It was a slow day of crime in Grantham, England, on March 9, apparently. Sophie Lindley, 4, was biking along Trent Road with her dad, when a police officer approached her and said she had to get off the path on her bike. (Sophie is still using training wheels.) "He said, 'The law is the law,' and she was not allowed to ride on the path," her father Dale told the BBC. "He said, 'If I catch you putting her on her bike further up the road I will turn around and confiscate the bike,' " Lindley added. Sophie's mother...
- 3/11/2015
- by Alex Heigl, @alex_heigl
- PEOPLE.com
Spoiler alert! If you haven’t watched Hell on Wheels’ season 3 premiere, stop reading now. Anson Mount spoke with EW about a scene likely to have fans talking…
In the two-hour return of the AMC Western, Cullen Bohannon (Mount), the new chief engineer of the Union Pacific Railroad, tried to convince a Mormon family to peacefully vacate its land, which his tracks were set to cross. After agreeing to a survey to determine if the tracks could go around the property instead, Bohannon — a widower whose new love interest, Lily Bell (Dominique McElligott), was killed in the season 2 finale — was...
In the two-hour return of the AMC Western, Cullen Bohannon (Mount), the new chief engineer of the Union Pacific Railroad, tried to convince a Mormon family to peacefully vacate its land, which his tracks were set to cross. After agreeing to a survey to determine if the tracks could go around the property instead, Bohannon — a widower whose new love interest, Lily Bell (Dominique McElligott), was killed in the season 2 finale — was...
- 8/11/2013
- by Mandi Bierly
- EW - Inside TV
I recently watched a short documentary by Andrea Marks called Freedom on the Fence. Made in 2009, and only 40 minutes long, it is a nice introduction to the world of Polish movie posters which concisely explains the particular set of circumstances that gave rise to the incredible flowering of creativity that was the Polish poster of the 1950s and 60s. An audio interview with Henryk Tomaszewski, the father of the modern Polish poster, explains how the systematic destruction of Warsaw by the retreating Nazis in 1945, which left 80% of the city in ruins, gave rise to a landscape of rubble and fences which basically created an open-air art gallery for posters.
At the same time, at the end of the war, there was a six year backlog of American and other foreign cinema that was waiting to be seen in Poland. Tomaszewski remembers being told by the woman in charge of film...
At the same time, at the end of the war, there was a six year backlog of American and other foreign cinema that was waiting to be seen in Poland. Tomaszewski remembers being told by the woman in charge of film...
- 7/5/2012
- MUBI
CBS
The story tightens as the plot thickens in “What Went Wrong,” an episode where Peter and Will separately unveil their inner mafiosi while Alicia continues her bizarre sexual guilt trip but almost makes up with Kalinda (seriously—how can she really forgive a friend who slept with her husband?) and finally finds a (surprising) new pal.
Alicia is daydreaming in court (as, frankly, we tend to do whenever the show heads there) when she gets a call from the headmistress at Capstone Prep School.
The story tightens as the plot thickens in “What Went Wrong,” an episode where Peter and Will separately unveil their inner mafiosi while Alicia continues her bizarre sexual guilt trip but almost makes up with Kalinda (seriously—how can she really forgive a friend who slept with her husband?) and finally finds a (surprising) new pal.
Alicia is daydreaming in court (as, frankly, we tend to do whenever the show heads there) when she gets a call from the headmistress at Capstone Prep School.
- 12/12/2011
- by Susan Toepfer
- Speakeasy/Wall Street Journal
Fame Pictures
Criminal defense attorney Steve Cron tells HollywoodLife.com that her parents pleas for rehab over jail time are in vain -– Lindsay won’t be let off the hook this time!
Lindsay Lohan and her parents, Michael and Dina, can cry, beg and plead all they want — but the 24-year-old actress is going to the slammer to serve her 90-day sentence whether she likes it or not, Los Angeles-based criminal defense attorney Steve Cron tells HollywoodLife.com.
“The judge has the right to impose punishment because Lindsay, in the judge’s view, has not followed the terms of her probation,” Cron explains.
He adds, “[They] might want [Lindsay] to go to rehab, but it’s not [their] decision. What [parents] want to see [their] kid go to jail? People go to jail by the 1,000s every day and it’s obviously not something they want to do, but it’s not his choice or her choice.
Criminal defense attorney Steve Cron tells HollywoodLife.com that her parents pleas for rehab over jail time are in vain -– Lindsay won’t be let off the hook this time!
Lindsay Lohan and her parents, Michael and Dina, can cry, beg and plead all they want — but the 24-year-old actress is going to the slammer to serve her 90-day sentence whether she likes it or not, Los Angeles-based criminal defense attorney Steve Cron tells HollywoodLife.com.
“The judge has the right to impose punishment because Lindsay, in the judge’s view, has not followed the terms of her probation,” Cron explains.
He adds, “[They] might want [Lindsay] to go to rehab, but it’s not [their] decision. What [parents] want to see [their] kid go to jail? People go to jail by the 1,000s every day and it’s obviously not something they want to do, but it’s not his choice or her choice.
- 7/9/2010
- by Kirstin Benson
- HollywoodLife
In a People interview, Brown calls judge's order requiring him to stay away from Rihanna 'a little harsh.'
By Jayson Rodriguez
Chris Brown
Photo: Frazer Harrison/ Getty Images
Chris Brown continues to speak out about the February altercation with then-girlfriend Rihanna that led the "Forever" singer to be sentenced to community labor work, weekly counseling and five years' probation. In the new issue of People magazine, slated to hit newsstands Friday, Brown opened up about his continued feelings for Rihanna and the judge's stay-away order that requires the former couple to keep their distance during his probation.
Brown called the order "a little harsh" but thought his overall punishment — 180 days of labor work, including trash pickup and graffiti removal; 52 weeks of counseling; and probation — was fair.
"The law is the law," Brown told the magazine. "I am relieved to put everything behind me. [The stay-away order] might have been a little harsh.
By Jayson Rodriguez
Chris Brown
Photo: Frazer Harrison/ Getty Images
Chris Brown continues to speak out about the February altercation with then-girlfriend Rihanna that led the "Forever" singer to be sentenced to community labor work, weekly counseling and five years' probation. In the new issue of People magazine, slated to hit newsstands Friday, Brown opened up about his continued feelings for Rihanna and the judge's stay-away order that requires the former couple to keep their distance during his probation.
Brown called the order "a little harsh" but thought his overall punishment — 180 days of labor work, including trash pickup and graffiti removal; 52 weeks of counseling; and probation — was fair.
"The law is the law," Brown told the magazine. "I am relieved to put everything behind me. [The stay-away order] might have been a little harsh.
- 9/2/2009
- MTV Music News
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