Wednesday, September 22, 2010

New Harry Potter trailer promises "dark times" ahead

LOS ANGELES | Wed Sep 22, 2010 11:22pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "These are dark times, there is no denying." So begins the newly released promotional trailer for the upcoming 3D sequel "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part I."

The British boy wizard once again will work his magic on movie audiences when "Deathly Hallows" hits theaters in November. A look at the trailer, released Wednesday by Warner Bros. Pictures, shows as much action as ever when multiple Harrys -- at least six of them -- are conjured up to help him battle his nemesis Lord Voldemort.

Harry's friends, Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley, also join the fight against the dark lord who now has control over the Ministry of Magic. But as Voldemort's powers grow, the bond among the three Hogwarts schoolmates becomes frayed, and Ron and Harry come to blows.

Will they remain friends and defeat Voldemort? The answer remains in doubt because, as the trailer tells audiences, "only one can live" when it comes to the battle between evil Voldemort and good Harry.

The Potter movies, based on the best-selling novels by author J.K. Rowling, have raked in billions of dollars at the worldwide box office. Rowling's final book, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows," was split into two films, with the second installment hitting theaters next July.

(Reporting and writing by Bob Tourtellotte; Editing by Dean Goodman)



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Ardent Madonna fan arrested outside her NYC home (AP)

NEW YORK � A retired New York City firefighter yearning to meet Madonna has been accused of scrawling messages of adoration on the sidewalk outside her apartment building and possessing a 7 1/2-inch ice pick.

Robert Linhart is charged with graffiti and criminal possession of an ice pick recovered from his car. He's also charged with resisting arrest outside the building near Central Park.

The grizzled 59-year-old was arraigned Wednesday in Manhattan Criminal Court. A judge set his bail at $20,000 cash.

Defense lawyer Cheryl Bader tells the Daily News there was "no threatening conduct" and it's "not a crime to adore Madonna," the singer of pop hits including "Like a Virgin" and "Material Girl."

Police say Linhart was arrested Tuesday while spray-painting messages to the singer and asking to meet her.

The fire department says Linhart retired in 1998.



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5 most liked Woody Allen movies (AP)

LOS ANGELES � When you make a movie a year, you're going to have your hits and misses. But when you've been making movies with a distinctive voice every year for more than four decades as Woody Allen has � including this weekend's "You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger" � you're also going to garner a loyal following of fans who are passionate and protective of their favorites.

It's impossible to say definitively what Allen's top five films are, but here I humbly offer you the five I like the most:

� "Annie Hall" (1977): It's quintessential Allen: the neurosis, the self-loathing, the patter of the dialogue, the obsession with a totally ill-suited woman, and of course all those Manhattan locations. It's got the trademark biting wisecracks, countered by the sweetness of how personal this story was. "Annie Hall" may look like a safe choice � and it did earn four Academy Awards including best picture and best director � but it's a perfect little nugget of all the things Allen does best. It's also one of the most enjoyable of his films, one you can watch over and over, with Diane Keaton at her most adorably ditzy. "Annie Hall" helped solidify both of their personas.

� "The Purple Rose of Cairo" (1985): As high-concept as you can get: A movie character walks off the screen and into real life. It's a wonderfully absurd idea, and it works because everyone takes it completely seriously. In one of his earliest film roles, Jeff Daniels is so charmingly earnest, so buoyant in his enthusiasm for discovering the outside world as the dashing Tom Baxter � even if that world is New Jersey during the Depression � and Mia Farrow is at her loveliest as the waitress in the audience with whom he starts a romance. But once other Tom Baxters try to walk off the screen, Allen's skills at constructing a farce kick in fully.

� "Vicky Cristina Barcelona" (2008): By far the best among his recent films, it works on multiple levels. It allows Allen (and us) to laugh at the follies of the idle rich and smug bohemians, until we unexpectedly find ourselves not just tolerating them but becoming engaged in their adventures. One of a series of films Allen has made in Britain and Europe, he seems freer here, more comfortable in his rhythm, less anxious to prove himself in a foreign land. The excellent cast includes an irresistible Javier Bardem, a little-known Rebecca Hall and the always alluring Scarlett Johansson, his recent muse. But Penelope Cruz steals the whole thing � and won a supporting-actress Oscar � as Bardem's crazy ex.

� "Crimes and Misdemeanors" (1989): Allen balances melodrama and comedy with this story of adultery, blackmail, compromise and guilt. Always guilt. The veteran cast features, on the serious side, Martin Landau as a philandering eye doctor, Anjelica Huston as his volatile mistress and Jerry Orbach as the brother who arranges an assassination attempt. On the comic side, Allen himself shows up as a documentary maker who's stuck working for his pompous brother-in-law, played by Alan Alda; despite being married himself, Allen's character finds himself falling for one of Alda's assistants, played once again by Farrow. Other Allen films have had similar tonal contrasts, but few are as successful.

� "Bananas" (1971): Silly, goofy, raw, witty Woody. One of his earliest films shows his flair for slapstick comedy. Allen stars as � what else? � a neurotic New Yorker. He travels to a fictional Latin American country while � what else? � chasing after a woman named Nancy, played by Louise Lasser. Nancy wants nothing to do with him, but the rest of the country's citizens do, and he ends up becoming their leader. Not exactly one of his strongest films from a philosophical, intellectual standpoint � this one's just flat-out funny, featuring commentary from Howard Cosell and lines like: "I object, your honor. This trial is a travesty. It's a travesty of a mockery of a sham of a mockery of a travesty of two mockeries of a sham."

___

Think of any other examples? Share them with AP Movie Critic Christy Lemire through Twitter: http://twitter.com/christylemire.



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Joaquin Phoenix thanks Letterman for his "beat down"

LOS ANGELES | Wed Sep 22, 2010 8:33pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A clean-shaven Joaquin Phoenix dressed in a suit and tie appeared on David Letterman's talk show Wednesday night and thanked the host for giving him a verbal "beat down" when the two last appeared together.

Phoenix, Oscar-nominated for his role as Johnny Cash in 2005 film "Walk the Line," also apologized to the talk show host for pulling a stunt as a rambling hip-hop performer on the "Late Show with David Letterman" in 2009, stunning audiences and Letterman with his bizarre behavior.

"I think that you've interviewed many, many people and I assumed that you would know the difference between a character and a real person, so -- but I apologize. I didn't -- I hope I didn't offend you in any way," Phoenix said in a transcript from Letterman's interview that will air Wednesday night.

For almost two years, Phoenix has been carrying out a hoax on his fans by telling anybody who would listen that he had given up Hollywood movies for a career as a hip-hop singer.

He grew a long, scraggly beard, put on weight and started rapping in front of live audiences. But it was all an act for a documentary film about his "transformation" called "I'm Still Here," that was directed by Phoenix's brother-in-law and fellow actor Casey Affleck.

The movie was released earlier this month in U.S. theaters and Affleck admitted last week in the New York Times that it was all an act. "It's a terrific performance, it's the performance of his career," he told the newspaper.

As part of his act, Phoenix appeared on Letterman's "Late Show" in February 2009 behind dark sunglasses and bushy beard, he mumbled answers to the talk show hosts' questions and, at times, appeared to have his mind elsewhere.

Since the hoax was revealed, speculation has arisen that Letterman had been in on the joke. But in Wednesday's interview, the pair tried to put those rumors to rest.

Letterman asked Phoenix directly if he knew anything about the act, to which Phoenix responded, "No."

(Reporting by Bob Tourtellotte; Editing by Jill Serjeant)



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Bruno Mars lands at No. 1 on U.S. singles chart

By Silvio Pietroluongo

Wed Sep 22, 2010 9:19pm EDT

NEW YORK (Billboard) - Days after he was arrested in Las Vegas on a cocaine charge, rising R&B singer Bruno Mars, claimed his first No. 1 on Billboard's Hot 100 singles chart Wednesday.

"Just the Way You Are," which also marks his first charting single as a lead artist, rose two places to the top and ended the two-week reign of Katy Perry's "Teenage Dream," which fell to No. 4. (Mars previously went to No. 1 in May, as the featured artist on B.o.B's "Nothin' On You").

Mars was arrested early Sunday on suspicion of possessing cocaine after a suspicious bathroom attendant at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino alerted authorities.

Eminem's former chart-topper "Love the Way You Lie," featuring Rihanna, held at No. 2 for a second week. Rihanna took the No. 3 spot in her own right after "Only Girl (In the World)" soared 72 places in its first week of sale at digital retailers.

"DJ Got Us Fallin' In Love," by Usher featuring Pitbull, rose one place to No. 5, while Taio Cruz fell two to No. 6 with "Dynamite." Also falling two slots, to No. 7, was "I Like It," by Enrique Iglesias featuring Pitbull.

Nelly's "Just A Dream" slipped one to No. 8, and "Club Can't Handle Me," by Flo Rida featuring David Guetta, held at No. 9. Far*East Movement's "Like A G6," featuring Cataracs & Dev, jumped six places to No. 10.

Kings of Leon claimed the top debut in the Hot 100 as "Radioactive" debuted at No. 37; the track comes from the rock band's upcoming album "Come Around Sundown," due October 19.



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Mel Gibson's ex-lover launches PR battle

By Zorianna Kit

LOS ANGELES | Wed Sep 22, 2010 8:18pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Mel Gibson's ex-girlfriend Oksana Grigorieva was portrayed on Wednesday as a "terrorized" woman who never attempted to extort money from the actor, with whom she has an 11-month old daughter.

In an appearance on NBC's "Today," show, Grigorieva's attorneys spoke publicly for the first time on the scandal that has engulfed Gibson over audiotapes of phone calls in which he rants at, and appears to threaten, his former lover.

Los Angeles police are investigating Gibson on suspicion of domestic abuse, and Grigorieva for possible extortion. Neither have been charged.

Gibson and the Russian-born model and singer split up earlier this year after having a baby following the end of the "Braveheart" star's 28-year marriage. Gibson has remained silent in the face of weeks of damaging publicity over the tapes.

"The media seems to focus on whether she extorted Mel Gibson", lawyer Daniel Horowitz said on Wednesday of Grigorieva. He called her a "domestic violence victim. She was beaten, she was terrorized."

Horowitz denied reports that Grigorieva asked for money in exchange for not releasing the infamous audio tapes, or photos of herself with a chipped tooth that she said resulted when the Oscar-winner allegedly punched her in the face.

But Horowitz said that "anybody who is beaten or threatened has the right to document it."

"Otherwise it is going to be Mel Gibson, one of the most popular loved superstars in the world against a lone woman," he said.

Horowitz said Grigorieva did not profit from the leaked tapes and claimed that she had tried to hold back any publicity that would hurt Gibson.

Actress Jodie Foster, who co-starred with Gibson in the 1994 film "Maverick" and worked with him on the upcoming movie "The Beaver," came to the actor's defense this week.

Foster told More magazine in an interview released on Tuesday that Gibson was the "easiest, nicest person I've ever worked with."

"When you love a friend, you don't abandon them when they are struggling," Foster told the magazine. "...he is and has been a true and loyal friend. I hope I can help him get through this dark moment."

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)



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Joaquin Phoenix to David Letterman: I'm sorry (AP)

NEW YORK � Joaquin (wah-KEEN') Phoenix says he's sorry for a wacky appearance on David Letterman's "Late Show" that turned out to be an elaborate piece of performance art.

Phoenix apologized Wednesday to Letterman for last year's visit, saying that he hoped no offense was taken. Letterman said it seemed that the bearded, mumbling Phoenix looked like he had slipped and hit his head in the tub.

Letterman said he took no offense, saying: "It was so much fun. It was batting practice, you know what I mean? Every one of them was a dinger."

Phoenix said last year he was giving up acting for a rap career. He actually was filling a role for filmmaker friend Casey Affleck. This week, he was clean-shaven, with trim hair and no sunglasses.



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Doctor: 1,500 pills don't prove Smith was addicted (AP)

LOS ANGELES � A pain-management doctor testified Wednesday that Anna Nicole Smith was not a drug addict, rebuffing a prosecutor who suggested the model's prescriptions for 1,500 pills in a single month amounted to an addiction.

"It speaks to potential danger and risk to the patient, but it doesn't speak to addiction," Dr. Perry G. Fine told jurors in Smith's drug conspiracy trial.

Fine, who testified as a defense witness, said the risk might be toxicity if she took all of the drugs, but added that Smith's medical records showed "no indication of actual harm."

The definition of an addict is central to the case against Dr. Sandeep Kapoor, Dr. Khristine Eroshevich and Howard K. Stern, who are accused of providing drugs to an addict. They are not charged in causing Smith's drug overdose death.

Stern, who was the late celebrity model's boyfriend, and Smith's two doctors, Kapoor and Eroshevich, have pleaded not guilty.

Fine said he believed Smith had a high tolerance for drugs but was not addicted. He said medical records showed Smith had suffered fractured ribs and was seeking relief from chronic pain.

"She woke up and functioned from day to day," Fine said. "... She was in recovery from rib fractures, and anyone's function would be highly limited."

Deputy District Attorney David Barkhurst had asked Fine whether Smith's prescriptions of 1,500 drug tablets in June 2004 might help determine if Smith was an addict.

Fine agreed with Superior Court Judge Robert Perry that the 1,500 pills cited were "a lot of drugs," but said it was "antiquated thinking" to equate the number of pills with addiction. The pills included various opiates, muscle relaxants and other drugs.

"The disease of addiction is viewed as largely present in genetic factors, and it takes social and environmental factors to bring it out," he said.

Fine said a typical addict would be driven to compulsive drug use to seek a sense of euphoria, but that he reviewed many records of Smith's medical treatment and saw no mention of her seeking euphoria. He said he saw many reports of her seeking relief from pain.



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Review: Tough lessons to learn in 'Superman' (AP)

Davis Guggenheim puts a human face on an unwieldy, seemingly unsolvable problem � the wretched state of America's public schools � in his latest documentary, "Waiting for 'Superman.'"

The director of the Academy Award-winning "An Inconvenient Truth" naturally has plenty of statistics to back up his points: state-by-state deficiency levels in math and reading, the cost of incarcerating a prisoner vs. sending a kid to 12 years of private school, the number of bad teachers who lose their jobs each year (it's low, given the protections they enjoy under tenure).

All staggering stuff � especially depressing if you're the parent of a young child. But Guggenheim offers some glimmers of hope in the alternative and charter schools cropping up across the country, and in the educators who dare to take a fresh approach. There's also suspense and heartbreaking human drama as he follows five kids � four of whom live in impoverished areas � waiting to find out whether they've won the lottery to nab a rare opening in these types of institutions.

The filmmaker himself acknowledges he was inspired to make "Waiting for 'Superman'" while driving past decaying public schools en route to dropping off his three kids (with wife Elisabeth Shue) at an expensive private school. He says he knows he and his family are lucky, which is smart in that it weakens possible criticism of him as being an out-of-touch elitist. His intentions certainly seem to be in the right place, as they were when he made his debut documentary, 2001's "The First Year," about five teachers struggling as they started out at some tough schools.

Here, he lets us get to know five kids and their families in Los Angeles, the San Francisco Bay Area, Washington D.C., the Bronx and Harlem � all bursting with potential and eager to learn, all facing uncertain futures because of the sub-par quality of the schools in their areas.

He also mixes in interviews with education leaders including Washington D.C.'s public schools chancellor Michelle Rhee, who shook things up with suggestions for reform such as firing bad teachers and offering merit pay to good ones, and Geoffrey Canada, creator of the Harlem Children's Zone, which aims to improve high school and college graduation rates.

The charismatic Canada is also the inspiration for the film's title: He recalls that, growing up poor in the South Bronx, he always dreamed that a superhero would swoop down to fix his school and his neighborhood. (Guggenheim tortures this metaphor with repeated footage of George Reeves from the black-and-white "Adventures of Superman" TV series from the 1950s.) Meanwhile, Randi Weingarten, head of the powerful American Federation of Teachers, comes off as a singular villain, fiercely protecting her union members regardless of whether they're doing their jobs adequately.

But the real drama comes at the end, as we watch and wait along with the film's five young stars to find out the results of lotteries that could land them coveted spots in alternative schools. Even if you don't have kids of your own, you'll find it hard not to get sucked in emotionally; this is just one example of how Guggenheim so adeptly takes a potentially dry topic and makes is cinematic.

Those outcomes � and the film as a whole � won't even come close to solving all the socio-economic and educational problems raised here. But they're a start.

"Waiting for 'Superman,'" a Paramount Pictures release, is rated PG for some thematic material, mild language and incidental smoking. Running time: 102 minutes. Three stars out of four.

___

Motion Picture Association of America rating definitions:

G � General audiences. All ages admitted.

PG � Parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children.

PG-13 � Special parental guidance strongly suggested for children under 13. Some material may be inappropriate for young children.

R � Restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.

NC-17 � No one under 17 admitted.



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FCC examines complaint about Skechers cartoon (AP)

WASHINGTON � The Federal Communications Commission is looking into complaints that a new TV show based on characters first created to market Skechers shoes to kids would violate government rules intended to limit commercial material in children's programming.

The FCC is seeking public comment on a petition filed last month by the Campaign for a Commercial Free Childhood about the cartoon series "Zevo-3," which premieres on the cable network Nicktoons on Oct. 11. It stars three superheroes from comic books and TV ads promoting Skechers.

The group says the program would violate a requirement that cable companies air no more than 12 minutes of commercial material per hour of children's programming, and FCC rules mandating a separation between commercial content and programming.



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High-tech set debuts 'Ring' opening at Met (AP)

NEW YORK � When Robert Lepage signed on to direct the Metropolitan Opera's first new "Ring" cycle in more than 20 years, he saw his challenge as using high-tech wizardry to create a set that would mirror Wagner's unique musical style.

That meant finding a visual equivalent for the "leitmotivs" or thematic strands of melody that Wagner wove in ever-shifting forms to compose the score of his epic music drama.

"All the motivs are like coloring crayons," Lepage said in a recent interview during technical rehearsals. "You take one theme and another and another and you do a braid with them and you create yet another. You always have the impression that the music is new and that the situation is new, but it's sewn or threaded with always the same threads. So we were looking for a set that would be devised in the same way."

The set he came up with � unlike any ever seen on an opera stage � will be put on public view for the first time Monday night when the company opens its season with "Das Rheingold" ("The Rhine Gold"), first of the four operas that make up the cycle. The exceptional cast stars Welsh bass-baritone Bryn Terfel as Wotan, king of the gods, and American mezzo-soprano Stephanie Blythe as his wife, Fricka.

It's a 45-ton metal structure consisting of 26-foot towers at either end of the stage with a horizontal bar running between them that supports 24 planks. The planks move independently, rotating in any direction or bending in the middle so that they can take on an almost infinite number of shapes and angles. With the help of computerized projections, they morph into the waters of the Rhine one moment, trees in a forest the next, a staircase, an underground cavern, or the hands of a giant.

The same set will be used for each of the four operas, which will be introduced over two seasons, with complete "Ring" cycle performances in the spring of 2012 and 2013.

"We've given it many nicknames," said the Canadian director, who supervised construction of the set at a shop in Montreal owned by his production company, Ex Machina. "At the beginning, each of the planks looked like a giant seesaw, but then it became more sophisticated. So now we mostly just call it The Machine. Sometimes, as a joke, I refer to it as The Monster."

Some of the singers are being asked to undertake acrobatic exertions familiar to anyone who has seen Lepage's Cirque du Soleil extravaganza "Ka" in Las Vegas. The Rhinemaidens sing their opening measures while "swimming," suspended by wires; tenor Richard Croft, playing the role of Loge, the half-god of fire, has to scamper backward up a steeply slanted ramp, helped by wires connected to his body.

Other effects will be created by using body doubles wearing the same costumes as the principals.

"You don't want to have Bryn Terfel with his head upside down hanging from a branch," Lepage said. "I want him to be in shape and sing."

And, indeed, the main characters � dressed in costumes that are highly traditional � spend most of their time interacting with each other very close to the front of the stage, or apron, while the set does its thing as a backdrop.

A lot is riding on the razzle-dazzle potential of The Monster, beyond the roughly $16 million price tag for the new production � which doesn't count several hundred thousand dollars it cost to reinforce the stage so that it could support such a heavy structure.

The Lepage "Ring" is replacing a much-loved, deliberately old-fashioned production by Otto Schenk that was introduced starting in 1986 and given its final outing in 2009.

And adding to the buzz that always surrounds a Met opening night, "Rheingold" will also mark the return to the conductor's podium of music director James Levine for the first time since health problems took him out of action last February.

But for all the focus on the set, Lepage knows this "Ring" will be judged as much by how well it depicts the conflicts among the characters as by the special effects.

"The thing I've learned through this process with James Levine is that even though it's a gigantic opera, it's a very intimate story and you need the main characters to be with you on the apron."

Peter Gelb, the Met's general manager who hired Lepage in 2005 and who has been a watchful presence throughout the long rehearsal process, agrees that "for any production of Wagner to succeed, it's all in that intimate storytelling."

Gelb is hopeful that Lepage has found the right balance.

"I love the contrast between the visual 'coups de theatre' and the intimate, almost kabuki-like interplay of the characters on the apron," he said. "They are so far downstage and in your face. The big visual moments work to accent the straight drama."

Yet Gelb admits to some pre-opening night jitters, something he said he always feels � but perhaps more so this year.

"This is obviously a project that has taken more time, care and attention than anything else since I've been here," he said, seated in the half-lit auditorium during the rehearsal break. "To the extent that I can will it to be right, I'm here doing just that."



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Fox crowns J-Lo, Tyler new `American Idol' judges (AP)

INGLEWOOD, Calif. � Jennifer Lopez and Steven Tyler will join Randy Jackson as "American Idol" judges next season, after months of turnover and speculation about the future of TV's top-rated show.

With pomp rivaling that of a U.S. Supreme Court appointment, Fox finally assembled the new pieces of the "Idol" panel that will be returned to its original three-member format for season 10.

Actress-singer-dancer Lopez and Aerosmith frontman Tyler will have the job of trying to match the offbeat chemistry of former judges Simon Cowell and Paula Abdul.

"This is 'American Idol,'" host Ryan Seacrest said after the new trio took the stage with him.

Tyler said he wanted to join the show because "it's being a part of something much bigger than yourself. ... I want to bring some rock to this rollercoaster and show if you've got the heart, the talent, the feeling to do this you could be the next American Idol."

"I'm so excited," Lopez said. "I'm looking for the next Michael Jackson."

The likely Lopez-Tyler pairing had been reported so frequently that Fox would have had to produce Betty White and 50 Cent instead to generate any surprise.

Cowell announced last January that he planned to leave to launch a new talent show for Fox in 2011, with newcomers Ellen DeGeneres and Kara DioGuardi exiting this summer. Abdul left in 2009 over a contract dispute.

Jackson will be the only original judge when "American Idol" returns in January.

Lopez and Tyler could help "American Idol" reinvent itself for the new season, when it will try to stem a ratings slide and bring in younger viewers. The show's audience has been gradually aging, and advertisers prefer to pitch to young adults.

But Fox and the show's producers didn't match the new judges to the target audience when it comes to age: Lopez is 41 and Tyler is 62. Jackson is in the middle at age 54.

Lopez's films include "Selena," "The Wedding Planner" and most recently "The Back-Up Plan." She has appeared as a mentor on "American Idol."

She was part of the "Fly Girl" house dancers on the comedy show "In Living Color," in 1990, before becoming a backup dancer for Janet Jackson.

"On the 6," Lopez's first album, came out in 1999 and launched a career in pop, Latin, hip-hop and R&B. "Love?" is the latest CD from the Grammy winner, who has twins with husband Marc Anthony.

Tyler brings a colorful and tempestuous history with him. He's fought with his band mates, been in rehab for prescription drug abuse and took a fall off a stage in 2009 that forced cancellation of Aerosmith's summer tour.

"American Idol" was the nation's favorite program last season, the seventh time it's held that position. But it showed rare vulnerability, beaten in the weekly ratings several times by ABC's "Dancing With the Stars."

A total of 24.2 million viewers watched the ninth season's final duel between Lee DeWyze and Crystal Bowersox, compared to the nearly 29 million viewers who saw Kris Allen claim victory over Adam Lambert last year.

___

Fox is a unit of News Corp.

___

Online:

http://www.fox.com



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Steven Tyler, Jennifer Lopez new "American Idol" judges

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Marlo Thomas launches website for women on AOL (AP)

NEW YORK � AOL is partnering with Marlo Thomas for a website of her own.

Thomas says the site, which officially launched Wednesday, is aimed at woman over 35 years old.

The well-known actress and social activist says the goal is for her to talk to the nation's women � and get them talking back.

She says she wants women to feel "there's lots of dreaming yet to go."

She describes the site as video-heavy, including live streaming chat and user-submitted video, and says she wants to share ideas.

Next week, Thomas is releasing a memoir, "Growing Up Laughing."

Earlier this month, AOL added talk-show host Ellen DeGeneres to its Web properties as it began sharing content with the website of "The Ellen DeGeneres Show."

___

Online:

http://www.marlothomas.com



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`Undercovers' colorful mission: bring change to TV (AP)

LOS ANGELES � Steven and Samantha Bloom are an appealing couple whose international spy capers on NBC's "Undercovers" promise to be slick, sexy and fun, the kind of escapist fare that fills many an hour of TV.

But the new show's intrigue comes from its casting along with its plots: Boris Kodjoe and Gugu Mbatha-Raw are the stars in charge of making this romp work, and both are black.

It's a persistent rarity in TV to have black leads outside of a "Grey's Anatomy"-style ensemble, and "Undercovers" is rarer still because it's not an African-American sitcom or a black-oriented drama fraught with social issues or family pathos.

This time around, two stunning, accomplished and happily wed black characters just get to have fun. The series airs 8 p.m. EDT Wednesday.

"It's huge progress," said writer and filmmaker John Ridley ("Three Kings," "Third Watch"). "As a person of color I love to see issue-oriented stuff, but at the same time, it's great to have two black people doing what two white people would do on any TV show."

Kodjoe, a German actor whose credits include the new movie "Resident Evil: Afterlife" and TV's "Soul Food," is glad to be part of a breakthrough for U.S. television in general and the network in particular.

NBC, which pioneered the first network drama series starring an African-American, "I Spy" with Bill Cosby in 1965, got a tongue-lashing this year from a California congresswoman for its lack of diversity. The network and parent company NBC Universal are under scrutiny as Comcast Corp. seeks regulatory approval to buy a majority stake in NBC Universal.

"It's quite a proud moment," Kodjoe said of "Undercovers." He calls it "refreshing" for a show to tell lighthearted stories about a couple and their adventures that have "nothing to do with them being black."

The decision to broaden the casting net beyond white actors resulted from the inclination and clout of J.J. Abrams, whose heavyweight credits include "Lost" and "Alias," and fellow producer Josh Reims ("Brothers and Sisters").

"We didn't want to do a show that looks like 10 other shows on TV. ... We just wanted to do something that felt fresh," Reims said. Various actors were considered but "we thought if we could cast two black actors it would be great."

There was no resistance, only encouragement, from the network and the studio, he said.

In the end, Reims said, the best choices proved to be Kodjoe, 37, and Mbatha-Raw, 27, a British-born, stage-trained actress who starred on Broadway with Jude Law in "Hamlet," on TV in "Doctor Who" and is in an upcoming Tom Hanks film, "Larry Crowne."

Mbatha-Raw, who like Kodjoe employs an impeccable American accent in "Undercovers," was unaware that black actors faced long odds for certain U.S. television roles. Her experience in Britain has been different.

"To be honest, I've been really blessed to play ethnically specific and non-ethnically specific roles" back home, she said, both on the stage and TV. "I think there's a different cultural legacy in the U.K. than in the United States."

As for the NBC series, "It's nice that it's groundbreaking but it shouldn't be in this day and age," she says.

Kodjoe agrees.

The entertainment industry needs to "make choices that are creative and real and diverse" and stop following tired paths that ignore diversity, he said. He was initially reluctant to read for "Undercovers" because he'd lost too many jobs when producers who praised his audition later informed him their show needed to go "in another direction."

Invariably, that meant a white actor had won the role, Kodjoe said.

It's the sidekicks on "Undercovers" who are white, played by Carter MacIntyre and Ben Schwartz. Gerald McRaney is the Blooms' boss, Carlton Shaw, who brings the couple back to work for the CIA five years after they quit to enjoy a routine married life and run a business (a catering company, which becomes their cover).

On another, more typical series, Shaw is just the kind of stern authority figure who would be played by a black actor to provide a dash of color � like Rocky Carroll as the agency director on "NCIS."

The caper genre has found a comfortable home on TV, especially in recent years on cable, with USA Network's "Burn Notice" and TNT's "Leverage" in the pack that feature mostly white leads with a minority cast member or two.

Black-headlined fare of that and nearly every other stripe has long been a tough sell on TV.

Acclaimed actor James Earl Jones has been in several short-lived series, most notably the 1995 family drama "Under One Roof."

"Snoops," a detective series starring Tim Reid ("WKRP in Cincinnati") and real-life wife Daphne Maxwell Reid, debuted in fall 1989 and was gone after just a few months. Reid's critically praised "Frank's Place" (1988) didn't fare better.

Other tries included "Get Christie Love," starring Teresa Graves as a sexy detective, which aired from September 1974 to July 1975. "Shaft," with Richard Roundtree in his big-screen detective role, lasted under a year in the mid-1970s.

This time around, will viewers dig "Undercovers"?

A long-standing rule in series development is to avoid making a program "exclusionary," said former TV executive and historian Tim Brooks (co-author of "The Complete Directory to Primetime Network and Cable TV Shows").

"When you have a program almost entirely in a black setting, white viewers feel that's not their world," Brooks said. In focus group testing, white viewers may not "say it in so many words, but they just can't relate it to their lives."

There's typically an exemption for sitcoms, which can draw a multiracial audience with all-black casts (examples abound, ranging from "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" to Cosby's comedies). But dramas about relationships hit closer to home, Brooks said.

Filmmaker Ridley doesn't buy that thinking. Largely white Hollywood decision-makers simply are drawn to projects and characters they're familiar with, he contends, and it takes an influential producer such as Abrams to see the need for change and force it.

And, Kodjoe notes, do it well.

"Josh Reims and J.J. Abrams are genius writers and that's what it comes down to. The rest is really up to the audience," he said.

___

Online:

http://www.nbc.com



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Book says aides doubt Obama's Afghan strategy (AP)

WASHINGTON � President Barack Obama's top advisers spent much of the past 20 months arguing about policy and turf, according to a new book, with some top members of his national security team doubting the president's strategy in Afghanistan will work.

The book, "Obama's Wars," by journalist Bob Woodward, says Obama aides were deeply divided over the war in Afghanistan even as the president agreed to triple troop levels there. Obama's top White House adviser on Afghanistan and his special envoy for the region are described as believing the strategy will not work.

According to the book, Obama said, "I have two years with the public on this" and pressed advisers for ways to avoid a big escalation in the Afghanistan war.

"I want an exit strategy," he said at one meeting. Privately, he told Vice President Joe Biden to push his alternative strategy opposing a big troop buildup in meetings.

While Obama ultimately rejected the alternative plan, the book says, he set a withdrawal timetable because, "I can't lose the whole Democratic Party."

Lt. Gen. Douglas E. Lute, the president's Afghanistan adviser, is described as believing the president's review of the Afghanistan war did not "add up" to the decision he made. Richard Holbrooke, the president's special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, is quoted as saying of the strategy, "It can't work," according to The New York Times, which obtained a copy of the book before its scheduled publication date, scheduled for next week.

Meanwhile, a U.S. official in Washington confirmed Woodward's report that the CIA is running an all-Afghan paramilitary group in Afghanistan that has been hunting Taliban and al-Qaida targets for the agency. A security professional in Kabul familiar with the operation says the 3,000-strong force was set up in 2002 to capture targets for CIA interrogation. Both sources spoke Wednesday on condition of anonymity to discuss matters of intelligence.

Obama was among administration officials that Woodward interviewed for the book. The Times, which posted its article on its website Tuesday night, said the White House had no comment on the book. The Washington Post also reported on the book on its website late Tuesday night.

Although the internal divisions described by Woodward have become public, the book suggests that they were even more intense than previously known and offers new details, the Times said.

Biden called Holbrooke "the most egotistical bastard I've ever met," and a number of administration officials expressed scorn for national security adviser James Jones, the Times said.

Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, thought his vice chairman, Gen. James Cartwright, went behind his back, while Cartwright dismissed Mullen because he wasn't a war fighter.

Gen. David Petraeus, who become the Afghanistan commander this summer, told a senior aide that he disliked talking with David Axelrod, the president's senior adviser, because he was "a complete spin doctor."

The book recounts incidents in which Adm. Dennis Blair, then the national intelligence director, fought with Rahm Emanuel, the White House chief of staff, and John Brennan, the counterterrorism adviser.

It also reports that the U.S. has intelligence showing that manic-depression has been diagnosed in Afghan President Hamid Karzai and that he was on medication.

In Kabul, Waheed Omar, Karzai's spokesman, said those allegations were untrue.

"This is a baseless, inflammatory comment that has its roots in a defaming propaganda campaign against President Karzai's personal integrity, leadership and his stances on matters of Afghan national interests," he said Wednesday. "The president is safe and sound. I can confirm that he takes no medication."

__

Associated Press reporters Deb Riechmann and Kimberly Dozier reported from Kabul.



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Country singer Shania Twain to write autobiography (AP)

NEW YORK � Shania (shuh-NY'-uh) Twain is ready to talk about her recent divorce � and she'll do it in her autobiography.

Of course, Twain will discuss much more than her recent split with music producer Robert "Mutt" Lange. The country superstar announced Wednesday that her book will talk about her difficult childhood, including the death of her mother. She'll also chart her rise to become one of the top-sellers in music.

Twain says recent struggles created a "sudden urgency to document my life before I ran out of time."

The Grammy winner shot to fame in the 1990s with hits like "Man! I Feel Like a Woman!" She had spent the past few years out of the spotlight.

She's due to have her own show on Oprah Winfrey's new OWN network.

Twain's book will be published by Atria (ay-TREE'-uh) Books.

____

Online:

http://www.shaniatwain.com

http://imprints.simonandschuster.biz/atria.



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"Money Never Sleeps" faces hard time on Wall Street

By Christine Kearney

NEW YORK | Wed Sep 22, 2010 8:33am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Gordon Gekko, the archetypal villain of iconic 1980s movie "Wall Street" has a new mantra: greed is not just good, it's legal and it's everywhere.

But his words, and the sequel "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps" that is set to hit cinemas worldwide on Friday, is unlikely to strike the same chord with securities traders and bankers that made Gekko a cult hero and the epitome of unabashed, 1980s financial excess, industry experts say.

"I don't think it will be as big an issue on Wall Street in terms of dirtying its image," said Igor Kirman, a partner at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, a major Wall Street law firm.

When "Wall Street" hit cinemas in 1987, the stock market had suffered a massive crash and Americans were angry. The film showed how bankers bought companies, stripped their assets, destroyed proud U.S. businesses and left countless blue-collar workers standing in unemployment lines.

Director Oliver Stone may be taking on Wall Street again, but in the aftermath of the 2008 global financial meltdown which drew universal ire from politicians and a steady stream of scandals -- from Bernie Madoff's ponzi scheme to the collapse of one firm which embodied the 1980s excesses, Lehman Brothers -- bankers are not worried about Stone's new film.

"Wall Street has been dragged through the mud in the last year or so. It has been scapegoated," said Kirman. "There is nothing that Oliver Stone is going to say...in this movie that our president has not said himself. It's not going to be a huge punch against Wall Street."

The movie saw its premiere at the Cannes film festival in May and met with mixed reviews. Since then, Stone said, he spent three weeks doing some extra editing.

Michael Douglas is back as ruthless corporate raider Gordon Gekko, but this time taking the blame for financial chicanery are the major money center banks and those who run them.

Central to the film's plot is a love relationship between Gekko's daughter, portrayed by Carey Mulligan, and a young Wall Street trader named Jake Moore (Shia LaBeouf) whose aggressive business dealings land him in trouble.

WALL STREET KOOL-AID

"Someone reminded me I once said, 'Greed is good,' now it seems it is legal, because everybody is drinking the same Kool-Aid," Gekko says at the beginning of the sequel as he leaves prison after serving time for insider trading.

Stone, a long-time critic of unbridled capitalism whose father was a stockbroker, told reporters that while the film was timely, bubbles in the financial cycle are here to stay.

"Love and trust and greed and betrayal; they go on and...they are equivalent to the '80s and they are equivalent now," he said, adding that the 2008 crisis was not so different from 1987, "When I thought greed was outrageous."

"The concept of American optimism, making money, being successful, is an ongoing part of the American ethos," said Stone, who has put forward contrarian views of America in such movies as "JFK" and "Nixon."

And if some on Wall Streets would not go and see the film because they don't like him, so be it, he said.



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Recovered, refreshed El DeBarge wants a 2nd chance (AP)

NEW YORK � It took El DeBarge more than two decades to get off drugs � and he says watching performers like T.I. and Bruno Mars get into trouble over them only proves that every one needs a second chance.

"My heart goes out to Bruno Mars, my heart goes out to T.I.," DeBarge said in a phone interview Tuesday from his Los Angeles home.

"I know there's a lot of people out there experimenting with drugs. I know. I did it because I was curious. I said, 'Hey, let me try this.' And it took me 22 years to un-try," the 49-year-old singer said.

DeBarge added: "They're very talented and I'm here to show that the second chance is ours."

T.I. was stopped on Sept. 1 after making an illegal U-turn and Los Angeles police say they found several pills confirmed to be a controlled substance. The rapper, 29, had been released from jail in June after serving 10 months on weapons charges and is still on probation.

Mars � the 24-year-old rising newcomer who's appeared on and co-produced two of the year's biggest hits with B.o.B's "Nothin' on You" and Travie McCoy's "Billionaire" � was arrested on Sept. 19 for having 2.6 grams of cocaine.

DeBarge, who was jailed for two years following a 2008 drug possession arrest, returned to the stage this year's at the BET Awards. He's planning to release "Second Chance," his first album in 16 years, later this year.

"Just call me crazy, but after a long 22-year drug bend and me being able to come back and being embraced by fans like this and just to be alive and still have my chops, I think that's awesome," DeBarge said.

The singer's career saw its peak in the 1980s when he led four of his siblings in the clan DeBarge. The R&B group had No. 1 hits like "Time Will Reveal" and "Rhythm of the Night." The group's music was also given new life through use by artists like the Notorious B.I.G., Tupac and Ashanti.

DeBarge's upcoming CD will feature 50 Cent, Fabolous and Faith Evans. He starts a tour with Mary J. Blige on Oct. 7 in Washington.

DeBarge said he never lost his voice, but did lose his confidence about his career.

"I was praying the whole time while I was on drugs: 'Oh God please, you got to get me off this. You got to help me.' So he said, 'OK.' ... Because I found out that God not only wanted me to have faith in him, but also to have faith in myself. And so once I did that, my confidence showed me that it was always there, I just had to believe it again."

___

Online:

http://www.eldebargemusic.com



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Michael Chiklis' superhero series targets families

By Allison Hope Weiner

Wed Sep 22, 2010 8:28am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - It's been three years since Michael Chiklis left behind foul-mouthed Vic Mackey, the antihero at the center of FX's cop drama "The Shield."

After a stint in such features as a sequel to his 2005 hit "The Fantastic Four" and "Eagle Eye," he returns to the small screen next Tuesday with ABC's family-oriented superhero series "No Ordinary Family."

WERE YOU LOOKING TO DO SOMETHING THAT WAS COMPLETELY DIFFERENT THAN "SHIELD"? BECAUSE THIS REALLY IS AT THE OTHER END OF THE SPECTRUM.

Chiklis: I wasn't particularly looking for something that was family-friendly, just the best script I could find. I usually look first for the best material you can find. Then you ask who is involved here, and is this going to be handled in the best possible way.

WERE YOU EVEN INTERESTED IN DOING A COP SHOW OR ANYTHING LIKE "SHIELD"?

Chiklis: There were some people making an attempt at something in that "Shield" area. It's just that to me, "The Shield" is not the kind of stuff you come across every day. It was extremely special. Sure, if I found something in the world as complex and well-written as "The Shield," I'd jump at it. But I haven't seen anything like it, not in my estimation.

THE SHOW SOUNDS A LOT LIKE "THE INCREDIBLES," WHERE IT'S FOR KIDS AND IT DOESN'T BORE ADULTS SO MUCH THAT THEY FEEL LIKE KILLING THEMSELVES WHEN THEY'RE FORCED TO SEE A MOVIE WITH THEIR CHILDREN.

Chiklis: It's funny that you bring up "The Incredibles"; I get what you're saying. I'm a father and have two children, 16 and 11. A show like "The Incredibles" has wit, pace and excitement and fun, and it's one that as a parent, I go and enjoy as much as my children. I wanted to make a show like that parents and kids could enjoy together. And this is that kind of show that will appeal to both.

SO YOU'RE MAKING SURE THAT THIS WON'T BE TOO CUTE LIKE A LOT OF FILMS FOR KIDS.

Chiklis: If it makes my eyes roll, we're not doing it. Everybody's radar is full-on about that. All of our discussions have been that. There will be episodes that are lighter at heart and then shows that are darker in tone. We're never going to be "Dark Knight" kind of dark because that goes to a place that precludes and excludes my 11-year-old. One of the templates that we used in terms of tone was the first "Spider-Man" movie: It was pure entertainment; it was smart, had familial stuff between Peter Parker and his aunt and uncle. There was romantic stuff between him and Kirsten Dunst and the adventure stuff between he and Green Goblin. And all worked scene to scene. We're going for that because there's a very sophisticated audience out there. But they had five months to shoot, and this situation is fraught with challenges and quite different.

SO, THE TONE WILL VARY FROM EPISODE TO EPISODE?

Chiklis: If you look at the poster for "No Ordinary Family," look closely enough you can see my tongue in my cheek. We're aware of what we're doing. I wouldn't personally call this a drama or a comedy, I'd call this an entertainment. This is fun, and it's supposed to be fun.

HOW DO YOU DO THE ACTION LIKE IN "SPIDER-MAN" ON A SHOW LIKE THIS?

Chiklis: We have an ample budget because it's network. Two, one of the most thrilling aspects of this gig for me, the CGI effects world is growing and mushrooming exponentially, and they're able to deliver the effects in quicker turnaround and less expensive. I don't know what we can achieve by the end of the first season in terms of special effects, always new stuff happening. We'll be able to do better. We're shooting gags that are on par with everything we did on "Fantastic Four."

DID YOU FIND BEING ON A NETWORK TO BE CREATIVELY CONSTRAINING?



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John 'Junior' Gotti agrees to movie about his life (AP)

LOS ANGELES � Hollywood has produced no shortage of movies and TV shows about the mob, but this one's coming straight from the most high-profile source imaginable: John "Junior" Gotti has sold the rights to his life story.

The 46-year-old son of the late, legendary Gambino crime family leader, "Dapper Don" John Gotti, has agreed to a deal with the independent production company Fiore Films. Financial details weren't made available because of a signed nondisclosure agreement, but a film about Gotti's life is in the works with a production budget of $15 million.

Gotti was tried four times since 2005 for racketeering, with each trial ending in a hung jury. He was released from prison in December after serving nine years in a previous racketeering case. He has said he left the life of organized crime in 1999.

These days, he's simultaneously working on a book and a screenplay with actor-writer Leo Rossi, which should be done by the end of the year. Casting should be announced around then, too, with shooting scheduled to begin in March. Fiore Films CEO Marc Fiore said Sylvester Stallone is among the people who've expressed interest in being involved both as director and star.

"I didn't realize how many fans the Gotti family had," Fiore said. "I'm getting calls from people we probably would not be able to speak to yet because of the infancy of our company."

Gotti said he chose this company because it was local and because it would let him tell his story.

"It's going to be filmed in New York, I've been working on it in New York, we can be an active player in the situation from start to finish," Gotti said Tuesday in a 30-minute, rare interview with The Associated Press. "They were willing to hear my thoughts and they assured me the script would be absolutely accurate, the script would be fair."

Gotti said previous movies about his family were mostly false because they relied on accounts from journalists or government agents. The HBO movie about his father, "Gotti" from 1996, was probably the most accurate of them all, he said, "and even that missed the mark by at least 40 percent."

"The opportunity presented itself to clear up a lot of inaccuracies," Gotti said. "Now, to do it for the big screen, which I'd never imagined, automatically it's appetizing.

"This is not a mob story. That's one misconception," he continued. "This is a father-son story."

Gotti said he envisions the film beginning with the final meeting he had with his father in 1999, when he told the senior Gotti he was walking away from the business. At the time, his father was suffering from throat cancer and serving a life sentence in prison for racketeering; he died in 2002 at age 61. The younger Gotti himself was being incarcerated at the time for bribery and extortion.

"It was the first time we'd had contact in seven years � the first time we'd touched each other in seven years," he said. And because it was a government-ordered meeting, all 90 minutes of it were captured on tape.

"Anyone sitting and watching that last video between a father and a son, there's no way they can walk away with dry eyes," he said.

As for casting, he says he doesn't care who plays him. Gotti said Armand Assante's portrayal of his father in the HBO movie was "70 percent accurate ... I never saw him flail his arms or kick garbage cans."

"This man spent the last 10 years of his life in solitary confinement, alone. He spent the last month of his life chained, shackled to a bed, emaciated by cancer," Gotti said. "The man stayed true to his code to his last breath."

Gotti says he's never seen "The Sopranos," but he understands the fascination with the "Godfather" trilogy � at least, the first two films.

"People love it because it's so different from the average, everyday American family, yet maybe not so different," he said. "I make dinner and my family has to be there every Sunday ... I don't care what they do the rest of the week, that's what we do. We're a pretty normal family with kids running all over the place. We have opinions, we have arguments, we have joy."

These days, Gotti is at home in the Long Island town of Oyster Bay, N.Y., with his six children who range in age from 4 to 20. (His youngest, Joe, was born on the first day of jury selection in his third trial.) He said he makes the kids breakfast every morning before his wife takes them to school. Then he showers, heads to his home office and writes.

"Every day I wake up, I'm blessed," he said. "If you told me tomorrow I have terminal cancer and I've got a month to live, I'm ahead of the game. I'm blessed."



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Is "Boardwalk Empire" HBO's next 'Sopranos'?

By Fred Schruers

Wed Sep 22, 2010 2:19am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - A line that resonates late in the opening episode of "Boardwalk Empire" comes when the central figure's protege brings his mentor up short with a stern bit of advice: "You can't be half a gangster, Nucky, not anymore."

The advice isn't welcome. The protege, Michael Pitt's emotionally wounded war veteran Jimmy Darmody, has been overstepping his bounds with the boss, Steve Buscemi's Nucky Thompson -- but it's clearly correct.

In similar fashion, when HBO set out to make the series -- which on Sunday attracted 4.8 million viewers (7.1 million including repeats), its most-watched premiere of any program in six years -- it realized you can't make half a gangster epic.

That's how HBO came to hire Martin Scorsese to executive produce and direct the 70-minute pilot and budget nearly $20 million for it.

Before that figure (about double the going rate for a TV pilot) was made public, there was a lot of guesswork as to what a month of shooting (about triple the typical schedule for a pilot) had cost HBO. The New York Post's Page Six threw a haymaker guess of $50 million, leading HBO to point querying media toward the Wall Street Journal's later, gentler $18 million estimate.

The subsequent 11 episodes now in the can -- they push the story, largely set in a carefully re-created boomtime Atlantic City, across nine months of 1920 beginning with the opening night of Prohibition -- averaged about $5 million to shoot. With the first ratings in, HBO was quick to order a new season, leaving the number of new shows unspecified (but very likely 12, matching the current cycle).

"It's more than a little victory," Standard & Poor's equity analyst Tuna Amobi said. "This makes it a potential juggernaut that's blown away even the more optimistic expectations."

The series debut's debate-snuffing number aligns with a generally -- but hardly unanimous -- upbeat set of reviews to let the network breathe much easier. Given the amount of earlier buzz, both in the industry and with the eager populace, HBO wasn't likely to get a standing ovation without hitting a home run.

Even the highly successful "True Blood," with its steadily ascending viewership across four seasons and sturdy DVD sales, has somehow been regarded as kid stuff alongside the epochal, 330-pound goombah that was "The Sopranos." (By the end of its run, the mob drama had an average viewership of nearly 9 million; the vampires series hovers at around half that.)

At a time when HBO's subscriber base is taking a small but unwelcome downtick, even the passing hullabaloo that was set off by early reports of "Empire's" high production costs can sting. HBO executives can and frequently will point out that their steady revenue stream has been fattening Time Warner's bottom line for years. And co-president Eric Kessler's oft-repeated mantra that exclusive, high-quality content will generally be rewarded by subscribers willing to pay a premium for the service (with handy cost escalators built into the network's deals with cable providers) has mostly kept Wall Street pretty upbeat.

Said industry analyst Richard Greenfield of BTIG: "HBO is in the midst of a creative resurgence. Every year they must continue to do what I would call 'feed the beast' and give people a reason to keep paying a substantial amount of money every month. And one way you do that is through irreverent original programing."

But Benchmark Capital recently downgraded both Time Warner and Showtime parent Viacom from "buy" to "hold" based mostly on the blah industry- and economywide forecasts. In February, Sanford C. Bernstein cable and satellite analyst Craig Moffett called the Time Warner Cable side "the single most attractive name in our coverage universe -- and by a wide margin," but by August he was warning that though "cord cutting," or dumping cable, is "overhyped," consumers ' impatience with rising prices soon could synergize with alternative delivery systems "storming the castle" to undercut cable subs.

Still, HBO's brain trust seems determined to hew to the business model that brought them this far.

"To count on a hit is a recipe for disaster," HBO programing president Michael Lombardo said. "I just think all we need to do is lean into the quality, believe in what you're doing, and hope that you find an audience there."

"Empire" showrunner and series creator Terence Winter ran with the show's premise at HBO's behest after executive producer Mark Wahlberg, tuned in with Scorsese since they made 2006's "The Departed," recruited the filmmaker.



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Japan bars Paris Hilton after drug plea (AP)

NARITA, Japan � Paris Hilton canceled her Asia tour and returned home when she was denied entry at Tokyo's airport Wednesday following a drug violation in the U.S. � running afoul of strict Japanese laws that have tripped up celebrities from Paul McCartney to Diego Maradona.

"I'm going back home, and I look forward to coming back to Japan in the future," a smiling Hilton told reporters before departing on her private jet.

The 29-year-old celebrity socialite had arrived at Narita International Airport, outside the Japanese capital, two days after pleading guilty to a misdemeanor drug charge in Las Vegas. Japan has strict immigration laws that bar entry to those convicted of drug offenses, although exceptions are occasionally granted.

Hilton was to appear Wednesday at a news conference in Tokyo to promote her fashion and fragrance lines. She arrived Tuesday evening, but was stopped at the airport and spent the night at an airport hotel after being questioned by officials.

"I'm really tired," said Hilton, wearing a black baseball cap and a navy sweat suit.

Hilton also abruptly canceled planned appearances in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and Jakarta, Indonesia.

Her publicist, Dawn Miller, said Hilton plans to make the trips at a later date.

"Paris is very disappointed and fought hard to keep her business commitments and see her fans, but she is forced to postpone her commitments in Asia," she said in a statement. "Paris understands and respects the rules and laws of the immigration authorities in Japan and fully wishes to cooperate with them."

A Japanese immigration official said she was denied entry Wednesday after a total of about six hours of questioning over the two days.

The country has taken a tough line with famous figures in the past.

Soccer icon Maradona was initially banned from entering the country during the 2002 World Cup finals for past drug offenses, but was eventually given a 30-day visa as a "special delegate."

The Rolling Stones struggled for years to gain entry to Japan and were eventually allowed in despite drug convictions among the group's members. In January 1980, former Beatles member McCartney was arrested for marijuana possession at Narita airport. He was deported without carrying out a planned concert tour by his rock group Wings.

Kazuo Kashihara, an immigration official at Narita International Airport, said if Hilton had applied for an entry permit farther ahead of her arrival, there might have been a chance for Japan's justice minister to consider an exception in her case. "She just showed up the day after (pleading guilty)," he said.

Just before taking off, Hilton tweeted a message to her fans.

"Going home now. So disappointed to miss my fans in Asia. I promise to come back soon. I love you all! Love Paris xoxo."

___

Associated Press writers Jay Alabaster and Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo and AP Entertainment Writer Anthony McCartney in Los Angeles contributed to this report.



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Paris Hilton leaves Japan after questioning

TOKYO | Wed Sep 22, 2010 5:00am EDT

TOKYO (Reuters) - Paris Hilton left Japan on Wednesday after lengthy questioning from airport officials, and following media reports that the socialite would not be allowed into the country after pleading guilty to possessing cocaine.

Hilton, 29, had flown into Tokyo on Tuesday for a fashion show but had been held back by officials at Narita airport so they could decide whether to allow her into Japan.

In Japan, immigration authorities can deny entry to anyone convicted of drug-related offences.

Hilton dropped her request to enter the country after questioning by officials, Kyodo news agency said. A spokesman at the airport's immigration bureau declined to say whether she had been barred entry or if she was leaving on her own will.

"I'm going back home. I look forward to being back in Japan in the future," the celebrity heiress said.

"I'm really tired," she told reporters at the airport.

On Monday in Las Vegas, Hilton pleaded guilty to cocaine possession following a recent arrest in which she was found to have 0.8 grams of the drug in a purse.

She was given a one-year suspended sentence, fined $2,000 and ordered to do community service.

Hilton arrived in Japan on a chartered plane with her sister Nicky. Airport officials asked her to stay at an airport hotel overnight so she could be questioning, Kyodo said.

She had been due to appear at a fashion show on Wednesday in Tokyo's Roppongi entertainment district but the show was canceled.

The former star of reality TV show "The Simple Life" is a member of the family that founded the Hilton hotel chain, and she has parlayed her notoriety into a successful career endorsing products in fashion, fragrances and other industries.

In Japan, she has promoted a popular brand of bags in the past with her sister.

(Reporting by Chisa Fujioka and Toru Hanai; Editing by Chris Gallagher and Miral Fahmy)



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Japan delays Paris Hilton's entry after drug case (AP)

NARITA, Japan � Paris Hilton has been denied entrance into Japan and is returning home to the U.S.

An immigration official said Wednesday that Hilton was not allowed into the country.

The 29-year-old celebrity on Monday pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor drug charge in Las Vegas.

Under Japanese law, immigration authorities can deny entry to those who have been convicted of drug-related offenses.

Hilton had been scheduled to promote her fashion and fragrance lines at a news conference in Tokyo on Wednesday.



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Colombian president supports Shakira at NYC show (AP)

NEW YORK � The president of Colombia might be in New York for the U.N. General Assembly, but he also found time to attend a concert by Shakira.

Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos, along with the former president of Chile, Michelle Bachelet, Queen Rania of Jordan and actor Jim Carrey, came out to Madison Square Garden on Tuesday night to watch the hip-swiveling Shakira perform before an energetic crowd.

"It's really an honor for us," Shakira said, thanking the president of her homeland for attending.

The bilingual singer kicked off her show with a slow groove to "Pienso en Ti" � wearing a hot pink ensemble that covered most of her body, revealing only her face and some of her blond curls � while she sang and gave hugs to people in the crowd. She walked to the middle of the stage, tore off the ensemble to reveal a shiny gold top with black tights and knee-high boots and performed the thumping "Why Wait."

"I'm here to please you!" she yelled. "Remember tonight I'm all yours."

The 33-year-old continued with rock-filled versions of "Te Dejo" and "Whenever, Wherever," then sang lyrics from EMF's 1990s hit "You're Unbelievable."

The crowd got rowdy during the electric guitar-fused "Si Te Vas" and the explosive "She Wolf."

But the highlight was Shakira's cover of Metallica's "Nothing Else Matters." Wearing a silver tank top, a flowing maroon skirt and no shoes, the singer belted the drum-filled jam, also highlighted by the violin. That was followed by a sensual Shakira dancing to the beat of the drum, then falling to the floor � and dancing again.

Shakira brought four fans onstage and gave them a dance lesson while others waved the Colombian flag throughout the show, which lasted for nearly two hours.

The Grammy-winning singer, whose new album "Sale el Sol (The Sun Comes Out)" is due out next month, performed songs from the CD, including the soft rock title track. She also grinded to her latest single "Loca."

"For a few months I've been different. I feel like the sun has been shining on me, brighter than ever!" she yelled.

She returned for an encore in a bright blue ruffled dress, performing the soft "Antes de las Seis." She then ripped off the dress to shake her hips � even imitating Beyonce's signature booty dance � to her largest U.S. hit, the uptempo "Hips Don't Lie."

Shakira closed the show with her international smash, the World Cup anthem "Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)." But before she began, a video of African children saying what they aspired to be played in the background. Green, red and yellow confetti began to fall as Shakira sang the song, saying loudly: "We're all Africa!"

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Online:

http://www.shakira.com



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