Monday, July 31, 2017

George Clooney and wife to help 3,000 Syrian children in Lebanon

George and Amal Clooney

UNITED NATIONS: George and Amal Clooney plan to help nearly 3,000 Syrian refugee children go to school this year in Lebanon, where the United Nations says around 200,000 Syrian refugee children are out of education.

More than one million Syrians -- including over 500,000 children -- are registered as refugees in Lebanon after fleeing the devastating war that has lasted more than six years in neighboring Syria.

UNICEF said Monday that close to 200,000 Syrian refugee children in Lebanon are out of school. Human Rights Watch estimates the number at more than 250,000.

The nearly 3,000 Syrian children´s education will be funded through a $2.25 million partnership announced by The Clooney Foundation for Justice with Google, in addition to a $1 million technology grant from HP.

The partnership with UNICEF will help seven public schools educate the students, who are not currently in school, and will support a pilot of technology tools in these schools for refugee and Lebanese children, the Clooneys said.

"Thousands of young Syrian refugees are at risk -- the risk of never being a productive part of society. Formal education can help change that," the couple said in a statement.

"We don´t want to lose an entire generation because they had the bad luck of being born in the wrong place at the wrong time," they added.

More than 330,000 people have been killed in Syria since war broke out in March 2011 with anti-government protests that have evolved into a complex proxy war.

The Clooneys welcomed their first children -- a twin boy and girl -- in Britain last month. Amal Clooney, a prominent British-Lebanese human rights lawyer, married her Hollywood movie star husband in 2014.

'Dunkirk' stays on top of box office

World War II epic "Dunkirk" stayed at the top of the North American box office for the second straight weekend, industry data showed Monday.

Directed by Briton Christopher Nolan, critically acclaimed "Dunkirk" took in another $26.6 million, according to box office tracker Exhibitor Relations.

It stars singer Harry Styles in the retelling of the storied 1940 evacuation of hundreds of thousands of Allied troops from a beach in northern France under constant German bombardment.

Debuting in second place with $24.5 million in revenue was "The Emoji Movie," an animated flick about a world inside a cell phone that is populated by emojis.

A chipper one named Gene is embarrassed that he has an expressive face and sets off an adventure to become like all the others -- with just one look to his or her mug.

Falling from second last week to third is raunchy comedy "Girls Trip" starring Queen Latifah, Regina Hall, Jada Pinkett Smith and Tiffany Haddish, which posted a haul of $19.6 million.

Another debut movie, action flick "Atomic Blonde" starring Charlize Theron in the role of agent Lorraine Broughton, took in $18.3 million as it grabbed fourth place.

Fifth went to "Spider-Man: Homecoming," which pulled in $13.3 million.

Rounding out the top 10 were:

"War For the Planet of the Apes" ($10.5 million)

"Despicable Me 3" ($7.6 million)

"Valerian" ($6.4 million)

"Baby Driver" ($4 million)

"Wonder Woman" ($3.3 million)

Spotify builds streaming lead at 60 million subscribers

Spotify said Monday that it had 60 million paying subscribers, expanding its lead in the fast-growing world of music streaming.

The Swedish company has more than double the base of nearest competitor Apple Music, which in early June said it had 27 million subscribers.

Apple Music, however, achieved its growth rapidly as it was launched only two years ago by the tech giant.

Spotify -- started in 2008 and available in 60 countries -- gave the figure in its first update since March, when it had announced that it had 50 million subscribers.

The company said in June that it had more than 140 million overall users -- meaning most people listen on its free, advertising-backed tier, which is controversial with many artists.

The next competitor to Spotify is Paris-based Deezer, which is especially strong in continental Europe and said in January 2016 that it had six million paying subscribers.

Other streaming sites include rap mogul Jay-Z's Tidal, a service launched last year by retail giant Amazon and early streaming site Rhapsody, which has rebranded itself as Napster.

Most music industry watchers expect streaming to keep growing sharply, with the subscriber numbers a small fraction of the potential global market.

Streaming has helped the music business chart two years of bumper growth after long stagnation, although artists often question how much of the money comes back to them.

HBO says data hacked, media says 'Game of Thrones' targeted

US cable channel HBO said on Monday that hackers had stolen upcoming programming, and Entertainment Weekly reported that the theft included a script for an unaired episode of the hit fantasy show "Game of Thrones."

HBO, a unit of Time-Warner Inc, declined to comment on the specific programming stolen in the hack.

"As most of you have probably heard by now, there has been a cyber incident directed at the company which has resulted in some stolen proprietary information, including some of our programming," HBO Chairman Richard Plepler wrote in a message to employees, which the company shared with reporters.

The company declined to comment on reports that unbroadcast episodes and scripts were among the data hacked, citing an "ongoing investigation" by unspecified law enforcement officials.

Entertainment Weekly reported that hackers stole 1.5 terabytes of data and had already posted online unbroadcast episodes of "Ballers" and "Room 104," along with "a script or treatment" for next week's episode of "Game of Thrones."

Reuters also received an e-mail on Sunday from a person claiming to have stolen HBO data, including "Game of Thrones."

The show is now in its seventh season and due to wrap up next year.

Angelina Jolie 'upset' over backlash to Cambodia film casting process

US Actor and UNHCR Special Envoy Angelina Jolie attends a conference at the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, March 15, 2017. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse
 

LOS ANGELES: Angelina Jolie responded to growing backlash over the casting process for her latest film, saying she was "upset" that an improvised scene during auditions had been misconstrued as taking real money away from impoverished children.

In a Vanity Fair interview published last week about her film First They Killed My Father, Jolie described a game played by the casting directors with the young Cambodian children auditioning for the lead role of Loung Ung.

Jolie – a special envoy for the United Nations refugee agency – told Vanity Fair she looked for her lead star in orphanages, circuses, and slum schools.

In the casting, a child was placed in front of money on a table, asked to think of what they needed it for and to snatch it away. Jolie would then pretend to catch them, and the child would have to lie about why they stole the money.

"I am upset that a pretend exercise in an improvisation, from an actual scene in the film, has been written about as if it was a real scenario," Jolie – who directed the film – said in a statement on Sunday.

"The suggestion that real money was taken from a child during an audition is false and upsetting. I would be outraged myself if this had happened."

Users on social media slammed Jolie's casting game as cruel and exploiting impoverished children. Vanity Fair reporter Evgenia Peretz called the casting game "disturbing in its realism" in the profile, while Kayla Cobb at pop culture website Decider.com compared the game to a psychological thriller.

"Everyone should know better than to literally dangle money in front of impoverished children … no movie is worth psychologically traumatizing multiple children," Cobb wrote.

First They Killed My Father is about the 1970s Khmer Rouge regime, under which more than a million people died. It is due to be released globally and on Netflix in September.

Jolie said the young girl who won the part, Srey Moch, was chosen after "she became overwhelmed with emotion" when forced to give the money back, saying she needed the money to pay for her grandfather's funeral.

"The children were not tricked or entrapped, as some have suggested," Rithy Panh, a Cambodian producer on the film, said in a statement. They understood very well that this was acting, and make believe."

Kareena Kapoor looks like ray of sunshine in surreal London shoot

Bollywood A-lister and full time mommy now-a-days, Kareena Kapoor has always the spotlight shining on her one way or another. From her pregnancy days to post baby appearances, the diva has been making continuous headlines.

Recently, the Bollywood actress had a stunning photoshoot in London.


The actress looks nothing short of a ray of sunshine on a wintry morning in a Belle-inspired yellow dress and long wavy locks. 



Online search trends witness change after '13 Reasons Why' aired: study

source: ABC

Online searches about suicide and suicidal methods soared in the weeks following the release of controversial Netflix drama "13 Reasons Why," about a teenage girl who killed herself, US researchers said Monday.

While the report in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) Internal Medicine did not examine whether the number of actual suicides rose following the popular drama's release, researchers said the spike in internet searches is cause for concern.

Overall, suicide-related queries were 19 per cent higher than expected following the show, said the research letter in JAMA.

"There were between 900,000 and 1,500,000 more suicide-related searches than expected during the 19 days following the series' release," said study co-author Mark Dredze, a professor of computer science at Johns Hopkins University.

Phrases like "how to commit suicide" rose 26pc, "commit suicide" was up 18pc and "how to kill yourself" increased nine pc.

On the flip side, searches for phrases like "suicide hotline" were up 12pc, and "suicide prevention" rose 23pc.

"While it's heartening that the series' release concurred with increased awareness of suicide and suicide prevention, like those searching for "suicide prevention," our results back up the worst fears of the show's critics," said lead author John Ayers, research professor at San Diego State University Graduate School of Public Health.

"The show may have inspired many to act on their suicidal thoughts by seeking out information on how to commit suicide."

Supporters have praised the drama - in which a friend listens to a series of audio-cassette journals left behind by the deceased girl - for its frank portrayal of adolescent struggles.

Critics say the show did not provide enough referrals to suicide prevention resources for people who may be at risk, and depicted a suicide in graphic detail during the final episode.

Researchers analyzed Google trends for searches originating inside the United States between March 31, 2017 - the day the series was released - and April 18.

They stopped their analysis then because former National Football League player Aaron Hernandez's suicide on April 19 might have influenced the trends.

For comparison, researchers used the period between January to March, prior to the show's release, to determine the typically expected volumes for these words and phrases.

Previous research has shown that "suicide search trends are correlated with actual suicides," and that "media coverage of suicides concur with increased suicide attempts," said the letter in JAMA.

Researchers urged the series' creators to add suicide prevention hotline numbers to old episodes, which are still available online.

They should also follow the World Health Organization's media guidelines for preventing suicide, "such as removing scenes showing suicide."

US actor, playwright Sam Shepard dead at 73

KENTUCKY: Sam Shepard, the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and Oscar-nominated actor whose career spanned nearly five decades, has died, US media reported Monday. He was 73.

Shepard died at home in Kentucky of complications from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease, The New York Times reported, citing a family spokesman.

Shepard, who wrote nearly 50 plays, won the Pulitzer for drama in 1979 for his play "Buried Child" and was nominated for an Academy Award in 1984 for best actor in a supporting role for the 1983 movie "The Right Stuff."

One of his most recent roles was in the Netflix television series "Bloodline."

Born in Fort Sheridan, Illinois in 1943, he was the son of a teacher mother and Army officer father, who was a bomber pilot during World War II.

Shepard had a nomadic early childhood, moving from base to base around the country before graduating from high school in Duarte, California.

He started acting and writing while still in high school, and spent a year studying agriculture before joining a traveling theater company and later moving to New York, where he began writing plays.

He became playwright in residence at San Francisco's Magic Theater and also worked in Hollywood as a writer on "Zabriskie Point" in 1970, until his role as Chuck Yeager in "The Right Stuff" brought him a wider audience.

"Paris, Texas," for which he wrote the screenplay, won the Palme D'Or at the 1984 Cannes Film Festival.

In 1986, he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters. His plays are performed on and off Broadway and in all the major regional America

Sunday, July 30, 2017

Diana confessions set to air on British TV

Footage of the late princess Diana pouring her heart out about her failed marriage with Prince Charles will air on British television for the first time, a channel confirmed Sunday.

Ahead of the 20th anniversary of her death in a Paris car crash, Channel 4 will broadcast "Diana: In Her Own Words" on August 6, despite a report in The Mail on Sunday newspaper that her brother Earl Charles Spencer is unhappy with the decision.

The tapes show the late princess of Wales speaking frankly to her voice coach about her loveless marriage to the heir to the British throne and his affair with Camilla Parker Bowles, now his wife.

Diana also discusses her struggle with bulimia and an unconsummated romance with a mystery man, widely believed to be her bodyguard Barry Mannakee, who died in a motorbike accident.

"At 24, I fell deeply in love with someone who was part of all this and that was all found out and he was chucked out and then he was killed. And that was the deepest blow in my life," she says in the footage.

The tapes were screened in the United States in 2004 and are available online, but they have not been never broadcast in Britain before.

Defending its decision, Channel 4 said the footage was an important historical resource.

"Though the recordings were made in private, the subjects covered are a matter of public record and provide a unique insight into the preparations Diana undertook to gain a public voice," it said in a statement.

"This unique portrait of Diana gives her a voice and places it front and centre at a time when the nation will be reflecting on her life and death."

The tapes were filmed in 1992-1993 at her Kensington Palace home by voice coach Peter Settelen, around the time that Diana separated from Charles.

She died in a car crash in Paris on August 31, 1997.

'Intrusive'

Twelve tapes were made, of which Settelen owns seven following a legal battle after they were found in a police raid on the home of Diana's butler Paul Burrell in 2001. The whereabouts and content of the other five is unknown.

Settelen's lawyer Marcus Rutherford said his client had been reluctant to show the tapes.

"But now, coming up to the 20th anniversary, with everyone, including her own children, discussing Diana and revisiting her life, he wants Diana to be able to speak for herself," he told The Sunday Telegraph newspaper.

Royal biographer Penny Junor told the newspaper that Charles and Diana's sons princes William and Harry would not want the tapes aired again, saying it would be "deeply hurtful to them".

"This is just another way of exploiting Diana," she said.

Rosa Monckton, one of Diana's closest friends, said it was "absolutely disgusting" that the tapes were being shown.

"How intrusive is this? It doesn't matter that it was 20-odd years ago," she told the Mail on Sunday.

"Think of the hurt they are causing to her family, to her sons."

'Dunkirk' beats out 'Emoji Movie,' 'Atomic Blonde' to repeat no. 1

An unlikely battle emerged at the box office this weekend between "The Emoji Movie" and "Dunkirk." As of Saturday morning the animated feature and war epic seemed to be in a dead heat. But by Sunday morning, most of the dust had settled, and it appears "Dunkirk" will once again be the weekend's first place film.

Christopher Nolan's latest from Warner Bros. over-performed last weekend when it opened to over $50 million, showing that the director, combined with positive critical reception, still has a strong draw -- even for a movie lacking movie star power, and at risk of being written off as yet another World War II movie. This time around it looks to take in $28.1 million from 3,748 locations, for a strong hold.

It's the first time that a movie has been first place two weekends in a row since the same studio's "Wonder Woman" in early June. Patty Jenkins' movie has had a phenomenal run since, and is currently closing in on $400 million domestic (right now it's at $395.4 million).

That means Sony's "Emoji Movie" is in second for the weekend with $25.7 million from 4,075 locations. The animated adventure took a lot of heat from critics -- reaction ranged from meh to horrible, earning its current Rotten Tomatoes score of 8%. Its B CinemaScore is also quite low for an animated movie, meaning audiences aren't particularly enjoying the movie either.

T.J. Miller plays the central character, a "Meh" emoji who has "no filter," meaning his expression can change. The same cannot be said for the rest of the cast, which includes James Corden, Anna Faris, Maya Rudolph, Christina Aguilera, and Sofia Vergara. Oh yeah, and Sir Patrick Stewart plays "Poop."

"We're thrilled," said Sony's marketing chief Josh Greenstein. "The audience has spoken and made the 'Emoji Movie' a family event."

That leaves this week's other major release, "Atomic Blonde" somewhat straggling. Focus Features and Sierra/Affinity is looking at a decent, but slightly below expectations launch for the Charlize Theron-starrer with $18.5 million from 3,304 locations. Earlier in the week "Blonde" was pegged at $20 million, but the opening weekend result is still solid considering its $30 million budget. It's also one of the largest launches for Focus, behind only "Insidious Chapter 3" ($22.7 million); "London Has Fallen" ($21.6 million); and "Burn After Reading" ($19.1 million).

The R-rated spy thriller has been compared to a female "Bond" or "John Wick." After all, it shares DNA with the latter in stuntman-turned-director David Leitch, who will next helm the "Deadpool" sequel. "Blonde's" launch is bigger than the first "Wick," which opened in Fall 2014 to $14.4 million, but less than its sequel ($30.4 million).

In "Blonde," Theron plays a hardcore action star -- the type of character that knocked out audiences in "Mad Max: Fury Road" -- named Lorraine Broughton. The rest of the cast includes James McAvoy, John Goodman, and Sofia Boutella.

"We're very happy with the opening. I feel this movie is going to have legs to it," said Lisa Bunnell, distribution chief at Focus Features.

Bunnell also pointed to Focus' commitment to putting women in and front and behind the camera with recent releases including "The Beguiled" and "The Zookeeper's Wife." "There's always a thought process behind 'Let's see some diversity,'" she said. "This is definitely a movie where Charlize takes center stage ... she can fight men, and she can beat men, so it's a really empowering movie to go see."

"Blonde" will land just below the summer comedy event that "Girls Trip" has become. Universal's release is posting $20.1 million during its second weekend from 2,648 theaters, for only a 36% drop from last weekend. Conversely, EuropaCorp and STX's "Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets" flopped last weekend, and is falling off fast. This weekend, Luc Besson's epic domestic dud should make $6.8 million from 3,553 locations. Sony's "Spider-Man: Homecoming" is hanging in the top five with an additional $13.5 million this weekend.

Annapurna showed Kathryn Bigelow's "Detroit" at 20 locations before its wide rollout next weekend. From those theaters, the critically approved crime drama took in $365,455 for a per screen average of $18,273.

"We're seeing that first and foremost, people are really into the movie," said Annapurna's distribution head Erik Lomis, who pointed to strong exit information, including 71% of the audience marked "definite recommend." "It's a Kathryn Bigelow film, so it's for everybody," he added.

To treat the bigger picture, this weekend is not good news for the summer box office overall, which is now 8.1% behind last year.

"We have been in a major struggle to compare favorably with last year's summer season week after week and with yet another 'down' weekend on the books, the summer deficit just added another percentage point in the wrong direction," said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at ComScore, who pointed out that this weekend's crop could not compete with 2016's "Jason Bourne" and "Bad Moms." Looking ahead, the first weekend in August seems to signal even more gloom and doom, as several films will be measured up against "Suicide Squad's" record breaking August 2016 tally.

Super hero’s ‘homecoming’ delayed!

The month of July could have witnessed the clash of the new Spiderman movie with our very own Project Ghazi at the box office, but due to an unavoidable situation, this could not happen.

I managed to see the reboot of the 'Spiderman' franchise, by the name of 'homecoming', but was least impressed. The change in cultural identities of the sidekicks, such as the best friend and the love interest, was puzzling for me.

In Pakistan, the 'homecoming' of its own superhero film was scheduled for the same month. With big sponsors and huge funds involved, Project Ghazi was dubbed the country's first-ever superhero film.

However, it met disaster on the premiere night when a half-cooked film was screened. Sanity prevailed and the release date was pushed ahead. It is reported that due to the pressure from sponsors, an incomplete film got to the premiere.

If sponsors had been successful in making big movies, Hollywood would have churned out dozens while I was in school. We longed for Avengers, Justice League and Super Friends in the 1980s, which were nowhere in sight.

I remember Pakistan's first sci-fi film, Shanee, came out in those days. It was the debut feature film for director/producer Saeed Rizvi, who had made a name by making famous TV commercials. Marketed as a horror film, it turned out to be a sci-fi thriller, introducing Pakistan's own superhero in the process.

Shanee had everything a kid living in those days wanted to see. A spaceship, an alien, lasers, a speedy chase, energizing of the characters, lots of action and well-written dialogues, which were only seen during Sultan Rahi-Mustafa Qureshi's confrontation, that too in Punjabi.

In a meeting with Saeed Rizvi, I was taken back in time as to how the idea was conceived. Saeed belongs to a family of filmmakers — his father Rafiq Rizvi was a veteran, who had been making films before the partition of the Sub-continent.

Saeed credits his futuristic Pakland Cement commercial from 1985 behind the idea. 'When daddy saw the commercial, which had Laser energizing a complete factory, he advised me to make a film using that technology. I started working on it, but due to my busy schedule, it took a year to develop a detailed script. To get a powerful story, I engaged senior writer from daddy's team, late Agha Nazir Kawish, who had earlier written films like Aag Ka Dariya, Phir Subha Hogi and Samandar, recalled Saeed.

The title role was played by Sherry Malik, a model-turned-actor, who played the role of an alien with a wooden face. There was excellent support from veterans Babra Sharif, Nayyar Sultana and Muhammad Ali.

The film begins when an alien arrives on earth, later transforming into Shanee, the fiancé of Babra Sharif's character Hina. Shanee had been killed by Shamsher Khan, played by Asif Khan, and his 'return from the dead' alerted the bad guys. Nayyar Sultana played Hina's mother while Muhammad Ali was Dino Chacha, whose son was also killed by Shamsher.

The shooting for the film started in 1987 in Shabab Studio, where Saeed rebuilt a village, to his own liking. The theme, similar to 'He-Man and the Masters of the Universe', appealed to the age group who were not yet teenagers. The well-choreographed fight sequences were never seen before in a Pakistani film.

"When I announced my project, nobody had belief in me, except for the late critic AR Slote. All audio effects were purchased from Los Angeles. There was no help from the government in those days and not a single penny was invested from the private sector as well, as they thought I was crazy," Saeed went back in time, which he still considers the worst for the film industry.

The film was released on March 10, 1989. Saeed Rizvi wanted to release it on March 3, the day of his father's birth. Rafiq Rizvi died in September 1988, during the production of Shanee, and failed to see the final movie, which opened to packed houses. Most of the crowd comprised school kids, usually accompanied by their parents.

Nearly three decades have passed since Shanee. Instead of progressing, the film industry collapsed and is now reinventing itself. Project Ghazi, like Shanee, has an ensemble cast with Humayyun Saeed, Shehryar Munawwar, Syra Shehroze, Talat Hussain and Adnan Jaffar. Director Nadir Shah, like Saeed Rizvi, hails from the advertising field.

When the trailer of Project Ghazi came out, it was promising. I wish the mishap of the premiere night turns out to be a blessing in disguise, and the makers come up with a great film. Shanee mesmerised those who saw it, let's hope, Project Ghazi leaves a similar effect on its viewers. 

Saturday, July 29, 2017

Mongolian melody: Hip-hop duo splices traditional singing and urban beats

Hip pop singers Sanjjav Baatar (L), Battogtokh Odsaikhan of a band called 'Fish Symboled Stamp', and a sound engineer adjust a mixing console in a recording studio in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, June 24, 2017. REUTERS/Joseph Campbell

ULAANBAATAR: Ulaanbaatar's urban music scene is buzzing with a new vibe created by a hip-hop duo mixing into their sound the traditional art of throat singing, or "Khoomei", as Mongolians refer to it.

Rap group Fish Symboled Stamp, named for a fish-shaped seal traditionally used to brand horses in the landlocked nation, incorporates the nearly 1,000-year-old vocal tradition of communities across Siberia and Central Asia.

Khoomei means "pharynx", and performers imitate the sounds of nature, emitting a melody of harmonics alongside a continuous drone, UNESCO, which added the art form to its intangible heritage listing in 2009, says on a website describing it.

Lead bass vocalist Sanjjav Baatar, 32, founded the group with rapper Battogtokh Odsaikhan, 30, in 2010, when they started experimenting with music styles.

Finding the voice that best suited them took some time.

"I couldn't understand what voice I should use," Baatar said. "One day my partner said, 'Why don't you rhyme with your Khoomei voice?' I tried it out, and it sounded really good."

Odsaikhan believes the cultural reference sets Fish Symboled Stamp apart from other Mongolian hip hop groups.

"Mongolian hip hop is no different from that in the West. It's just copy and paste," he said.

The pair says they were inspired by Mongolian folk religion and frequent childhood visits to the vast steppe undulating in every direction.

Mongolia's climate and environment contributed to the development of Khoomei, said Lhamragchaa, a throat singing teacher at a private school in Ulaanbaatar.

"Our ancestors were herding their cattle in the open grasslands and were hearing the sounds of nature, like wind blowing, and trying to imitate them," said Lhamragchaa, who has only one name, like many Mongolians.

Bataar and Odsaikhan are proud of their culture, nationalism and Mongolia's historical legacies, which predominate in their lyrics.

Fish Symboled Stamp represented Mongolian art at the recent opening of an art gallery, drawing favourable comment for their skills in folding together traditional and modern music.

"Such performances can make Mongolians proud of their cultural heritage," said Otgonbileg, a 50-year-old teacher.

Friday, July 28, 2017

Pop singer Katy Perry to host MTV Video Music Awards show

Katy Perry performs on the Pyramid Stage at Worthy Farm in Somerset during the Glastonbury Festival in Britain, June 24, 2017. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez/Files
 

LOS ANGELES: Pop singer Katy Perry will host the MTV Video Music Awards (VMA) in August, MTV said on Thursday, and will also perform and compete for some top awards.

The hosting gig will kick off a busy 12 months for Perry, who embarks on a world tour in September and will be a judge in 2018 on the new version of the television talent show American Idol.

Perry, who released her latest album Witness, in June, is the most followed person on Twitter, with more than 100 million followers.

Her big-budget video "Chained to the Rhythm" will compete in four categories at the VMA show, but she was snubbed in nominations for the top two categories of video of the year, and artist of the year.

The "Roar" singer was also nominated with Calvin Harris in the best video collaboration category for "Feels", pitting her directly against her pop rival Taylor Swift, who got a nod for her duet with Zayn Malik for "I Don't Wanna Live Forever."

The MTV Video Music Awards are scheduled to take place in Los Angeles on August 27 and will be shown live on MTV.

MTV taps Katy Perry to host VMAs

Katy Perry will host this year's MTV Video Music Awards, the network announced Thursday, as it turned to one of pop music's most visible stars for its big gala.

Perry was also the first performer announced for the awards, which will be aired globally from Los Angeles on August 27.

MTV broke the news by posting a picture of the newly blonde singer clad as an astronaut -- a nod to the awards' "Moonman" statuette and the network's early commercials.

In a statement, Perry joked that she had started "training in zero gravity."

MTV has experimented with different host formats for the annual party, which are generally better remembered for attention-grabbing on-stage incidents than for the award winners.

Miley Cyrus hosted the event two years ago, but in 2016, MTV decided to have multiple presenters throughout the night rather than a single host.

Perry, the only person with more than 100 million followers on Twitter, is up for five VMAs this year for "Chained to the Rhythm," her disco-inspired track whose video presents a sci-fi amusement park fantasy.

The 32-year-old has three videos that have reached one billion views on YouTube, led by "Roar."


Clooney vows to sue French magazine over twins' photos

George Clooney and his wife Amal pose on the red carpet as they arrive for the screening of the film 'Money Monster' during the 69th Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France, May 12, 2016. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard/Files

LOS ANGELES: George Clooney on Friday said he would take legal action against a French magazine that published the first photos of his newborn twins.

The Ocean's Eleven actor said photographers from Voici magazine "scaled our fence, climbed our tree and illegally took pictures of our infants inside our home".

Clooney said in a statement that the photographers and the magazine "will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. The safety of our children demands it".

Clooney and his humanitarian lawyer wife, Amal, announced the arrival of the twins – a boy and a girl called Alexander and Ella – in June but have given no details, photos or interviews about them.

Voici on Friday published grainy photos of Amal and George Clooney, dressed in swim wear, each carrying one of the babies in their arms. They appear to be walking in a garden in what the magazine said was the Clooneys' villa near Lake Como in Italy.

Voici magazine did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The babies are their first children for the couple, who married in Venice, Italy in 2014 in a big celebrity ceremony but who have tried to keep their personal lives private since then.

F. Scott Fitzgerald's 'Last Tycoon' reborn on TV

LEFT: Actor Matthew Bomer from the TV series 'The Last Tycoon' attends the 57th Monte-Carlo Television Festival in Monaco, June 18, 2017. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard/File Photo; CENTRE: Lily Collins; RIGHT: Kelsey Grammer 
 

LOS ANGELES: F. Scott Fitzgerald never finished his last novel The Last Tycoon but that made filming the book for a new television series even more interesting for actors Kelsey Grammer and Lily Collins.

Fitzgerald died in 1940 at the age of 44 before finishing the story about the studio system in the Golden Age of Hollywood. He left notes on where the characters were heading and the completed novel was released posthumously in 1941 by his friend, Edmund Wilson.

"What's fun, I guess, about an unfinished novel is you can get to do what you want to with it. He's laid out a really wonderful blueprint and you get to finish it," said Grammer, who plays Pat Brady, a character based on movie studio boss Louis B. Mayer.

'The Last Tycoon' poster. (Image courtesy: Trailer Addict)

The Last Tycoon – which was previously adapted for television in 1957 and film in 1976 – will air in nine parts on Amazon, starting on Friday, July 28.

Collins – who plays Brady's daughter Cecelia – said she enjoyed having the freedom to "take it and run with it and bring about the historical facts of the period but also to bring in our imagination".

Cecelia is trying to break into production in Hollywood, which is still a challenge for women nearly 80 years after Fitzgerald's death.

"Some things have changed but many, many things have not. A lot of the things that we are dealing with on the show are sadly really relevant and fresh today, whether it's the ageism or the sexism or the anti-Semitism and certain aspects of race," said Matt Bomer, who plays Monroe Stahr, a character based on studio chief Irving Thalberg.

Grammer, best known for TV comedies Cheers and Frasier, said the studio battles depicted in Fitzgerald's book also felt close to home.

"I don't think it's very different. I think everybody is a lot more polite now, but I think secretly down, down, deep inside they fight like it's turf war, like it is a war they need to win," he said.

´England Lost´: Mick Jagger sings Brexit blues

Mick Jagger Twitter

LONDON: Rock legend Mick Jagger has released a new track called "England Lost" that reflects the soul-searching in Britain since the Brexit vote in what he said was "a difficult moment in our history".

The song released on Thursday, a collaboration with grime artist Skepta, starts out as a reflection on seeing England´s beleaguered football team lose.

"But when I wrote the title I knew it would be about more than just that. It´s about a feeling that we are in a difficult moment in our history," the Rolling Stones frontman, who turned 74 on Wednesday, said in an interview for Apple Music.

"It´s about the unknowability about where you are and the feeling of insecurity. That´s how I was feeling when I was writing," Jagger said.

"I went to find England, but England´s lost," he sings in the blues-inspired track.

"I went to find England, it wasn´t there/ I think I lost it in the back of my chair," goes the song, with a music video showing a smartly-dressed man being held back as he tries to run into the sea.

"I think I´m losing my imagination/ I´m tired of talking about immigration/ You can´t get in and you can´t get out/ I guess that´s what we´re all about."

The Brexit referendum last year divided the country after a bitter campaign in which hardline rhetoric against immigration featured prominently.

Jagger told Sky News in an interview in April 2016 ahead of the vote that: "I don´t think to me personally it´s going to make a huge difference".

"I think to the country in the short-term it will be detrimental. In the longer term, in say a 20-year term, it might turn out to be beneficial."

Jagger also on Thursday released a second solo track entitled "Gotta Get a Grip", a dance tune, that he said was more inspired by the United States and is being seen as a comment on US President Donald Trump.

"The world is upside down/ Everybody lunatics and clowns/ No one speaks the truth/ And madhouse runs the town," Jagger sings.

"Immigrants are pouring in/ Refugees under your skin/ Keep ´em under, keep ´em out/ Intellectual, shut your mouth/ Beat ´em with a stick," he sings.

"The message I suppose is despite all those things that are happening, you´ve got to get on with your own life, be yourself and attempt to create your own destiny," Jagger said.

Q&A: Anushka Sharma on being a creature of instinct

Anushka Sharma and Shah Rukh Khan in 'Jab Harry Met Sejal'

If there's one quality that defines Anushka Sharma, it's clarity. The actress says she uses her instinct to choose her roles and has no doubts about what she wants and doesn't want – from modeling to acting and producing.

Sharma, who had two big hits last year ("Sultan" and "Ae Dil Hai Mushkil"), stars opposite Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan in her next film, the romantic comedy "Jab Harry Met Sejal". 

She spoke to Reuters about her latest release, why she doesn't doubt her decisions and what she learned from producing films.

Q: You declined Imtiaz Ali when he offered you "Tamasha" because you thought the role wasn't strong enough…

A: (Interrupts) I am not commenting on that at all. I haven't said anything like that. I have never made a comment on "Tamasha." I don't talk about films that I am not part of.

Still from 'Jab Harry Met Sejal'

Q: Was Sejal (from "Jab Harry Met Sejal") a strong-enough role for you?

A: If we answer this question with the reference of the other thing you asked me, it is not fair, so I am not going to talk about that. I don't talk about the films I don't do. I don't like it when actors do that either – when they are not doing a film and they want everyone to know they are not doing it. I think it's disrespectful to the person who offered the film to you and to the person who is doing it. You are not better because you aren't doing a film.

For me, I react to films purely on instinct. And at different times in your life, you want to do things for different reasons. When I heard the script of this ("Jab Harry met Sejal") film, I was totally drawn to it and I loved the character of the girl. I have never played someone with a comic touch. I have always played girls who are very self-assured and know what they are doing and Sejal is anything but that. She is lost and her introduction in the trailer is of a girl who needs guidance. That was what's exciting and that is why I decided to do the film.

Anushka and SRK in a scene from 'Jab Harry Met Sejal'

Q: Do you ever have a smidgen of self-doubt when you decide to say 'no' to a film, especially when it is directed by an acclaimed director?

A: No, because there is a lot of clarity in me about why I decided to say no to a film. There was never a doubt in my head that I wanted to work with Imtiaz. I wanted to work with him for the longest time. He is a director whose work I have loved and is somebody who has had a huge impact in my life; because when I watched his first film, that was the first time I thought of wanting to act some day.

Q: Is there any aspect of your career where you let self-doubt creep in sometimes?

A: Self-doubt constantly travels with you. That doubt is good because it helps you keep things in check and keep pushing forward and working hard. I'll never feel complacent or happy with the things I do. I never have. But I don't let that become so negative that it ends up troubling me or harming me in any way. I become observant of these things. I become observant of the negative emotions in my life. I don't ride them.

Of course I have my ups and downs but the difference is that the self-doubt doesn't change my course of action. I am on one path. These things (self-doubt, negativity) keep coming up, but I keep moving forward. I am not someone who is going to have self-doubt and lose my cool, become hyper, insecure, angry, aggressive and say "Ab main ye karoongi, ab main ye nahi karoongi" (I will do this, or I won't do that) and lose track of what I want. Or that I end up looking at what other people are doing… which people do sometimes. And it doesn't help you in any way.

Still from 'Jab Harry Met Sejal'

Q: Is that a personality trait or is that something you have developed over the years?

A: It is a personality trait. It's always been like that. Even when I was modeling, I knew what kind of ads I didn't want to do. Like I didn't want to do 'montage-y' ads or ads where there were too many people. When I got my first film, Aditya Chopra told me, "If you had been one of those models who was in a lot of ads, I wouldn't have taken you for the film." Somehow, and I don't know how, but I knew that I didn't want to do many ads.

Q: Can anyone's opinion change your course of action?

A: My brother is the only one I discuss movies with, but we are mostly on the same page. It is very rare that we have disagreed on movies, and that is why we work so well.

Q: You've produced three films till now. What have you learnt as a producer?

A: Things that you learn, you put in your next film. Maybe I can talk about it in my biography. It's all so new and there is growth with each day. The stuff that I have learned producing one film is equivalent to five films that I have shot as an actor.

Each film comes with its own sets of issues. It makes you calmer, more patient, more resilient to setbacks and changing circumstances. That is what I have learnt the most as a producer.

During shoot of 'Jab Harry Met Sejal'

Q: You have said that you took to producing because you wanted the freedom to make stories that you wanted to tell. Are the setbacks worth that freedom?

A: Sometimes you feel like it isn't. It is so nice when you are part of a film like this one (which she is not producing). As a producer, it is very challenging and you are tested a lot more. You have your own tests as an actor, but here, the stakes are higher. You are far more responsible for the film. But I am happy… when I see that we are encouraging and promoting new talent, it gives me a lot of satisfaction. I feel like a bigger part of movies, more connected to the movies because of that. And I feel like my time is consumed in the best way possible. It is very difficult at times and you feel like, "Why aren't I doing what everyone else is doing?" But I am happy that me becoming a producer has encouraged many other actresses to do it too.

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Stephen Colbert signs new animated series to bring 'Orange President' to TV

Image: Nerdist via Showtime

NEW YORK: Comedian Stephen Colbert has signed a deal to produce an animated series about US President Donald Trump, reprising a familiar tangerine-colored character from The Late Show for an initial run of 10 episodes on Showtime.

The series, set to debut in fall, will also star the president's "family, top associates, heads of government, golf pros and anyone else straying into his orbit," seen through the eyes of an imaginary documentary crew, the channel announced Thursday.

"I know a lot of people wanted to do this, and I'm honoured that the Cartoon President invited our documentary crew into his private world," Colbert said in a statement.

"I've seen some of the footage, and I look forward to sharing the man behind the MAGA," he added, referring to Trump's campaign slogan "Make America Great Again."

Colbert took over The Late Show on CBS in late 2015, but only hit top gear after Trump's election.

He beat his main late show rivals Jimmy Kimmel (ABC) and Jimmy Fallon (NBC) this season thanks to his brand of politically charged humour – the first time CBS won the rating battle since 2010.

Colbert's two-dimensional Trump caricature appeared on a segment during his live coverage of the presidential election last year before becoming a recurring character on his show.

Colbert will team up with Chris Licht, his executive producer on The Late Show", for the as yet untitled project.

Mohsin Hamid, Kamila Shamsie longlisted for Man Booker Prize

Author Mohsin Hamid (left) and Kamila Shamsie (right). Photo: File

British-Pakistani authors Mohsin Hamid and Kamila Shamsie were lauded with the honor of being nominated for the prestigious Man Booker prize.

Shamsie's Home Fire and Hamid's Exit West are among the 13 novels longlisted for the £50,000 award.

Hamid's second novel — The Reluctant Fundamentalist — was shortlisted for the award in 2007. 

The Ministry of Utmost Happiness – penned by renowned author Arundhati Roy – has also been longlisted for the prize.

Roy won the award for her first novel, The God of Small Things -- published 20 years ago.

Not only their work but the contenders are also a diverse range of authors, with six women and seven men on the list. There are four UK, four US, two Irish, two British-Pakistani, and one Indian authors are longlisted for the award.

Chair of judges Baroness Lola Young shared that only when the judges surveyed the 13 remaining contenders that they realised the diversity of their list.

"The longlist showcases a diverse spectrum – not only of voices and literary styles but of protagonists too, in their culture, age and gender. Nevertheless we found there was a spirit common to all these novels: though their subject matter might be turbulent, their power and range were life-affirming – a tonic for our times," said Young.

Young and her fellow judges will reread the longlist of 13 titles to come up with a shortlist of six, which will be announced on September 13. The winner will be announced on October 17.