Strike, day 79

January 22nd, 2008

This morning was a day of firsts on the picket line. For starters, it was my first day of rain picketing. A clear plastic garbage bag protects the sign, so beyond needing to occasionally wipe off my glasses, it wasn’t a big difference. It was warmer than most mornings, so I’ll gladly take some rain.

paramount mapToday was the first time all the WGA pickets were consolidated at Paramount, so it was weird to see four times as many picketers at six in the morning. While we started out at our normal gates, pretty soon we gathered in big groups to walk around the entire lot.

Paramount is seven blocks wide and four blocks deep, but it backs up against the Hollywood Forever Cemetery, so there’s no way to circle it without including the cemetery, a few strip malls, and the WIC center. So for any confused observers (there were a few), the WGA is not anti-corpse, anti-doughnut, or anti-women-infants-and-children.

Google Maps shows one lap equalling 1.7 miles. I’m surprised; it doesn’t feel that long. As I noted on Day 1 of the strike, the sidewalks on the west side of Paramount are ridiculously unusable: 2 feet wide with a light pole in the middle.

So if you’re tempted to head out for one of the later picketing shifts today, by all means go. It’s a very nice change to be able to walk forward without interruption.

Teaching Thursdays

Some writers from WB Gate 2 are starting an off-the-cuff program called Teaching Thursdays. Priya Hamilton-Wilkes wrote in:

A few of us came up with an idea of “Teaching Thursdays,” where writers of various TV and feature genres would join us on Thursdays, making themselves available to discuss story, structure and everything in between to aspiring writers. Medical drama day will be Thursday, January 24th, from 9-12 at Gate 2 at Warner Bros.

It’s a great idea. One of the frustrating things about picketing is that so often, you feel like you’re not doing anything constructive. That’s why I’ve been happy to have so many readers come out to Paramount. I suspect the WB Gate 2 crew will get at least as much out of it as the aspiring writers who come out to learn.

The elephant in the room

At 6:09 this morning, I was interviewed by a KTLA news crew about my opinions on the DGA deal and what it meant for the informal WGA talks which are now beginning. (The reporter didn’t pick me specifically. The group I was walking with shoved me in front.)

So while I’ve refrained from weighing in officially on the blog for fear of undercutting the off-stage discussions, I can at least repeat what I told the reporter.

I’ve been “cautiously optimistic” too many times during the strike, so I officially refuse to link emotion and prediction. I won’t predict, period.

That said, everyone on every side recognizes why this would be a very good time to get the strike resolved. There are important issues which are unique to writers, ones that don’t really have any equivalent in the DGA deal, so those are going to take careful action to address.

While I won’t predict whether a deal will be reached soon, do I think a deal can be reached? Absolutely.

Tomorrow will be back to normal, with picketing at the Van Ness gate at Paramount starting at 5:45 a.m.

Equity Media Names Patrick Doran Chief Financial Officer

January 22nd, 2008
LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Jan. 22, 2008 (PRIME NEWSWIRE) -- Equity Media Holdings Corporation (Nasdaq:EMDA) announced today that Patrick Doran has been named Chief Financial Officer for the company, effective immediately. Doran, who has over 28 years of diversified financial and operational experience in major corporations, joined Equity Media in a consulting role in November.

Alessandra Ambrosio

January 22nd, 2008

Elite New York’s Alessandra Ambrosio on the cover of the new Brazilian Rolling Stone. Photo by JR Duran. First issue…

 

eGames' Purrfect Pet Shop Lands Big Fish Games Exclusive

January 22nd, 2008
LANGHORNE, Pa., Jan. 22, 2008 (PRIME NEWSWIRE) -- Casual games developer and publisher eGames, Inc. (Pink Sheets:EGAM) announced today that its new pet adoption game, Purrfect Pet Shop(tm) launched online on BigFishGames.com on January 18, kicking off two weeks of exclusive placement on the popular casual games portal. During the exclusive period, Big Fish Games will heavily promote the game to millions of casual game fans.

Britney Spears Spends More Than Two Hours at Deposition

January 22nd, 2008

BritneyBritney Spears spent more than two hours at the Los Angeles office of Kevin Federline’s lawyer, Mark Vincent Kaplan, Monday for an ongoing deposition in the ex-couple’s custody battle.

At 10:40 a.m., Spears, 26, wearing a dark blue top and jeans, drove up to the office in her white Mercedes-Benz SL65 with friend Sam Lutfi. Both had serious expressions on their faces. The singer was spotted leaving at 1:20 p.m.

The singer has missed numerous appointments for the court-ordered cross examination. She was expected to be grilled about her past drug and alcohol use, her apparent failure to follow court orders and other matters pertaining to her parenting skills.

Federline’s attorney will use evidence gathered in depositions to try to convince a court that his client should retain primary physical custody of the ex-couple’s children. A custody trial is set for April.

“Kevin wants nothing more than to be able to parent his children with participation by their mother,” Kaplan previously said. “But the best interest of the children require that they be in the most sound, safe, nurturing and consistent environment. That is paramount.”

On Jan. 3, Spears was deposed for only 14 minutes, after arriving one-and-a-half hours late. That night and into the next morning Spears had a four-hour standoff with police, ending with her brief hospitalization.

Last Monday, the singer lost all visitation rights to sons Preston, 2, and Jayden 1, indefinitely after she showed up for a hearing, then left without entering the courthouse.


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Scott Hamilton & His Wife Have a Boy

January 22nd, 2008

Scott Hamilton and his wife, Tracie,Olympic champion ice skater Scott Hamilton and his wife, Tracie, celebrated the birth of their second son on Monday at a Tennessee hospital, the couple confirmed.

“Mom and son are doing just fine,” Hamilton said in a text message.

Maxx Hamilton arrived at 7:51 a.m. He weighed in at 7 lbs., 8 oz., and measured 20 inches long, Hamilton said. He joins big brother, 4-year-old Aidan.

Hamilton, 49, and Tracie, 38, have been married since 2002, and they reside in Nashville, Tenn.

Hamilton won the gold medal in men’s ice skating at the Sarajevo Olympics in 1984. He is expected to provide commentary for the upcoming U.S. Figure Skating Championships this weekend in St. Paul, Minn., but those plans could change due to Maxx’s arrival.

The champ played a skating announcer in last year’s comedy Blades of Glory starring Will Ferrell and Jon Heder. Last fall, Hamilton completed taping a series of episodes for the ABC TV series Wanna Bet? and AOL Television’s Jury Duty.

Hamilton continues to co-produce Stars on Ice, which he conceived and co-founded in 1986. He retired from full-time touring with the production during its 2000-2001 season. Known the last several years as Smucker’s Stars on Ice, the show entered its 22nd consecutive U.S. touring season this month.


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Shoot Down – Trailer

January 22nd, 2008
  Shoot Down - Trailer
In the mid-to-late 90s, thousands of Cuban refugees attempted to cross the Florida Straits by whatever means available - small boats, homemade rafts and inner tubes. Only one in four rafters made it to U.S. shores, with tens of thousands perishing at sea. A volunteer group based in Miami called “Brothers to the Rescue” was formed to patrol the Straits in small civilian aircraft, offering aid to rafters. On February 24th, 1996, in the midst of heightening political unrest in Cuba and in the wake of a revised U.S. policy toward Cuban refugees, the Cuban government authorized two military fighter jets to attack and destroy two of the volunteer planes.
Directed by: Cristina Khuly
Starring:

Sundance ’08: day six: rigged for our pleasure

January 21st, 2008

Sundance%20Ballot.jpg

One small new development here this year is the change in the audience-award ballot. The old ballot had five ranked numbers that required you to precisely rip the number of your choice. I always had to check which number corresponded to what. Was "one" the highest of the lowest? No matter. Now the ballots are divided into four categories: "fair," "good," "better," "best." This revised format might be easier for the hard-working volunteers to tally. But what does it say about the festival's interest in real audience feedback when the ballot assumes the worst a Sundance film can be is "fair"?

So leaving "Máncora," Ricardo de Montreuil's obnoxious road movie about a depressed 21-year-old hottie, his hot stepsister, and her hot-enough husband on their way to Peru's hottest resort spot, it annoyed me to no end to settle for "fair." Of course, when the 21-year-old has stoned sex with the two party girls (both hot), the three 21-year-oldish Utahan jocks in the row in front of me were sufficiently awed. Presumably, they ripped the "best" corner.

My companion that evening wrote a much more incisive review for his blog.

Incidentally, the ballot pictured above was for Ellen Kuras's "Nerakhoon (The Betrayal)," a movie I wanted to like more than I actually did. Kuras is a terrific cinematographer. She's shot gorgeous movies for Spike Lee and Michel Gondry, and she's been working on her first film as a director for about 23 years. She made "Nerakhoon" with Thavisouk Phrasavath, whose story the film tells.

During the Vietnam War and for years before it, the CIA backed the Royal Lao military, eventually relying on it to help run the United States' long, horrifying covert bombing campaign on the country. Over 10 years, more than 200 million tons of bombs were unloaded on Laos. The country was more or less destroyed, and Thavisouk's family became one of about 750,000 Hmong refugees. Meanwhile, after America's withdrawal, the Laotian government sent his father, who fought for the Laos on the U.S.'s behalf, was sent to a concentration camp under the guise of "reeducation." Thavisouk, his mother, and brothers and sisters emigrated to New York, and the family fell apart.

Kuras essentially became a member of the family, and the movie she and Thavi have made still feels raw and choked on emotional devastation, exchanging the inherent drama of Phrasavaths' collapse for a vague, watery dreaminess, with lots of shots of Thavi and his mother grieving and lamenting to us. (It doesn't always look like a cinematographer's movie.) By the time the official premiere was over, half the audience was sobbing. I understood the empathetic tears. I got how cathartic the movie must have been for Thavi, his family, and for Kuras, too. I recognized the cruel, infrequently articulated human rights quagmire that the U.S. left Laos in. But I should have been reeling. And I wasn't.

Still, all things being relative, I tore the "good" part of my ballot.

Review – No Country for Old Men (2007)

January 21st, 2008

by Puptentacle

If there’s one thing the Coens do well it’s a big story in a small town. Two more of their favourite ingredients are murder and greed. It may come as no surprise, therefore, that No Country for Old Men tells a story of blood and drug money in arid West Texas. Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin), out hunting one day, as you do, stumbles upon the body-strewn site of a Mexican gang feud in the desert. He decides to relieve them of the suitcase full of money, apparently intended to pay for a truckload of heroin.

Hot on his trail are a deeply sinister psychopathic hitman, Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem), with a novel weapon of choice; the private detective (Woody Harrelson) hired to track him down; and the ageing sheriff (Tommy Lee Jones) following the trail of bodies.

Sundance ’08: days four and five: She wants to die

January 21st, 2008

Downloading%20Nancy.jpg

Maria Bello was having breakfast where I was this morning. She's unexpectedly petite, kept company with a tall, broad Jake Gyllenhaal-like creature who carried her stuff, and was wearing what looked like a giant yak hide. Maria, forgive me if it was just some synthetic poly-something blend, but it looked yaky. Anyway, she seemed like a lovely young lady, and she's here because she's starring in "Downloading Nancy," a perfectly ridiculous, Susan Hayward-style thriller about a suicidal housewife who goes online and hires her killer (a very fit Jason Patric), only to kind of fall in with him. (Man, I love screenwriting.) The music-video director Johan Renck gives the movie some trashy style, and Bello does enough acting to rip the skin off a yak, which she might have already done.