Looking for some new accessories, Taylor Swift was spotted leaving Neil Lane Jewelry store in Los Angeles, CA on Friday afternoon (May 4).
The 22-year-old cutie matched her red lip to her jeans, which she paired with pretty gold flats as she walked out of the store sporting a gorgeous new ring.
In career news, the hit show “Glee” announced that a cast recording of the blonde beauty’s song, “Mean,” will appear on its May 15 episode titled “Props".
The anti-bullying ballad will be performed by Dot-Marie Jones (Coach Beiste) and Mark Salling (Puck). This is the first time one of Miss Swift’s song will appear on the show.
COLDPLAY PAYS TRIBUTE TO ADAM YAUCH AT STAR-STUDDED L.A. SHOW
The stars were out in Los Angeles, CA last night (May 4), as they enjoyed a night of music with family and friends by attending the Coldplay concert.
Looking stylish in leggings and booties, the lovely Ashley Tisdale was spotted entering The Hollywood Bowl venue with her parents while Gwen Stefani made her arrival in a bright pink jacket and a bold red lip.
Adding a little more Hollywood hotness to the crowd was Zoe Saldana, who turned up with a close gal pal as she kept her head down to avoid the swarm of paparazzi.
A giggling Cameron Diaz was seen leaving after the show with close friend Drew Barrymore by her side - as the two held hands during the walk to their ride.
In honor of Beastie Boys member Adam "MCA" Yauch, Coldplay took the opportunity to share their reworking of "(You Gotta) Fight For Your Right (To Party)" during last night’s concert. Yauch lost his three-year battle with cancer yesterday, which sparked an overwhelming reaction from fans and celebrities.
KIM KARDASHIAN'S NIGHT OF GENEROSITY
Joining in on a commendable charity celebration, Kim Kardashian kicked off her weekend by attending the Generosity Water's 4th Annual Night of Generosity in Hollywood, California on Friday night (May 4).
Held at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, the E! reality star joined fellow celebrities, top brands and influential philanthropists in raising funds for the organization which helps bring clean drinking water to thousands of those in need.
After enjoying cocktails, appetizers special live performances and the beautiful museum style visual displays, Kim capped off her night at the Generosity Water fete, as she tweeted, "Just left the Generosity Water event. Thanks @MIKESNEDEGAR for inviting me!"
The outing comes as Kim recently spoke with WWD about her family's hit program, "Keeping Up with the Kardashians" - which kicks off the seventh season on May 20th.
Of the E! reality series' direction this time around, the 31-year-old brunette beauty dished, “The next season will be a lot more focused on my little sisters. Their careers are becoming busy. They are doing more than their school and cheerleading. They now have jobs outside school."
As for how long they plan on keeping it going, Kim said that it “depends on how much longer we are having fun doing this, and we are still having fun.”
Held at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, the E! reality star joined fellow celebrities, top brands and influential philanthropists in raising funds for the organization which helps bring clean drinking water to thousands of those in need.
After enjoying cocktails, appetizers special live performances and the beautiful museum style visual displays, Kim capped off her night at the Generosity Water fete, as she tweeted, "Just left the Generosity Water event. Thanks @MIKESNEDEGAR for inviting me!"
The outing comes as Kim recently spoke with WWD about her family's hit program, "Keeping Up with the Kardashians" - which kicks off the seventh season on May 20th.
Of the E! reality series' direction this time around, the 31-year-old brunette beauty dished, “The next season will be a lot more focused on my little sisters. Their careers are becoming busy. They are doing more than their school and cheerleading. They now have jobs outside school."
As for how long they plan on keeping it going, Kim said that it “depends on how much longer we are having fun doing this, and we are still having fun.”
I'M NOT GETTING BACK WITH SAM RONSON - LINDSAY LOHAN
Lindsay Lohan and Samantha Ronson are NOT getting back together ... sources close to Lindsay tell TMZ -- despite reports the two were all over each other this week at a NYC nightclub.
Lindsay did hang out with Sam Thursday night at Le Baron in New York -- but sources tell TMZ, there was no touchy-feely business going on ... it was just two old friends catching up together.
There were reports the two might have rekindled a relationship -- but we're told that's not true ... neither Lindsay nor Sam has plans to reunite romantically.
We're told the two are simply focusing on mending their friendship after a rough break-up in 2009. They began dating on-and-off in 2007.
As one source put it -- they're "just friends. That's it. Nothing more."
Lindsay did hang out with Sam Thursday night at Le Baron in New York -- but sources tell TMZ, there was no touchy-feely business going on ... it was just two old friends catching up together.
There were reports the two might have rekindled a relationship -- but we're told that's not true ... neither Lindsay nor Sam has plans to reunite romantically.
We're told the two are simply focusing on mending their friendship after a rough break-up in 2009. They began dating on-and-off in 2007.
As one source put it -- they're "just friends. That's it. Nothing more."
FORGET RAP... I WORK CONSTRUCTION NOW - JAY-Z
Jay-Z is keeping a close eye on his multimillion dollar NBA investment -- showing up to a Brooklyn construction site yesterday to check out the future home of the Nets ... and even trying his hand at some hard labor.
The rapper toured the dirt-filled construction yard on Friday -- known as Barclays Stadium -- to take a gander at where his Brooklyn Nets will earn their stripes ... as in black and white, 'cause the team's colors just changed too. Get over it.
Oh yeah, we also got video of Jay-Z careening around the construction site on a bulldozer -- reaching breakneck speeds of approximately 1 mph. It's pretty hilarious.
The rapper toured the dirt-filled construction yard on Friday -- known as Barclays Stadium -- to take a gander at where his Brooklyn Nets will earn their stripes ... as in black and white, 'cause the team's colors just changed too. Get over it.
Oh yeah, we also got video of Jay-Z careening around the construction site on a bulldozer -- reaching breakneck speeds of approximately 1 mph. It's pretty hilarious.
50 CENT TALKS NEW ALBUM, EXPLAINS WHY G-UNIT WAS DROPPED & POSSIBILITY OF WORKING WITH GAME
50 Cent speaks on a slew of topics, including G-Unit's departure from Interscope and whether he and Game will ever work on a track together.
In an interview with Bootleg Kev on Las Vegas' Hot 97.5, 50 Cent discussed his upcoming album, which is set to drop July 2.
"My project is pretty much done, but I'm not done writing," said 50 of the project.
50 also explained that he wouldn't be going for a vintage sound on the album. "When you say 'take it back,' you're not leaving any room for growth. You're staying 'Stay where you were ten years ago.' For me, it has that energy that they were attracted to on Get Rich or Die Tryin', all across the board. I just think the way I articulated things on this project, my choices, are better. I think I'm better. I'm thinkin' it out a little more. They'll get a chance to see where I am."
Among the topics 50 discussed was why Interscope Records dropped G-Unit Records. "The reason why G-Unit was dropped, so that the general public understands: the reason G-Unit was dropped from Interscope records was because the deal I gave them was so well-put-together for them that they were to receive $750,000 in advance on the next albums - each one of the artists. They gotta remove that in this climate of record sales."
Finally, 50 was asked whether there was even a remote chance that he and Game would ever collaborate on anything in the future. The Queens emcee was noncommittal: "I don't know. Let me see if this is just one of my character defects or not: when you said [Game's album The Documentary] was crazy, you're making reference to things I wrote," he explained. "Meaning, the first three singles off of that were things that I wrote. So now, when you look at that, and you look at all the disrespect that was displayed over the years, ask yourself - would you be inherently uncomfortable with the concept of associating yourself again with someone where...you don't even know where it came from. If I did something wrong, I can accept it. ...But if I didn't do anything at all and it turns into what that turned into, I'ma just stay away from it.
In an interview with Bootleg Kev on Las Vegas' Hot 97.5, 50 Cent discussed his upcoming album, which is set to drop July 2.
"My project is pretty much done, but I'm not done writing," said 50 of the project.
50 also explained that he wouldn't be going for a vintage sound on the album. "When you say 'take it back,' you're not leaving any room for growth. You're staying 'Stay where you were ten years ago.' For me, it has that energy that they were attracted to on Get Rich or Die Tryin', all across the board. I just think the way I articulated things on this project, my choices, are better. I think I'm better. I'm thinkin' it out a little more. They'll get a chance to see where I am."
Among the topics 50 discussed was why Interscope Records dropped G-Unit Records. "The reason why G-Unit was dropped, so that the general public understands: the reason G-Unit was dropped from Interscope records was because the deal I gave them was so well-put-together for them that they were to receive $750,000 in advance on the next albums - each one of the artists. They gotta remove that in this climate of record sales."
Finally, 50 was asked whether there was even a remote chance that he and Game would ever collaborate on anything in the future. The Queens emcee was noncommittal: "I don't know. Let me see if this is just one of my character defects or not: when you said [Game's album The Documentary] was crazy, you're making reference to things I wrote," he explained. "Meaning, the first three singles off of that were things that I wrote. So now, when you look at that, and you look at all the disrespect that was displayed over the years, ask yourself - would you be inherently uncomfortable with the concept of associating yourself again with someone where...you don't even know where it came from. If I did something wrong, I can accept it. ...But if I didn't do anything at all and it turns into what that turned into, I'ma just stay away from it.
THE AVENGERS SUCKS. AND IT DOESN'T MATTER
I called my friends to make plans. I picked the theatre with the good screen. I ordered my tickets on-line. I showed up early. I waited in line. I found a half dozen seats. I put on my 3-D glasses, and I settled in for the movie event of the summer. I sat through two hours and 22 minutes of The Avengers.
And when it was over, I wanted my $15 back.
As promised, the movie was star-studded, with a complex plot, intense action scenes, and a helping of trademark Joss Whedon snark.
What it wasn’t: good.
No, I’m not a cinesnob, or I wasn’t last night. I’m not comparing The Avengers to The Diving Bell and the Butterfly or even No Country for Old Men. I’m comparing it to my favourite summer popcorn movies: Iron Man. The Dark Knight. X-Men. Star Trek.
And even by those modest watch/laugh/cheer/forget standards, The Avengers was a major disappointment. I was expecting it to be better than this commercial. I was wrong. (NOTE: This review is largely spoiler free except for very broad references to major story arcs and a few minor vignettes.)
Sure, there were a few bright spots. Mark Ruffalo was far less annoying than Edward Norton as the Hulk’s alter ego Bruce Banner. Robert Downey Jr. got off a few good one liners and Samuel L. Jackson was, well, Samuel L. Jackson. (Although I kept waiting for him to whip out his iPhone and order a few more organic ingredients for his date night risotto.) And there were inside baseball cameos from the likes of Powers Boothe of Deadwood fame, and the always awesome Harry Dean Stanton.
So why, on earth did Whedon the Director make all of these characters fight the same? The coolest thing about The Avengers premise is that these are characters with wildly different backgrounds and thus wildly different strengths and weaknesses.
The Hulk is an unstoppable, id-powered force of nature.
Iron Man is a fighter jet, in size 42 long.
Thor is a god, kinda.
Captain America is walking, talking argument in favor of performance-enhancing drugs.
Black Widow is all about the fine art of persuasion.
And that other guy shoots arrows.
But in The Avengers, they all fight the same way. They hurl themselves generically around midtown Manhattan, killing an army of generic bad guys who look like they were chromed at Orange County Choppers. Watch the trailer below and you’ll see them all defying gravity in the same generic Spiderman-meets-the-Ewoks kind of way. In the movie it’s longer and louder.
But a movie like this needs to be two things: Fun. And exciting. The Avengers was neither.
And it was pretty much doomed from the start. By cramming this many stars into the movie–the whole point, I know–the movie lost its chance to develop characters along with the story line. At the very beginning, there’s a promising scene between Scarlett Johansson’s Black Widow and Ruffalo’s Bruce Banner, but that’s pretty much it.
As for Loki, the movie’s super villain, he reminded me of nothing so much as Mitt Romney. He’s an entitled dullard with exotic hair, bent not so much on world domination, as returning things to a 19th century status quo where the downtrodden know and accept their places. His main skill? Getting natural allies to bicker and fight amongst themselves. I kept waiting for Karl Rove to make an appearance for a strategic tete a tete.
Which leaves the action. Quentin Tarantino is right. Directing action is a vastly underrated skill. When Martin Scorsese plots out a long dolly shot, following characters as they walk and talk, the critics oohh and aahh and call him a genius. But once those characters start throwing punches, it’s not art anymore, it’s reduced to mere craft. The Avengers shows just how hard it is to direct action, by showing the very smart and capable Joss Whedon fail at it.
Even in a movie this jam-packed, Whedon the writer was able to assign each character certain verbal quirks. Black Widow had an entirely different vernacular than Captain America or Bruce Banner.
Even a B-list superhero film like The Fantastic Four got this right. But Whedon blew it.
And I lay it off on Whedon’s lack of directorial chops, rather than a failure of vision. Whedon, as you remember, is the auteur behind Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The appeal of that character lives in the contrast between Buffy’s very real and specific strength and her equally real vulnerabilities. That’s what we loved about Buffy, and that’s why we were afraid for her whenever she’d approach the Hell Mouth.
With The Avengers, Whedon was too busy figuring out the special effects to remind us what these super heroes could and couldn’t do. And by extension why we should be afraid for them. Or, in the spirit of any good caper flick, root for one of our heroes to swoop in and rescue another. By the end, the only thing I was rooting for was for the battle to move downtown so The Hulk could hurl himself off the Forbes building in all his green glory.
Of course, none of this matters. You’ll go see The Avengers for the same reasons I saw it. Which is that everyone is seeing it. (My Facebook friend Matt Zoller Seitz of New York Magazine likened the hype to a cross between a winning lottery ticket and the Second Coming.) The Avengers will make roughly $147 zillion dollars in its opening weekend, rake in a few hundred zillion more overseas, and three summers from now we’ll get the gang together again for The Avengers II: The Return of the Big Green Pile of Money.
And we’ll all fork over $17 to see it and again leave the theatre vaguely disappointed.
© Forbes
The Avengers made a premiere in the US on May 4, 2012 and has so far grossed over $400m.
And when it was over, I wanted my $15 back.
As promised, the movie was star-studded, with a complex plot, intense action scenes, and a helping of trademark Joss Whedon snark.
What it wasn’t: good.
No, I’m not a cinesnob, or I wasn’t last night. I’m not comparing The Avengers to The Diving Bell and the Butterfly or even No Country for Old Men. I’m comparing it to my favourite summer popcorn movies: Iron Man. The Dark Knight. X-Men. Star Trek.
And even by those modest watch/laugh/cheer/forget standards, The Avengers was a major disappointment. I was expecting it to be better than this commercial. I was wrong. (NOTE: This review is largely spoiler free except for very broad references to major story arcs and a few minor vignettes.)
Sure, there were a few bright spots. Mark Ruffalo was far less annoying than Edward Norton as the Hulk’s alter ego Bruce Banner. Robert Downey Jr. got off a few good one liners and Samuel L. Jackson was, well, Samuel L. Jackson. (Although I kept waiting for him to whip out his iPhone and order a few more organic ingredients for his date night risotto.) And there were inside baseball cameos from the likes of Powers Boothe of Deadwood fame, and the always awesome Harry Dean Stanton.
So why, on earth did Whedon the Director make all of these characters fight the same? The coolest thing about The Avengers premise is that these are characters with wildly different backgrounds and thus wildly different strengths and weaknesses.
The Hulk is an unstoppable, id-powered force of nature.
Iron Man is a fighter jet, in size 42 long.
Thor is a god, kinda.
Captain America is walking, talking argument in favor of performance-enhancing drugs.
Black Widow is all about the fine art of persuasion.
And that other guy shoots arrows.
But in The Avengers, they all fight the same way. They hurl themselves generically around midtown Manhattan, killing an army of generic bad guys who look like they were chromed at Orange County Choppers. Watch the trailer below and you’ll see them all defying gravity in the same generic Spiderman-meets-the-Ewoks kind of way. In the movie it’s longer and louder.
But a movie like this needs to be two things: Fun. And exciting. The Avengers was neither.
And it was pretty much doomed from the start. By cramming this many stars into the movie–the whole point, I know–the movie lost its chance to develop characters along with the story line. At the very beginning, there’s a promising scene between Scarlett Johansson’s Black Widow and Ruffalo’s Bruce Banner, but that’s pretty much it.
As for Loki, the movie’s super villain, he reminded me of nothing so much as Mitt Romney. He’s an entitled dullard with exotic hair, bent not so much on world domination, as returning things to a 19th century status quo where the downtrodden know and accept their places. His main skill? Getting natural allies to bicker and fight amongst themselves. I kept waiting for Karl Rove to make an appearance for a strategic tete a tete.
Which leaves the action. Quentin Tarantino is right. Directing action is a vastly underrated skill. When Martin Scorsese plots out a long dolly shot, following characters as they walk and talk, the critics oohh and aahh and call him a genius. But once those characters start throwing punches, it’s not art anymore, it’s reduced to mere craft. The Avengers shows just how hard it is to direct action, by showing the very smart and capable Joss Whedon fail at it.
Even in a movie this jam-packed, Whedon the writer was able to assign each character certain verbal quirks. Black Widow had an entirely different vernacular than Captain America or Bruce Banner.
Even a B-list superhero film like The Fantastic Four got this right. But Whedon blew it.
And I lay it off on Whedon’s lack of directorial chops, rather than a failure of vision. Whedon, as you remember, is the auteur behind Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The appeal of that character lives in the contrast between Buffy’s very real and specific strength and her equally real vulnerabilities. That’s what we loved about Buffy, and that’s why we were afraid for her whenever she’d approach the Hell Mouth.
With The Avengers, Whedon was too busy figuring out the special effects to remind us what these super heroes could and couldn’t do. And by extension why we should be afraid for them. Or, in the spirit of any good caper flick, root for one of our heroes to swoop in and rescue another. By the end, the only thing I was rooting for was for the battle to move downtown so The Hulk could hurl himself off the Forbes building in all his green glory.
Of course, none of this matters. You’ll go see The Avengers for the same reasons I saw it. Which is that everyone is seeing it. (My Facebook friend Matt Zoller Seitz of New York Magazine likened the hype to a cross between a winning lottery ticket and the Second Coming.) The Avengers will make roughly $147 zillion dollars in its opening weekend, rake in a few hundred zillion more overseas, and three summers from now we’ll get the gang together again for The Avengers II: The Return of the Big Green Pile of Money.
And we’ll all fork over $17 to see it and again leave the theatre vaguely disappointed.
© Forbes
The Avengers made a premiere in the US on May 4, 2012 and has so far grossed over $400m.
BEYONCE WINS JOURNALISM AWARD
US singer Beyonce Knowles has won over 240 awards and accolades in her 15-year music career but who would have imagined she would be honoured with a journalism award?
The mother-of-one and wife to famous entertainment mogul Jay Z has won an award from the New York Association of Black Journalists (NYABJ) for her Essence article ‘Eat, Play, Love’, the group said on Wednesday in a press release.
Bey’s article talks about her ‘decision to take nine months away from her career to travel and find herself’. ‘In Capri I ate pizza and drank red wine every Sunday. I discovered I love artichokes and that a salad and fresh fish are not only healthy choices but incredibly delicious’, the 30-year-old narrates.
The award to Beyonce has however been received with mixed reactions. ‘These types of awards overlook the real journalists who write about insightful and sometimes dangerous topics’, Amber Rose of Mused Magazine wrote in reaction to the award.
However special correspondent for ABC News, Katie Couric tweeted, ‘From 1 journalist 2 another: congratulations to @Beyonce!’
The NYABJ awards is to hold on May 15. It is unsure if Beyonce will attend.US singer Beyonce Knowles has won over 240 awards and accolades in her 15-year music career but who would have imagined she would be honoured with a journalism award?
The mother-of-one and wife to famous entertainment mogul Jay Z has won an award from the New York Association of Black Journalists (NYABJ) for her Essence article ‘Eat, Play, Love’, the group said on Wednesday in a press release.
Bey’s article talks about her ‘decision to take nine months away from her career to travel and find herself’. ‘In Capri I ate pizza and drank red wine every Sunday. I discovered I love artichokes and that a salad and fresh fish are not only healthy choices but incredibly delicious’, the 30-year-old narrates.
The award to Beyonce has however been received with mixed reactions. ‘These types of awards overlook the real journalists who write about insightful and sometimes dangerous topics’, Amber Rose of Mused Magazine wrote in reaction to the award.
However special correspondent for ABC News, Katie Couric tweeted, ‘From 1 journalist 2 another: congratulations to @Beyonce!’
The NYABJ awards is to hold on May 15. It is unsure if Beyonce will attend.
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