[Editor’s note: The following review contains spoilers for “Twin Peaks: The Return” (Season 3), “Part 12.”]
Two major mysteries were solved in “Part 12,” a geographically and tonally sporadic episode of “The Return”: We found out what the “blue rose” referred to, and Audrey Horne (Sherilyn Fenn) made her 2017 debut.
As exciting as the latter point sounds, but ultimately didn’t prove to be, first things first: Did Gordon Cole (David Lynch) invent “The X-Files”?
Forgive us for the meta pop culture diversion, but Albert’s (Miguel Ferrer) exposition dump in recruiting Tammy (Chrysta Bell) to The Blue Rose task force triggered alarm bells. To sum up, Albert told the prospective new member that a few years after the government conducted a massive cover-up regarding the existence of UFOs, the military and FBI secretly joined forces to investigate the unsolvable leftover cases, and Gordon, Albert, and Cooper have been looking for answers ever since.
Read More‘Twin Peaks’ Review: Part 11 Puts a Funny Spin on David Fincher...
Two major mysteries were solved in “Part 12,” a geographically and tonally sporadic episode of “The Return”: We found out what the “blue rose” referred to, and Audrey Horne (Sherilyn Fenn) made her 2017 debut.
As exciting as the latter point sounds, but ultimately didn’t prove to be, first things first: Did Gordon Cole (David Lynch) invent “The X-Files”?
Forgive us for the meta pop culture diversion, but Albert’s (Miguel Ferrer) exposition dump in recruiting Tammy (Chrysta Bell) to The Blue Rose task force triggered alarm bells. To sum up, Albert told the prospective new member that a few years after the government conducted a massive cover-up regarding the existence of UFOs, the military and FBI secretly joined forces to investigate the unsolvable leftover cases, and Gordon, Albert, and Cooper have been looking for answers ever since.
Read More‘Twin Peaks’ Review: Part 11 Puts a Funny Spin on David Fincher...
- 7/31/2017
- by Ben Travers
- Indiewire
This article originally appeared on EW.com.
The Royal Mail will immortalize the late David Bowie with a series of new stamps, the British postal service announced Wednesday. The series of 10 stamps honor various eras of Bowie’s career and become available to the public in March. According to a press release, it’s “the first time Royal Mail has dedicated an entire stamp issue to an individual music artist or cultural figure.”
Six of the stamps commemorate the iconic artwork of Bowie’s albums: 1971’s Hunky Dory, 1973’s Aladdin Sane, 1977’s “Heroes”, 1983’s Let’s Dance, 1997’s Earthling, and his final album,...
The Royal Mail will immortalize the late David Bowie with a series of new stamps, the British postal service announced Wednesday. The series of 10 stamps honor various eras of Bowie’s career and become available to the public in March. According to a press release, it’s “the first time Royal Mail has dedicated an entire stamp issue to an individual music artist or cultural figure.”
Six of the stamps commemorate the iconic artwork of Bowie’s albums: 1971’s Hunky Dory, 1973’s Aladdin Sane, 1977’s “Heroes”, 1983’s Let’s Dance, 1997’s Earthling, and his final album,...
- 1/26/2017
- by Jordan Runtagh
- PEOPLE.com
The video for David Bowie‘s last single “Lazarus” — released days before the late singer lost his 18-month battle with cancer — hauntingly referred to death and rebirth. And in a new documentary about the 69-year-old music legend, the video’s director reveals Bowie learned his cancer was terminal while filming the video.
David Bowie: The Last Five Years, which premieres on British television Saturday, covers the final years of Bowie’s life — including his 2003-4 A Reality Tour, and the making of his 25th (and final) studio album Blackstar.
Directed by Francis Whately, it’s a follow-up to the 2013 documentary David Bowie: Five Years.
David Bowie: The Last Five Years, which premieres on British television Saturday, covers the final years of Bowie’s life — including his 2003-4 A Reality Tour, and the making of his 25th (and final) studio album Blackstar.
Directed by Francis Whately, it’s a follow-up to the 2013 documentary David Bowie: Five Years.
- 1/7/2017
- by Dave Quinn
- PEOPLE.com
David Bowie's son denies that a portion of his father's ashes were scattered at Burning Man. After multiple news sources reported that the singer's godchild was given permission from Bowie's wife Iman to take a portion of his ashes to the Nevada festival, Duncan Jones claims the reports are bogus. Jones, 45, tweeted on Monday, "That Burning Man thing? What people will do & say for attention never ceases to amaze me. Not true. Kind of a gross claim as well. *sigh*" He added that if his father wanted his ashes spread in public, it would be at Skegness Butlins, a resort in Lincolnshire,...
- 9/12/2016
- by Stephanie Petit, @stephpetit_
- PEOPLE.com
[Embedcode {}] Duncan Jones is applauding Lorde for her touching tribute to his late father David Bowie, over a week after slamming Lady Gaga for her performance at the Grammys. Lorde, 19, brought down the house with her rendition of "Life on Mars?" after Annie Lennox and Gary Oldman accepted the Brit Icon Award on Bowie's behalf at the Brit Awards on Wednesday. You can now download @lorde's moving tribute to #DavidBowie: https://t.co/JnuDVoFYco @GooglePlay #BRITs pic.twitter.com/2s4d0dupbc— Brit Awards (@brits) February 25, 2016 The emotional tribute kicked off with a spotlight in the midst of an empty stage...
- 2/25/2016
- by Karen Mizoguchi
- PEOPLE.com
[Embedcode {}] Duncan Jones is applauding Lorde for her touching tribute to his late father David Bowie, over a week after slamming Lady Gaga for her performance at the Grammys. Lorde, 19, brought down the house with her rendition of "Life on Mars?" after Annie Lennox and Gary Oldman accepted the Brit Icon Award on Bowie's behalf at the Brit Awards on Wednesday. You can now download @lorde's moving tribute to #DavidBowie: https://t.co/JnuDVoFYco @GooglePlay #BRITs pic.twitter.com/2s4d0dupbc— Brit Awards (@brits) February 25, 2016 The emotional tribute kicked off with a spotlight in the midst of an empty stage...
- 2/25/2016
- by Karen Mizoguchi
- PEOPLE.com
The night David Bowie died, guitarist Gerry Leonard was a marquee guest at the first annual Dublin Bowie Festival, and the subject of an onstage interview about his close collaborator. Leonard played on three of Bowie’s albums — 2002's Heathen, 2003's Reality, and 2013's The Next Day — and was the musical director of his epic Reality tour, the one cut short by Bowie's 2004 heart attack. Six years later, when the superstar was ready to record again for what would become The Next Day, one of the first people he contacted was Leonard. They met in Leonard’s Woodstock home and worked up the first demos of his long-awaited comeback album. (The next one, Blackstar, was released two days before Bowie’s death.) Leonard was back in New York last week for a gig with Suzanne Vega. We caught up with him in a downtown boutique hotel to talk about the...
- 1/22/2016
- by Boris Kachka
- Vulture
I was gutted by the news shared by playwright/producer Jeff Cohen as he and I walked our dogs in Riverside Park early this morning. The Thin White Duke was no more. I struggled to understand the implications of losing a music hero. Rushing home, resigned to reality, I watched his two new videos, the one above and the ablum's title track which I featured on this website last week, both from his 28th studio album, ★(Blackstar), released this past week on January 8th, 2016, the date of Bowie's 69th birthday. As I watched "Lazarus" again, it all made sense.
"Lazarus" is clearly Bowie's epitaph, his final prophetic performance on this mortal coil...
Look up here / I'm in heaven I've got scars that can't be seen I've got drama that can't be stolen Everybody knows me now...
The coins on his eyes, the pallor of his skin, his frail body wrapped in a fashionalbe shroud.
"Lazarus" is clearly Bowie's epitaph, his final prophetic performance on this mortal coil...
Look up here / I'm in heaven I've got scars that can't be seen I've got drama that can't be stolen Everybody knows me now...
The coins on his eyes, the pallor of his skin, his frail body wrapped in a fashionalbe shroud.
- 1/11/2016
- by Dusty Wright
- www.culturecatch.com
David Bowie, who died Sunday at 69, will be remembered for changing the face of music, especially with one of his best-known songs, "Heroes." Bowie, who had not performed for a decade prior to his death, last played the song live at his final full concert, which took place on June 25, 2004 at Germany's Hurricane Festival. (Bowie's final performance would come in 2006, alongside Alicia Keys at New York's Hammerstein Ballroom, where he performed "Changes" for the last time.) At the time, Bowie was suffering pain from what he thought was a pinched nerve; after the show, he collapsed backstage and was rushed to a nearby hospital, where he underwent surgery for a blocked artery. He was later forced to cancel the rest of his Reality Tour, making the Hurricane Festival set the last time Bowie would ever tour. Watch his final performance of "Heroes" above.
- 1/11/2016
- by Dee Lockett
- Vulture
David Bowie, a legend in the music and film industry, has died at the age of 69. “David Bowie died peacefully today surrounded by his family after a courageous 18 month battle with cancer. While many of you will share in this loss, we ask that you respect the family’s privacy during their time of grief,” read a statement posted on the artist’s official social media accounts. Bowie largely left the spotlight after a heart attack in 2004 brought an abrupt end to a tour supporting his album “Reality.” The singer experienced pain during a performance at a German festival
Legendary Artist David Bowie Dies at 69...
Legendary Artist David Bowie Dies at 69...
- 1/11/2016
- by Nat Berman
- TVovermind.com
It took ten years for David Bowie to follow-up 2003's "Reality" with last year's Grammy-winning "The Next Day," but the legendary singer promises he won't make fans wait that long for his next album. As NME reports, Bowie released a statement which was read at a London charity event which benefitted the Terrance Higgins Trust and celebrated Bowie's 50th anniversary of musicmaking. The statement reads, “[London] is even better than the one you were in last year, so remember to dance, dance, dance. And then sit down for a minute, knit something, then get up and run all over the place. Do it. Love on ya. More music soon. David” The phrase "More music soon" doesn't reveal very much -- will it be an album of new material? More "Next Day" outtakes? Some sort of collaboration? -- but fans can start getting excited now, and we'll keep you posted on any further developments.
- 7/16/2014
- by Dave Lewis
- Hitfix
Usually, when Christmastime rolls around, Ben Stiller finds himself in a franchise film, either one of the "Night at the Museum" movies (the third one is out next year) or the series based around "Meet the Parents" (there have been three of those, too). But this year, Stiller finds himself giving a different kind of yuletide greeting, with "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty," a loose remake of the 1947 Danny Kaye movie (they're both based on James Thurber's 1939 short story of the same name).
In the movie, Stiller plays the title character, a man who works for Life Magazine in the photo department even though, as a physical object, Life hasn't existed for many years. Every once in a while, Walter "zones out" and enters a lush fantasy land of his own invention, only to snap back to reality. Until a crisis at work causes him to actually take...
In the movie, Stiller plays the title character, a man who works for Life Magazine in the photo department even though, as a physical object, Life hasn't existed for many years. Every once in a while, Walter "zones out" and enters a lush fantasy land of his own invention, only to snap back to reality. Until a crisis at work causes him to actually take...
- 12/23/2013
- by Drew Taylor
- Moviefone
London, May 8 (Reuters) - David Bowie's latest music video featuring him as a Christ-like figure surrounded by women in skimpy outfits and priests in a bar was slapped with an adult-only rating by video sharing website YouTube on Wednesday.
The video for the single "The Next Day" was temporarily pulled from YouTube with a screen shot saying it had been removed because its content violated YouTube's terms of service, according to the British singer's publicist.
The video also stars Oscar-winning French actress Marion Cotillard as a woman with stigmata with blood spurting from her wounds as well as Gary Oldman as a priest condemning Bowie.
A spokeswoman from Google Inc. -owned YouTube said the video was removed but then returned to the website with a restriction for viewers aged 18 and above.
"With the massive volume of videos on our site, sometimes we make the wrong call. When it's brought...
The video for the single "The Next Day" was temporarily pulled from YouTube with a screen shot saying it had been removed because its content violated YouTube's terms of service, according to the British singer's publicist.
The video also stars Oscar-winning French actress Marion Cotillard as a woman with stigmata with blood spurting from her wounds as well as Gary Oldman as a priest condemning Bowie.
A spokeswoman from Google Inc. -owned YouTube said the video was removed but then returned to the website with a restriction for viewers aged 18 and above.
"With the massive volume of videos on our site, sometimes we make the wrong call. When it's brought...
- 5/8/2013
- by Reuters
- Huffington Post
Spring has arrived -- flowers and music in full bloom. Some of it only hints at what might be as summer approaches. Until then, here are few things I'm carting around in my wheelbarrow. Dig it.
"Spiderlegs" Danny Malone: Balloons (Dm)
Happy accident as I had no prior knowledge of Mr. Malone prior to listening to his new album, but no worries. Here's a wonderful folk-rock tune from this Austin-based singer/songwriter's second long-player. He recorded this set of confessional musings in a haunted 15th century castle in Denmark, each song in a different room. He calls his music "sexy, dirty, sad songs about the human condition." This remains my favorite track; and the video below is pretty bloody "sexy" too.
Alicia Keys at Prudential Center April 8, 2013, Newark, NJ
I'd never seen her live, and I don't why, but I'm damn happy I finally did. She is a major talent,...
"Spiderlegs" Danny Malone: Balloons (Dm)
Happy accident as I had no prior knowledge of Mr. Malone prior to listening to his new album, but no worries. Here's a wonderful folk-rock tune from this Austin-based singer/songwriter's second long-player. He recorded this set of confessional musings in a haunted 15th century castle in Denmark, each song in a different room. He calls his music "sexy, dirty, sad songs about the human condition." This remains my favorite track; and the video below is pretty bloody "sexy" too.
Alicia Keys at Prudential Center April 8, 2013, Newark, NJ
I'd never seen her live, and I don't why, but I'm damn happy I finally did. She is a major talent,...
- 5/2/2013
- by Dusty Wright
- www.culturecatch.com
It’s been quite a rush of late for fans of David Bowie; what with his sudden and out of the blue single Where Are We Now? coinciding with the announcement of a new album in the shape of The Next day, soon followed by the stellar second single The Stars (Are Out Tonight), then the early free streaming of the album before its release at the start of this week – which if you’ve not checked it out has been reviewed here for your pleasure so have a nose.
All that aside though, as exciting and incendiary a return as it might of been. There was an early on promise that Bowie would not be touring this album and had no intention of doing so, from the man himself. However as those previously mentioned momentous events of this comeback started to unfold, rumours began to circulate – most notably from...
All that aside though, as exciting and incendiary a return as it might of been. There was an early on promise that Bowie would not be touring this album and had no intention of doing so, from the man himself. However as those previously mentioned momentous events of this comeback started to unfold, rumours began to circulate – most notably from...
- 3/13/2013
- by Morgan Roberts
- Obsessed with Film
David Bowie's new album, The Next Day (coming out on March 12, but streamable free now on iTunes), may or may not turn out to be the comeback he wants. But one thing is definitely different in the world since his last album, Reality, came out in 2003: YouTube. It’s easy to forget that, just a few years ago, it was difficult to take a comprehensive look back into the audio-visual history of pop performers. Even longtime Bowie fans will be surprised at some of the footage available these days. What follows are some of my favorites from his pre-mtv era, in no particular order. All that's required for full enjoyment is to keep in mind that virtually everything about Bowie at the time — his sexuality; his dress; his dry, crisp sound; and his impenetrable archness — were new and genuinely aesthetically challenging. If you're curious about Bowie and want...
- 3/7/2013
- by Bill Wyman
- Vulture
David Bowie, at first, presents his new album “The Next Day” as a dismantling of his earlier work. With an album design that literally puts a white box over the photo of Bowie’s face on the cover of his album “Heroes,” he turns fans’ “hero” into a blank slate, The title “The Next Day” is a phrase from a script or the new chapter from a fiction, something one would say after “Reality” strikes. But it’s not all introspection and decomposition. It’s about moving around, as Bowie still dons different guises, playing a lot with being old and being...
- 3/5/2013
- Hitfix
David Bowie's new single 'Where Are We Now?' and album 'The Next Day' have shot to the top of the UK iTunes download charts.
The glam-rock singer unveiled his first new music in a decade at midnight on Monday, as part of his 66th birthday celebrations.
David Bowie performing at Live Aid
Fans, and even those who work in the music industry, were stunned by the unexpected release. Bowie has not performed live since 2006 and has rarely been seen in public since then, leading to rumours of possible ill-health which were denied by his spokesman.
Listen: What do you think of 'Where Are We Now?'
Once known for his flamboyance, the star turned down the opportunity to appear at the Olympics Opening Ceremony last year despite a personal plea by director Danny Boyle.
Bowie's spokesman said, in a statement, the star was the sort of artist who...
The glam-rock singer unveiled his first new music in a decade at midnight on Monday, as part of his 66th birthday celebrations.
David Bowie performing at Live Aid
Fans, and even those who work in the music industry, were stunned by the unexpected release. Bowie has not performed live since 2006 and has rarely been seen in public since then, leading to rumours of possible ill-health which were denied by his spokesman.
Listen: What do you think of 'Where Are We Now?'
Once known for his flamboyance, the star turned down the opportunity to appear at the Olympics Opening Ceremony last year despite a personal plea by director Danny Boyle.
Bowie's spokesman said, in a statement, the star was the sort of artist who...
- 1/9/2013
- by The Huffington Post UK
- Huffington Post
Today is David Bowie's 66th birthday, and while most 66-year-olds would likely prefer that nobody make a big fuss—maybe take in a matinee of The Guilt Trip and follow with an early dinner at Applebee's—David Bowie is obviously not most 66-year-olds. So he's using his special day to announce The Next Day, his first new album in nearly a decade. Bowie has been more or less retired since 2003's Reality, his only "new" material consisting of one-off appearances and that time he wrote "Little Fat Man" for Ricky Gervais. He'll end all that ...
- 1/8/2013
- avclub.com
Jan. 8 is David Bowie’s 66th birthday and he’s handing out a huge present: Ten years after his last studio album and well into a self-imposed retirement, David Bowie shocked his fans by releasing a new single Monday night and announcing a new album. “Where Are We Now,” produced by longtime collaborator Tony Visconti, precedes the March 12 release of “The Next Day,” Bowie's first studio album since 2003’s “Reality.” The new song/video is embedded below, but since that video is sometimes cutting out, you can also hear the new song here. It's available for sale on iTunes now. The standard...
- 1/8/2013
- Hitfix
Or "How I Learned to Love the Glitter."
As a child who grew up in a home that loved horror, some of my earliest memories include vampires.
After all, I was born the same year The Lost Boys came out, and I remember seeing it on VHS when I was very young. In third grade I got a troubled call home from my teacher because I’d turned in a book report on Interview with the Vampire. We saw Buffy the Vampire Slayer in theaters and my mom used to tell this embarrassing but funny anecdote about when I was very young and my bed was against my room’s window; she would say that I slept with my head cocked to the side and my arms across my chest, "just in case" a vampire happened by and decided they wanted to bite me. She swore that I wanted to...
As a child who grew up in a home that loved horror, some of my earliest memories include vampires.
After all, I was born the same year The Lost Boys came out, and I remember seeing it on VHS when I was very young. In third grade I got a troubled call home from my teacher because I’d turned in a book report on Interview with the Vampire. We saw Buffy the Vampire Slayer in theaters and my mom used to tell this embarrassing but funny anecdote about when I was very young and my bed was against my room’s window; she would say that I slept with my head cocked to the side and my arms across my chest, "just in case" a vampire happened by and decided they wanted to bite me. She swore that I wanted to...
- 11/19/2012
- by Amanda Rebholz
- Planet Fury
Reality television competitions are fierce. Simon Cowell is hoping to land a big name celebrity like Beyonce Knowles, Celine Dion, Mariah Carey for replace Paula Abdul on X factor. He'll have to find a wild card to replace the Dancing With The Stars Mirror Ball Trophy Winner Nicole Scherzinger (the lead singer from the Pussycat Dolls). If he copies American Idol and tries to hire a male rocker, we wonder if he'd try to get someone like Elton John, Mick Jagger from the Rolling Stones, pop music singer David Bowie. Grace Slick or Cher would be great Baby Boomer generation women to hire as judges on the reality TV show as well. Keep reading...
Continue reading...
Continue reading...
- 2/6/2012
- by Tom Peracchio
- Green Celebrity
HollywoodNews.com: Adam Mitchel Lambert (born January 29, 1982) is an American singer, songwriter, and actor from San Diego, California. In May 2009, he finished as the runner-up on the eighth season of American Idol. The Times identified Lambert as one of the few openly gay mainstream pop artists to launch a career on a major label in the United States.
Adam Lambert ◄ Back Next ►Picture 1 of 11
Adam Lambert - Adam Lambert with Orianthi in Concert at Ryman
◄ Back Next ►Picture 1 of 11
Adam Lambert - Adam Lambert with Orianthi in Concert at Ryman
Early Life
Lambert released his debut album, For Your Entertainment, in November 2009, via RCA Records/19 Recordings. The album debuted at number three on the Billboard 200 in December 2009, selling 198,000 copies in the United States in the first week. In 2010, Lambert was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance for “Whataya Want from Me”.
Adam Lambert was born in Indianapolis,...
Adam Lambert ◄ Back Next ►Picture 1 of 11
Adam Lambert - Adam Lambert with Orianthi in Concert at Ryman
◄ Back Next ►Picture 1 of 11
Adam Lambert - Adam Lambert with Orianthi in Concert at Ryman
Early Life
Lambert released his debut album, For Your Entertainment, in November 2009, via RCA Records/19 Recordings. The album debuted at number three on the Billboard 200 in December 2009, selling 198,000 copies in the United States in the first week. In 2010, Lambert was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance for “Whataya Want from Me”.
Adam Lambert was born in Indianapolis,...
- 6/19/2011
- by Josh Abraham
- Hollywoodnews.com
Ian McCulloch has admitted that he would love to collaborate with David Bowie. The Echo and the Bunnymen frontman performed last night at a Jd Set concert in Glasgow celebrating Bowie, alongside Sharleen Spiteri, Steve Mason, Kate Nash and Ramona. McCulloch told Digital Spy: "I'd love to do one last great David Bowie song. I'd love me and him to do something. I've got songs that I'd love him to sing - it was him and Leonard Cohen. "I just think Bowie was so influential and the greatest solo artist of the 20th Century. In any walk of art. It seems like he's waiting [to release new music]. Maybe his life's just changed." Bowie's last studio album was 2003's Reality. The singer-songwriter was diagnosed with an acutely blocked artery while on tour (more)...
- 4/21/2011
- by By Mayer Nissim
- Digital Spy
The Film:
A multi-layered retelling of Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake, Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan is the type of film Dario Argento use to make during his supernatural cycle. A common reference is to his Suspiria, but I see traces in Argento’s last great film, The Stendhal Syndrome here and there. But mostly these references are in style and tone, as Aronofsky is given material and a script than Argento has never got. Black Swan is a resounding piece of film, tickling the fine line of arthouse and B-movie intentions. It’s an odd line to walk, especially for Aronofsky who is defined by his themes, instead of genre efforts, but Black Swan is perhaps the best widely received “horror” film since Silence of the Lambs.
The fun trick of the film is given to the audience early on. “We all know the story. Virginal girl, pure and sweet,...
A multi-layered retelling of Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake, Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan is the type of film Dario Argento use to make during his supernatural cycle. A common reference is to his Suspiria, but I see traces in Argento’s last great film, The Stendhal Syndrome here and there. But mostly these references are in style and tone, as Aronofsky is given material and a script than Argento has never got. Black Swan is a resounding piece of film, tickling the fine line of arthouse and B-movie intentions. It’s an odd line to walk, especially for Aronofsky who is defined by his themes, instead of genre efforts, but Black Swan is perhaps the best widely received “horror” film since Silence of the Lambs.
The fun trick of the film is given to the audience early on. “We all know the story. Virginal girl, pure and sweet,...
- 3/28/2011
- by Jon Peters
- Killer Films
Filed under: Reality-Free, Recaps, Stay Tuned
['Supernatural' - 'Clap Your Hands If You Believe...']
There are a lot of reasons to watch 'Supernatural' -- it examines thoughtful and sometimes weighty themes about life and loyalty within the context of a well-made, smart genre drama.
But here's this week's reason to be even more glad to be a fan of 'Supernatural': It offered us the sight of Dean Winchester getting punched in the face by a fairy and roasting that demonic Tinkerbell clone in a microwave, as David Bowie's 'Space Oddity' played on the soundtrack.
That's what I'm talking about!
Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments...
['Supernatural' - 'Clap Your Hands If You Believe...']
There are a lot of reasons to watch 'Supernatural' -- it examines thoughtful and sometimes weighty themes about life and loyalty within the context of a well-made, smart genre drama.
But here's this week's reason to be even more glad to be a fan of 'Supernatural': It offered us the sight of Dean Winchester getting punched in the face by a fairy and roasting that demonic Tinkerbell clone in a microwave, as David Bowie's 'Space Oddity' played on the soundtrack.
That's what I'm talking about!
Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments...
- 11/20/2010
- by Maureen Ryan
- Aol TV.
Kings of Leon are used to getting pelted with adoration, adulation and the occasional female undergarment. But on Friday night (July 23), they got a whole new type of fanfare. Only a few songs into their set at the Verizon Wireless Amphitheater in St. Louis, the band was forced to leave the stage following a steady onslaught of pigeon excrement, dropped by an infestation of the birds who had decided to shack up in the venue's upper rafters. "I was hit by pigeons on each of the first three songs," bassist Jared Followill said. "We had 20 songs on the set list. By the end of the show, I would have been covered from head to toe."
Though the show had to end early, the band can stand by at least one thing: There has certainly never been a high-profile rock concert ended prematurely by bird droppings. However, there are a handful...
Though the show had to end early, the band can stand by at least one thing: There has certainly never been a high-profile rock concert ended prematurely by bird droppings. However, there are a handful...
- 7/26/2010
- by Kyle Anderson
- MTV Newsroom
B.J. Novak, best known as Ryan from 'The Office,' will host the 14th Annual Webby Awards show in New York City on June 14, according to Urlesque.
Novak will be joined by judges David Bowie, Arianna Huffington and Martha Stewart. Fans were able to vote for their favorite in each category, via the People's Choice vote.
For more, check out Urlesque's exclusive report.
Filed under: Awards, Reality-Free
Permalink | Email this | | Comments...
Novak will be joined by judges David Bowie, Arianna Huffington and Martha Stewart. Fans were able to vote for their favorite in each category, via the People's Choice vote.
For more, check out Urlesque's exclusive report.
Filed under: Awards, Reality-Free
Permalink | Email this | | Comments...
- 5/3/2010
- by Chris Harnick
- Aol TV.
London - The Mutant Chronicles unleashes cannibalistic humanoids into a steam punk World War I world. The movie features Thomas Jane (Hung), Ron Perlman (Hellboy), Devon Aoki (Sin City), Sean Pertwee (Doomsday) and John Malkovich (Being John Malkovich) as the only defense against these ungodly creatures in the CGI enhanced environment. Can Aoki cut them all down with her cool sword?
Director Simon Hunter took nearly two years to adapt the role playing game into a cinematic universe. You can get great sense of what he undertook for his first major motion picture on the Two-disc Collector’s Edition DVD and the Blu-ray recently released by Magnolia Home Entertainment. I had a chance to swap questions via email with Hunter. Here’s the Q&A action:
Joe Corey: Have you played the game?
Simon Hunter: Yes I have played the game and enjoyed it very much - the...
Director Simon Hunter took nearly two years to adapt the role playing game into a cinematic universe. You can get great sense of what he undertook for his first major motion picture on the Two-disc Collector’s Edition DVD and the Blu-ray recently released by Magnolia Home Entertainment. I had a chance to swap questions via email with Hunter. Here’s the Q&A action:
Joe Corey: Have you played the game?
Simon Hunter: Yes I have played the game and enjoyed it very much - the...
- 8/20/2009
- by UncaScroogeMcD
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