Monday, October 4, 2010

Return of "Deadliest Catch" trio still uncertain

Tue Oct 5, 2010 1:32am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Will Discovery reel in its missing "Deadliest Catch" captains?

As filming is set to begin next week on the show's seventh season, the network issued a statement Monday revealing that the Cornelia Marie, the fishing boat captained by the late Phil Harris, will return this season with sons Josh and Jake Harris on board as deckhands.

But absent from the statement were popular "Catch" co-stars Capts. Sig Hansen and Andy and Johnathan Hillstrand, who quit the Emmy-nominated reality series last week in the wake of a $3 million lawsuit Discovery filed against the Hillstrands for allegedly failing to complete work on a planned spin-off special.

Discovery, Hansen and the Hillstrands all have declined to comment since the "Catch" co-stars told The Hollywood Reporter last week that they were "unable" to continue with the show due to "the current situation with Discovery." The silence suggests the two sides are at least talking about a possible settlement of the lawsuit that would pave the way for the trio to return to the show.

But the clock is ticking because the last of the "Catch" boats is scheduled to leave for Dutch Harbor, Alaska, by October 15 to take advantage of king crab season in the Bering Sea.

The stakes are high for Discovery. Without Hansen, the Hillstrands or Capt. Phil Harris, who died in February, the network risks damaging one of its biggest franchises. Ratings for the show's sixth season were way up from Season 5, with a record 8.5 million viewers tuning in to a July episode featuring Harris' on-camera death.

Discovery likely hopes that the Harris kids can fill the void of Capt. Phil Harris, but hit reality series often find that a major casting change can be, well, deadly.

"Our dad made a tremendous connection with so many fans, and it is such a fitting tribute to his life that we, his sons, can remain fishing on the boat that he skippered for so many years," Josh and Jake Harris said in the statement.

Capt. Derrick Ray, who replaced Phil Harris as skipper last season, is returning as captain along with engineer Steve Ward and deckhands Freddie Maughtai and Ryan Simpson. Last season, the show added another new captain, Bill Wichrowski, and his boat, the Kodiak.



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Zack Snyder at helm of new Superman movie

Mon Oct 4, 2010 7:06pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Zack Snyder has been chosen to direct the new Superman movie, which Christopher Nolan is producing for Warner Bros. and Legendary Pictures.

Snyder had been on the list of filmmakers ensconced in meetings with Nolan and Warners executives, who in recent weeks have talked to Darren Aronofsky, Ben Affleck, Matt Reeves and Tony Scott.

The job was so coveted that even Robert Zemeckis, retired to the world of performance-capture animation, considered returning to live-action filmmaking in order to nab the gig.

The Superman movie is one of the studio's top priorities, not only because it serves as the linchpin for its line of films based on DC Comics superheros, but because Warners needs to be in production on a new Superman movie by 2011 or risk losing certain copyrights to the heirs of creators Joe Shuster and Jerry Seigel. (That litigation is still pending.)

Nolan, who revived Batman for the big screen with 2005's "Batman Begins" and the 2008 hit "The Dark Knight," teamed up with David Goyer for a new a way to revive the last son of Krypton. Despite grossing $200 million domestically, the last movie about the Man of Steel, 2006's "Superman Returns," was considered a disappointment, and a hoped-for franchise launch never flew off.

Part of the problem stems from Superman's origins: The character for decades was a beacon of positive qualities, and his stories usually were painted in black-and-white. So from the point of view of a certain audience segment, Superman isn't hip enough for a time that prefers its heroes more morally ambiguous.

Goyer is writing the script, which is rumored to have, like "Superman Returns," a connection to Richard Donner's Superman films of 30-odd years ago. In this movie's case, it's a villain connection: General Zod, who was played by Terence Stamp in "Superman" (1978) and "Superman II" (1980).

Snyder has become one of Warner Bros.' favorite filmmakers since he directed the surprise smash "300," the adaptation of the Frank Miller comic book. He followed that with "Watchmen," the adaptation of the seminal Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons miniseries, and is now putting the final touches on his original work "Suckerpunch," which is slated to open March 25.

Snyder just made his animated feature debut with "Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole." The movie opened softly but is generating strong word-of-mouth, with box-office receipts having fallen only 32 percent in its second week.

(Editing by Sheri Linden at Reuters.)



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"Crime" doesn't pay for Keanu Reeves in spoof

Mon Oct 4, 2010 5:36pm EDT

TORONTO (Hollywood Reporter) - Combining a backstage theatrical romance and a drama about a bank robbery into one spoof might have seemed a good idea at the time, but while Malcolm Venville's "Henry's Crime" is billed as a comedy it's more funny odd than funny ha-ha.

Keanu Reeves, who also was active in getting the picture made, has the central role of a man convicted of a robbery he had no part in who decides to make up for the time in jail by now committing the crime.

Reeves plays the part, however, as a blank canvas, and while some of the deliberately contrived elements of the combined plotlines are amusing, it becomes increasingly silly rather than gaining the laughs it seeks.

Cross-cutting between Reeves dashing back and forth from a performance of Chekhov onstage and bank robbers digging a tunnel to a vault below is clearly intended to be hilarious, but it just seems awkward. It will take very clear marketing to keep audiences from being confused by the film's intentions. Even that might not be enough despite entertaining performances by Vera Farmiga, as Reeves' leading lady onstage, and James Caan, as his main buddy in the bank raid. The film screened at the recent Toronto festival.

The setup is that hapless Henry (Reeves), who has a drab marriage to Debbie (Judy Greer) and a drearier job as a tollbooth collector, finds himself bullied off to a baseball game by sometime pals Eddie (Fisher Stevens) and Joe (Danny Hoch). But there is no baseball game.

Instead, Eddie and Joe rob a bank at gunpoint, leaving Henry to wait in his car, which has now become the getaway vehicle. The robbery goes sour, bank guard Frank (Bill Duke) collars the stupefied Henry, and he is promptly sent to jail.

After serving his time, he sets out to rob the bank for real and, through a series of what are supposed to be funny coincidences, discovers not only how to break into it but also a cover for his activities.

The cover comes from joining a down-at-the-heels theatrical troupe in a production of Chekhov's "The Cherry Orchard" starring a beauty named Julie Ivanova (Farmiga) he meets cute when she runs him over with her car.

The play's director, Darek Milodragovic (Peter Stormare), casts Henry in the lead role opposite Julie, and the play's rehearsals proceed as Henry, joined by tough old cellmate Max (Caan) digs beneath the theater into the bank.

Eddie, Joe and Frank all get involved too, and the cross-cutting gets frenetic as the film's director, Venville ("44-Inch Chest"), tries to emphasize the parallels between the fate of the characters in the play and in the film. But the pacing is always one beat off.

Farmiga adds likable goofiness to the wry humor she displayed in "Up in the Air," and Caan appears to having a very good time as Max. He does his best to make the audience have one too, but it's an uphill struggle.



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Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber nearing 1 billion YouTube views

Mon Oct 4, 2010 4:51pm EDT

NEW YORK (Billboard) - Lady Gaga and Justin Bieber are both approaching a major milestone of the new music industry: one billion all-time YouTube views.

Lady Gaga should pass one billion views around October 20 if she continues on her current pace, according to David Birch, communications director at TubeMogul. During September, she averaged almost 1.8 million views per day.

Birch says Bieber will surpass the 1 billion views milestone around November 1 if he keeps up his current pace. During September, Bieber's videos were viewed about 3.7 million times per day.

After Lady Gaga and Bieber, the next closest artist is Michael Jackson at around 600 million views, says Birch.

Even though Lady Gaga will be the first to the one billion mark, TubeMogul data shows that lately Bieber has been the hotter of the two and has been YouTube's most-viewed music artist. From July 1 to September 28, according to TubeMogul data supplied to Billboard, Bieber averaged 3.98 million daily views to Lady Gaga's 2.04 million views per day.

Bieber has been hot since winter. Since February 28, Bieber has averaged 3.83 million daily views while Lady Gaga has averaged 2.53 million. To put their numbers in perspective, Kanye West has averaged 271,000 daily views in that time period.

But what really stands out is the consistent performance of Bieber's videos. In April, TubeMogul began "Most Viral Videos of the Month" to highlight the most-viewed videos -- including unofficial versions -- in a given month. Nearly 9 in 10 of all videos to make the list have been music videos, and Justin Bieber has been the one constant month after month. He had four of the top 10 videos of the month from April through August.

Both artists have many of YouTube's all-time most-viewed videos. Bieber's "Baby" is YouTube's most-watched video of all time with 345 million views. His "Never Let You Go" is No. 22 with 92 million views while "Never Say Never" is No. 28 with 86 million views.

Lady Gaga's "Bad Romance" is No. 2 all-time at YouTube with 288 million views. "Just Dance" is at 11 with 123 million views, "Alejandro" is 26 with 87 million views and "Telephone" is 31 with 85 million views.

YouTube views include videos in the Vevo network but not Vevo videos viewed at Vevo.com. Vevo CEO Rio Caraeff has stated that YouTube accounts for about 90 percent of Vevo's views. Videos by both Bieber and Lady Gaga are shown on Vevo.

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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John Lennon 70th Birthday Events

Mon Oct 4, 2010 4:45pm EDT

NEW YORK (Billboard) - There are places we remember, all our lives, though some have changed. Seventy years after the birth of John Winston Ono Lennon, the memories and music live on.

We remember where we were that night those lads from Liverpool leapt a wild octave -- "I wanna hold your hand!" -- before a screaming audience on "The Ed Sullivan Show." And simply changed the world.

Or the days we carefully placed each vinyl gift from the Fab Four on a turntable, from the irresistible "Meet the Beatles" through the adventurous "Rubber Soul," from the psychedelia of "Sgt. Pepper" to the swan song of "Let It Be." Or where we first heard the songs of John Lennon, solo artist: the quiet ferocity of "Working Class Hero," the tough idealism of "Imagine" or the buoyant hope of "Starting Over," and so many more.

And we grieve still for that December night in 1980 when a gunman struck on a street in New York, taking Lennon's life. But not his legacy.

Now a younger generation can say, "There are places we remember," linking moments in their lives with the music Lennon created, whether with the Beatles or as a solo artist. Younger fans have discovered the hits of Lennon & McCartney through the film "Across the Universe," through the Cirque du Soleil show "Love" or through the interactive joy of playing "The Beatles: Rock Band" videogame.

And they've taken to the streets to protest wars from Iraq to Afghanistan, chanting Lennon's still-all-too-relevant demand, "Give Peace a Chance." Seventy years after the birth of John Lennon, Billboard celebrates his legacy by spotlighting events around the world.

REMEMBERING JOHN: BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION EVENTS

Just as the songs of John Lennon won the hearts of fans worldwide during his lifetime, an array of events and projects are marking the 70th anniversary of Lennon's birthday on October 9. Here are just a few.

October 9: Lennon Ono Grant for Peace Awards in Iceland

Ono will be in Iceland to present the biannual Lennon Ono Grant for Peace Award to "Gasland" director Josh Fox, nature/culture writer Michael Pollan, author/human rights activist Alice Walker and human rights/safety activist Barbara Kowalcyk. She'll attend the annual lighting of the Peace Tower and perform with Sean Ono Lennon and the Plastic Ono Band in Reykjavik.

October 9: "Peace and Harmony" Lennon Monument Reveal in Liverpool

Lennon's hometown of Liverpool will host his older son, Julian Lennon, and his first wife, Cynthia Lennon, at the unveiling of an 18-foot-high monument titled Peace and Harmony in the city center. The work was commissioned by Global Peace Initiative, an arts organization based in the United States.

October 9: Screening of PBS Documentary "LENNONYC" in NYC

PBS will screen a new American Masters documentary "LENNONYC," which focuses on Lennon's life in New York during the 1970s, on Lennon's birthday, October 9, in New York's Central Park at 7 p.m. The film, which features unreleased recordings and home movies, will air nationally on PBS on November 22 at 9 p.m. "LENNONYC" premiered at the New York Film Festival on September 25 and was promoted with a new PBS podcast series.

November 2: "Imagine There's No Hunger" Concert in Hollywood

Hard Rock Cafe International will present "Imagine There's No Hunger: Celebrating the Songs of John Lennon," a concert at the Hard Rock Cafe Hollywood to benefit the Grammy Museum and WHY Hunger, which fights hunger and poverty worldwide.



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Television star Ronit Roy endorses fashion house

Television celebrity and Bollywood actor Ronit Roy has now ventured fashion fraternity.

West End musical suspended after actor shot on stage

London, Oct 4 (PTI) A West End musical of Stephen Sondheim's 'Passion' was suspended after an actor was accidentally shot in the face during an on-stage duel.

Chris Rock curses out fan for charity

Los Angeles, Oct 4 (PTI) Celebrities often go to great lengths for the sake of charity but 'Rush Hour' star Chris Rock did the unthinkable, he indulged in a cursing brawl with a fan to raise money for a good cause.

Final arguments start in Anna Nicole Smith trial (AP)

LOS ANGELES � Closing arguments began Monday in the drug conspiracy trial of Anna Nicole Smith's former boyfriend and two doctors, who are accused of plotting to satisfy her craving for painkillers and sedatives.

The prosecution began addressing jurors after Superior Court Judge Robert Perry warned them not to be swayed by sympathy or public opinion.

Howard K. Stern, Dr. Sandeep Kapoor and Dr. Khristine Eroshevich have pleaded not guilty to conspiring to provide excessive prescription drugs to the former Playboy model while knowing she was an addict.

They are not charged in her 2007 accidental overdose death in Florida.

The judge spent 40 minutes instructing jurors on the law governing their decisions and said they must only reach a conspiracy conviction if the defendants agreed to commit the alleged crimes.

The case could go to the jury by Thursday. The defendants face unspecified fines and prison sentences if convicted.

At issue is whether the former reality TV star was provided excessive prescription drugs and whether she was an addict or someone seeking relief.

Perry has been highly critical of the prosecution's presentation but speculation that he might dismiss many of the 11 charges fizzled last week when he announced he would dismiss only two counts against Stern and part of another charge against Stern and Kapoor.

"I think there are weaknesses in the prosecution's case," Perry said at the time. "But my inclination is to let it go to the jury."

Three defense attorneys, Steve Sadow for Stern, Brad Brunon for Eroshevich and Ellyn Garafalo for Kapoor are expected to argue for their clients to be acquitted, claiming they cared deeply for Smith and were trying to help her with legitimate medical concerns.

In eight weeks of testimony, the prosecution presented a long list of prescriptions for drugs, including opiates and sedatives acquired for Smith.

The defense has challenged witnesses who claimed Smith was an addict, and has tried to undermine the credibility of those who alleged Stern and Eroshevich were personally administering drugs to Smith in the months after the death of her son, Daniel, sent her into depression.

Attorneys have spent hours with the judge debating legal instructions for the jury that may help them sort out definitions of addiction and falsifying prescriptions.

The judge dismissed two charges against Stern of obtaining drugs for her by fraud and deceit, including use of false names. He also dismissed part of a conspiracy count against Stern and Kapoor, ruling there was insufficient proof the two men conspired to obtain controlled drugs through fraud and deceit.

Perry raised the unusual prospect that if he does not agree with jury convictions, he has the option to change the verdicts or order a new trial. He said he has done this in other cases.



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Record exec Tommy Mottola is writing a memoir (AP)

NEW YORK � Record executive Tommy Mottola's (muh-TOH'-luhz) latest project is words only.

Grand Central Publishing announced Monday that the former CEO Of Sony Music Entertainment and ex-husband of Mariah Carey has a memoir scheduled for release in 2012.

"The Last Starmaker" will cover his years with Carey and his work with such recording artists as Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen and Michael Jackson, who once accused Mottola of being a racist.

Mottola helped discover Carey, Celine Dion, Jennifer Lopez and Gloria Estefan, among other performers.



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Director gets 1 year in prison in wiretapping case (AP)

LOS ANGELES � "Die Hard" director John McTiernan has been sentenced to one year in prison for lying during a wiretapping investigation of Hollywood private investigator Anthony Pellicano.

A federal judge in Los Angeles also ordered a $100,000 fine for McTiernan, who will be allowed to post bond pending an appeal.

Defense attorneys had sought a three-year probation term after the 59-year-old McTiernan pleaded guilty in July to two counts of making false statements to the FBI. He also pleaded guilty to one count of perjury for lying to a federal judge while trying to withdraw a guilty plea.

Pellicano was convicted in 2008 of wiretapping film producer Charles Roven for McTiernan and of bugging the phones of celebrities and others to get information for clients. Pellicano was sentenced to 15 years in federal prison.



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Donnie Wahlberg's divorce finalized in California (AP)

LOS ANGELES � Donnie Wahlberg is the new single kid on the block.

Court records in Simi Valley, Calif., show the actor-singer and his wife of nearly nine years finalized their divorce on Sept. 28.

The pair each filed for divorce on the same day in August 2008 and reached an out-of-court settlement in the case, which was handled at a Ventura County courthouse about 38 miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles.

They have two sons, were married in 1999 and separated in early 2008.

Wahlberg was a member of the boy band New Kids on the Block, which was intensely popular in the late 1980s and early 1990s and have reunited in recent years.

The 41-year-old is also an actor, appearing in series such as "Band of Brothers" and the new police drama "Blue Bloods."



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Detroit symphony musicians go on strike (AP)

DETROIT � Musicians who are refusing to accept steep pay cuts demanded by the financially struggling Detroit Symphony Orchestra have hit the picket lines.

Dozens of tuxedo-clad musicians began picketing Monday morning at the Max M. Fisher Music Center in downtown Detroit, as a French horn quartet played in the background.

Symphony management declared an impasse Sept. 1 and began implementing a 33 percent base pay cut for orchestra veterans, from $104,650 to $70,200 in the first year.

Musicians had offered a 22 percent reduction in the first year to $82,000.

No bargaining sessions are scheduled. The musicians union has filed an unfair labor practices complaint with the National Labor Relations Board.

Symphony management officials did not immediately return messages seeking comment.

____

Online:

Musicians union: http://www.detroitsymphonymusicians.org

Symphony: http://www.detroitsymphony.com



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HBO film captures key moments for Springsteen (AP)

NEW YORK � Bruce Springsteen doesn't imagine his three children, ranging in age from 16 to 20, would be that interested in a new HBO documentary on his 1978 album "Darkness on the Edge of Town."

Maybe they will later, since the movie is partly for them.

"Do you really want to watch your dad, watching thousands cheer your parents?" he said. "Nobody wants to see that. Watching people boo your folks, that would be something worth coming to see."

For his fans, the film "The Promise: The Making of `Darkness on the Edge of Town" is an intriguing peek, supplemented with home video from the time, into the creative process of a music legends at a key time in his career. Burdened by a management lawsuit and brooding over newfound fame at age 27, Springsteen and his E Street Band produced a taut treatise on growing into adulthood within a faltering economy. The film debuts Oct. 7 at 9 p.m. ET.

Getting there was anything but easy. Springsteen wrote and discarded far more songs than he used � fans will be able to hear many of them later this fall � as he whittled the band's sound from expansive to lean and made sure the disc hung together creatively.

One night a bleary-eyed Springsteen forced poor Max Weinberg to repeatedly hit his snare drum, searching for a sound he imagined in his head but could never quite get on tape.

"Madness has its rewards � if in the end you don't destroy yourself," Springsteen said. "I had an idea but a lot of it, looking back now, probably could have been dispensed with and everyone would have been left with a little more of their sanity. But that was how we made those records. I believed at that time that you had to work hard at something. I didn't trust anything that came too easily."

That may have tortured a few band members but the attitude made him think hard about what he wanted to say and made for well-constructed songs.

"I wanted them to last and they did last," he said. Along with the title cut, the album features "Badlands," "Prove It All Night" and "Racing in the Street."

Sheer luck made this video document possible.

A friend at the time, Barry Reebo, frequently followed Springsteen and his gang with a video camera, back to when the rocker played small clubs. No one thought twice when Reebo hung around the studio during the "Darkness" sessions. He didn't use big lights. Sometimes it seems the musicians forgot he was there.

After reforming the E Street Band a decade ago following a hiatus, Springsteen began thinking about video archives of their work, particularly for younger fans who knew nothing of their epic late 1970s performances.

Reebo hadn't sold his footage, and Springsteen was surprised at all he had. He struck a deal, and filmmaker Thom Zinny made "The Promise" by mixing the old tapes with current recollections from Springsteen and his band.

"We caught the band at a very pivotal moment � immediately post-success, and I'm in the throes of trying to figure out what I'm all about, trying to figure out what that success meant," he said.

Success was fine, but he mistrusted it. He felt safe among the places and people he grew up with in New Jersey.

"I felt there was a story there, the late '70s in the United States, what they call the Carter recession," Springsteen recalled. "I thought there was an interesting and unique story in my neck of the woods that wasn't being alluded to or told very much in American rock music. It was being told in England by the Clash, but not so much in American rock music."

He pursued it with an almost maniacal sense of purpose.

"We were in the studio for a long time not because we were interested in making records, but because we were interested in making purposeful records," he said. "We were interested in making essential records."

Family was also on his mind. He didn't feel he really knew his parents and what they went through � the song "Factory" was about his dad's blue collar life � and "The Promise" exists in part so Springsteen's children will have a document of how their father handled the curiosity of his own teen years.

The "Darkness" album came three years after "Born to Run," a lifetime in that musical era. For much of that time, Springsteen was prevented from releasing music due to a lawsuit involving his former manager, Mike Appel. Appel was a big music fan with his own vision for Springsteen's career, and the lawsuit was strictly about control, Springsteen said.

Appel even appears in "The Promise" and issues what could be interpreted as an admission that he had been wrong. "I had strong ideas," Appel said. "In the end, you have to say, `Mike, who's the artist?'"

Springsteen laughs when he's asked if he's ever gotten an apology. "No," he said. "I've never asked him to and he doesn't have to. We're very good friends."

It's a season of "Darkness" for Springsteen. On Nov. 16, Columbia will release two products centered on the period. One is "The Promise," a two-CD set of material recorded then that never made the original 10-song album. It contains 21 songs, including "Fire," which became a hit for the Pointer Sisters, and "Because the Night," which Patti Smith took, added some of her own lyrics and turned into the biggest hit of her career.

The songs likely formed the bones of an album never made between "Born to Run" and "Darkness."

A more extensive package, formed to look like the notebooks Springsteen used for song lyrics at the time, contains those two CDs and a remastered version of "Darkness on the Edge of Town." It also contains three DVDs with the HBO documentary and four hours of concert footage.

The material includes an entire 26-song Houston concert from 1978, and a 2009 recording of Springsteen and his band performing the "Darkness" album in its entirety at an empty Paramount Theater in Asbury Park, N.J.

Springsteen described his recording process at the time as "making a huge splatter painting and standing back and editing and shaping the way I wanted it to come out."

The outtakes "really hold together as a body of work because they all came out of the same sessions, the same sounds and tones. ... It's an interesting bunch of music that I hope the fans enjoy."

___

Online:

http://www.hbo.com

http://www.brucespringsteen.net/

___

EDITOR'S NOTE � David Bauder can be reached at dbauder"at"ap.org

(This version CORRECTS title of writer)



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Franzen's fixed 'Freedom' goes to UK stores (AP)

LONDON � A corrected edition of Jonathan Franzen's novel "Freedom" is being shipped to British stores.

The publisher, HarperCollins' 4th Estate imprint, says the British edition of the highly praised novel was discovered to be an earlier draft which contained a number of typesetting errors.

4th Estate publicist Susanna Frayn said Monday that the correct, final version of Franzen's text is now being shipped.

The publisher is offering replacement copies to anyone who bought one of the faulty first copies.

"On behalf of everyone at Fourth Estate and HarperCollins I'd like to apologize profusely to Jonathan, his readers and our customers that our first edition of 'Freedom' does not reflect the author's final corrected version of the novel," HarperCollins UK's chief executive, Victoria Barnsley, said Friday.

"It is a truly magnificent novel and we want everyone to have a chance to appreciate it in the final, fully corrected version. We are hugely appreciative of Jonathan's patience and utter professionalism over this."



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George Michael denies special treatment in jail

LONDON | Mon Oct 4, 2010 7:23am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Jailed singer George Michael has denied newspaper reports that he is receiving special treatment while in prison for driving under the influence of drugs.

In a statement, the 47-year-old former Wham! frontman said he felt compelled to address what he called "the usual rubbish" reported in the press.

Michael was sentenced to eight weeks in jail last month following a car accident in London in July. He was also banned from driving for five years and fined.

The singer was told he would serve four weeks behind bars and spend the rest of his sentence on license.

"Much as I would prefer to rise above the usual rubbish that I'm reading day after day about my time here in prison, I think it's only fair to my fans, family and friends to respond in some way even though I will be home soon," he said.

"So please believe me when I tell you that in the last three weeks, there have been no tears, no anxiety, no bullying -- in fact, not so much as a sleepless night for me.

"On the contrary, I've been treated with kindness by fellow inmates and prison staff alike and, as far as I can tell, have received no special treatment of any kind whatsoever, unless, of course, some of the guys here are letting me win at the pool table.

The star behind hits including "Careless Whisper" and "Faith" also hinted he would return to the recording studio after years without releasing new material.

"Most of my days have been spent reading thousands of letters and postcards of incredible support from people around the world. I promise to repay their kindness with new music as soon as I possibly can," he said.

Michael has a history of drug and driving offences. He was banned from driving for two years in 2007 and sentenced to 100 hours of community service after admitting driving when unfit due to drugs.

In 2008 he apologized to fans after being arrested and cautioned by police for possession of drugs.

The Grammy award winner has sold an estimated 100 million albums as a solo artist.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White; Editing by Steve Addison)



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Following film and TV, music takes stab at 3-D (AP)

NEW YORK � At the beginning of the re-emergence of 3-D, the focus was on film, with movies like "Avatar" paving the way for the technology to become an integral part of the cinema experience.

Soon TV followed, with sporting events like the World Cup featured in 3-D, and companies such as Sony and Samsung rolling out 3-D televisions.

Now, the music world is making sure it isn't left behind in the 3-D revolution. Justin Bieber and the Black Eyed Peas are planning to release 3-D movie-concerts, while the music video for Shakira's World Cup anthem, "Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)," had a version in 3-D. Even acts like Sia and the Broken Bells are producing 3-D clips.

"It's not the '80s 3-D, like, the way people think of 3-D. It changes the art form of storytelling. It's pretty amazing. It's a whole new freaking jump-off," said the Peas' leader will.i.am.

Oscar-winning director James Cameron, whose groundbreaking "Avatar" has become the top-grossing movie in history, says 3-D's spillover to music will find success.

"Music videos in 3-D, it's natural, that's great," he said.

Cameron's production company, Pace, will produce the Peas' upcoming project. Will.i.am says 3-D music content will alter the way we watch music videos and concerts � and record labels have taken note.

JeanBaptise Duprieu, senior director at Sony Music International, says the company will "produce a lot of 3-D content this year."

Duprieu says when he presented Shakira's "Waka Waka" video to Sony staffers, they felt a sense of closeness to the Latin sensation.

"The reaction was, 'Wow, we feel so much closer to the artist ... and really immersed (in) what's going on,'" Duprieu recalled. "So I think generally the impression is a better connection and a more sort of real vibrance going on."

The Peas performed a 3-D concert in New York's Times Square in March while rap-rock trio N.E.R.D did so last month. And other musicians like Miley Cyrus, the Jonas Brothers and Kenny Chesney have released 3-D concerts. International singers Kylie Minogue and Sia have also filmed some of their recent live shows in 3-D. Veteran rockers U2 did so in 2006 on their "Vertigo" tour.

Peter Shapiro, co-founder of 3ality Digital and producer for 2008's concert film "U2 3D," says the music film helped pave the way for more like it. But he adds there are plenty of challenges with creating good 3-D material for the music world.

"If it's not done well and the cuts don't match, you can hurt people's eyes," he said. "3-D likes to be slower than 2-D. So if you're watching TV ... 3-D lends itself to feeling like you're there. You want to forget that you're watching a recorded image."

Cameron says 3-D music content will find more successful in clips that won't have too much action going on.

"It's not that 3-D works against you when you cut fast, it's just that you don't have time for your eye to lock in 3-D so you're not getting the value out of it," Cameron said. "But some music videos are long, sustained takes � so that's the kind that will work the best."

Duprieu agrees, explaining that Sony plans to film 3-D content with its classical musicians � including a recent recital with pianist Lang Lang.

"You would think classical music is pretty static and you would not feel that much stuff going on, but actually because of the depth of 3-D, you really actually enhance the listening experience and connection to the music by having that shot in 3-D," he said.

"It can actually be overwhelming to have too many cameras and too many different angles," he added.

Outside the Shakira clip, others have since produced 3-D music videos and content. Guitar Center Sessions, a program on DirecTV Inc., features live 3-D performances, including recent shows with Peter Gabriel and Jane's Addiction. A representative for the channel confirmed that there are plans to shoot about 15 more shows before the end of the year.

Rock duo Broken Bells released a 3-D video for their latest single, "October," and the video for Bon Jovi's new single, "What Do You Got," was shot in 3-D.

Wayne Isham, the director behind the Bon Jovi clip, says 3-D music videos are an opportunity for "music videos to blow everyone's minds again."

"I think it's going to be a rebirth of performance again in music, because with everything that's going on with the Internet and everything that's going on with the lack of a true MTV channel where people are not having ... the ability to show their videos, I think now bands are going to be able to showcase themselves ... in the most simplistic sense," Isham said.

___

Associated Press Music Writer Nekesa Mumbi Moody in New York and AP Entertainment Writer Ryan Pearson in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

___

Online:

http://www.pacehd.com

http://www.3alitydigital.com

http://www.u23dmovie.com/

http://www.shakira.com

http://www.justinbiebermusic.com

http://www.blackeyedpeas.com

http://www.bonjovi.com

http://gc.guitarcenter.com/sessions/



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Project uses indie artists to introduce Dylan (AP)

NEW YORK � A new project aims to introduce Bob Dylan's music to young people by having buzz-worthy indie artists cover one of his best-known albums in a digital-only format.

"Subterranean Homesick Blues: A Tribute to Bob Dylan's `Bringing It All Back Home'" goes on sale at iTunes on Tuesday and features artists like J. Tillman of Fleet Foxes; the Morning Blenders; Peter Moren of Peter, Bjorn and John; and Mirah tackling songs from Dylan's 1965 "going electric" album.

Its producer is Jim Sampas, who has done similar tributes to Bruce Springsteen's "Nebraska" album and the Beatles' "Rubber Soul."

Dylan's album, a mixture of acoustic and electric tunes, included songs like "Maggie's Farm," "Mr. Tambourine Man," "It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)" and "Subterranean Homesick Blues."

"My desire was to show the brilliance of his songwriting and bring it to a younger audience that might not be aware of his work," Sampas said. "A lot of younger musicians embrace Dylan's work, but the overall population doesn't have as much knowledge."

The project has a mix of fairly faithful covers and some interesting interpretations. The Castanets cast "Maggie's Farm" in some modern percussion and synthesizer sounds. Tillman strips the sarcasm from "If You've Gotta Go, Go Now" for a sweet acoustic sound that makes the narrator sound vulnerable.

The Morning Blenders sweetened "Outlaw Blues," although member Christopher Chu said he wanted to make it sound creepy.

"He arranges his songs so perfectly that it's hard not to just want to do a 100 percent faithful rendition," Chu said. "But at the same time, that's not what I wanted to do with a cover. I wanted to pick a song where I could change it up a bit."

Chu, 25, knows Dylan's music well. Dylan is one of the first artists he began to obsess over as a young fan, along with the Beach Boys and Neil Young. He's convinced that he missed out on a golden era of music.

His favorite Dylan album is "Highway 61 Revisited."

"His influence is so wide that no matter what age you are, you eventually run into Dylan," Chu said.

William Fitzsimmons, who covered one of the album's outtakes, "Farewell Angelina," said the specter of Dylan was an intimidating factor when he started writing songs. He's 32 years old.

"I didn't write songs until later in life because I wondered, `What was the point?'" he said. "You put on a record like "Blood on the Tracks' when you want to write about heartbreak. You realize somebody already did it and it's hard to imagine you can add anything. It's very intimidating."

He doesn't know how Dylan keeps it up.

"You're not supposed to write that many amazing songs in your lifetime," he said.

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Online:

http://www.reimaginemusic.com



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Parker, Spitzer aim for ideological center (AP)

NEW YORK � During a rehearsal for his CNN prime-time show that bows Monday, former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer talks about how the country's politics are driven by the small percentage of Americans on each ideological extreme. The majority in the middle often go unheard.

He could just as easily be talking about the audience "Parker Spitzer" hopes to reach: the people who would feel more comfortable at Jon Stewart's million moderate march than watching Bill O'Reilly on Fox News Channel or Keith Olbermann on MSNBC, and are maddeningly elusive for CNN unless a big story is breaking.

Spitzer falls back on a political term: expanding the base.

"We've always believed that both O'Reilly and Olbermann are really good shows," he said. "Look at the numbers and what they do. We're not out to criticize or diminish them. The question is, is there room for something different?"

CNN will soon find out. The show that teams Spitzer with Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Kathleen Parker lands in cable news' most unforgiving time slot (8 p.m. ET). Two television novices (one with a giant, personal blot on his record) are working to fuse a mixture of enlightenment and entertainment.

They sat in a New York studio last week testing ideas. Each show will open with topical editorials by both hosts. A test segment called "The Clash" brought in ideological opposites from The Nation and National Review to talk economic policy, a quicker-moving and less formulaic version of "Crossfire."

A cardboard cutout of Bill Clinton was placed on a seat for a lighthearted feature on Americans missing the former president, especially when contrasted with the present one.

"One of my friends says, `I miss him like an old boyfriend,'" Parker said. "Another one says he was an old boyfriend."

Parker places a jewel-encrusted bell on the table the hosts share, calling it Spitzer's "pause button." She's conscious that he sometimes talks at breakneck speed and lets his inner wonk take over. "People are reaching for their remote controls, I can feel it," she said during the rehearsal when Spitzer and a guest argued too long over whether World War II was an economic stimulus plan.

She had never met Spitzer before CNN brought them together for some meetings, and the two now share a quick-witted repartee.

The man who conceived the show, CNN U.S. president Jon Klein, was fired just 10 days before the premiere. The company's top management immediately reached out to reassure the hosts that the move didn't change CNN's support for "Parker Spitzer."

CNN hopes viewers, particularly women, look beyond Spitzer's political fall from grace, when he resigned as governor in 2007 after being caught using prostitutes.

Some won't be able to, said Marcy McGinnis, a former CBS News executive now teaching journalism at Stony Brook University. But others will be more forgiving and willing to listen to what he has to say, she said.

"You deal with it like you deal with anything else," Spitzer said. "You try to be forthright, say I understand it. You will react as it's appropriate. ... And I'll try to persuade you that this is a show worth listening to."

It has certainly been discussed internally and, if Spitzer happens to be talking about another personal political scandal, he won't shy away from acknowledging his own failings, said Liza McGuirk, the show's executive producer.

"I think Americans like to forgive people," Parker said. "Eliot's not the first person to trip on that particular fault line. He's been forthright and honest, and he and his family have moved through it."

For both hosts, some nerves are evident as they attempt jobs they haven't done before, like when they race through a script during rehearsal. They've both spent plenty of time in front of cameras, but being a host is different, Spitzer said.

"Yes," Parker said. "He has to be nice to our guests."

"We have to let our guests speak," Spitzer said.

"That's a problem for you rather than me," replied Parker, whose South Carolina accent is a few speeds slower than her on-air partner.

They loosely fit conservative-liberal roles, but say their opinions will occasionally surprise viewers. She's long heard criticism that she's not conservative enough. In the past month, she's written an "open letter to Muslims" that said most Americans were appalled by a Florida pastor who wanted to burn the Quran. Other columns said charges that President Barack Obama is an anti-colonialist are poppycock and said Fox's Glenn Beck "is messianic and betrays the grandiosity of the addict."

"I'm a conservative but not an ideologue," she said. "There are certain people on the right who will always turn on you if you think outside of the box and that's part of the problem the Republican Party is having right now."

Those columns bring her hundreds of letters from people thanking her, saying they rarely hear from calm, rational voices, she said.

"I just think there's an atmosphere out there for what we bring to the table," she said.

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Online:

http://www.cnn.com

___

EDITOR'S NOTE � David Bauder can be reached at dbauder(at)ap.org



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Family plans public farewell for actor Tony Curtis (AP)

LAS VEGAS � Celebrities, fans, friends and family members are saying goodbye to Tony Curtis during public funeral services to celebrate the movie star's life.

Longtime friend and pallbearer Gene Kilroy tells The Associated Press that Curtis' wife, Jill Curtis, plans to eulogize her husband of 16 years Monday in Las Vegas. The 85-year-old Oscar-nominated actor who starred in "The Defiant Ones" and "Some Like It Hot" died Wednesday.

An hourlong funeral is to be followed by burial and then a private reception at the Luxor hotel-casino on the Las Vegas Strip.

Kilroy says billionaire investor Kirk Kerkorian, actor Kirk Douglas and singer Phyllis McGuire are among seven honorary pallbearers. Curtis' daughter, actress Jamie Lee Curtis, is among family members expected to attend.



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