Archive: January 2009 (131-140 of 354)

Jan 22 2009 03:00 PM ET

'My Fair Wedding': Share the love

Filed under: Television and tagged: ,

I have a habit of discovering cable reality shows long after they premiere. Case in point: WE tv’s My Fair Wedding. I’d heard a couple of friends rave about the show — which involves wedding planner David Tutera popping up three weeks before a bride’s big day and changing/improving everything — but I hadn’t seen it until I got sucked into a Martin Luther King Jr. Day marathon. It really is amazing. For starters, they pick awesome brides with theme weddings(!). So, for example, there’s Mandy, the tattooed Marilyn Monroe impersonator who wants an old Hollywood reception — and spiders on her cake; lovable Wanda, who wants to bring South Beach to a New Jersey ballroom and thinks she’s done it with glowing plastic ice cubes; and Jennifer, who dreams of being a princess for a day, but pronounces the ‘qu’ in etiquette like you do in question.

What’s so wonderful is that while Tutera attempts — and often fails — to hide his dismay at a bride’s bad taste, he really is there to help. It’s not like watching an old Trading Spaces episode where you know that a designer Doug is following his own vision even though common sense says the homeowner will hate it. Tutera’s word is final, but he works with his always likable, appreciative brides to make sure that the couple’s personalities are still represented and that their theme is fully realized — just with some added class. So Mandy is given a voice lesson (and orchestra) so she can perform a song for husband at the reception, where she also gets her spider on a quirky groom’s cake. Wanda’s ballroom is transformed into South Beach with lighting, furniture, and a choreographed first salsa. Jennifer’s wedding is moved to a freakin’ castle and she’s taken to the Disney Bridal salon to try on gowns inspired by the Disney princesses. (No, she doesn’t find out which gown she’ll be wearing down the aisle until she steps into it on her wedding day, but Tutera has to have a little fun.)

I could go on about the virtues of the show, but you need to see it for yourself. WE tells me there’ll be another season 1 marathon airing on Valentine’s Day, starting at 1 p.m. ET. The show will return with new episodes in late summer.

Jan 22 2009 02:17 PM ET

2009 Oscar nominations: Who got snubbed?

Filed under: Movies and tagged: ,

Oscarsnubs_lAs promised, Forest Whitaker and Academy president Sid Ganis announced the 2009 Oscar nominations at exactly 8:38 a.m. EST. My lasting impression from the major-network broadcast is that I really dig the singsong yet clipped manner in which Forest says "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," so it’s clear that the film hasn’t been snubbed this morning. Read EW.com’s complete list of the major nominees.

The omission of Clint Eastwood (pictured, left) from the Best Actor category and Gran Torino from any of the major categories certainly stands out, as does the absence of Slumdog Millionaire‘s Dev Patel (pictured, right with costar Freida Pinto) from the Supporting Actor group. Slumdog did rack up 10 total nominations, including Best Picture and Best Director for Danny Boyle. The inclusion of The Reader in the Best Picture category is a huge surprise, and an especially disappointing one for fans of The Dark Knight. (And Wall-E!)

Which snubs stand out to you? Let us know in the comments below.

More Oscars:
Dave Karger’s Oscar Watch blog
2009 Oscar nominees: The complete list
Oscars 2009: Video interviews with Danny Boyle, Anne Hathaway, and more
Gallery: The Biggest Oscar Snubs Ever

addCredit(“Eastwood: Anthony Michael Rivetti; Patel: Ishika Mohan”)

Jan 22 2009 02:00 PM ET

Site of the Day: College Humor's 'Michael Showalter Stuff'

A web search for Michael Ian Black’s new children’s book, Chicken Cheeks, led me to the video below of Black peddling it on his buddy Michael Showalter’s webseries, The Michael Showalter Showalter, while wearing a chicken suit. If you have more than six minutes to kill, this link leads you to College Humor’s index of "Michael Showalter Stuff," which includes his video chats with the likes of Paul Rudd, Michael Cera, David Cross, SNL‘s Andy Samberg, and 30 Rock‘s Jack McBrayer.

More on Micheal Showalter and Michael Ian Black:
Michael Showalter guest blogs on PopWatch Pt. 1
Michael Showalter guest blogs on PopWatch Pt. 2
PopWatch Interview: 13 Things You Might Not Know About Michael Ian Black
10 Stupid Questions With The State

Jan 22 2009 11:00 AM ET

Quote of the Day: The Weather Girls edition

"Humidity is rising/ Barometer’s getting low/ According to all sources, the street’s the place to go/’Cause tonight for the first time/ Just about half-past ten/ For the first time in history, it’s gonna start raining men/ It’s raining men! Hallelujah!/ It’s raining men! Amen!/ I’m gonna go out to run and let myself get/ Absolutely soaking wet!/ It’s Raining Men! Hallelujah!/ It’s Raining Men! Every Specimen!/ Tall, blond, dark and lean/ Rough and tough and strong and mean" — The Weather Girls’ "It’s Raining Men"

Jan 22 2009 02:15 AM ET

'American Idol': What did you think of the Louisville auditions?

Filed under: American Idol and tagged: ,

Greetings, Idoloonies! After a lackluster Tuesday-night show focusing on the San Francisco auditions, I’m deeply concerned yet strangely (delusionally?) hopeful that tonight’s American Idol tryouts from Louisville, KY, will showcase the kind of potentially A-list talent that’s made the show such an addictive treat for the last seven seasons. Future Fantasia Barrinos and Chris Daughtrys, please stand up! Like, immediately! We need you! Anyhow, I’ve got a family obligation tonight that means I’ll be watching the proceedings on DVR — though unlike all of you lucky cats, I can’t fast-forward through the boring parts — so until I post my TV Watch recap sometime around 6 a.m., I figured I’d offer up this blog post as a place where you can discuss the episode. I also took the liberty of embedding the Idolatry season premiere, because, well, it’s not every day you get to see Melinda Doolittle pitch a fit. How hilarious is this woman?

More American Idol
‘American Idol’ San Francisco recap: Finding Hacks in Cali
 Meet ‘Idol’ judge Kara DioGuardi
Slezak, watch your back!
EW’s ‘American Idol’ HQ

Jan 22 2009 01:21 AM ET

Sam Cooke: A change that finally came

Samcooke_lSam Cooke never lived to watch Barack Obama take office, let alone see his own 1964 civil-rights soul classic "A Change Is Gonna Come" become the unofficial anthem of the campaign — the singer was shot and killed by an L.A. hotel proprietress in 1963, weeks before the song hit the charts.

But in a nice little bit of cosmic timing, the man behind that song, and 29 other  Top 40 hits, including "You Send Me" and "Bring It On Home to Me," would have turned 78 tomorrow. Over the years, "Change" has been covered by Bob Dylan, Aretha Franklin, the Fugees, the Band, and Otis Redding, among countless others; this past weekend, Betty Lavette and Jon Bon Jovi performed it for Obama at the Lincoln Memorial. Unfortunately, there’s no good audio clip available on YouTube, but if you’ve got 99 cents, get it on iTunes — or better yet, spend $11.99 and treat yourself to the entire remastered 30-track collection Sam Cooke: Portrait of a Legend 1951-1964; he’s worth it.

Jan 21 2009 09:06 PM ET

Should Judd Apatow make Bill Hader's slasher movie?

Billhaderjuddapatow_lSaturday Night Live‘s Bill Hader is trying to convince Judd Apatow to team up with him for a horror comedy. Hader tells CHUD.com that he and SNL scribe Simon Rich have presented their idea to Apatow (who produced Superbad, in which Hader costarred), but says he isn’t sure if it’ll get made. Though cryptic about the actual plot of the film, Hader said that he’s a fan of true crime shows, and that, "That’s basically what the movie is about. What if that guy decided tocome to your house? What would you and your dips— friends do aboutit?" While the concept sounds Scream meets Shaun of the Dead to me, Hader likened it to "Straw Dogs meets Halloween meets Home Alone meets Monster Squad."

What do you think? Should Apatow make the movie? Let him know in our poll below. I vote yes because, while I’m not a fan of true crime shows, I have experienced that moment after a CSI marathon when you become hyperaware of your surroundings and everything (and everyone) that could kill you. There are laughs to be had there.

 

 

More Judd Apatow:
Judd Apatow tops EW’s 50 Smartest People in Hollywood list
Catching up with Judd Apatow
Comic-Con 2008: Judd Apatow and Kevin Smith bring down the house
Judd Apatow wraps his ‘Evening of Comedy’ at L.A. UCB

Jan 21 2009 08:44 PM ET

What's on your Must List? (We're loving 'Big Love')

Biglove_lJust when I was about to cancel my subscription, HBO redeemed itself by bringing back two of my favorite shows — Flight of the Conchords and Big Love. Sunday night’s episode of Big Love was my favorite episode of the series so far, and that’s why it’s on my Must List this week. We caught up with the covert polygamist Henricksons (and Grants and Heffmans) shortly after they were maybe-exposed to some community members. With nosy neighbors in the know, Bill’s Mormon-friendly casino idea, Roman Grant on trial, a potential fourth wife, Barb’s new cancer scare, Nicki spying for her father, and about 157 more side plots (really, I counted), this season is shaping up to be the best ever. Speaking of Nicki, I’m pretty psyched that her character is finally being redeemed (via rooftop ”confession”) — it had gotten to the point where she was so alienating, I wasn’t quite sure why Bill married her in the first place.

What about you, PopWatchers? What’s at the top of your Must List this week? List up to three items from current TV/movies/music/books/games/online. Don’t forget your e-mail address, in case we decide to use your submission in the magazine. Deadline is Thursday, Jan. 22, at 5 p.m. ET

Jan 21 2009 08:26 PM ET

Site of the Day: Metacritic's All-Time Low Scores

Filed under: Movies and tagged: ,

88minutes_lWhile scanning the 2009 Razzie Award nominations this morning, I wondered how this year’s worst film offerings (The Hottie and the Nottie, Love Guru, etc.) compared to the bottom feeders of years past. Enter today’s Site of the Day: The All-Time Low Scores on Metacritic.com. I’m not proud to report that even though this list is likely intended to have the opposite effect, it kind of makes me want to see Bio Dome. And I’m pretty psyched that Caffeine, the awful Mena Suvari/Katherine Heigl movie that I routinely managed to watch-without-really-watching on HBO or Showtime during a particularly pathetic patch of 2008, ranked 200 on the Worst List. That movie is the word "awful" come to life. In Britain!

I’m thankfully unfamiliar with most of this year’s Razzie noms — excluding Al Pacino’s Worst Actor turn in 88 Minutes. Indeed, I saw 88 Minutes IN THE THEATER. Under the very worthy excuse of "having an interview with Ben McKenzie" (pictured, behind Pacino), of course. ‘Fess up: What was the absolute worst movie you paid to see in 2008?

Jan 21 2009 07:31 PM ET

Sirius XM raising costs? Vive le monopoly!

Siriusxm_lSome six months after last summer’s merger between Sirius Satellite Radio and rival XM Radio, we’re now seeing reports that the new Sirius XM is raising prices starting March 11, charging $2 more per month for additional subscriptions, and $2.99 a month for online streaming (formerly part of the base package). This move is seemingly in line with the FCC merger agreement because technically, the company is not raising its base price — if you have one receiver and don’t stream online, you’re not affected. What’s more, if you call Sirius XM customer service, someone will explain to you that you can lock in the current rate if you sign up for a three-year subscription (which in satellite radio years, is like, well, a decade). Still, the post-merger move feels like a disconcerting harbinger of price increases to come.

I’ve personally never been a Howard Stern fan (seems every day there’s fewer of those around), and at home, I plug my Internet-connected laptop into the stereo to listen to various online radio as well as my MP3 collection. That means the only place I really listen to satellite radio is my car or at work via the Internet. I like having Sirius on my four-hour road trips to see my Boston-based in-laws, but I think I might just stick with terrestrial radio and my iPod (connected via an inexpensive yet adequate-at-least-in-rural-areas FM modulator) for car rides and ditch the satellite radio rather than pay an extra 3 bucks a month just to listen at work. Yes, it’s about saving cash. But it’s also about saying screw you to this monopoly before it bites me in the behind.

Anyone else gonna chuck their satellite radio if this price-jacking rumor is true? How do you listen to radio these days? Or perhaps radio really is a dead medium…?

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