future.

Listening to Essany speak, he's sort of a modern hybrid of Johnny Carson and Steve Jobs - an exceedingly capable communicator but one who is sensitive to the evolution of technology and changing times.

Essany sees the future of late night talk moving away from traditional television outlets and toward streaming and on-demand digital channels.

"I think we're on the verge of seeing some groundbreaking innovations in a traditional broadcasting format that could be a game-changer in late night comedy programming," Essany contends.

When asked if he'll be the guy to facilitate that change, Essany just flashes that confident grin and says that "someone is going to do it, whether or not it's me is irrelevant in the big picture."

Essany denies having any formal contact with the BBC, Netflix, or Google about what he describes as the "first truly interactive late night talk show," but a source at Netflix says that they have received requests from subscribers hoping that The Michael Essany Show will eventually be a part of the streaming content provider's library.

"I've repeatedly asked my grandmother to stop making those calls to Netflix," Essany jokes.

So what's next for Michael Essany? For now, the charming brown-haired goofball with a devilishly playful glint in his eye says he's focused on his present commitments to work and to getting back into optimal physical and mental shape.

"My friend Jessica Dumanch is a Pilates instructor and she's really changed my life with her guidance on nutrition and wellness," Essany says. "I realized how out of step and out of shape I am. I can't very well reach for the stars if I'm going to throw my back out in the process."

Emma Martin, a longtime colleague of Essany's, says television would be well served by her friend's "inevitable return."

"He [Michael] is just really smart and someone who can give the audience things that they haven't yet seen or even realize they may want," Martin asserts. "Wherever he goes, in the U.S. or across the pond, people remember him and ask for pictures and autographs with him. To be remembered like that means Michael has done more than just entertain people. I think he's also really inspired them."

With Johnny Carson, Jay Leno, and now David Letterman soon to be gone from television, many believe the "old-school" late night chat show is gone forever. But others believe someone like Michael Essany could one day bring back to late night something that's both old and familiar, and something that's completely fresh and youthful.

"I don't know of anyone else who could pull that off," says Martin. "Jimmy Fallon is doing great, but the late night landscape as a whole isn't. Within the next five years, I think a sign of distress -- a 'bat signal' for late night - will be visible, and you're going to see people on this industry calling on guys like Michael to save the day."

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The David Letterman Talk Show You Don't Know...

$
0
0
Amid all the tributes to David Letterman, as his talk show comes to an end tonight, I wish that at least someone on a national scale would have tracked down a clip from the 1979 TV movie, Fast Friends. I remember watching it at the time, and it was enjoyable, but one thing about it always stood out, and which I've always remembered.

The story was sort of a dark showbiz satire centered on a late night TV talk show. As best I can recall at this distance of time, the host, played by Dick Shawn, was lunatic and ultimately had to be replaced. And there was an intense "behind-the-scenes" competition between two guys over who would replace him. And the big twist is that at the very end, neither of them get the job, but it goes instead to a stand-up comic who had appeared on the talk show and done well, holding his own on-air against the host. The choice was a surprise because the actor playing the comic given the late night talk-show host job out of the blue was only 10th-billed on screen and (in real life) not hugely well known. His name was -- David Letterman.

I swear this is true. You can check out the full credits here on iMDB, but this below is part of the site's billing --

2015-05-20-1432133923-9992117-ADave2.jpg


Just to put this in proper perspective, this TV movie was a year before he got his own short-lived morning show on NBC, and three years before his Late Night program began on the network.

I tried to track down a video clip of Dave's appearance in the film, but not only couldn't find one, I couldn't find any clips from the movie. But I'm sure a national TV show could have had the resources to track something down. I realize that this qualifies as a Little Known Fact -- and even far lesser known to have actually seen it. But anyone putting together a feature on Letterman should have been able to come across it pretty easily: you look up his credits on iMBD (something pretty basic to do), and look through them. There aren't many acting jobs to go through, and when one of them popped up as being about a talk show, that should have set off alarms.

Ah, well. Maybe someday footage will show up. Until then, the mere whimsy of it is almost enough, just to know. And I couldn't let the day pass without mentioning it.


*


To read more from Robert J. Elisberg about this or many other matters both large and tidbit small, see Elisberg Industries.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Saying Hello (and Goodbye) to David Letterman

$
0
0
I'm saying goodbye to an old friend tonight. He doesn't know it, but that's okay. There will be millions of other people at the party, watching the last broadcast of Late Show with David Letterman.

My particular goodbye started in December. It had been a busy week. Then one day -- out of the blue and on our walk home after a hard run -- I thought, "No! Forget about everything except being in the Late Show audience." So I did. I imagined where we'd be sitting, but I didn't stop there. I imagined what I'd ask Dave during the audience warmup. And by the time we got home I was smiling so big my face hurt.

No matter we were -- what? -- less than a week from heading to New York City, 10 or 11 days away from one of three nights we'd be able to attend a taping. I hadn't heard from anyone after submitting the appropriate paperwork, and my chances appeared to be approaching zero but quick.

Within two or three days of my change of focus, though, I was on the phone with a guy named Kevin, answering his trivia question correctly. Less than a week later, there we were -- in the studio audience! I couldn't believe it. That set! Just like it looks when you watch on TV. I couldn't get over how cozy it felt. I kept scanning the room as I inhaled everything -- remembering how many, many, many times I'd imagined being there.

Alan Kalter did most of the warmup. Alec Baldwin on the video was hilarious. More Alan. Paul and the band. And then Dave! He only had "a minute" so I knew I couldn't be shy. When he started talking to some guy about his jacket I thought that might be it. But before he could finish his question about whether there were any questions my hand shot up. We were right in his line of sight -- I'll always wonder how much my enthusiasm with Kevin on the phone the week before was responsible for that -- and I'll always thank my lucky stars for our great seats.

I'd been imagining this moment for years. Or at least since I discovered -- by way of Twitter, I think -- Dave does a warmup. It's when he's at his best, in my opinion. He's the master of the moment. I could no longer deny just how badly I wanted to talk with him. This was my chance. It's what I came to do.

So when he called on me the first thing I did was look behind me to make sure he was, indeed, talking to me. He was. He asked my name. Maureen Anderson. He asked where I was from. Detroit Lakes, Minnesota. Is that the answer I had to repeat because he didn't hear it the first time? He asked where Detroit Lakes is. Forty miles east of Fargo. "Oh," he said -- I think. But then for sure something like, "So you're way up there." I could see my husband motioning with his thumb as if to say, "Yes, it's way up there." Then Dave asked what I do for a living and when I said I'm a radio talk show host people applauded. They applauded. I got applause in the Ed Sullivan Theater for the answer to a question David Letterman asked me! "Good for you," I think he said. And then, "What brings you to New York?" I told him our daughter goes to NYU. "What year is she?" he asked. "Sophomore." And he said, "So you're bringing her back home for the holidays." I nodded as he said, "That's very nice." And again I thought that might be it because it felt like we'd already used up a minute.

Then he said, "What's your question?" And I said, "In all the years you've been doing the show, if you could relive one installment for the sheer joy of it, what would it be?" I think that's how I worded it, anyway. I was so excited it was difficult to believe it was happening. He didn't really bite, though -- at least in terms of answering it seriously. He kind of looked down -- as if that isn't how they roll -- but he repeated the question at least twice, and eventually brought Paul in on it. After joking around a little bit they decided on the show with Selena Gomez. And that was it.

Later as I watched a clip or two of shows recorded after ours -- and clips from the warmups that were posted online -- I realized I hadn't thrown out something easy for him to riff on. But I had one chance to ask him a question, and I wanted to ask about something that mattered.

I just couldn't get over as we got settled in we were sitting exactly where I'd imagined sitting. Then I couldn't get over I got to ask exactly the question I'd imagined asking.

And I decided, right there on the spot, to never again doubt my ability to make a dream come true.

Silly? Maybe. But Dave's made a nice living -- and life -- by being silly.

He's also been the backdrop for most of the big moments in my own life. Even when I was at my lowest I knew -- because he could still make me laugh -- things would be okay.

Funny how the person responsible for so much laughter is making so many of us sad tonight.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


A Rhyming Farewell Ode to Letterman

$
0
0
He's the toast of the talk show scene:
Guests from Clooney to Joaquin;
From Regis to Drew
And Jack Hanna's zoo;
Dave's better than shots of caffeine!

Over 33 crazy years
He's explored uncharted frontiers
From meteorology
To comic psychology
He's one of the great pioneers.

With gap tooth and curly locks;
Striped ties, and snow white socks;
From Paul Shaffer to Biff,
He'll rap and he'll riff --
As addictive as Bagels & Lox.

Dave's weathered so many storms
With viewers from bedrooms to dorms.
With Carson, his muse
He's helped fight off our blues
With wit and invention - no norms.

He's conquered his conflicts with clout --
No room left to mope or to pout.
So back came Madonna
And Oprah - Nirvana!
Who said Dave was not a Boy Scout?!

2015-05-20-1432082239-2969575-Photo.MiaatLettermanMarquis001515.jpg

It's been quite a run, all No Frills
From Stupid Pet Tricks to both Bills --
That's Clinton and Murray --
Super Animals Furry.
Just what are Dave's fabulous skills?

His timing, his comebacks, his brain;
His love for the purely insane;
His ribbing of Justin;
Ad lib-bing with Dustin;
He's Groucho, Jack Benny, Mark Twain!

And true, though I still never got
That chance for a Late Show guest spot
It's now perfectly clear
That I'll persevere
And Dave's just thickened my plot!

Yes, we're saddened there's no more Top 10;
But perhaps we'll all start doing Zen!
Hey Letterman, thanks
For the decades of pranks.
Now on to what's next, Dave...Amen.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The Forthcoming Slut-Shaming of The Bachelorette

$
0
0
Last night, during part two of the season premiere, Bachelor Nation quickly learned that the producers had in fact stacked the deck against Britt to ensure Kaitlyn would take her rightful place as The Bachelorette. But even being staunch supporters of the Kaitlyn campaign did not make watching Britt's unceremonious dismissal enjoyable. The Highlander gimmick -- as with most recent Bachelor gimmicks -- seemed incredibly cheap, manipulative and just not worth it. "Hey, we're going put you on a shaky pedestal, just to watch you fall off!" At least the singer-songwriter Brady followed his heart, pulled himself out of the game, and went in search of Britt, hopefully saving her from a life on ChristianSingles.com. (Maybe yoga-dork Tony should've considered walking the walk more, like Brady, instead of just talking all his apparently disingenuous new-age talk.*)

Unfortunately, shaky pedestals are mostly what The Bachelor/ette franchise trades in. And so we discovered in the season highlights featured at the end of the show -- undeniably the most dramatic minute of last night's entire one-hour episode -- that just because Kaitlyn was crowned Bachelorette does not mean she's going to get off scot free. Oh no, prepare to be taken down a peg or 12!

2015-05-20-1432142623-3830880-kaitlyn_crying_bachelorette.jpg


Apparently, Kaitlyn has sex on this season of The Bachelorette. To which you might say, "Yeah, we all know the Bachelor/ettes usually have sex with the three people who end up in their three fantasy suites, so what? This is sanctioned, encouraged, practically obligatory in the world of The Bachlor/ette. Nobody judges because it's understandable that you want to sample the sex before you sign on for a life of it."

But Kaitlyn has sex before the fantasy suites -- Dun dun DUN!!!!!! Cue the foreboding music, the outrage and, of course, the slut shaming.



We'll admit, it may not be the nicest or the classiest thing in the world to have sex with one person while you're dating several others. But then that standard should be applied across the board, even in the fantasy suites -- after all, which god deemed that multiple sexual partners is sanctioned only within the sacred confines of a petal-strewn hotel room in the tropics? It's all so arbitrary!

Which begs the question: Is the level of interrogation, judgment and resulting tearful self-indictment that Kaitlin apparently experiences, as suggested in the teaser, really warranted? On his own season, Juan Pablo, who had (some kind of) sex with Clare in the ocean, was spared similar treatment -- no, all the ire was directed at Clare, not him. Apparently, women are the guardians of sex; they alone have the burden of good judgment, self restraint and appropriately-timed purity. Men are off the hook, because they can't help themselves (duh) -- women, on the other hand, should really know better.

We can hope the producers just exaggerated the drama and threw up some red herrings to get us to tune in this season (as they're notorious for... and which we're suckers for). But even if that's the case, the producers still edited the package to run Kaitlyn over the rails. They may as well have had wardrobe put her in a shirt with a scarlet letter on the front (made out of rose petals, natch)!

When people are put in impossibly romantic situations, with mood lighting, bathing suites, hot tubs, hotel rooms and countless glasses of champagne -- all with at least the spoken intention of finding and falling in love -- can we really blame them for taking a hot and heavy makeout session to the next obvious level? And if we can, then we've got to be consistent with our blame: If women are expected to abstain, then men must be too; if sex on The Bachelor/ette is not okay in regular hotel rooms, then it shouldn't be okay in the fantasy suites.

It seems like Kaitlyn has the ability to keep things in perspective: At one point she says, "I don't think I'm a bad person, and I'm not ashamed of myself. [I just] made a huge mistake." Let's hope the men on the show and, more importantly, America can too.

* As cringe-inducing as Tony is, he did come up with one of the best new terms for masturbation that we've heard in a long time: "There's one water fountain now, and we're all standing in line," said Tony, after they sent his first choice, Britt, home. "I'm feeling like going home and digging my own well." Digging my own well. We're gonna use that!


Read our take on the first part of the season premiere of "The Bachelorette."


MORE LIKE THIS ON EMandLO.com:

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Dying to Do Letterman: My Conversation With Steve Mazan

$
0
0
In comedy, timing is everything, especially if you've been given only five years to live and you've made it your career goal to perform on "The Late Show with David Letterman."

The occasion of Letterman's final broadcast is an opportune time to recount one of the most triumphant moments during Dave's 33-year tenure, the "Late Show" debut of comedian Steve Mazan, who beat the professional (not to mention the health) odds to make come true his dream of performing on his hero's stage.

Mazan's five-year odyssey is chronicled in the documentary, "Dying to Do Letterman," which was also the name of his social media and grassroots campaign to bring himself to the attention of Letterman's staff. It is available for free on Hulu.

The 45 year-old comedian, spoke with me about life, Letterman, and not letting "someday" pass you by.

Mazan, a native of the west suburban Chicago city of Hanover Park, was 12 years-old when the original "Late Night with David Letterman" debuted on NBC following "The Tonight Show" starring Johnny Carson. For three decades, the allotted six-minute slot on "The Tonight Show" was the one most desired and sought-after by comedians.

But Mazan felt more of a kinship with Letterman. "He was so different," he said. "He had a younger sensibility (than Carson). My parents hated him, and I think that made me like him even more. Any time I could, I stayed up late to watch him, and I continued all through college and in my time in the Navy. He was the guy who inspired me to get into comedy (professionally)."

Mazan began performing stand-up in 1999 in San Francisco. His early years were not about getting on "The Late Show." They were about getting good. Mazan's Midwestern work ethic told him that a Letterman appearance would surely follow,

"Work hard and good things will happen," he said. "That has always worked well for me. I just assumed that if I went out there and kept my nose to the grindstone, the Letterman people would hear about me and invite me to audition."

Every artist is a work in progress. "Dying to Do Letterman" captures Mazan's maturation as a performer, but also, hilariously, some of the hellish early gigs he did, such as between-inning sets during a minor league baseball game. "That was a promotional tie-in with a local comedy club," Mazan laughed. "The team thought it would be fun to try a comedy night. I've always been up for anything, but it was awful. The players were heckling me."

During these years, Mazan put his Letterman dream on the back burner as he worked to establish himself. That changed in 2005 following a set at the famed Improv comedy club. Driving home, Mazan experienced sharp pains in his side. By the time he got home, he could barely stand. His initial thought was, least case scenario, food poisoning, and worst case, appendicitis. Doctors delivered the devastating punchline: He had tumors all over his liver. There was no treatment or cure. They gave him five years to live.

Mazan always believed that he would get on "The Late Show" someday. Suddenly, his somedays were limited. "I now had to make someday happen and chase the dream rather than wait for it to come to me," he said.

While this sounds like something out of "King of Comedy," Mazan was not tempted to pull a Rupert Pupkin and kidnap Letterman. Instead, he sought out comedians who had done Letterman for advice, including Ray Romano, Kevin Nealon and Jim Gaffigan, who, in the documentary, tells Mazan, that there would come a time when he thought he'd be ready to be on 'The Late Show,' but it's not up to him. "When I thought I was ready," Gaffigan says, "it was still five years until they said I was ready."
Mazan might not have had five years. "It'll never happen," Nealon jokes(?) to the cameramen following Mazan's visit.

But it did. Here is the appearance:



Mazan's time with Letterman himself was short and sweet, he said. "After I told my last joke and he went to break, he said, 'Great job, really funny' and shook my hand. I asked for one of the cue cards (of my act) and he handed it to me."

Mazan is gratified that his "Late Show" routine is cancer-free. In his regular act, he said, material about his condition might comprise five minutes at the end of an hour-long set. "I never want the audience to feel sorry for me," he said. "I would be wondering if they were laughing because they thought I was funny or because they felt bad for me."

The "Late Show" staff vetted him as they would any comedian, Mazan said proudly. The documentary captures the setbacks along the way, such as an early assessment that he was not "Late Show"-good.

"It was hard to get that," Mazan said, "but at the same time, it reinvigorated me to prove to them that this wasn't a 'Make-a-Wish' thing, that I'm a good enough comic to be on their show."

Mazan reports that he currently feels great. It has been a decade since he first got the original five-year diagnosis. "The bad news is that there is no treatment or cure," he said. "The good news is that because of that, I don't have ongoing radiation or chemo, and the tumors have remained relatively small. I've been very lucky and feel as good as I ever have."

Nor has he rested on his "Late Show" laurel. He has written a book version of "Dying to Do Letterman" for the "Chicken Soup for the Soul" publishers. He was a writer on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show."

But after appearing on "The Late Show," and with Letterman retiring, what is his next big goal? How do you avoid a letdown? Being a part of the documentary, which has won awards at film festivals, he said, helped him avoid feeling a letdown, he said. "You do want to fill that void so you feel like you're chasing something bigger. I would love to do "Conan," (a kindred Letterman spirit). There's always another level you want to get to career-wise, a new door to break down, a new club to get into. There is always something."

A version of this story originally appeared on Millionaire Corner.com

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

From the Big Screen to the Playroom -- Take Home the Summer Blockbuster With Great Movie Toys

$
0
0
Summertime means summer blockbuster movies for the whole family. Trust me: Kids movies are not just for kids and this summer's lineup will have adults LOL-ing just as much as the kiddies! Plus, when the movie is over, you know your kids will want to bring the magic home and -- thanks to a huge array of super fun toys -- it's easy for them to do so. Here's a peek at the movies your whole family will love this summer and some of the awesome toys that will be available along with them.

Earlier this year, we were briefly reunited with our Disney Frozen friends in the Frozen Fever short. Okay, so it's not a full-length feature film to fill our Frozen void, but it did succeed in keeping our own Frozen fever hot, hot, hot! Every single time poor Elsa sneezes, little baby snowmen -- or Snowgies -- pop up. Fans will love the Disney Frozen Fever Snowgie Chatterbacks, from Just Play. They are adorable and repeat everything that you say, so don't be afraid to let them help you get the "clean your room" message across twice (or 40 times).
2015-05-20-1432139230-9326793-JustPlay.FozenChatterbacks.jpg


Avengers: Age of Ultron hit theaters earlier this month, and Hasbro has so many great role-play items that let kids become their favorite superhero. In the movie, the ultimate battle takes place between the Avengers and Ultron, a robot designed by the Avengers. Ultron was developed to keep the peace, but when he decides that the only way to do that is to end humanity, well, let's just say the Avengers have their work cut out for them. From the Hulk's grippy fists to Thor's mighty hammer, kids will have a blast!
2015-05-20-1432139284-156487-Hasbro.HulkGammaGripFists.jpg


On June 12, after two decades of false starts, Jurassic World will open its doors for business. And so it's no surprise that dinosaurs are stomping and chomping through the toy aisles in a big way this year. Lego has a whole line of sets that lets kids recreate their favorite scenes from the movie and also include cool collectible dino figures. The Playskool Heroes line has a Tyrannosaurus Rex figure with fierce chomping action that kids can use to gobble up the human figure.
2015-05-20-1432139336-900088-Playskool.TRex.png


We've all been waiting anxiously for the Minions movie for a long time. Well I'm here to tell you that wait is not in vain, and you definitely won't be disappointed with these mischievous creatures. Bring the fun home with Tumblin' Stuart, from Thinkway Toys, or make a splash at the pool with the Minion swim goggles or goggle kickboard from Skyrocket Toys.
2015-05-20-1432139373-4443476-ThinkwayToys.TumblinStuart.jpg


And last but not least, Disney•Pixar's Inside Out will not only have your entire family laughing, but also relating to all the emotions that kids and grown-ups face on a daily basis as they watch Riley, her parents, and their emotions tackle life's challenges. Adults will laugh and shake our heads, while the movie serves as teachable moments for our kids' social development, especially when accompanied by a great line of plush emotions from Tomy that have the voices of the characters built in.
2015-05-20-1432139462-7194280-Tomy.InsideOutPlush.jpg


You don't have to wait for a rainy day to dive into this lineup. Movies make great family day trips. So grab the fam and head to theater -- and don't forget the popcorn!

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

We Are in a Wonder Woman Moment

$
0
0
My 2-year old daughter plays on the beach in a tiny red, white and blue swimsuit, her chest emblazoned with a winged yellow "W" that needs no explanation. Unlike Dora the Explorer and Ariel the Mermaid, cutesy characters popular with the toddler set, Wonder Woman is a full-grown Amazon, created in 1941 by William Moulton Marston to serve as "psychological propaganda for the new type of woman who should rule the world."

Yet, the kiddie bathing suit didn't come from a hipster purveyor of "feminist baby clothing," but mass-market Old Navy, advertised without apparent contradiction alongside pink sparkly ballerina dresses and "Daddy's Little Girl" pajamas. Similarly, Under Armour, the sports-apparel giant with the macho street cred of being the official NFL outfitter, has authored a "womanifesto," enacted in part in the release of fitted Wonder Woman tops and SuperGirl sports bras. Warner Brothers will begin shooting a Wonder Woman feature film this fall.

Seventy-four years after Wonder Woman's birth, we are in the throes of a full-blown Wonder Woman moment.

Three new, very different books participate in this Wonder Woman frenzy and try to explain it. Together, Debora Spar's Wonder Women: Sex, Power, and the Quest for Perfection (2013), Jill Lepore's The Secret History of Wonder Woman (2014), and Noah Berlatsky's Wonder Woman: Bondage and Feminism in the Marston/Peter Comics, 1941-48 (2015) pose common questions: Who is Wonder Woman? What is Wonder Woman's relationship with the history and, more excitingly, the future of feminism, particularly in a moment when women are both exhausted and excited by the desire to gracefully have and do "it all," superhero-style?

Spar never mentions Wonder Woman, but her legacy is clear for contemporary women in the near-manic pursuit of superwoman status in the form of the perfect job, family, hair and waistline undertaken by many girls and women in our so-called "postfeminist" era. It is Spar's unlikely status as a feminist theorist --she at one point describes feminism as a movement "greedy to its core" -- that yields Wonder Women's freshest and most jarring insights. She engages feminist theory seriously, even if to express disappointment with what it offers today's women and girls hell-bent on achieving Wonder Woman status.

For example, Spar concedes that conventional notions of beauty primarily function to oppress women, but declares it unrealistic to jettison the demands of the beauty-industrial complex. Indeed, she acknowledges that amid her intense responsibilities, she expends energy taming her curly, ethnic hair into what is widely, if problematically, considered a more professional style. Spar supplements this apparently mundane admission with a fascinating calculation: over a lifetime, women lose five years attending to basic ministrations like manicures and makeup which, by middle age, intensify into a veritable "arms race of enforced youth." These facts are unsurprising, though Spar's honesty is: Admitting participation in mainstream beauty culture has been rightly called the last feminist taboo, and is rarely addressed beyond shadowy corners of the feminist blogosphere. This is a notable contribution given abundant research indicating that women of all backgrounds devote economic and emotional energy to their physical appearances.

But as the historical treatments offered by Lepore, and even more so, Berlatsky, show, Spar's coiffed, overachieving, wife-to-be is definitively not the evil-avenging, otherworldly, ambiguously-but-explicitly sexual Wonder Woman that Marston envisioned. The two might converge in the marketplaces of 2015, but this speaks primarily to the fluidity of Wonder Woman as a cultural symbol, rather than to her limits.

Historian Jill Lepore explores the "secret history" of both Wonder Woman the comic book series and Wonder Woman the cultural icon. Through extensive archival research and in luminous prose, Lepore primarily traces the career and personal life of Marston, who conceptualized Wonder Woman in the early 1940s. Most salaciously, Lepore reveals his secret, "non-conformist" polyamorous domestic arrangement, which included not only Sadie Elizabeth Holloway, his wife and longtime sweetheart, but also Olive Byrne, his undergraduate student who mothered two of his children, and other itinerant "love leaders" who convened at gatherings Lepore calls a "sexual training camp."

Wonder Woman emerged from this bizarre world, representing Marston's fantasies, failures and contradictions. Imagined to incarnate a feminist ideal of the perfect admixture of love, power and beauty, Wonder Woman was intended to counteract masculine exemplars of brutishness and indelicacy. In 1972, Gloria Steinem reflected on the Wonder Woman comics of her childhood and felt "amazed by the strength of their feminist message." This is precisely the legacy one imagines Marston hoped for. By contrast, a central purpose of Lepore's narrative seems to be to qualify the legitimacy of Marston's feminism. For his supposed innovations in the field of psychology, Lepore points out his unseemly affinity for manipulating the emotional responses of young women. For the radical potential of Marston's rejection of bourgeois marriage, Lepore intimates an environment of manipulation and duplicity.

Berlatsky, an expert in comics conversant in queer theory, arrives at almost the opposite conclusion through his close interpretation of Wonder Woman's comic panels: Marston successfully reconciled the apparently incongruous acts of binding women in chains (among other ostensibly demeaning actions) and empowering them. Marston emerges as a creative genius, pioneering acceptance of female, alternative and queer sexualities a good three decades before the sexual revolution -- and in a comic book, of all places. Berlatsky wholly rejects Lepore's argument that the explicit examples of binding, chaining and whipping furnish clear evidence of the line where Marston's feminism faded into fetish. To make this point, Berlatsky turns to feminist theories of rape to argue that even violent submission can bring erotic pleasure to apparent victims. In depictions of rape and incest, however, it requires a major analytical leap to discern the "feminist vision... at the heart" of Marston's vision. At the same time, Berlatsky's insightful interpretation of the comics illuminates many subtle examples of sexualized content that, taken together, convincingly suggest a liberatory agenda not apparent in Lepore's reading.

A shared engagement with the cultural product that is Wonder Woman unites these three diverse books. It is truly remarkable to consider that the same symbol can plausibly suggest hypersexual lesbian ecstasy (Berlatsky) and symbolize the supremely conventional dream of a "white wedding... in Vera Wang" (Spar). Wonder Woman represents at once everything and nothing, but thanks to these three books, we now have a much better sense of who exactly is inspiring us, and how we might embrace, but not enforce, Wonder Woman's example on ourselves, each other and our girls.

A longer version of this review essay was originally published at Public Books.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Viewing all 38214 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>