Entries Tagged 'Gossip' ↓

Bowe Bergdahl: Obama Only Wanted The Glory

PA 19980633 Bowe Bergdahl: Obama Only Wanted The Glory

President Barack Obama, center, walks with Jani Bergdahl, left, and Bob Bergdahl, right, to the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Saturday, May 31, 2014, after speaking about the release of their son, U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl. Bergdahl, 28, had been held prisoner by the Taliban since June 30, 2009. He was handed over to U.S. special forces by the Taliban in exchange for the release of five Afghan detainees held by the United States. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

 

WHAT to we think of the Bowe Bergdahl affair?  Allahpundit writes:

This seems to boil down to a fundamental misunderstanding by the White House of military culture. If soldiers had reacted the way O expected, celebrating the release of a POW, it really would have tamped down the criticism of Bergdahl. For obvious reasons: If the men who risk their lives defending America are willing to forgive him and welcome his return, who are the rest of us to question him? But that’s not how the men who served with him reacted; in fact, unless I missed it, not a single member of Bergdahl’s unit has spoken up in his defense. Obama gambled heavily that both veterans and the media would keep quiet. He lost.

Should he have left the alleged deserter in the enemy’s hands?

Andrew Sullivan:

Barack Obama is, au contraire, a uniquely and proudly American story. He has been relentless in pursuing the enemy in Afghanistan and Pakistan in his period in office. He killed bin Laden and Anwar al -Awlaki. His emergence as a biracial president would give any sane American a reason to be proud, not squeamish. And what he did, in the case of Bergdahl, requires no further explanation than that a commander-in-chief’s task is to leave no servicemember behind enemy lines, especially as a war comes to a close.

Fearne Cotton, Myleene Klass and Hayley Atwell lead the way in floral prints at the Glamour Women Of The Year Awards 2014

It is a star-studded bash which gives celebrities the chance to showcase their sartorial prowess and floral prints were the go-to style for attendees.

Jonah Hill hits out using homophobic slur after photographer mocks his floral shorts

Actor Jonah Hill has come under fire after using a highly offensive homophobic slur.

LEA MICHELE GLEE Starlet Started Drinking As A Toddler!

Lea Michele Brunette Ambition

Glee starlet Lea Michele recently confessed to Chelsea Handler that she started drinking at a very, very young age!

During an interview to promote her new book, Brunette Ambition, on the comedian’s show, Chelsea Lately, Lea confessed that her huge Italian family kept some of the traditions of Italy alive and well in their home, even though they were living in the United States. Lea described the dinner table as “Pellegrino, a jug of soda and a huge thing of wine,” which made for some awkward situations when she was old enough to date and would be wondering where the wine was in front of her boyfriend’s parents!

Lea also discussed the pressures she faced to get a nose job when she first entered show biz, with one potential manager telling her to get plastic surgery as soon as she turned 15!

Lea Michele Book Signing At Barnes & Noble
Lea Michele Book Signing At Barnes & Noble
Lea Michele Book Signing At Barnes & Noble
Lea Michele Book Signing At Barnes & Noble
Lea Michele Book Signing At Barnes & Noble
Lea Michele Book Signing At Barnes & Noble
Lea Michele Book Signing At Barnes & Noble
Lea Michele Book Signing At Barnes & Noble
Lea Michele Book Signing At Barnes & Noble
Lea Michele Book Signing At Barnes & Noble
Lea Michele Book Signing At Barnes & Noble
Lea Michele Book Signing At Barnes & Noble
Lea Michele Book Signing At Barnes & Noble

Photos via Fame Flynet.

 

 

In Case You Missed It: Best Pics & Stories From The Week

The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAXVictoria Beckham and David Beckham caught a flight out of LAX with their brood. Check out the major stories from the past week!

  • ‘Harry Potter’ star Emma Watson graduated from Brown University!
  • Kim Kardashian and Kanye West revealed some pics from the Kimye wedding.
  • Is Hayden Panettiere pregnant?
  • HOW much will the Kimye wedding make for Kim Kardashian and Kanye West?
  • Katy Perry lands the first GLOBAL Cosmo cover.
  • Rob Kardashian vows to drop the pounds after ditching the Kimye wedding.
  • Bethenny Frankel takes the stand in her nasty custody battle with Jason Hoppy.
  • Brad Pitt is ATTACKED at the premiere of Angeline Jolie’s new movie, ‘Maleficent.’
  • Beyonce and Angelina Jolie were two of the celebs who made Forbes’ Most Powerful Women List for 2014.
  • Evan Rachel Wood and Jamie Bell split after two years of marriage and one child.
  • Dr. Maya Angelou passed away.
  • Prince William and Kate Middleton began their tour of Scotland by visiting Strathearn for the first time.
  • Kate Gosselin and her brood are back on a ‘Kate Plus Eight’ special on TLC!

The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAX
The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAX
The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAX
The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAX
The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAX
The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAX
The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAX
The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAX
The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAX
The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAX
The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAX
The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAX
The Beckham Family Departing On A Flight At LAX

Photos by FAMEFLYNET

JASON KENNEDY & LAUREN SCRUGGS E! Host & Fashion Blogger Are Engaged!

jason kennedy engaged to lauren scruggsCongratulations to Jason Kennedy and Lauren Scruggs! The couple are engaged after the E! host popped the question. Jason posted a pic of his proposal on Instagram.

He apparently surprised Lauren by telling her he was flying to NYC. Jason even continued the ruse with a pic from his airplane window. He explained in the caption for the main pic above:

Truth is I never flew to New York, I flew to Dallas and asked her if she would spend the rest of her life with me. I love you @laurenscruggs

People reports they’re engaged, so I think we can safely assume the answer was “Yes” ;).

Photo Courtesy of Jason Kennedy

Transfer Balls: Ricky Lambert Is Not Exclusive To Liverpool

TRANSFER balls: The Daily Mirror calls itself “the intelligent tabloid”. Knowing that, readers will admire the intelligence behind today’s “EXCLUSIVE” that Ricky Lambert could be leaving Southampton for Liverpool.

 

lamb 225x300 Transfer Balls: Ricky Lambert Is Not Exclusive To Liverpool

 

More intelligent readers may recalls a similar story on the Guardian website on May 29, posted at 8pm:

Liverpool offer Southampton £4m plus add-ons for Rickie Lambert

An hour earlier than that the Mail announced:

Rickie Lambert set for £4m Liverpool move after Reds hold talks with Southampton over England striker

One minute later, John Cross delivered his version of the same story for Mirror readers online.

So. How can it be an “exclusive” one day later? Is the Mirror seriously claiming credit for breaking a story that also appeared in at least two rival newspapers?

More Transfer Balls every day.

Transfer Balls: Manchester United, Arsenal Get Juve’s Alexis Sanchez As Liverpool Prepare Bid

TRANSFER Balls: The contest in the national Press is to link every big English team with Barcelona’s Alexis Sanchez.

Daily Star:

Chelsea, Liverpool and Man Utd target Alexis Sanchez

October 2013, Daily Star:

SNAPPED: Barcelona ace Alexis Sanchez dons a Manchester United shirt! ALEXIS SANCHEZ is pictured for the first time in a Manchester United shirt – but it’s only a Starsport impression!

May 10, Daily Mirror:

Wenger has been tipped off the Chile international will be sold this summer and is set for a £20million tug-of-war with Juventus

May 11, Daily Mail:
Continue reading →

Wooden Tops: The 5 Best Real People You Meet In Gerry Anderson Live-Action Productions

wooden8 300x224 Wooden Tops: The 5 Best Real People You Meet In Gerry Anderson Live Action Productions

 

A VERY long time ago — in the late 1960s — a newspaper critic somewhere wrote what he believed was a witty joke.

He noted that the characters and performances in the live-action works of producers Gerry and Sylvia Anderson were “wooden.”

You see what he did there, right?

Gerry and Sylvia Anderson had often worked with puppets on TV series such as Stingray (1964) and Thunderbirds (1965), so this joke was no doubt a clever slam on the actors and writing in the production he was actually reviewing.

Even when they weren’t puppets, Anderson characters were about as real as puppets, the joke went.

In this case “wooden” might be defined as simply “stiff and unnatural” or “without spirit or affect.”

For literally decades now, this joke about “wooden’ characters and performances has been mindlessly regurgitated, and applied to what sometimes seems every Anderson review imaginable.

But the question we must now ask is, simply: is the oft-repeated slam actually true?

Or is the over-used “wooden” descriptor just a form of conventional wisdom that has gone unquestioned for so long that it has now become mindlessly accepted?

To better answer that question, I respectfully submit below the five “real” people you may meet in the live-action productions of Gerry and Sylvia Anderson.

I consider “real” (as opposed to “wooden”) to mean in this context that the characters showcase a sense of verisimilitude.  They closely resemble people you have encountered and may know in life.

Similarly, a “real” person is someone replete with contradictions and failings (rather than just an affectless avatar for “wooden” dialogue or exposition).

In other words, these folks may look like one thing, but when you scratch the surface a bit you find there is something deeper, and maybe even a little conflicted going on inside.

 

 

wooden1 300x225 Wooden Tops: The 5 Best Real People You Meet In Gerry Anderson Live Action Productions

 

1. Ed Straker: The Workaholic Leader

In the far-flung year of 1980, Commander Ed Straker (Ed Bishop) in UFO (1969-1970) is the head of SHADO, a secret organization dedicated to fighting alien invaders. Straker is a respected leader, and absolutely uncompromising in terms of his expectations for his people.

Yet for every victory Straker wins in the war against the malevolent extra-terrestrials, he faces a defeat on the home front.

One episode of the series “A Question of Priorities,” explores his relationship with his estranged son, John (Barnaby Shaw), and his ex-wife (Suzanne Neve).

Straker has the opportunity to help his son in an emergency, but, at the last moment, he must step away and fight the big war rather than the personal one. As a result, Straker’s son dies, and his wife, Mary, vows never to speak to him again.

Another episode, “Confetti Check A-OK,” is a flashback story that reveals how Straker’s marriage to Mary went south at exactly the time he accepted his role as commander of SHADO.

UFO thus suggests a deeply unpopular idea in modern times: you can’t have it all.

Instead, there is a balance that must be maintained, and for each marker of success, a marker for defeat goes alongside.  Straker is a great hero and yet an eminently sad man because he has alienated and lost everyone outside the “job.”

Haunted by this fact, later episodes of the series such as “Mind Bender” and “Time Lash” reveal Straker on the veritable edge of psychosis, fighting his way back to sanity only because of his self-acknowledged “bloody-mindedness.”

If Straker were a “wooden” or unreal character, we would see no yin and yang.  There would be no such balance in his life. He would fight for the cause and be happy at home too.

But the fact is that Straker is not hot happy — and can never be happy again — because he has sacrificed love and family to save the Earth itself.

 

 

wooden2 300x226 Wooden Tops: The 5 Best Real People You Meet In Gerry Anderson Live Action Productions  

 

2. Victor Bergman: The Man With No Heart has a Lot of Heart

Professor Victor Bergman in Space: 1999 (1975- 1977) is a man who has an artificial or mechanical heart. His name “Bergman” could be interpreted, literally, to mean man of ice.  And if you read the novelizations based on the series, that’s how the character is portrayed in literary form.

But Victor is not a man of ice, a man without emotions (because he lacks “heart”) in the actual TV series.

On the contrary, Bergman is revealed to be a man of great wisdom, loyalty and love.  In “The Black Sun” for instance, he shares a final drink (of scotch…) with Commander Koenig (Martin Landau) on what could very likely be the eve of their death.  Their moon is headed into the event horizon of a black hole, and chances for survival are grim.

Yet when Koenig toasts to everything that might have been, Victor counters with a toast to “what was,” an emotional and very human recognition of the journey the duo has traveled together.

In the same episode, this rational man of science with respect and humility discusses the idea if not directly of God, then of a “cosmic intelligence.”

Again, if “reality” or verisimilitude equates to contradictions, then Victor is very real indeed.  The man who should have no emotions instead wears them on his sleeve.  The scientist who should discuss only hard science is willing to ponder metaphysics.

 

 

wooden4 300x218 Wooden Tops: The 5 Best Real People You Meet In Gerry Anderson Live Action Productions

 

3. Paul Morrow: The Controller Out of Control

Also in the aforementioned Space: 1999, Prentis Hancock plays Paul Morrow, the controller (or manager, essentially…) of Main Mission on Moonbase Alpha. On the job, Paul seems a fairly rigid and disciplined fellow.  He doesn’t reveal much of his internal self.

But in situations outside the norm, Paul is revealed to be a person…of surprising layers.

In the aforementioned “Black Sun,” for example — with the clock ticking down towards destruction — he returns to his cabin, alone, and plays his guitar.  Previously, audiences had no indication of Paul’s musical bent.

And when another Alphan, –Tanya (Suzanne Roquette)–  asks if she can share the “music” with this very private man, Paul answers in the affirmative.  The efficient controller is gone, replaced by a man willing to reach out.

Later, in an episode called “The Last Sunset,” Paul reveals his love for data analyst Sandra Benes (Zienia Merton).  He also loses his hard-fought sense of control because of exposure to hallucinogens on the surface of the moon (which has been rendered habitable by alien probes).

Again, the man who could be mistaken for the world’s toughest manager — or even a military martinet — reveals that, unloosed, he possesses quite an imagination.  In his “spaced out” ramblings under the influence of the ‘shrooms, he imagines a glorious future for the Alphans…

If Paul were just the “wooden” underling none might expect, we would not see such depths and contradictions.

 

 

wooden3 300x163 Wooden Tops: The 5 Best Real People You Meet In Gerry Anderson Live Action Productions

 

2. Jason Webb: The cut-throat, wheeling-dealing administrator who fights for a good cause

Let’s face it: few of us tend to like managers, or politicians.  Many of them see power as not a means to an end, but as an end in and of itself.

But in Journey to the Far Side of the Sun (1969), we meet a bureaucrat who wheel-and-deals not for personal gain, not for wealth and power, but for the advancement, actually, of the species.  Jason Webb (Patrick Wymark) of EUROSEC wants to explore a planet discovered on the opposite side of our star, Sol.  He needs the money to do it, and America is not willing to contribute.

So Webb allows for EUROSEC — his organization! — to suffer a security leak. The Russians learn of the “new” planet, and now it’s a race to get to it.  “You wouldn’t want anyone else to get there first, would you?” he asks a United States administrator, creating, essentially, a new space race.

Importantly, this space race will benefit man’s knowledge and learning about the cosmos.

So Webb is ruthless in his desire to achieve a goal, so much so that he would make his own “command,” essentially, look bad.  And that goal is not one of wealth or prestige, but exploration.

Again, this is the duality or conflict we see frequently in the characters of live-action Anderson productions.  The characters don’t behave woodenly at all…they reveal layers and contradictions.

Similarly, at the end of Journey to the Far Side of the Sun, many years have passed, and Webb — now wheelchair-bound — is haunted by the mission’s failure.  And once more, it’s not what the mission’s failure means to him as a human being, it’s what it means to the human race that so tortures his final years.

 

 

wooden5 300x176 Wooden Tops: The 5 Best Real People You Meet In Gerry Anderson Live Action Productions

 

5. Tony and Maya: The office flirts

There’s nothing deep about the possibly clichéd character type of the “office flirts” — two people highly attracted to one another, but not moving on that attraction for fear of harming a working relationship.

But again, a character doesn’t need to be “deep” or “original”
simply not to be wooden.  He or she just needs to demonstrate passion, the opposite quality of “stiff” or “without spirit.”

Maya (Catherine Schell) and Tony Verdeschi (Tony Anholt) on Space: 1999 and Officers Haldane (Rob Youngblood) and Jane Castle (Simone Bendix) on Space Precinct (1994) certainly fit that bill.

In both cases, these young “couples” go through a kind of delicate courting dance, caring for one another and then withdrawing to their separate corners when that attraction grows too powerful.

Again, I’m not arguing that the office flirts are original or layered as a type, only that they add passion — the aforementioned sense of spirit — to their respective series.  Certainly, the office-flirts prototype was a strong enough character structure to be resurrected on Star Trek: The Next Generation with Riker and Troi fulfilling those roles.

 

wooden6 300x225 Wooden Tops: The 5 Best Real People You Meet In Gerry Anderson Live Action Productions

wooden7 300x218 Wooden Tops: The 5 Best Real People You Meet In Gerry Anderson Live Action Productions

 

I’ve limited the list here to five character types, but the list could go on to include more characters from the Anderson canon too.

For instance, both UFO and Space: 1999 feature sort of “playboy” pilots — Paul Foster (Michael Billington) and Alan Carter (Nick Tate) — who demonstrate a depth of character beyond their “surface” love of flying machines….and womanizing.

Both men are fiery and temperamental. And though fiercely loyal to their commanding officers, they aren’t afraid to speak their minds, either.

They are within the command structure, in other words, but these pilots do not blindly follow orders (as we see of Carter, for instance, in “Black Sun,” or in the coda of “Mission of the Darians,” when he explicitly questions Commander Koenig.)

In short, none of these characters are without spirit or affect, or in the slightest bit, wooden.

Instead, the characters of live-action Gerry Anderson productions actually qualify as being quite realistic, rather than melodramatic…a quality that is perhaps the norm in science fiction television.

The Top 10 Lyrical Low Points of the 1970s

ABBA Ring Ring costumes The Top 10 Lyrical Low Points of the 1970s

 

BACK in January, we covered The Top Ten Lyrical Low Points of the 1980s.  Well, it’s time to tackle another decade – the 1970s.  While there were certainly a lot of good songs with good lyrics recorded during this period, there was a metric f**k-ton of bad ones as well.  But despite the enormity of the task, we’ve waded through it and plucked out the worst of reasonable well-known songs, and here they are…

10. “Roundabout” by Yes

 

 

In and around the lake
Mountains come out of the sky and they
STAND THERE!

 

It’s important to remember this isn’t a list of the worst songs, just the worst lyrics – and these are positively dreadful.  I know, I know – it’s “art rock”, so all is forgiven.  Perhaps I could overlook one misstep, by Yes was constantly delivering insane lyrics.  Take another example from Yes’ “The Solid Time of Change”:

A seasoned witch could call you from the depths of your disgrace,
And rearrange your liver to the solid mental grace

What the – ?  I presume their word choice was based more on how it sounded rather than whether it made any real sense.  It’s still no excuse, but at least it’s not as bad as the next prog rockers singing about melons…

 

 

9. “Xanadu” by Rush

 

 

To find the sacred river Alph
To walk the caves of ice
Oh, I will dine on honeydew
And drink the milk of Paradise

 

I get it.  It’s pulled from Coleridge.  Somehow that fact doesn’t keep me from hating it.  In fact, the pretentious nature of prog rock makes me hate it more – for the love of God, it takes over five minutes of self-important noodling before you even get to the lyrics!

 

8. “I Am the Tiger” by ABBA

 

And if I meet you,
What if I eat you?
I am the tiger.

 

English wasn’t their first language, so I’ll cut them some slack.  Plus, their preternatural ability to craft a melody that could make a Ringwraith smile, gives them a get-out-of-jail-free card…almost.  Sometimes a lyric is so bad, there’s no forgiving it.

 

 

7. “I Am Woman” by Helen Reddy

 

 

But I’m still an embryo
With a long, long way to go
Until I make my brother understand

 

This from the woman who brought you “Angie Baby”, which contained some of the most haunting and mysterious lyrics ever written.  “I Am Woman” is no doubt an empowering song, and it came at a perfect time when Women’s Lib was in full swing.  Yet, that embryo rhyme just begs to be included on this list.

 

 

6. “Your Song” by Elton John

 

 

If was a sculptor
But then again, no.

 

A great song, but Blecch!  Bernie Taupin could get pretty creative with his wording (just listen to “Levon” for proof): however, here it’s just cringeworthy.

 

 

5. “The Joker” by Steve Miller Band

 

 

Some people call me Maurice
Cause I speak of the pompitous of love

 

Miller is notorious for giving the middle finger to grammar in favor of a nicely flavored verse.  Take for instance:

Billy Mack is a detective down in Texas. You know he knows just exactly what the facts is.

I think it’s okay to sacrifice grammar on occasion.  After all, I’m not going to criticize Bo Diddley because “Who Do You Love?” should really be “Whom Do You Love?”  However, when you start inventing stupid words like “pompitous” because you’re high, I’ve got to call you out on it, Steve.

 

 

4. “Ain’t Gonna Bump No More (With No Big Fat Woman)” by Joe Tex

 

 

I told her to go on and leave me alone
I ain’t gettin’ down
You done hurt my hip once
I ain’t gonna bump no more with no big fat woman
I ain’t gonna bump no more with no big fat woman

 

Tex was actually nominated for a Grammy for this song, which is shocking until you consider that “My Humps” actually won one.

 

 

3. “I Am I Said” by Neil Diamond

 

 

“I am”… I said
To no one there
And no one heard at all
Not even the chair

 

This is actually a brilliant song; an honest testimony of feeling like a stranger in both your hometown and where you currently dwell.  Neil felt an outsider in New York, where he grew up, and LA where he made it big and set up his palatial estate.  The lyrics are heartfelt and the melody is sweeping…. but then it gets to that bit about the chair.  WTF, Neil?!?

 

 

2. “Muskrat Love” by Captain & Tennille

 

 

Muskrat Suzie, Muskrat Sam
Do the jitterbug at a Muskrat Land
And they shimmy, Sam is so skinny

 

I’m not one of those rock snobs who turns his nose up at every cheesy pop song; I happen to like Captain & Tennille.  I enjoyed their variety show when it aired, and was genuinely sad to hear the recent news that their longtime relationship was at its end.

And yet, no amount of personal goodwill can polish this turd.  The two artists who recorded this song, America and C&T have both commented on how polarizing this song is to a crowd – some cheer, some boo.  You either love or loathe this cutesy saccharine mess, and I happen to fall into the latter category.

The only other song which I can think of which can compare in terms of pure unbridled cheese is “Till I Met You” from The Brady Bunch.  I nearly included it on this list, but didn’t think it qualified since it isn’t really a proper recording.

Fans of The Brady Bunch are well familiar with the many lyrical crimes committed on the show.  Let’s not forget Ex-Monkee Davy Jones’ “Girl” where he thanks the titular lady for “making my nighttime nicer”.  Then, of course, there’s the infamous “Can ya’ dig the sunshine?” from “Sunshine Day”.  But for me, the worst Brady lyric is from a song co-written by Barry Williams himself, “Till I Met You”:

 

Clowns never laughed before
Beanstalks never grew
Ponies never ran before
Till i met you

 

 

Egad, that is just wrong.  But I digress.  On to number one….

 

 

1. “MacArthur Park” by Richard Harris/Donna Summer

 

 

Someone left the cake out in the rain
I don’t think that I can take it
’cause it took so long to bake it
And I’ll never have that recipe again
Oh, no!

 

Long heralded as the worst lyrics of all time, this almost seems too obvious a choice.  Yet, it was so popular by so many artists… and it is so, so terribly bad, that it would be a crime not to single this out as the low water mark in the history of lyrics.

The composer, Jimmy Webb, who shall forever stand accused for unleashing this abomination upon mankind, has tried to offer an excuse: “The cake, it was an available object. It was what I saw in the park at the birthday parties. But people have very strong reactions to the song. There’s been a lot of intellectual venom.”

Au contraire, Jimmy.  There’s nothing intellectual about my venom.  It comes from my very soul, and burns with the white-hot fury of a thousand suns.