Tom Brady hopes a puppy will distract you from Deflategate.
Rest in peace, Anne Meara.
Kim Kardashian & Kanye West celebrated their anniversary on Instagram.
Blind item revealed: this is Henry Cavill?!
Gigi Hadid & Kylie Jenner are in Monaco.
Josh Duggar’s cousin Amy Duggar has some words.
The week’s royal round-up photos.
Looking at the positive with Game of Thrones.
This story is absolutely insane.
Brandi Glanville asks her Twitter followers to be nice to LeAnn & Eddie.
Rosie O’Donnell is fighting with her estranged wife.
Ben Affleck hits the toy store with his kids.
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Podcast
Morgan Stewart Models in NYC, EJ Johnson Plans Bahamas Trip
The season three premiere of The #RichKids didn’t waste any time getting right back into the Beverly Hills drama opening with a cabana pool party thrown by Dorothy Wang to get everyone together!
At the party, EJ Johnson shows off his amazing weight loss and Dorothy debuts her new hair! After the party we see a glimpse into Brendan Fitzpatrick and Morgan Stewart’s life after moving in together and it’s going exactly how we could expect. Bickering, but they’re choosing they’re battles.
Then Morgan gets a call from her publicist saying that Untitled Magazine wants her to be their fashion correspondent for New York Fashion Week and walk in a runway show! But, Brendan isn’t super excited for her which makes her quickly upset.
Next up, EJ, Roxy Sowlaty, Morgan and Dorothy head to lunch and discuss their upcoming plans. EJ shares that he will be having a business trip to the Bahamas and invites the girls to come along. When they discussed who else he would invite, he was not sure if wanted to invite Jonny due to his outbursts in the past and Dorothy was quick to agree. Morgan and EJ both head to New York and EJ meets up with an old pal Taylor-Ann Hasselhoff.
Back in Los Angeles, Jonny confronts Roxy about their lunch after getting texts from Dorothy that everyone was talking behind his back at lunch!
Obviously Roxy and Jonny are both confused…and angry.
Morgan has a successful runway show and her and EJ celebrate with a night out in NYC! Upon her return home, Brendan apologizes for not seeming more excited and he gives her flowers! But little did she realize that while she was out of town Brendan had been doing some….shopping.
We then see Taylor-Ann discussing her invite to the Bahamas from EJ with her sister and she shares her worry about Roxy being in attendance. She reveals that her and Roxy have a rocky past. The episode ends with everyone confronting Dorothy at her birthday party about the alleged “text gate!”
Don’t miss a new episode of #RichKids of Beverly Hills next Sunday at 10 pm ET!
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Empire Cast Gifted With Rolexes
Empire Cast Gifted With Rolexes, but Jussie Smollett tells why he still has yet to put the bling on his wrist.
As everybody at upfronts and beyond knows, Fox TV Group chairmen Dana Walden and Gary Newman gifted the team behind big hit Empire with fancy Rolex watches. But actor Jussie Smollett told THR he still has yet to put the bling on his wrist.
“I never would've bought a Rolex in my life,” laughed the Billboard Music Awards performer at UCLA's Jonsson Cancer Center Foundation's recent Taste for a Cure fundraiser. “I'm going to have it sitting there only for a momentous occasion, because I can't imagine going outside with something that expensive on my wrist unless I bring pepper spray.” Smollett added that he doesn't need a reminder of his good times. “It feels like a billion dreams are coming true. I wake up every day and thank God, my mom, Lee Daniels and Danny Strong.”
US Top 40 Chart Week May 23, 2015
US Top 40 Chart Week May 23, 2015 includes Wiz Khalifa & Charlie Puth – See You Again at #1, ranked by airplay, SoundScan sales and online streaming.
TW: position This Week LT: position Last Week WC: Weeks on Chart TWC: Total Weeks on all Charts PP: Peak Position RE: Re-Entry NA: Not Availiable
TW 1 | LW RE | PP 1 | WC 6 | TWC 184 |
TW 2 | LW 35 | PP 2 | WC 8 | TWC 49 |
TW 3 | LW | PP 3 | WC 16 | TWC 324 |
TW 4 | LW 38 | PP 1 | WC 25 | TWC 684 |
TW 5 | LW 21 | PP 5 | WC 11 | TWC 98 |
TW 6 | LW RE | PP 3 | WC 17 | TWC 487 |
TW 7 | LW 36 | PP 7 | WC 8 | TWC 119 |
TW 8 | LW RE | PP 2 | WC 17 | TWC 391 |
TW 9 | LW RE | PP 8 | WC 3 | TWC 258 |
TW 10 | LW RE | PP 2 | WC 23 | TWC 743 |
TW 11 | LW RE | PP 9 | WC 12 | TWC 59 |
TW 12 | LW RE | PP 4 | WC 16 | TWC 391 |
TW 13 | LW RE | PP 6 | WC 9 | TWC 128 |
TW 14 | LW RE | PP 11 | WC 18 | TWC 131 |
TW 15 | LW RE | PP 11 | WC 14 | TWC 68 |
TW 16 | LW RE | PP 16 | WC 5 | TWC 26 |
TW 17 | LW 34 | PP 17 | WC 8 | TWC 48 |
TW 18 | LW RE | PP 11 | WC 7 | TWC 92 |
TW 19 | LW RE | PP 14 | WC 9 | TWC 66 |
TW 20 | LW RE | PP 10 | WC 18 | TWC 339 |
TW 21 | LW RE | PP 16 | WC 15 | TWC 60 |
TW 22 | LW 8 | PP 22 | WC 3 | TWC 7 |
TW 23 | LW RE | PP 6 | WC 16 | TWC 156 |
TW 24 | LW RE | PP 24 | WC 2 | TWC 19 |
TW 25 | LW New | PP 25 | WC 1 | TWC 11 |
TW 26 | LW RE | PP 24 | WC 3 | TWC 498 |
TW 27 | LW RE | PP 21 | WC 4 | TWC 87 |
TW 28 | LW RE | PP 28 | WC 5 | TWC 101 |
TW 29 | LW RE | PP 11 | WC 11 | TWC 122 |
TW 30 | LW RE | PP 6 | WC 41 | TWC 241 |
TW 31 | LW RE | PP 29 | WC 11 | TWC 42 |
TW 32 | LW RE | PP 11 | WC 10 | TWC 52 |
TW 33 | LW RE | PP 19 | WC 7 | TWC 38 |
TW 34 | LW RE | PP 34 | WC 2 | TWC 3 |
TW 35 | LW RE | PP 29 | WC 4 | TWC 124 |
TW 36 | LW RE | PP 2 | WC 30 | TWC 776 |
TW 37 | LW New | PP 37 | WC 1 | TWC 12 |
TW 38 | LW RE | PP 32 | WC 8 | TWC 56 |
TW 39 | LW RE | PP 24 | WC 7 | TWC 69 |
TW 40 | LW RE | PP 24 | WC 12 | TWC 140 |
TW: position This Week LT: position Last Week WC: Weeks on Chart TWC: Total Weeks on all Charts PP: Peak Position RE: Re-Entry NA: Not Availiable
Ambient Session With Martin Sturtzer, Virus TI, V-Synth
This video, via Martin Stürtzer/Phelios, captures a live studio ambient session. Technical details: Recorded live without overdubs or sequencing. Martin Sturtzer / Phelios is a dark ambient project by Martin Stürtzer from Wuppertal / Germany. Phelios released music on Malignant Records, Loki Found and Eternal Soul Records. He also organizes the “Phobos Festival” in Wuppertal.
Surface of SR388 (Metroid II)
This video captures a performance of Surface of SR388, from Metroid II (Return of Samus) .
In the video, Steven Morris does a video song style multi-instrument performance of Surface of SR388, from Metroid II (Return of Samus), composed by Ryohji Yoshitomi.
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Cassandra Grey hosted a tea party in honor of Iris Apfel
It might have been a coincidence that 93-year-old New York fashion legend Iris Apfel came decked out in head-to-toe grey from her leather coat and silver necklaces to the flats and stockings to beauty site Violet Grey’s tea party held in her honor on Monday. But we doubt it. Because her style is so unique, bohemian and personal, adhering to a “more is more” aesthetic, nothing Apfel does with style seems accidental even down to her signature giant black round eyewear with a rose tint.
The guests were an assortment of Hollywood royalty: Carole Bayer Sager, Jane Semel, Barbara Guggenheim (with a cream-colored Kelly bag), and Brad Grey’s mother (Cassandra’s mother-in-law), as well as fashion elites including stylist Jane Ross, fashion expert Katharine Ross, actress Nicola Peltz, Kelly Styne, and Slate PR co-founder Ina Treciokas.
Cassandra Grey hosted the large outdoor English tea party, replete with salmon and cucumber tea sandwiches, baby scones, shortbread, clotted cream and strawberry jam and multi-colored French macaroons, in her stunning Bel Air home. As Grey flaunted her baby bump in a blue, white and peach long dress (“It’s vintage,” she said), pal Anjelica Huston promptly noted, “The print looks like a Maxfield Parrish painting!”
Diverse Cast Delivers Higher Box Office Ratings
Hollywood’s racial and gender diversity is increasing, says Darnell Hunt, lead author of the second annual Hollywood Diversity Report by UCLA’s Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies, set for release Feb. 25.
This story first appeared in the March 13 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine.
Hollywood’s racial and gender diversity is increasing. But it’s not increasing quickly enough, says Darnell Hunt, lead author of the second annual Hollywood Diversity Report by UCLA’s Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies, set for release Feb. 25. “Hollywood is not progressing at the same rate as America is diversifying,” says Hunt, the center’s director and a sociology professor. The U.S. population is about 40 percent minority and slightly more than half female, but, in news to no one, women and minorities are represented onscreen and behind the camera in drastically lesser proportions, the study indicates.
The problem isn’t audiences: During the years the study surveys — 2012 and 2013 — viewers preferred films and television shows with moderately diverse casts, according to Nielsen ratings and box-office reports. “Audiences, regardless of their race, are clamoring for more diverse content,” says co-author Ana-Christina Ramon.
The study blames the lack of diversity on agencies, guilds, studios and networks — “an industry culture that routinely devalues the talent of minorities and women,” reads the report.
The authors recognize the report’s time window limits its relevance, especially as racial diversity has shown big gains on TV during the 2014-15 season, but they predict their findings will encourage more progress. The study surveyed the top 200 films by global box office in 2012 and 2013, excluding foreign movies, and every broadcast, cable and digital TV series of the 2012-13 season (1,105 total).
FILM
In movies, minorities were underrepresented more than 2-to-1 (less than half as much as their share of the U.S. population) in lead roles and 2-to-1 as directors, and women lagged 2-to-1 as leads and 8-to-1 as directors (female-helmed films included 2012’s Zero Dark Thirty and The Guilt Trip and 2013’s Frozen and Carrie). Meanwhile, films with casts about 30 percent diverse did best at the worldwide box office.
The diversity gaps mostly were smaller than in 2011. “There are pockets of promise,” says Hunt, citing best picture winner 12 Years a Slave for upping the share of Oscar wins to 25 percent for films with a minority lead; Gravity, with seven Oscars, evened out the wins for male- and female-fronted releases. But after a 2014 Oscars race with all white acting nominees and only one best picture nominee with a black lead, “this year was a step backward from what might otherwise have been optimism from 2013,” admits Hunt.
Viewers like diversity, with broadcast scripted shows 41 percent to 50 percent diversely cast scoring the highest ratings in black and white households alike in 2012-13, while on cable, white and Latino viewers preferred casts with 31 percent to 40 percent diversity. Black households preferred cable shows with more than 50 percent diversity, a figure buoyed by BET programs including The Game and Kevin Hart’s Real Husbands of Hollywood.
But TV remained white-heavy onscreen and behind the camera, with minorities underrepresented nearly 6-to-1 in lead roles on scripted broadcast shows and nearly 2-to-1 as leads on cable (relative to their share of the U.S. population), more than 3-to-1 as cable series creators and more than 6-to-1 as broadcast creators. Women were underrepresented about 2-to-1 as broadcast and cable creators, and their frequency as leads on broadcast dipped below 50 percent; they also remained outnumbered on cable. Both groups were underrepresented in reality programming.
Hunt is hopeful, though. “Film has always been a step or two behind television in terms of its willingness and ability to open up and diversify,” he says. He feels the medium is becoming more inclusive with the bevy of new distributors and producers, particularly such digital platforms as Netflix and Amazon. “It’s creating a chance for people to get in who had no shot before,” says Hunt. “But they’re still not getting in at the rate the tried-and-true names are.”
He is “very optimistic” regarding this pilot season’s push for diversity — with numerous minority-led projects ordered, several through overall deals with diverse talent including Eva Longoria and producer Will Packer — as well as the recent success of Empire, Black-ish, How to Get Away With Murder, Fresh Off the Boat and other diverse programs.
EXECUTIVES
This year, for the first time, the study surveyed diversity in 2013 in the executive ranks of TV networks and studios (96 percent white and 71 percent male) and major and mini-major film studios (94 percent white and 100 percent male). The past year’s executive moves, such as Stacey Snider’s jump to 20th Century Fox and Amy Pascal stepping down as co-chair at Sony Pictures, aren’t reflected in this snapshot.
The report was backed financially by a half-dozen major studios and networks including the Walt Disney Co. and Time Warner. In addition to publishing the study online, Hunt and Ramon will present it to executives from each sponsor, as they did the first report in 2014. That study helped some executives make changes at their companies, including the creation of HBOAccess, a mentorship program for diverse writers and filmmakers, which Time Warner executive director of diversity and corporate social responsibility Jonathan Beane says was inspired largely by the report. “I want to make sure that what I’m preaching, I have data to support it. The report does that,” he says.
He agrees with the researchers that the problem stems from executive attitudes during the hiring process, which perpetuates the lack of diversity in executive suites — even if unintentionally. “I don’t believe it’s malicious,” says Beane. “It’s just that people have a better eye for talent when it looks like them and has the same background as them.”
Says Hunt: “It’s a high-risk industry. People want to surround themselves with collaborators they’re comfortable with, which tends to mean people they’ve networked with — and nine times out of 10, they’ll look similar. It reproduces the same opportunities for the same kind of people: You’re surrounding yourself with a bunch of white men to feel comfortable.”
He adds that the industry won’t change until that does. “It’s not like there’s this general trend upward, this wave everything is riding. It’s very precarious,” says Hunt. “It’s getting better, but it’s not getting better fast enough. And it’s still a big problem.”
Drake says I Wasn’t Disgusted By Madonna Kiss Video
Drake was not grossed out when Madonna planted a prolonged lip-lock on him at Coachella Sunday night… his reaction was all about the lipstick aftertaste.
Sources close to Drake tell TMZ … he loved the kiss. As for whether the kiss was prearranged, Drake says it wasn’t … the plan was for Madonna to dance around him while he sat in the chair.
Drake says he was not banking on a transfer of the glossy stuff and that’s why he blanched.
When you look closely at the video, it looks like whatever lipstick there is it’s pretty colorless … either nude or beige.
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Giveaway Synthtopia + Ableton Making Music Book
Making Music. 74 Creative Strategies for Electronic Music Producers. A book by Dennis DeSantis with a collection of solutions to common roadblocks in the creative process, with a specific emphasis on solving musical problems, making progress, and (most importantly) finishing what you start.
Electronic musicians used to be able to hide behind clunky, emerging technology as an excuse for inaction. But musicians today live in a golden age of tools and technology. A ninety-nine-cent smartphone app can give you the functionality of a million-dollar recording studio. A new song can be shared with the world as soon as it’s finished. Tutorials for every sound design or music production technique can be found through a Google search. All of these developments have served to level the playing field for musicians, making it possible for a bedroom producer to create music at a level that used to be possible only for major-label artists.
But despite all of this, making music is still hard. Why?
Making Music was written both to answer this question and to offer ways to make it easier. It presents a systematic, concrete set of patterns that you can use when making music in order to move forward.
The contest ends May 24, 2015. The contest is open to all readers. We will contact the winner via email after the contest ends.
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