Black Panther and Creed star Michael B. Jordan attended Saturday’s English Premiere League soccer match between AFC Bournemouth and Crystal Palace, his first since becoming a minority shareholder in the ownership group that acquired Bournemouth earlier this month.
Related Story 'Creed III' Trailer: Michael B. Jordan's Adonis Finds New Adversary In Jonathan Majors' Boxer Damian Anderson Related Story 'Avatar: The Way Of Water' Rises To 1.38B Global Through Third Weekend, Nears 1B Overseas – International Box Office Related Story College Football Championship Final Two: Georgia To Face Tcu In Los Angeles Title Showdown
Jordan was quickly recognized and hailed by the club’s fans as he arrived for the home game at Vitality Stadium in Bournemouth, a coastal city about two hours southwest of London.
Check out the welcome:
Hey #afcb fans – @michaelb4jordan is in the house ! pic.twitter.com/2qZG9ZE5i8
— Mark McAdam (@markmcadamtv) December 31, 2022
Earlier this month,...
Related Story 'Creed III' Trailer: Michael B. Jordan's Adonis Finds New Adversary In Jonathan Majors' Boxer Damian Anderson Related Story 'Avatar: The Way Of Water' Rises To 1.38B Global Through Third Weekend, Nears 1B Overseas – International Box Office Related Story College Football Championship Final Two: Georgia To Face Tcu In Los Angeles Title Showdown
Jordan was quickly recognized and hailed by the club’s fans as he arrived for the home game at Vitality Stadium in Bournemouth, a coastal city about two hours southwest of London.
Check out the welcome:
Hey #afcb fans – @michaelb4jordan is in the house ! pic.twitter.com/2qZG9ZE5i8
— Mark McAdam (@markmcadamtv) December 31, 2022
Earlier this month,...
- 12/31/2022
- by Patrick Hipes
- Deadline Film + TV
Click here to read the full article.
SmartLess Media’s expansion has begun.
A year and a half after signing a lucrative deal with Amazon, SmartLess co-hosts Jason Bateman, Sean Hayes and Will Arnett and their newly formed media company are rolling out offerings from Jameela Jamil, Rob Corddry, Amy Schneider, Rex Chapman, Sean Hayes and Eric McCormack. Their slate, a collection of original podcasts made in collaboration with Wondery and Amazon Music, shares a comedic DNA with flagship SmartLess, which continues to be a top 10 podcast in year three.
“The three of us are so excited and grateful to be able to bring more SmartLess style content your way, and we hope you’ll all love the talent on these new podcasts as much as we do,” the trio of co-founders said in a statement announcing the upcoming slate Wednesday. “If not, a lot of it was Sean Hayes...
SmartLess Media’s expansion has begun.
A year and a half after signing a lucrative deal with Amazon, SmartLess co-hosts Jason Bateman, Sean Hayes and Will Arnett and their newly formed media company are rolling out offerings from Jameela Jamil, Rob Corddry, Amy Schneider, Rex Chapman, Sean Hayes and Eric McCormack. Their slate, a collection of original podcasts made in collaboration with Wondery and Amazon Music, shares a comedic DNA with flagship SmartLess, which continues to be a top 10 podcast in year three.
“The three of us are so excited and grateful to be able to bring more SmartLess style content your way, and we hope you’ll all love the talent on these new podcasts as much as we do,” the trio of co-founders said in a statement announcing the upcoming slate Wednesday. “If not, a lot of it was Sean Hayes...
- 12/14/2022
- by Lacey Rose
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
SmartLess Media, the company that grew out of Jason Bateman, Sean Hayes, and Will Arnett’s eponymous podcast, has lined up its first slate of audio series.
The company is launching four new shows after striking a multi-million-dollar deal with Wondery and Amazon Music and hiring Richard Korson as President.
The four shows are Bad Dates hosted by Jameela Jamil, Amy Always Wins hosted by Rob Corddry, Owned hosted by Rex Chapman and Just Jack & Will, a Will & Grace rewatch podcast hosted by Hayes and Eric McCormack.
Bad Dates will launch on February 6 on Amazon Music and on all podcast services on February 13. The show will feature a panel of guests sharing tales of their worst andcraziest dates ever, before weighing in on everyone else’s misfortune. Produced by Smartless Media, the series was created by Robert Cohen, who exec produces with Jamil with Stewart Bailey as producer.
In Amy Always Wins,...
The company is launching four new shows after striking a multi-million-dollar deal with Wondery and Amazon Music and hiring Richard Korson as President.
The four shows are Bad Dates hosted by Jameela Jamil, Amy Always Wins hosted by Rob Corddry, Owned hosted by Rex Chapman and Just Jack & Will, a Will & Grace rewatch podcast hosted by Hayes and Eric McCormack.
Bad Dates will launch on February 6 on Amazon Music and on all podcast services on February 13. The show will feature a panel of guests sharing tales of their worst andcraziest dates ever, before weighing in on everyone else’s misfortune. Produced by Smartless Media, the series was created by Robert Cohen, who exec produces with Jamil with Stewart Bailey as producer.
In Amy Always Wins,...
- 12/14/2022
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
Apple is taking a further step into ordering original audio series with a new podcast about opioids and bank robbery.
The tech giant has launched Hooked from Campside Media, the Sister-backed company behind Chameleon: Hollywood Con Queen series.
The series explores the true story of Tony Hathaway, whose addiction to legally prescribed opioids led him to spiral from a top engineer to becoming one of the most prolific bank robbers in American history.
It is hosted by journalist and Campside Media co-founder Josh Dean and features three years worth of interviews with Hathaway, his family, law enforcement and others involved in the story. Dean exec produces alongside Vanessa Grigoriadis, Adam Hoff, Matt Shaer, and Mark McAdam.
Hooked is an adaptation of Dean’s story Hooked: America’s Busiest Bank Robber for Bloomberg Businessweek.
A television adaptation was in development by John Ridley for ABC Signature.
It marks only the second...
The tech giant has launched Hooked from Campside Media, the Sister-backed company behind Chameleon: Hollywood Con Queen series.
The series explores the true story of Tony Hathaway, whose addiction to legally prescribed opioids led him to spiral from a top engineer to becoming one of the most prolific bank robbers in American history.
It is hosted by journalist and Campside Media co-founder Josh Dean and features three years worth of interviews with Hathaway, his family, law enforcement and others involved in the story. Dean exec produces alongside Vanessa Grigoriadis, Adam Hoff, Matt Shaer, and Mark McAdam.
Hooked is an adaptation of Dean’s story Hooked: America’s Busiest Bank Robber for Bloomberg Businessweek.
A television adaptation was in development by John Ridley for ABC Signature.
It marks only the second...
- 11/3/2021
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
The Arthur soundtrack. The idea that popular culture is in some kind of irreversible decline is not one I find myself able to get too far down with. Sure, there’s a lot of crap around. But crap is one thing that we’ve always proved capable of producing in abundance, and I don’t just mean the funny-smelling brown biscuits that pop out of our backsides once a day (twice if last night was chilli and beer night).
Sure, some folks might like to brandish the French New Wave or the Clash or Apocalypse Now as incontrovertible proof that back then was a whole heap better than right now, but when doing so they always conveniently elect to forget the slurry which enshrined their chosen pearls: Plan 9 From Outer Space. The surprisingly successful recording career of the Smurfs. The Wild Geese, especially the bit where Roger Moore makes...
Sure, some folks might like to brandish the French New Wave or the Clash or Apocalypse Now as incontrovertible proof that back then was a whole heap better than right now, but when doing so they always conveniently elect to forget the slurry which enshrined their chosen pearls: Plan 9 From Outer Space. The surprisingly successful recording career of the Smurfs. The Wild Geese, especially the bit where Roger Moore makes...
- 4/9/2011
- by Paul Martin
- Movie-moron.com
London, May 26 – Mike Myers got entangled in a scuffle on the streets of New York, when one of his friends allegedly attacked a photographer with a hockey stick.
The photographer attempted to click pictures of the Shrek star when Myers’ friend Mark McAdam hit him with a hockey stick on his head.
As per reports of The Daily Express, the photographer alleges McAdam, 40, turned on him and hit him on the head with his stick, while Myers fled the scene. He claims to have needed five stitches to treat a wound above his right eye.
McAdam was arrested on charges of felony assault, according to the New York Daily.
The photographer attempted to click pictures of the Shrek star when Myers’ friend Mark McAdam hit him with a hockey stick on his head.
As per reports of The Daily Express, the photographer alleges McAdam, 40, turned on him and hit him on the head with his stick, while Myers fled the scene. He claims to have needed five stitches to treat a wound above his right eye.
McAdam was arrested on charges of felony assault, according to the New York Daily.
- 5/26/2010
- by News
- RealBollywood.com
Mike Myers was caught up in trouble on the streets of New York on Monday, May 24 - one of his friends was arrested for allegedly hitting a photographer with a hockey stick as he attempted to take pictures of the star. The snapper was photographing the "Shrek" actor in Manhattan as he walked along a street with his friend Mark McAdam, with both men carrying hockey sticks.
The photographer alleges McAdam, 40, turned on him and hit him on the head with his stick, while Myers fled the scene. He claims to have needed five stitches to treat a wound above his right eye. McAdam was arrested on charges of felony assault, according to the New York Daily News.
Mike Myers has his new movie "Shrek Forever After" released in United States last week. In this fourth installment of the animated movie series, he reprise his role to voice the titular character.
The photographer alleges McAdam, 40, turned on him and hit him on the head with his stick, while Myers fled the scene. He claims to have needed five stitches to treat a wound above his right eye. McAdam was arrested on charges of felony assault, according to the New York Daily News.
Mike Myers has his new movie "Shrek Forever After" released in United States last week. In this fourth installment of the animated movie series, he reprise his role to voice the titular character.
- 5/26/2010
- by AceShowbiz.com
- Aceshowbiz
Mike Myers was caught up in trouble on the streets of New York on Monday - one of his friends was arrested for allegedly hitting a photographer with a hockey stick as he attempted to take pictures of the star.
The snapper was photographing the Shrek actor in Manhattan as he walked along a street with his friend Mark McAdam, with both men carrying hockey sticks.
The photographer alleges McAdam, 40, turned on him and hit him on the head with his stick, while Myers fled the scene. He claims to have needed five stitches to treat a wound above his right eye.
McAdam was arrested on charges of felony assault, according to the New York Daily News.
The snapper was photographing the Shrek actor in Manhattan as he walked along a street with his friend Mark McAdam, with both men carrying hockey sticks.
The photographer alleges McAdam, 40, turned on him and hit him on the head with his stick, while Myers fled the scene. He claims to have needed five stitches to treat a wound above his right eye.
McAdam was arrested on charges of felony assault, according to the New York Daily News.
- 5/25/2010
- WENN
PARK CITY -- Four-and-a-half years in the making, "God Grew Tired of Us" is a labor of love not only for the director Christopher Quinn but for the three Lost Boys of Sudan who are the subject of the film. An incredibly powerful story of renewal, commitment and the resiliency of the human spirit, this is a movie that should attract a large theatrical audience, and no one will go home disappointed.
In 1983 some 25,000 boys from the southern Sudan, most of them 5-10 years old, fled the advancing Muslim army from the north which was seeking to exterminate the male population of black Christians. The Lost Boys, as they came to be known, trekked barefoot for over a thousand miles and eventually settled in a UN refuge camp in Kakuma, Kenya, which is where Quinn started filming.
Rather than becoming bitter and hostile, the boys formed a close-knit society in which they all took care of each other, boys as young as 11 taking on the responsibility of surrogate fathers. What is remarkable to see in Quinn's footage is that these children have not let their sadness and suffering--many buried their families--wipe out their good will and kind nature.
While at the camp, Quinn chose three boys to follow as they left their community to resettle in the U.S. Before they leave, their cultural fears are amusing, but not in a condescending way. These people have great dignity even as they worry about the difficulty of using electricity and whether they will have to bring water from the river to bathe.
In selecting John Bul Dau, Panther Bior and Daniel Abul Pach, Quinn has picked excellent stars for his film. They are intelligent, engaging and a pleasure to spend ninety minutes with. Although their arrival in America has many humorous moments, this is not another fish out of water story. These are not people simply trying to adapt to a foreign culture, they bring with them spiritual values that are intrinsically the opposite of American life. They really do love their neighbors and Daniel marvels at how you can't just go into a stranger's house for help if you need something.
Panther and Daniel are situated in Pittsburgh while John moves to Syracuse. They are lonely at first but what they have in common from their Dinka tradition and what keeps them going is their commitment to help their family and friends who still don't have a home or a homeland. John works three jobs to send money to his family in a Uganda refuge camp.
After the initial phase of shooting, Quinn returned to Syracuse and Pittsburgh every other month to record their progress through the modern world, their various jobs and return to school. One of the most moving of many moving scenes in the film occurs when John brings his mother to America after not knowing for many years if she was even alive. She is so overcome with joy at their reunion that she can barely stand up and walks through the airport calling out Dinka chants of delight.
Quinn always seems to have his camera in the right place at the right time, thanks in no small part to cinematographer Paul Daley's vibrant colors and Geoffrey Richman's crisp editing. Film also features a tuneful soundtrack of African music that carries the uplifting message of these wonderful, wounded Lost Boys who never lost their faith.
GOD GREW TIRED OF US
LBS Films
Credits:
Director: Christopher Quinn
Producers: Molly Bradford Pace, Quinn
Executive producers: Bard Pitt, Adam Schlesinger, Jack Schneider
Director of photography: Paul Daley
Music: Mark McAdam, Mark Nelson, Jamie Staff
Editor: Geoffrey Richman.
Cast:
John Bul Dau, Panther Bior, Daniel Abul Pach
No MPAA rating
Running time -- 90 minutes...
In 1983 some 25,000 boys from the southern Sudan, most of them 5-10 years old, fled the advancing Muslim army from the north which was seeking to exterminate the male population of black Christians. The Lost Boys, as they came to be known, trekked barefoot for over a thousand miles and eventually settled in a UN refuge camp in Kakuma, Kenya, which is where Quinn started filming.
Rather than becoming bitter and hostile, the boys formed a close-knit society in which they all took care of each other, boys as young as 11 taking on the responsibility of surrogate fathers. What is remarkable to see in Quinn's footage is that these children have not let their sadness and suffering--many buried their families--wipe out their good will and kind nature.
While at the camp, Quinn chose three boys to follow as they left their community to resettle in the U.S. Before they leave, their cultural fears are amusing, but not in a condescending way. These people have great dignity even as they worry about the difficulty of using electricity and whether they will have to bring water from the river to bathe.
In selecting John Bul Dau, Panther Bior and Daniel Abul Pach, Quinn has picked excellent stars for his film. They are intelligent, engaging and a pleasure to spend ninety minutes with. Although their arrival in America has many humorous moments, this is not another fish out of water story. These are not people simply trying to adapt to a foreign culture, they bring with them spiritual values that are intrinsically the opposite of American life. They really do love their neighbors and Daniel marvels at how you can't just go into a stranger's house for help if you need something.
Panther and Daniel are situated in Pittsburgh while John moves to Syracuse. They are lonely at first but what they have in common from their Dinka tradition and what keeps them going is their commitment to help their family and friends who still don't have a home or a homeland. John works three jobs to send money to his family in a Uganda refuge camp.
After the initial phase of shooting, Quinn returned to Syracuse and Pittsburgh every other month to record their progress through the modern world, their various jobs and return to school. One of the most moving of many moving scenes in the film occurs when John brings his mother to America after not knowing for many years if she was even alive. She is so overcome with joy at their reunion that she can barely stand up and walks through the airport calling out Dinka chants of delight.
Quinn always seems to have his camera in the right place at the right time, thanks in no small part to cinematographer Paul Daley's vibrant colors and Geoffrey Richman's crisp editing. Film also features a tuneful soundtrack of African music that carries the uplifting message of these wonderful, wounded Lost Boys who never lost their faith.
GOD GREW TIRED OF US
LBS Films
Credits:
Director: Christopher Quinn
Producers: Molly Bradford Pace, Quinn
Executive producers: Bard Pitt, Adam Schlesinger, Jack Schneider
Director of photography: Paul Daley
Music: Mark McAdam, Mark Nelson, Jamie Staff
Editor: Geoffrey Richman.
Cast:
John Bul Dau, Panther Bior, Daniel Abul Pach
No MPAA rating
Running time -- 90 minutes...
- 1/25/2006
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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