Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Carrie Underwood: A Role Model We Can All Look Up To


We don’t see Carrie Underwood involved in racy scandals like so many young female singers (Miley Cyrus, Britney Spears).

In an interview, Underwood said
 I take it very seriously, and my motto is I would never want to do anything that would embarrass my own children, in the future. And I think that’s the best way to look at things.

She also goes on to say,
I never want to do anything that would make my parents, you know, my role models, disappointed in me.

It’s great to see a young famous female singer take her actions so seriously so she can be a good role model for young people these days.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Oprah to End Her Show in 2011



In another blow to the struggling business of network television, Oprah Winfrey is expected to announce on her program today that she will step down from her syndicated afternoon talk show, which over the last two decades has transformed her into one of the richest and most influential forces in popular culture.
Although she has kept mum about her plans, Winfrey, 55, is expected to furnish a new show to OWN: the Oprah Winfrey Network, the long-delayed cable outlet she is starting in partnership with Discovery Communications. The network is scheduled to roll out in 2011 in about 75 million U.S. homes.

The media personality and mogul — whose show has served as the main pedestal from which she has engaged newsmakers high and low, transformed obscure products and personalities into runaway successes, and preached a gospel of self-empowerment to her devoted, largely female audience — is betting that, in a world of ever-fragmenting audiences, the future lies with creating her own branded network. She was recently ranked No. 234 on a Forbes list of the world’s richest people, with an estimated net worth of $2.7 billion.
Although Winfrey could not be reached for comment, Tim Bennett, the president of Winfrey’s Chicago-based production company, Harpo Inc., confirmed in an e-mail Thursday to station partners that she would end the existing program Sept. 9, 2011.

“Oprah’s personal comments about this on tomorrow’s live show will mark an historic television moment that we will all be talking about for years to come,” Bennett wrote.

Financial pain

Meanwhile, CBS and Walt Disney Co.’s ABC are expected to bear the brunt of the financial pain ushered in by Winfrey’s departure. CBS, which acquired Winfrey’s original syndicator, King World, for $2.5 billion 10 years ago, has taken in hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue over the years from “The Oprah Winfrey Show.”

ABC carries the show on many of its stations, including its owned-and-operated outlets KABC-TV in Los Angeles and WABC-TV in New York. The show, which has aired in late afternoon on most stations across the country, can be counted on to deliver big audiences for the local newscasts that usually followed it.
“She uniquely remains appointment television,” Bill Carroll, vice president at New York-based Katz Television Group, which advises local stations on programming and other issues, said earlier this week when the Winfrey development was rumored but not confirmed. “When she came on and established herself, it was a sea change in the industry, and when she leaves it will be a sea change.”

Winfrey, however, now confronts a broadcast medium that is scarcely recognizable compared with the one that greeted her Sept. 8, 1986, when she took her local Chicago talk show into national syndication. Broadcast ratings have plummeted in recent years as viewers have fled to cable and online programming.
Although “Oprah Winfrey” is still the top-rated syndicated talk show, its ratings have not been immune from the erosion. Station managers are finding themselves hard-pressed to continue making rich programming deals, even for “Oprah.”

Industry scuttlebutt had it that her rich license fees were going to drop as much as 50% in her next renewal deal. Some observers have pointed out — although not publicly, for fear of alienating someone who retains unrivaled power in the entertainment sphere — that Winfrey had little choice but to give up the syndicated show and bend her empire to new realities.

On the other hand, few expect her to go the way of Howard Stern, another once-potent broadcaster who gave up a huge platform for a new role — in Stern’s case, transferring his show from terrestrial to satellite radio — and wound up with a greatly diminished profile.

“She’s not going to die the death of a thousand paper cuts,” said one broadcast executive. “She’s too smart for that.”

Indeed, Winfrey’s power to shape culture is undimmed, as evidenced by her recent record. She began this week with a headline-grabbing interview with former vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, who was promoting her bestselling memoir, “Going Rogue.” A movie she helped produce, “Precious,” the story of a young black woman in Harlem who overcomes a legacy of obesity and abuse, is an early favorite for Oscar consideration.

Raised on a pig farm

By her own account, Winfrey was herself the victim of abuse, growing up impoverished on a pig farm in Mississippi, and has struggled with weight issues her entire life. That story has served as a lasting wellspring for her cultural appeal.

And long after she leaves broadcast TV, Winfrey’s fingerprints will remain on the medium, with her disciples (and former regular guests) Phil McGraw and Dr. Mehmet Oz hosting their own hit shows thanks to her support, and another follower, interior designer Nate Berkus, preparing his own syndicated show for national rollout next year.

Her book club has minted reliable brands out of previously unknown authors such as Wally Lamb and — controversially — James Frey, while bringing mainstream attention and blockbuster sales figures to literary writers such as Toni Morrison and Cormac McCarthy. Winfrey’s enthusiastic sponsorship turned “The Secret,” a 2006 self-help book by Rhonda Byrne that was treated skeptically by many critics, into a multimedia phenomenon.
As one of the most successful African American women in U.S. history, her role in culture has been thoroughly debated. Her full-throated support of Barack Obama’s candidacy for president was a crucial way station on his path to the White House.

Winfrey’s shift from broadcast to cable may be viewed as a reflection of the power shift between the two media. Over the last two decades, cable has gone from a hodgepodge of channels that used to subsist on obscure sports and reruns to the home of high-quality original programming.

Cable networks have two revenue streams — subscription fees and advertising — while broadcast television still primarily relies on advertising. Cable networks are drivers at media conglomerates Viacom, News Corp. and Disney. Comcast’s talks to acquire control of NBC Universal from General Electric are being motivated by its desire to get its hands on their cable channels including USA and Bravo, not its NBC broadcast network or local TV stations.

Winfrey’s record with new ventures has been impressive, with a few stumbles along the way. She launched, for example, “O: The Oprah Magazine,” one of the most successful magazine start-ups in history.
But one of her rare missteps involved a foray into cable TV. She was an early backer of Oxygen, a cable network for women that was started by Geraldine Laybourne and television producer Marcy Carsey.
Winfrey was supposed to be very involved but never really got fully on board, and the network struggled to establish itself. Winfrey eventually scaled back her role in the channel, which is now owned by NBC Universal.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Brad Pitt/Angelina Jolie debut bling



Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie have designed a limited-edition collection of gold and silver snake jewelry and accessories called “The Protector” for high-end jeweler Asprey .


The couple have been working on the project for more than a year and their pieces will go on sale at Asprey stores in London, New York, Beverly Hills, Tokyo and Dubai this week, Women’s Wear Daily reports. Prices start at $525 for a silver baby spoon with a curving, serpent-shaped handle. Which, to us, sounds like it could be traumatizing to the child. But we digress . . .


Other items in the collection: an eggcup, tooth box and picture frame, as well as gold and diamond pendants and rings. All feature curving snakes. Jolie, 34, was given a ring in the shape of a snake while pregnant with Shiloh and considers the reptile a protector of her family. Proceeds from the sale of the collection go to Education Partnership for Children of Conflict, co-founded by Jolie in 2006.

Nicole Kidman: Post-Baby Curves Helped Me Land Nine

What did Nicole Kidman find to be an expected plus to giving birth, besides the baby? Bigger breasts. “They’re not very big, my boobs, so they just became normal size. I loved it!” she tells the December/January issue of Ladies’ Home Journal. “I felt very Woman. When you’ve had a slightly androgynous body your whole life, having breasts is a nice feeling.”

Even more than that, Kidman, 42, jokes that her fuller bosom helped earn her a role in the upcoming musical Nine, starring Daniel Day-Lewis.

“[I had] big boobs because I was breast feeding – I was perfect for it,” she tells Entertainment Tonight Canada. “I wouldn’t get cast now.”

Not that she was champing at the bit to become a working mom again after baby Sunday Rose was born. But she says, she couldn’t resist the chance to work with Day-Lewis, director Rob Marshall and the rest of the star-studded cast.

“I was not looking to go back to work. I went back to work because this was … the perfect kind of scenario,” she tells ET Canada of Nine. “Part of me was nervous about going back to work … but they said I could bring my baby to the set, and Rob didn’t seem to find that a problem at all, so then I was like ‘Uh, this is heaven.’ “

Farrah Fawcett’s Will: $4.5M for Son, Nothing for Ryan O’Neal


Farrah Fawcett not only cut longtime lover Ryan O’Neal out of her will - she reportedly left a nice chunk of change to a secret ex-boyfriend.


According to RadarOnline.com, the “Charlie’s Angels” star, who died of cancer in June at age 62, left the bulk of her estate ($4.5 million) to her son Redmond, plus a half-million dollars each to her father and a nephew.


Surprisingly, the will is said to exclude O’Neal, who was at Fawcett’s side during her last days.
Fawcett instead reportedly bequeathed $100,000 to Greg Lott, a former Texas football player who has admitted to being the late actress’ secret lover.

Lott, who has accused O’Neal of preventing him from seeing Fawcett while she was dying, told the Sunday Express that “this news that I am indeed in her will and Ryan is not raises some serious questions about why he prevented me from seeing the love of my life in her final months.

“Farrah meant the world to me and I know that I equally had a profound impact on her.”
O’Neal, who co-produced a controversial television documentary about the ’70s icon’s final months, has described Lott as a “disgruntled ex-boyfriend from the sixties.”

Also left out of the will was Fawcett’s close friend Alana Hamilton, another co-producer of the documentary, as well as Craig Nevius, a film maker who says he was thrown off the project by O’Neal.

Radaronline.com, which obtained a copy of the will, also reports that the actress’ last wish to die at home was not granted. Fawcett died in a hospital in Santa Monica, California.

Jennifer Lopez titles album, premieres new single live Sunday


The wait is nearly over for Jennifer Lopez’s first single to be released from an album dubbed “Love ?”.
Titled “Louboutins,” Lopez’s new single will make its debut not on radio or online but at Sunday’s American Music Awards.

Joining a line up that includes Whitney Houston, Janet Jackson, Alicia Keys and more, Lopez will perform the new single before a live audience.
Speaking with 102.7 FM’s DJ Skee earlier this week, Lopez discussed the single and forthcoming performance.


“It’s basically about when you get to that point in a bad relationship and you’re like: ‘I really have to leave. It’s just not good for me’, ” said Lopez. “This song is actually about when you’ve made the decision-I’m out.”

While Lopez dismissed claims that the song was related to her current life and marriage (Marc Anthony), she did tell DJ Skee that she’s had to put on her Louboutins on and walk in the past.
“I’ve had to do it… sometimes you just gotta do it. You gotta put on your Louboutins and be like, ‘This is what you’re missing..”

Earlier this year, Lopez released a record titled “Fresh Out The Oven” featuring Pitbull under her nickname Lola. Contrary to reports calling the record a single, Lopez says it may not make the album but could be released as a bonus track.

Lopez’s forthcoming album, her first in nearly three years, is due for release early 2010.

Damn I’m Old: Celebrity Birthdays


 
The following celebrities were born on November 17:
 
RuPaul is 49.
Gerry McGee of The Ventures is 72.
Gordon Lightfoot is 71.
Martin Scorsese is 67.
Lauren Hutton is 66.
Lorne Michaels is 65.
Danny DeVito is 65.
Stephen Root (”King of the Hill,” “NewsRadio”) is 58.
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio is 51.
William Moses is 50.
Dylan Walsh (”Nip/Tuck,” “Brooklyn Bridge”) is 46.
Daisy Fuentes is 43.
Sophie Marceau (”Braveheart”) is 43.
Ronnie DeVoe of New Edition and Bell Biv DeVoe is 42.
Ben Wilson of Blues Traveler is 42.
Leslie Bibb (”ER,” “Popular”) is 36.
Brandon Call (”Step By Step”) is 33.
Aaron Lines is 32.
Rachel McAdams (”Wedding Crashers”) is 31.
Isaac Hanson of Hanson is 29.
Justin Cooper (”Liar, Liar”) is 21.
Raquel Castro (”Jersey Girl”) is 15.