Monday, January 31, 2011

Eva Longoria and Tony Parker finalize divorce

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"Two and a Half Men" shutdown could cost millions

Mon Jan 31, 2011 7:19pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - As Charlie Sheen heads back to a rehabilitation facility, weeks of salacious headlines are now giving way to a steep financial price for the star's behavior.

In fact, sources tell The Hollywood Reporter that if "Two and a Half Men" is forced to shut down permanently, it could jeopardize as much as $250 million in domestic syndication revenue for producer Warner Bros. Television and millions more in lost ad revenue for CBS.

In its eighth season, "Men' is the most-watched comedy on television, averaging 14.7 million viewers, while it is second only to ABC's "Modern Family' among the ad-coveted younger demographic of 18-49-year-olds.

CBS sells 30-second spots in "Men' for more than $200,000, according to media buyers, generating more than $3 million per episode. Kantar Media reports that the show grossed CBS more than $155 million in ad revenue last season alone.

And "Men' also is the network's linchpin on Monday nights, helping to launch successful comedies including "The Big Bang Theory' and most recently "Mike & Molly" (both from "Men" co-creator and executive producer Chuck Lorre).

There are currently only two new episodes of "Men" that have not yet aired, and while CBS will save on license fees if production remains shut down, the loss of new "Men" will certainly impact the overall performance of its Monday night lineup.

In a statement released to THR on Sunday, CBS again expressed concern for Sheen's well-being but sought to distance the network from any potential deleterious effect of the actor's behavior.

"Looking forward, the financial impact of the shutdown is not material to CBS," the statement says. "Any ratings declines will be more than offset by the reduced programing costs for episodes lost this season. We will begin to address the scheduling issues this week. The network is strong and deep with hit series; we're not reliant on one show. In addition, 'Two and a Half Men' has always performed well in repeats, and we have the option of ordering additional episodes of other popular comedies on the network."

At this point, the final two new episodes are scheduled to air February 7 and 14. (The first is fittingly titled "Three Hookers and a Philly Cheese steak," according to the CBS schedule.)

(Editing by Zorianna Kit)



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'Two and a Half Men' shutdown could cost millions

Mon Jan 31, 2011 2:58am EST

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - As Charlie Sheen heads back to a rehabilitation facility, weeks of salacious headlines are now giving way to a steep financial price for the star's behavior.

In fact, sources tell The Hollywood Reporter that if "Two and a Half Men" is forced to shut down permanently, it could jeopardize as much as $250 million in domestic syndication revenue for producer Warner Bros. Television and millions more in lost ad revenue for CBS.

In its eighth season, "Men" remains the most-watched comedy on television, averaging 14.7 million viewers, and is second only to ABC's "Modern Family" among the ad-coveted younger demographic of 18-49-year-olds. CBS sells 30-second spots in "Men" for more than $200,000, according to media buyers, generating more than $3 million per episode. Kantar Media reports that the show grossed CBS more than $155 million in ad revenue last season alone.

And "Men" also is the network's linchpin on Monday nights, helping to launch successful comedies including "The Big Bang Theory" and most recently "Mike & Molly" (both from "Men" co-creator and executive producer Chuck Lorre). There are currently only two new episodes of "Men" that have not yet aired, and while CBS will save on license fee if production remains shut down, the loss of new "Men" will certainly impact the overall performance of its Monday night lineup.

In a statement on Sunday, CBS again expressed concern for Sheen's well-being but sought to distance the network from any potential deleterious effect of the actor's behavior.

"Looking forward, the financial impact of the shutdown is not material to CBS," the statement said. "Any ratings declines will be more than offset by the reduced programing costs for episodes lost this season. We will begin to address the scheduling issues this week. The network is strong and deep with hit series; we're not reliant on one show. In addition, 'Two and a Half Men' has always performed well in repeats, and we have the option of ordering additional episodes of other popular comedies on the network."

At this point, the final two new episodes are scheduled to air February 7 and 14. (The first is fittingly titled "Three Hookers and a Philly Cheesesteak," according to the CBS schedule.)

For Warner Bros. Television, the stakes are arguably higher. Domestic syndication deals are on tap to bring in nearly $2 billion for the first two syndication cycles that extend through the 2020-21 season. That's in addition to foreign and DVD sales revenue.

Sheen signed a new two-year deal reportedly worth close to $2 million per episode for Seasons 8 and 9. But no one knows how long the actor will stay in rehab this time. (A stint last year barely interrupted the show's production schedule, with "Men" finishing Season 7 with 22 episodes rather than the planned 24). If Sheen's well-documented demons force a shutdown for the remainder of the current eighth season as well as the ninth season, industry sources estimate that Warner Bros., which has already packaged those seasons on current syndication deals, could lose as much as $250 million. Warner Bros. declined further comment Sunday.

But the studio might soon have to re-examine those rich syndication deals. WBTV first sold "Men" in syndication to Tribune Broadcasting and Sinclair Broadcast Group in 2006 for license fees of about $2 million in cash and an additional $2 million per episode in barter advertising, sources said. Last year, reruns also began airing on FX for another $850,000 per episode. Today, "Men" is the No. 1 syndicated comedy in households and the 25-54 demo.

"It's one of the greatest success stories ever in syndication," one industry insider said. "It's just an enormous hit. It's been so exposed and yet it continues to do so well."

That's why in November, the companies announced a second cycle of that deal extending through the 2020-21 season and encompassing the current eighth and ninth seasons of the show. And while Warner Bros. still has more than seven seasons of "Men," the potential loss of 32 episodes off of that deal, or a license period about 12 months shorter, is not insignificant.

There also is the future syndication revenue that will be left on the table if the show ends this season. "Seinfeld," which finished its run in 1998, continues to perform well in syndication, and has reportedly racked up close to $3 billion in domestic syndication so far. In making the announcement about the second-cycle syndication deal for "Men" in November, Sean Compton, president of programing for Tribune Broadcasting, alluded to the future prospects of "Men."

The show, Compton said, "was an immediate game-changer that significantly elevated the performance of our stations, and we have never looked back. This is one of those rare shows -- like 'Friends' and 'Seinfeld' -- that will continue to deliver for decades."



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Sunday, January 30, 2011

Hollywood actors honor "King's Speech"

LOS ANGELES | Sun Jan 30, 2011 11:11pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Oscars front-runner "The King's Speech" won the top prize at the Screen Actors Guild Awards on Sunday, giving the British royals drama yet another boost four weeks ahead of Hollywood's biggest night.

The film took the prize for best ensemble cast, the guild's equivalent of the best picture Oscar.

While SAG's top honor has a spotty record as an Oscar barometer -- with a success rate of about 50 percent -- "The King's Speech" has been on a roll in the past week, winning the top prizes from both Hollywood's directors and producers.

The winners of SAG's individual acting awards mirrored the results at the recent Golden Globes and the Critics' Choice Movie Awards, further reducing the likelihood of much surprise when the Oscars are handed out in Hollywood on February 27.

British actor Colin Firth, who stars in "The King's Speech" as stammering wartime monarch King George VI, was named best actor. Natalie Portman was named best actress for her role as an unhinged ballerina in "Black Swan."

The supporting prizes went to a pair of actors from "The Fighter," a fact-based boxing drama: Christian Bale as a crackhead former boxing hero and Melissa Leo as a feisty, blue-collar matriarch.

"The King's Speech" triumphed over "Black Swan," "The Fighter," the Facebook drama "The Social Network" and the lesbian family comedy "The Kids Are All Right." It picked up a leading 12 Oscar nominations on Tuesday, including best picture, director and actor.

Firth, previously best known for romantic comedies such as "Bridget Jones' Diary," thanked his "dream cast." Australian actor Geoffrey Rush, an Oscar nominee for his role as the reluctant king's unconventional speech therapist, said the movie was a true example of ensemble acting.

"We have such a roll call of extraordinary heavy hitters," said Rush.

Portman, 29, trained for months for her role in "Black Swan," a melodrama set in the New York ballet world. She recently became pregnant by one of the movie's co-stars.

The Screen Actors Guild also honors performances in television. HBO's new Prohibition-era series "Boardwalk Empire" took best cast ensemble for a drama, while its star Steve Buscemi won for his role as a corrupt politician.

Emmys favorite "Modern Family" won for best comedy ensemble, and 89-year-old former "Golden Girl" Betty White was a popular winner for her role as a sassy caretaker in the new comedy "Hot in Cleveland."

Julianna Margulies made it two in a row for what she called the "role of a lifetime" as a buttoned-up lawyer in the legal drama "The Good Wife," and Alec Baldwin won for the fifth straight year for his role as a network executive in the comedy "30 Rock."

(Additional reporting by Nichola Groom. Editing by Dean Goodman)



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Hollywood actors honor "King's Speech"

LOS ANGELES | Sun Jan 30, 2011 11:11pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Oscars front-runner "The King's Speech" won the top prize at the Screen Actors Guild Awards on Sunday, giving the British royals drama yet another boost four weeks ahead of Hollywood's biggest night.

The film took the prize for best ensemble cast, the guild's equivalent of the best picture Oscar.

While SAG's top honor has a spotty record as an Oscar barometer -- with a success rate of about 50 percent -- "The King's Speech" has been on a roll in the past week, winning the top prizes from both Hollywood's directors and producers.

The winners of SAG's individual acting awards mirrored the results at the recent Golden Globes and the Critics' Choice Movie Awards, further reducing the likelihood of much surprise when the Oscars are handed out in Hollywood on February 27.

British actor Colin Firth, who stars in "The King's Speech" as stammering wartime monarch King George VI, was named best actor. Natalie Portman was named best actress for her role as an unhinged ballerina in "Black Swan."

The supporting prizes went to a pair of actors from "The Fighter," a fact-based boxing drama: Christian Bale as a crackhead former boxing hero and Melissa Leo as a feisty, blue-collar matriarch.

"The King's Speech" triumphed over "Black Swan," "The Fighter," the Facebook drama "The Social Network" and the lesbian family comedy "The Kids Are All Right." It picked up a leading 12 Oscar nominations on Tuesday, including best picture, director and actor.

Firth, previously best known for romantic comedies such as "Bridget Jones' Diary," thanked his "dream cast." Australian actor Geoffrey Rush, an Oscar nominee for his role as the reluctant king's unconventional speech therapist, said the movie was a true example of ensemble acting.

"We have such a roll call of extraordinary heavy hitters," said Rush.

Portman, 29, trained for months for her role in "Black Swan," a melodrama set in the New York ballet world. She recently became pregnant by one of the movie's co-stars.

The Screen Actors Guild also honors performances in television. HBO's new Prohibition-era series "Boardwalk Empire" took best cast ensemble for a drama, while its star Steve Buscemi won for his role as a corrupt politician.

Emmys favorite "Modern Family" won for best comedy ensemble, and 89-year-old former "Golden Girl" Betty White was a popular winner for her role as a sassy caretaker in the new comedy "Hot in Cleveland."

Julianna Margulies made it two in a row for what she called the "role of a lifetime" as a buttoned-up lawyer in the legal drama "The Good Wife," and Alec Baldwin won for the fifth straight year for his role as a network executive in the comedy "30 Rock."

(Additional reporting by Nichola Groom. Editing by Dean Goodman)



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British actor Henry Cavill cast in Superman movie

LOS ANGELES | Sun Jan 30, 2011 1:56pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - British actor Henry Cavill, will finally get to don Superman's cape in the new Man of Steel movie, its distributor said on Sunday, almost a decade after he failed to make the cut for the previous film.

Cavill, 27, will play the dual roles of mild-mannered newspaperman Clark Kent and his high-flying alter ego in the film, which Warner Bros. will release in December 2012. Its formal title has not been announced yet.

Zack Snyder ("300") will direct from a script written by David S. Goyer and based on a story that Goyer developed with "Inception" director Christopher Nolan, who will serve as a producer.

Cavill is perhaps best known for his role as Charles Brandon, the brother-in-law of Henry VIII, in the royal drama "The Tudors." He was a main contender for "Superman Returns" when Joseph "McG" Nichol was attached as director. But when McG exited the project in 2004 and Bryan Singer signed on, Brandon Routh was subsequently cast.

Singer's film, released in 2006, grossed about $391 million at the worldwide box office, a disappointment given its reported $215 million cost. An executive at Time Warner Inc-owned Warner Bros. later said the film "didn't quite work ... in the way that we wanted it to."

Cavill, born in the Channel Islands, is the latest actor with British ties to take on the role of an iconic American superhero. Andrew Garfield, born in Los Angeles but raised in England, was last year cast as the lead in a reboot of the "Spider-Man" franchise, which is due out in July 2012.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; Editing by Eric Beech)



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British actor Henry Cavill cast in Superman movie

LOS ANGELES | Sun Jan 30, 2011 1:56pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - British actor Henry Cavill, will finally get to don Superman's cape in the new Man of Steel movie, its distributor said on Sunday, almost a decade after he failed to make the cut for the previous film.

Cavill, 27, will play the dual roles of mild-mannered newspaperman Clark Kent and his high-flying alter ego in the film, which Warner Bros. will release in December 2012. Its formal title has not been announced yet.

Zack Snyder ("300") will direct from a script written by David S. Goyer and based on a story that Goyer developed with "Inception" director Christopher Nolan, who will serve as a producer.

Cavill is perhaps best known for his role as Charles Brandon, the brother-in-law of Henry VIII, in the royal drama "The Tudors." He was a main contender for "Superman Returns" when Joseph "McG" Nichol was attached as director. But when McG exited the project in 2004 and Bryan Singer signed on, Brandon Routh was subsequently cast.

Singer's film, released in 2006, grossed about $391 million at the worldwide box office, a disappointment given its reported $215 million cost. An executive at Time Warner Inc-owned Warner Bros. later said the film "didn't quite work ... in the way that we wanted it to."

Cavill, born in the Channel Islands, is the latest actor with British ties to take on the role of an iconic American superhero. Andrew Garfield, born in Los Angeles but raised in England, was last year cast as the lead in a reboot of the "Spider-Man" franchise, which is due out in July 2012.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; Editing by Eric Beech)



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All eyes on SAG awards as Oscars loom

LOS ANGELES | Sun Jan 30, 2011 8:02am EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hollywood's A-list turns out on Sunday for the Screen Actors Guild Awards, honoring 2010 film and television performances just one month before the Oscars.

Britain's Colin Firth, seen as a front-runner for his role as a stammering monarch in "The King's Speech," and nominees Annette Bening, Natalie Portman, Amy Adams, Nicole Kidman and Jeff Bridges are among those expected at the Los Angeles ceremony.

Some 120,000 actors in the U.S. film and TV industry pick the Screen Actors Guild winners, who are seen as top contenders at the February 27 Oscars because actors make up the largest voting group among members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

The guild does not hand out prizes for best movie. But its top prize of best cast ensemble should narrow down a close race for the movie industry's highest honors between Facebook movie and Golden Globe winner "The Social Network," and "The King's Speech," which has a leading 12 Oscar nominations.

Ballet thriller "Black Swan," boxing drama "The Fighter" and lesbian family movie "The Kids Are All Right" are also competing for SAG's best cast trophy.

SAG best actress nominee Portman, 29, who plays an unhinged ballerina in "Black Swan," is thought to be neck and neck with Bening for her performance as a lesbian mom whose partner cheats on her with a man. Both took home Golden Globes this month.

Firth has swept the Hollywood awards season so far and earned an Oscar nomination for his role as shy King George VI -- the father of current British monarch Queen Elizabeth -- who fought to overcome an embarrassing stutter in the 1930s.

Jesse Eisenberg, who portrays Facebook creator Mark Zuckerberg in "The Social Network," is also nominated best actor at SAG, along with 2010 Oscar winner Jeff Bridges for western "True Grit," James Franco for "127 Hours" and veteran Robert Duvall for the independent film "Get Low."

Firth's co-stars Helena Bonham Carter and Geoffrey Rush are nominated in supporting categories, along with three of the cast of "The Fighter" -- Melissa Leo, Amy Adams and Christian Bale.

The guild also honors performances in television. This year the cast of musical series "Glee" will defend its 2010 award for best TV comedy cast, while stylish advertising drama "Mad Men" must fend off a challenge from HBO's lavish new Prohibition-era series "Boardwalk Empire."

Best individual TV nominees include Michael C. Hall ("Dexter"), Steve Buscemi ("Boardwalk Empire"), Julianna Margulies ("The Good Wife"), Steve Carell ("The Office"), Betty White ("Hot in Cleveland"), Chris Colfer ("Glee"), and Tina Fey ("30 Rock").

(Editing by Xavier Briand)



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Saturday, January 29, 2011

"Like Crazy" wins top drama film award at Sundance

PARK CITY, Utah | Sat Jan 29, 2011 11:50pm EST

PARK CITY, Utah (Reuters) - Love story "Like Crazy" and assisted suicide documentary "How to Die in Oregon" won the top awards at the Sundance Film Festival on Saturday, putting both on the list of must-see independent movies for 2011.

"Like Crazy," directed by Drake Doremus, picked up the jury prize for best drama with its tale of an American woman and British man who fall in love for the first time but move away from each other, testing their relationship.

Doremus, accepting his award, said it is "about love never dying and being with you for the rest of your life." The movie also earned a special prize for its actress, Felicity Jones.

The documentary winner, "How to Die in Oregon," has been among the most talked about movies at Sundance 2011, with its examination of assisted suicide and its footage of a terminally ill woman taking an overdose of drugs and literally dying on camera.

Special juries of industry professionals vote on winners, and those are considered the top prizes, but audiences also vote for their favorites.

The Audience Award for best drama went to "Circumstance," which tells of two Iranian teenagers who fall in love but are not allowed to be together due to cultural influences.

"The cast and the crew have given up a lot to do this (movie) because we believe in the story, and we believe in human rights and artistic expression," said "Circumstance" director Maryam Keshavarz when accepting her trophy.

The Audience Award for documentary was given to "Buck," a revealing tale of animal trainer Buck Brannaman, who was the inspiration for the film "The Horse Whisperer."

Other top prizes went to John Foy, director of documentary "Resurrect Dead: The Mystery of the Toynbee Tiles," and to Sean Durkin for directing drama "Martha Marcy May Marlene."

LOOK OUT ART HOUSES

Sundance, which is backed Robert Redford's Sundance Institute for filmmaking is the largest U.S. gathering for independent movies, and winners here will go on to become some of the most talked about films in art houses.

Last year's Sundance jury winners included drama "Winter's Bone" and documentary "Restrepo," and both are nominated this year for Oscars.

Sundance 2011 has proven to be exceptionally strong, audiences and filmmakers seem to agree. "This year, what has excited me, is I think the quality is increasing in diversity and is increasing in depth" of artistry, Redford told Reuters.

He said that three years ago, the Sundance Institute set out to get back to its roots of supporting alternative voices in cinema and he felt like this year that strategy paid off.

In addition to prizes for U.S. films, Sundance also gives awards in world cinema. The Danish/Norwegian co-production "Happy, Happy," about a woman engaging in an extramarital affair, won the jury prize for best drama, and Afghanistan war film "Hell and Back Again," was the jury's pick for best documentary.



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"Like Crazy" wins top drama film award at Sundance

PARK CITY, Utah | Sat Jan 29, 2011 11:50pm EST

PARK CITY, Utah (Reuters) - Love story "Like Crazy" and assisted suicide documentary "How to Die in Oregon" won the top awards at the Sundance Film Festival on Saturday, putting both on the list of must-see independent movies for 2011.

"Like Crazy," directed by Drake Doremus, picked up the jury prize for best drama with its tale of an American woman and British man who fall in love for the first time but move away from each other, testing their relationship.

Doremus, accepting his award, said it is "about love never dying and being with you for the rest of your life." The movie also earned a special prize for its actress, Felicity Jones.

The documentary winner, "How to Die in Oregon," has been among the most talked about movies at Sundance 2011, with its examination of assisted suicide and its footage of a terminally ill woman taking an overdose of drugs and literally dying on camera.

Special juries of industry professionals vote on winners, and those are considered the top prizes, but audiences also vote for their favorites.

The Audience Award for best drama went to "Circumstance," which tells of two Iranian teenagers who fall in love but are not allowed to be together due to cultural influences.

"The cast and the crew have given up a lot to do this (movie) because we believe in the story, and we believe in human rights and artistic expression," said "Circumstance" director Maryam Keshavarz when accepting her trophy.

The Audience Award for documentary was given to "Buck," a revealing tale of animal trainer Buck Brannaman, who was the inspiration for the film "The Horse Whisperer."

Other top prizes went to John Foy, director of documentary "Resurrect Dead: The Mystery of the Toynbee Tiles," and to Sean Durkin for directing drama "Martha Marcy May Marlene."

LOOK OUT ART HOUSES

Sundance, which is backed Robert Redford's Sundance Institute for filmmaking is the largest U.S. gathering for independent movies, and winners here will go on to become some of the most talked about films in art houses.

Last year's Sundance jury winners included drama "Winter's Bone" and documentary "Restrepo," and both are nominated this year for Oscars.

Sundance 2011 has proven to be exceptionally strong, audiences and filmmakers seem to agree. "This year, what has excited me, is I think the quality is increasing in diversity and is increasing in depth" of artistry, Redford told Reuters.

He said that three years ago, the Sundance Institute set out to get back to its roots of supporting alternative voices in cinema and he felt like this year that strategy paid off.

In addition to prizes for U.S. films, Sundance also gives awards in world cinema. The Danish/Norwegian co-production "Happy, Happy," about a woman engaging in an extramarital affair, won the jury prize for best drama, and Afghanistan war film "Hell and Back Again," was the jury's pick for best documentary.



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Bruno Mars to plead guilty to cocaine possession

LOS ANGELES | Fri Jan 28, 2011 9:25pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Pop singer Bruno Mars will plead guilty to a charge of possessing cocaine in Las Vegas last September and receive probation, among other sentencing requirements, according to a media report on Friday.

Clark County District Attorney David Roger told the Las Vegas Review Journal that Mars will be sentenced to a year of probation, pay a $2,000 fine, perform 200 hours of community service and attend drug counseling.

Mars, 25, rose to the top of the pop charts in 2010 with "Nothin' on You," his collaboration with rapper B.o.B. He co-wrote Travie McCoy's "Billionaire" and collaborated with Cee-Lo Green on Grammy-nominated song "F*ck You" before scoring a solo hit with the ballad "Just the Way You Are." More recently his "Grenade" has been topping music charts.

But 2010 was marred by his September arrest in which a bathroom attendant at Las Vegas' Hard Rock Hotel saw Mars, whose real name is Peter Hernandez, with "a baggy of white powder," according to a police report at the time.

The powder was later tested and found to be cocaine.

Roger told the Las Vegas Review Journal that if Mars is able to complete his sentencing without getting into further trouble, he can withdraw his plea and the case will be dismissed. The newspaper said that type of sentencing was common in minor, first-time drug possession cases.

Mars had been due in court in Clark County, where Las Vegas is located, for a February 4 preliminary hearing, but he will waive that appearance and a new court date will be scheduled where he will be expected to enter the guilty plea.

(Editing by Zorianna Kit)



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Friday, January 28, 2011

Charlie Sheen back in rehab, TV show on hold

LOS ANGELES | Fri Jan 28, 2011 8:18pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "Two and A Half Men" actor Charlie Sheen checked into rehab again on Friday, causing production on his top-rated TV comedy to shut down for the second time in a year.

A day after being hospitalized following reports of a 36-hour drug and drink-fueled party at his home, Sheen, 45, "voluntarily entered an undisclosed rehabilitation center", his spokesman Stan Rosenfield said.

"He is most grateful to all who have expressed their concern," Rosenfield said, adding that Sheen had asked for privacy and that no additional information will be provided.

It is the actor's third stint in rehab in 12 months.

Broadcaster CBS, and Warner Bros. Television, which makes the show, said production on "Two and A Half Men" -- the No. 1-rated TV comedy in the United States -- was temporarily suspended as a result.

"We are profoundly concerned for his health and well-being, and support his decision," they said in a statement.

Sheen, the highest paid actor on U.S. television, was rushed to a hospital with severe abdominal pains on Thursday. He left that night and was earlier said to be planning a return to the set of his TV show next Tuesday. But those plans changed.

It was not clear on Friday how long Sheen would remain in rehab but a typical stay is 28 days. A Warner Bros. spokesman said 16 of the 24 scheduled episodes for the TV season ending in May 2011 had been taped, with 8 remaining to be filmed.

HOLLYWOOD BAD BOY

Sheen reportedly earns about $27.5 million a year for his role as a womanizing bachelor on "Two and A Half Men," which is seen by some 15 million viewers weekly.

The show is a huge source of revenue for Warner Bros. and CBS, the most-watched U.S. network, and it has remained popular despite the well-publicized incidents of increasingly bad behavior by Sheen.

Production on "Two and A Half Men" was suspended in February 2010 when Sheen checked into rehab in what was described as a "preventative measure".

The actor was again ordered to rehab last August after pleading guilty to attacking his wife in an alcohol-fueled argument the previous December. He also spent time in rehab in 1998 after being hospitalized for a drug overdose.

In October 2010, New York police found Sheen drunk in a trashed hotel room with a naked porn star. His spokesman said at the time he had an allergic reaction to medication.

In early January, media reports said he was partying hard in Las Vegas and came close to missing his show's set call.



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Demi Lovato out of rehab, return to TV show uncertain

LOS ANGELES | Fri Jan 28, 2011 8:17pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Disney Channel teen star Demi Lovato has finished a three-month stay in rehab but has not yet decided when or whether to return work on her "Sonny With a Chance" TV show.

A source close to Lovato, 18, said the singer and actress returned to Los Angeles earlier this week.

Back in November, she had pulled out of a concert tour and entered a rehab facility to get treatment for what were described as "emotional and physical issues."

Lovato had fought eating disorders, was bullied at school, and had struggled with cutting in the past, her spokeswoman said at the time.

The future of her TV show "Sonny with a Chance", in which Lovato plays a comedy actress, was unclear on Friday.

For now she "will continue to focus first and foremost n her well-being," the source said.

A Disney Channel spokeswoman said that "Demi's management will inform us when she is able to return to work."

In Lovato's absence, writers on "Sonny with a Chance" have been working on sketches for "So Random" -- a show within a show on "Sonny". Disney Channel said that "So Random" was being developed as a full series and production started earlier this week.

Lovato got her break as the star of the 2008 Disney Channel movie "Camp Rock" and has since released two hit albums. She dated teen heart-throb Joe Jonas in 2010, and was on a Latin American tour with the Jonas Brothers before abruptly pulling out in November 2010.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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Demi Lovato out of rehab, return to TV show uncertain

LOS ANGELES | Fri Jan 28, 2011 8:17pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Disney Channel teen star Demi Lovato has finished a three-month stay in rehab but has not yet decided when or whether to return work on her "Sonny With a Chance" TV show.

A source close to Lovato, 18, said the singer and actress returned to Los Angeles earlier this week.

Back in November, she had pulled out of a concert tour and entered a rehab facility to get treatment for what were described as "emotional and physical issues."

Lovato had fought eating disorders, was bullied at school, and had struggled with cutting in the past, her spokeswoman said at the time.

The future of her TV show "Sonny with a Chance", in which Lovato plays a comedy actress, was unclear on Friday.

For now she "will continue to focus first and foremost n her well-being," the source said.

A Disney Channel spokeswoman said that "Demi's management will inform us when she is able to return to work."

In Lovato's absence, writers on "Sonny with a Chance" have been working on sketches for "So Random" -- a show within a show on "Sonny". Disney Channel said that "So Random" was being developed as a full series and production started earlier this week.

Lovato got her break as the star of the 2008 Disney Channel movie "Camp Rock" and has since released two hit albums. She dated teen heart-throb Joe Jonas in 2010, and was on a Latin American tour with the Jonas Brothers before abruptly pulling out in November 2010.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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Bruno Mars bounces Britney from No. 1 singles slot

Fri Jan 28, 2011 1:32am EST

NEW YORK (Billboard) - Bruno Mars returned to the No. 1 slot on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart Thursday, ending Britney Spears' one-week reign.

Mars' "Grenade" logged a third nonconsecutive week at the top, having alternated between Nos. 1 and 2 over the past six weeks. Spears' "Hold It Against Me" tumbled to No. 6, as a hefty 55% slide in download sales more than offset a gain in radio airplay.

Katy Perry's former No. 1 "Firework" rose one to No. 2, rapper Wiz Khalifa's "Black and Yellow" jumped two to No. 3, Enrique Iglesias' "Tonight (I'm Lovin' You)" rose two to No. 4, and Rihanna's "What's My Name?" slipped one to No. 5.

Kesha's "We R Who We R" held at No. 7, Pink's "Raise Your Glass" at No. 8, and the Black Eyed Peas' "The Time (Dirty Bit)" at No. 9. Singer/rapper Pitbull's "Hey Baby (Drop It to the Floor)" jumped 10 places to No. 10.

At No. 79, Zac Brown Band's "Colder Weather" led a list of three songs new to the Hot 100. James Blunt entered at No. 94 with "Stay the Night," and alternative/punk band Yellowcard took the last slot with "For You, and Your Denial."

Justin Bieber's "Never Say Never," featuring Jaden Smith, re-entered at No. 85 after peaking at No. 33 during the summer. The song is being reworked to radio as an accompanying single to Bieber's 3D documentary concert film of the same name opening in theaters February 11.



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Charlie Sheen hospitalized after wild party

LOS ANGELES | Thu Jan 27, 2011 8:29pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Charlie Sheen, America's highest paid TV actor, was hospitalized with severe abdominal pains on Thursday after he reportedly laughed too hard at the television during a marathon party.

In the latest apparent instance of rabble-rousing that has threatened production of his CBS hit comedy "Two and A Half Men," Sheen was carried by stretcher to an ambulance early on Thursday morning.

Sheen's spokesman, Stan Rosenfield, told Reuters the actor has a long-standing hernia condition, although he was not sure if that was the direct cause of his latest hospitalization.

"All I know is, he was having severe abdominal pains and went to the hospital," he said.

But a friend of Sheen's told celebrity TV show "Extra" that the pains were the result of a hernia injury that worsened when the 45-year-old Hollywood bad boy laughed too hard at a television show. It was not known what the show was.

"I'm not dying", Sheen was said to have told his friend Steve Bordersen, according to "Extra."

Rosenfield said Sheen's father, "West Wing" actor Martin Sheen, and his mother, Janet Templeton, were at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

Celebrity website TMZ.com said that actress Denise Richards, the second of Sheen's three former wives, was also at the hospital.

TMZ said emergency services were called to Sheen's Los Angeles-area house after a noisy party that had started late Tuesday.

TMZ said one of the guests claimed that a "briefcase full of cocaine" was delivered to the house at one point. Asked for comment, Rosenfield said, "I don't believe it." But he added he had no way of knowing since he was not present.

Sheen reportedly earns about $27.5 million for his starring role as a womanizing bachelor on "Two and a Half Men," the No. 1 comedy on U.S. television with some 15 million weekly viewers.

But his personal issues, including stints in rehab, an admitted penchant for porn stars and prostitutes, and a 2009 attack on his wife, have made as many headlines.

Sheen's "Two and A Half Men" co-star Jon Cryer told chat show host Conan O'Brien on Wednesday that he was never sure what to expect.

"It's always a little weird because ... the stuff you hear is just unbelievable. I mean like, I'm checking TMZ, as I do everyday, to know if I have to go to work at all," Cryer said.

Earlier this month, CBS executives said they were highly concerned about Sheen, but added that at work he behaved in a professional manner and that "Two and A Half Men" would continue.

Sheen was convicted in August for a Christmas Day 2009 attack on his third wife and was ordered to rehab.



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Thursday, January 27, 2011

Charlie Sheen hospitalized in LA

LOS ANGELES | Thu Jan 27, 2011 7:14pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Actor Charlie Sheen, star of the most-watched comedy on U.S. television, was rushed to a Los Angeles hospital with severe abdominal pains on Thursday, his spokesman said.

"All I know is, he was having severe abdominal pains and went to the hospital," Sheen's spokesman Stan Rosenfield said in a statement.

Rosenfield told Reuters that he had gone to the hospital to see the star of "Two and a Half Men" but was told the actor was sleeping. He added that Sheen's father, actor Martin Sheen, and his mother Janet Templeton, were on their way to the hospital.

Celebrity website TMZ.com said the actor's second wife Denise Richards was also at the hospital, where unspecified tests were being carried out on the actor.

It was the latest in a string of incidents in Sheen's personal life -- his assault conviction last year, stint in rehab, and recent reports of hard drinking, partying, and drug use -- that have caused concern for executives at broadcaster CBS, which airs "Two and a Half Men".

Sheen, 45, is the highest paid TV actor in Hollywood, and "Two and a Half Men" is No. 1 comedy on U.S. TV, raking in revenue for CBS and the show's makers at the Warner Bros. film and TV studio, a unit of Time Warner Inc.

TMZ.com said Sheen was taken from his Los Angeles area home on a stretcher and rushed by ambulance to the hospital after a 911 emergency call was placed.

The website said the call followed a noisy party at Sheen's house on Wednesday night. Two women left the house as Sheen was taken out at 7 am on Thursday morning, TMZ said.

Earlier this month, executives at CBS said they were highly concerned about Sheen, but added that at work he behaved in a professional manner and that "Two and A Half Men" would continue. Sheen plays a womanizing bachelor on the comedy.

Sheen was convicted last year for a December 2009 attack on his, then third wife in Aspen, Colorado, and he was ordered to drug and alcohol rehab.

In October, he was briefly hospitalized in New York when police found him acting drunk and incoherent in his room in the company of a porn star. His spokesman said at the time he had a bad allergic reaction to medication. Media reports said he had trashed his hotel room.

Two week ago, TMZ.com and other celebrity media outlets reported Sheen was at it again, partying hard in Las Vegas with porn stars and coming close to being late for rehearsals in Los Angeles for his TV show.

Sheen has five children from three marriages and he signed up in May 2010 for two more seasons of "Two and Half Men." No filming is scheduled this week for the show.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant and Zorianna Kit; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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"Black Swan" jewelry box among SAG auction items

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Charlie Sheen in hospital with stomach pains: report

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"American Idol" dominates ratings in second week

Thu Jan 27, 2011 1:01pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Executives U.S. network Fox are breathing a sigh of relief this morning.

The network dominated Wednesday night with the second week of "American Idol" averaging a 9.2 rating in the 18-49 demographic and 25.2 million viewers. But more importantly, the two-hour "Idol" (8-10 p.m.) was only down 5% in the demo compared to last Wednesday's premiere.

Last year, the third telecast of "American Idol" dropped 14% in the demo. Of course, the tenth season opener last Wednesday was also down 18% in the demo (9.7 rating) compared to the 2010 opener.

ABC and CBS tied for a distant second on the night averaging a 2.1 demo rating each. ABC had back-to-back reruns of "The Middle" (which averaged a 2.0 in the demo with 6.8 million viewers from 8-9 p.m.) followed by reruns of "Modern Family" (2.6, 7.3 million) and "Cougar Town" (2.1, 5.0 million).

At 10 p.m., new drama "Off the Map" (1.8, 5.0 million) was down 14% in the demo compared to last week's episodes, for its lowest rating since its premiere three weeks ago.

Paula Abdul's CBS reality competition show "Live to Dance" continues to languish, finishing fourth at 8 p.m. with a 1.1 demo rating and 4.7 million viewers overall. However that's actually up 10% compared to last week.

The news was better for CBS at 9 p.m.; a new episode of "Criminal Minds" built substantially on its paltry lead-in (3.2, 12.8 million) to take second in the hour, while "Blue Bloods" continued to perform well in its new Wednesday time slot, finishing first at 10 p.m. (2.0, 12 million).

NBC was fourth on Wednesday averaging a 1.4 demo rating with 4.8 million viewers overall. At 8 p.m., "Minute to Win It" (1.4, 5.0 million) was down 13% week-to-week, while "Chase" (1.2, 4.1 million) was up 20%. And "Law & Order: SVU" was third at 10 p.m. averaging a 1.7 rating with 5.4 million viewers.

(Editing by Zorianna Kit)



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Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Penelope Cruz has son with Javier Bardem

MADRID | Wed Jan 26, 2011 7:17pm EST

MADRID (Reuters) - Spanish film star Penelope Cruz has given birth to a baby boy after marrying Oscar-winning actor Javier Bardem last summer, Cruz's spokeswoman said on Wednesday.

"Penelope and Javier welcomed their first son into their family last week. Both parents and baby are doing great," Cruz's New York publicist spokeswoman said in a statement.

The boy is Cruz's first child. Her spokeswoman did not say where the birth took place, but Spanish media said earlier that he was born in a Los Angeles hospital.

No other details were available.

Bardem, 41, won his third Oscar nomination on Tuesday for his role in Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's film "Biutiful". The actor took home an Academy Award for his best supporting actor role in the Coen brother's 2007 movie "No Country for Old Men,".

Cruz, 36, won an Oscar herself for her role in Woody Allen's 2008 movie "Vicky Cristina Barcelona."

The couple has known each other for 20 years but rumors of a romance arose during the filming of "Vicky Cristina Barcelona," in which Bardem also performed.

(Reporting by Teresa Larraz in Madrid and Jill Serjeant in Los Angeles,)



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MTV stands by racy teen drama "Skins"

LOS ANGELES | Wed Jan 26, 2011 7:42pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Viacom's MTV said on Wednesday it was standing by its controversial teen series "Skins" despite an exit of advertisers, a 50 percent slump in audience its and calls for a government pornography probe.

"Skins," an edgy new drama based on a British TV series of the same name, features a group of teens who dabble in drink, drugs and underage sex. Some of the largely unknown actors are as young as 15.

"The show is not canceled. The next episode is going ahead on Monday," an MTV spokeswoman told Reuters, responding to a media report the show was about to be axed.

Taco Bell, Subway, General Motors, Wrigley, Schick, H&R Block, Footlocker and L'Oreal have either pulled commercials from "Skins" or placed the series on a "do not buy" list in the last week.

Red Bull and skin care marketer Zeno Hot Spot ran ads in the latest episode on Monday, along with movie promotions from several Hollywood studios.

The move followed calls by a parents watchdog for a U.S. government investigation into possible violations of laws on the sexual exploitation of minors. U.S. laws ban the visual depiction of children or teens under 18 years of age involved in sexually explicit conduct.

Audiences for Monday's second episode dropped by half to 1.6 million U.S. viewers from the 3.3 million who watched the heavily promoted January 17 debut.

MTV said a fall-off in audiences for the second episode of a series are common and noted that the "Skins" audience was in line with that of other popular teen TV dramas "Gossip Girl" and "Vampire Diaries."

"'Skins' has earned the loyalty of fans across the globe for its thoughtful and honest portrayal of teen life today. An internationally acclaimed scripted drama, the show has been honored with a long list of prestigious awards. MTV stands by the U.S. adaptation of 'Skins' and the vision of its creator Bryan Elsley," MTV said in a statement.

MTV has declined to comment specifically on advertisers pulling out of the show but has said it has an "ongoing dialogue" with companies about the best fit for the various shows on the cable network.

The Hollywood Reporter on Tuesday cited an industry source as estimating that the loss of advertising could cost MTV $2 million an episode.

Elsley, meanwhile, said the show was a "very serious attempt to get to the root of young people's lives" and that the truth of how teens sometimes behave "can be a little painful to adults and parents."

Writing in the Huffington Post earlier this week, Elsley added: "Our approach is not careless. We've created a supportive and protective environment for everyone working on the show."

(Editing by Todd Eastham)



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"King's Speech" gets royal treatment at Oscars

BEVERLY HILLS, California | Wed Jan 26, 2011 2:55pm EST

BEVERLY HILLS, California (Reuters) - "The King's Speech" reigned supreme in Hollywood on Tuesday as Oscar voters bestowed 12 nominations on the British drama, including best picture, actor and director.

The film, revolving around wartime monarch King George VI's struggle to overcome a crippling stammer, led a field packed with commercial and critical hits.

"True Grit," a Western remake about a young girl's brave quest to track down her father's killer, received 10 nominations despite performing poorly in key critics awards. The film's writers/directors/producers, Joel and Ethan Coen, accounted for three of those nominations.

The Facebook drama, "The Social Network," the early favorite during awards season, received eight nominations, tying with the groundbreaking sci-fi thriller "Inception," one of 2010's biggest movies.

All will vie for best picture, a 10-film field rounded out by "Black Swan," "The Fighter," "The Kids Are All Right," "127 Hours," "Toy Story 3" and "Winter's Bone."

Initial consensus among critics indicated a tight race for the top prize between Columbia's "Social Network" and Weinstein Co's "King's Speech," with Paramount's "True Grit" a possible spoiler.

The films' respective studios will ramp up their campaigning in the lead-up to the 83rd annual awards show on February 27. Actor Kevin Spacey, a "Social Network" executive producer, said talk of a bitter contest was "a silly conversation."

"You guys like the horse race. I enjoy the work," he told Reuters.

INDIE DRAMA 'WINTER'S BONE' SURPRISES

As in recent years there was little surprise or controversy among the leading contenders.

Perhaps the most notable omission was that of "Inception" director Christopher Nolan, despite universal acclaim for his bold vision setting a heist thriller in the subconscious.

"As any of the other people on 'Inception' will tell you, our job would not have been possible without Chris' amazing vision," said Guy Hendrix Dyas, the film's Oscar-nominated production designer.

Observers were pleasantly surprised by the four nominations for the indie film "Winter's Bone," a gritty murder-mystery that earned just $6 million during its limited release at the North American box office and is out on DVD.

Awards season favorite Colin Firth was nominated for his lead role in "The King's Speech" as the father of the current monarch, Queen Elizabeth.

His co-stars were also nominated for their supporting roles in the Weinstein Co. release: Helena Bonham Carter, as George's wife, the future Queen Mother; and Australian actor Geoffrey Rush as the king's unorthodox speech therapist.



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UK university awards first Beatles studies degree

LONDON | Wed Jan 26, 2011 12:58pm EST

LONDON (Reuters) - A Canadian woman has become the first person in the world to graduate with a masters degree in Beatles studies.

Former Miss Canada finalist, Mary-Lu Zahalan-Kennedy was one of the first 12 students to sign up for the Liverpool Hope University course on the Fab Four when it began in 2009 and was the first to graduate, the university said on Wednesday.

"I am so proud of my achievement," Zahalan-Kennedy said. "The course was challenging, enjoyable and it provided a great insight into the impact the Beatles had and still have to this day across all aspects of life."

The launch of the unique masters degree in Beatles, Popular Music and Society was a world first when it took its first class. Zahalan-Kennedy was the first to accept her degree in person from the university.

The course looks at the studio sound and composition of the Beatles and how Liverpool helped to shape their music. Students also examine the significance of their music and how it helped to define identities, culture and society.

Mike Brocken, founder and leader of the Beatles Master of Arts course at Liverpool Hope University, said the postgraduate degree makes Zahalan-Kennedy a member of a select group of popular music experts.

"Mary-Lu now joins an internationally recognized group of scholars of popular music studies who are able to offer fresh and thought-provoking insights into the discipline of musicology," he said.

(Reporting by Paul Casciato, editing by Steve Addison)



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Tuesday, January 25, 2011

"King's Speech'"gets royal treatment at Oscars

BEVERLY HILLS, California | Tue Jan 25, 2011 4:37pm EST

BEVERLY HILLS, California (Reuters) - "The King's Speech" reigned supreme in Hollywood on Tuesday as Oscar voters bestowed 12 nominations on the British drama, including best picture, actor and director.

The film, revolving around wartime monarch King George VI's struggle to overcome a crippling stammer, led a field packed with commercial and critical hits.

"True Grit," a Western remake about a young girl's brave quest to track down her father's killer, received 10 nominations despite performing poorly in key critics awards. The film's writers/directors/producers, Joel and Ethan Coen, accounted for three of those nominations.

The Facebook drama, "The Social Network," the early favorite during awards season, received eight nominations, tying with the groundbreaking sci-fi thriller "Inception," one of 2010's biggest movies.

All will vie for best picture, a 10-film field rounded out by "Black Swan," "The Fighter," "The Kids Are All Right," "127 Hours," "Toy Story 3" and "Winter's Bone."

Initial consensus among critics indicated a tight race for the top prize between Columbia's "Social Network" and Weinstein Co's "King's Speech," with Paramount's "True Grit" a possible spoiler.

The films' respective studios will ramp up their campaigning in the lead-up to the 83rd annual awards show on February 27. Actor Kevin Spacey, a "Social Network" executive producer, said talk of a bitter contest was "a silly conversation."

"You guys like the horse race. I enjoy the work," he told Reuters.

INDIE DRAMA 'WINTER'S BONE' SURPRISES

As in recent years there was little surprise or controversy among the leading contenders.

Perhaps the most notable omission was that of "Inception" director Christopher Nolan, despite universal acclaim for his bold vision setting a heist thriller in the subconscious.

"As any of the other people on 'Inception' will tell you, our job would not have been possible without Chris' amazing vision," said Guy Hendrix Dyas, the film's Oscar-nominated production designer.

Observers were pleasantly surprised by the four nominations for the indie film "Winter's Bone," a gritty murder-mystery that earned just $6 million during its limited release at the North American box office and is out on DVD.

Awards season favorite Colin Firth was nominated for his lead role in "The King's Speech" as the father of the current monarch, Queen Elizabeth.

His co-stars were also nominated for their supporting roles in the Weinstein Co. release: Helena Bonham Carter, as George's wife, the future Queen Mother; and Australian actor Geoffrey Rush as the king's unorthodox speech therapist.



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Oscar extends warm welcome to newcomer nominees

LOS ANGELES | Tue Jan 25, 2011 5:23pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Child star Hailee Steinfeld hit the jackpot with her first feature film, Australia's Jacki Weaver had to wait 40 years and Jesse Eisenberg joined the elite club of Oscar nominees on Tuesday by bringing to life the publicity-shy creator of Facebook.

Oscar's red carpet will be brimming with newcomers in February as eight of the 20 actors nominated for the movie industry's highest honors are first timers. And in close-knit Hollywood, three of the five directors competing for an Academy Award this year are also new arrivals.

"I grew up watching the (Academy) awards and never thought this would be my reality," said an elated Darren Aronofsky, nominated for directing the ballet thriller "Black Swan".

"I'm pretty freaking happy! The dog jumped over the moon. It's a very competitive year, especially for directors," said David O. Russell, another first-time director nominee for the true life boxing drama "The Fighter".

Britain's Tom Hooper, 38, better known for directing TV dramas, also makes his first trip to the Academy Awards on Feb 27, courtesy of front-runner "The King's Speech".

Proving some stars really are born overnight, Hailee Steinfeld is getting her first taste of Oscar glory at age 14, playing vengeful Mattie Ross in western "True Grit".

The California teenager had shot only a handful of commercials and TV roles before being chosen for "True Grit" from thousands of young actresses in a nationwide search.

Steinfeld said she was asleep when she was nominated for best supporting actress at dawn on Tuesday.

"I woke up to hear my parents screaming in the other room. It's very, very surreal. when I woke up I thought, I've got to be dreaming. This is crazy," she told Reuters.

EISENBERG, LAWRENCE, FRANCO

Eisenberg, who earned a nod playing Facebook creator Mark Zuckerberg in "The Social Network", said he took the role because "the script was wonderful. The character was endlessly fascinating -- a very frightened and frightening character."

Unknown a year ago, "Winter's Bone" actress Jennifer Lawrence, 20, found herself in the company of veterans Nicole Kidman, Natalie Portman and Annette Bening. Lawrence plays a teenager facing eviction who journeys through her drug-infested community to find her missing father in the low-budget drama.

"Spider-Man" star James Franco barely had to move to win the first Oscar nomination of his 13-year career. Franco, 32, plays a man trapped for days in a canyon with his armed pinned against a rock after a climbing accident in "127 Hours".

Actors Christian Bale and Mark Ruffalo are also newcomers in their respective roles as a drug addicted boxer in "The Fighter" and a sperm donor dad in "The Kids Are All Right."

Weaver, 63, may be a household name in her native Australia, but she is finally finding fans in Hollywood thanks to her part as the tough matriarch of a Melbourne crime family in the low-budget movie "Animal Kingdom".

"I'm elated to the point of euphoria. I feel like I'm in a walking dream. I'm so relieved that all those millions of Australians that wanted me to get this nomination aren't disappointed. Happy Australia Day," Weaver said of her best supporting actress nod.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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Doctor pleads not guilty in Michael Jackson's death

LOS ANGELES | Tue Jan 25, 2011 1:43pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Michael Jackson's personal physician declared "I am an innocent man" as he pleaded not guilty to a charge of involuntary manslaughter on Tuesday, two weeks after he was ordered to stand trial for his role in the pop star's 2009 death.

The judge presiding over the case against Dr. Conrad Murray also set a trial date for March 28 and scheduled a hearing for February 7 on a number of procedural issues, including a possible decision on whether television coverage of the trial will be allowed.

The 57-year-old cardiologist, who had his license to practice medicine suspended as a condition for his bail, faces up to four years in prison if convicted.

Murray was with the pop singer when he died at age 50 at a rented Los Angeles home on June 25, 2009, from what coroners ruled was an overdose of the powerful anesthetic propofol and a cocktail of sedatives.

The doctor was ordered to stand trial earlier this month after a six-day preliminary hearing in which witnesses testified that Murray was slow to call for help on the morning of Jackson's death, and that he tried to hide evidence of propofol in the singer's bedroom.

Defense lawyers have suggested that the "Thriller" singer may have injected himself with the fatal dose of propofol, which he was using as sleep aid while rehearsing for a series of planned comeback concerts in London.

Involuntary manslaughter, to which Murray pleaded not guilty, is defined as unintentional killing without malice and is a lesser charge than murder.

"Your honor, I am an innocent man. I therefore plead not guilty," Murray told Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor.

Lawyers told the judge the trial could last four to eight weeks.

Although Murray was ordered to be in court when jury selection is due to begin on March 28, he is excused from attending the February 7 pretrial hearing unless he wishes to be present.

"Dr. Murray still has a medical license in Texas and Nevada, and he's going to keep treating patients until that changes," his lawyer Ed Chernoff said.

Chernoff told reporters that Murray looks forward to presenting his side of the story but said his legal team has not decided whether the doctor will testify in his own defense.

(Reporting and writing by Steve Gorman; editing by Will Dunham)



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Monday, January 24, 2011

Former MSNBC anchor Olbermann says career not dead

LOS ANGELES | Mon Jan 24, 2011 11:17pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Former MSNBC anchor Keith Olbermann, who abruptly left his top-rated show at the U.S. cable news network last week, said on Monday that "reports of the death of my career are greatly exaggerated."

In his first comments since his departure, the liberal broadcaster, who often butted heads with MSNBC management, took to Twitter to share his thoughts with fans.

"My humble thanks to all Friends of Keith for the many kind words," he wrote on the social network, before paraphrasing a quote from Mark Twain. "The reports of the death of my career are greatly exaggerated."

It was not immediately clear how Olbermann planned to revive his career. He had two years left on his contract, when he signed off for the last time on his "Countdown with Keith Olbermann" political affairs program on Friday.

Neither Olbermann nor MSNBC gave a reason for the move, which came as Comcast Corp is finalizing a deal to acquire a 51 percent stake in MSNBC's NBC Universal parent from General Electric Co. A Comcast spokesman said his company had nothing to do with Olbermann's departure.

Olbermann left just over two months after he was briefly suspended by MSNBC for giving money to three Democratic politicians during the congressional election campaign, including U.S. Representative Gabrielle Giffords, who recently survived an assassination attempt in Arizona.

Olbermann's program helped define MSNBC as a liberal voice in cable television and a counterpoint to the conservative thrust of News Corp-owned Fox News, the ratings leader. MSNBC is now second in the ratings, ahead of Time Warner Inc's CNN.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis and Yinka Adegoke)



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Kardashian sisters continue to draw high TV ratings

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Oprah Winfrey says speechless at news of half-sister

LOS ANGELES | Mon Jan 24, 2011 7:20pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Oprah Winfrey on Monday revealed that she had a half-sister that she only found out about late last year, saying the news left her speechless.

Welcoming single mother of two Patricia to an emotional reunion on her daytime talk show, Winfrey said her mother Vernita Lee kept the birth in 1963 a secret and gave the baby up for adoption.

Winfrey, 56, said she was only nine years old and living with her father when her mother became pregnant.

"Imagine my shock just a few months ago, at the end of October, when I found out I have another sister living just 90 minutes away," Winfrey said.

"For the most part my life has been an open book and on the show I think I've seen about everything. And I thought nothing could surprise me anymore, but let me tell you I was wrong," she told viewers.

Patricia, whose last name was not revealed, said she had been raised in foster homes since age 7.

Patricia said she first learned she was Winfrey's half sister in 2007, but kept it a secret because she knew it would create a media frenzy.

"She (Patricia) never once thought to go to the press. She never even thought to sell her story," Winfrey said.

Winfrey's personal life has been well documented. She was born in Mississippi to unmarried parents and raised by her grandmother early in her childhood. During her teen years she was shuttled between parents and was the victim of abuse. She became pregnant at the age of 14 but her son died shortly after birth.

But Winfrey went on to become the most influential woman on U.S. television, hosting a talk show that is in its 25th year, and launching her own television network on January 1.

Patricia, who now lives in Milwaukee, and Winfrey met the first time at Thanksgiving last November, they said.

Asked by Winfrey why she had given Patricia up for adoption and kept the baby a secret for so long, Vernita Lee said that she had felt unable to take care of her.

"I thought it was a terrible thing for me to do," Lee said.

(Reporting by Bob Tourtellotte, Editing by Patricia Reaney)



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Christina Aguilera to sing Super Bowl national anthem

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Music mood muted despite Lady Gaga, more big albums

LONDON | Mon Jan 24, 2011 10:06am EST

LONDON (Reuters) - When even Lady Gaga can't lift the gloom, you know the music industry is in the doldrums.

Despite a release schedule that includes the reigning queen of pop, Britney Spears, R.E.M., U2 and Coldplay, record labels are bracing themselves for another tough year.

Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment, Warner Music Group and EMI -- the market leaders -- struggled in 2010 as they have for a decade, hampered by online piracy, shrinking retail space and an inability to adapt to technological change.

Global recorded music sales overall slumped by nine percent last year, and figures out last week estimated that some 19 of 20 tracks downloaded from the Internet were illegal.

The scale of piracy and other challenges suggest that no matter which artists are competing for chart supremacy, 2011 sales are virtually guaranteed to extend their long slide.

"I don't see any indication that record sales are going to improve, because it's got nothing to do with the quality of the music," said U.S. music critic Robert Christgau in a blunt assessment of the business prospects.

That does not make release schedules irrelevant, with companies still hopeful their artists will rise to the top and repay their time and investment.

Top of the pile is widely tipped to be "pop provocateur" Lady Gaga with "Born This Way," due out on May 23. Not one to shy away from the hype, the singer has called it "my absolute greatest work I've ever done."

Combined sales of her "The Fame," "The Fame Monster" and a remix album have reached 15 million, a hefty figure even in pre-crisis days, and with more touring planned, Forbes predicts the 24-year-old could earn over $100 million this year.

"She's just hitting her stride artistically and commercially now," entertainment attorney Bernie Resnick told Forbes. "We're only seeing the beginning."

ROCK'S SHOT IN THE ARM

Other established solo female artists vying for attention include 29-year-old Spears, who releases a new album in March. Lead single "Hold It Against Me" has just debuted atop the U.S. singles chart with impressive sales.

Canada's Avril Lavigne is back on March 8 with "Goodbye Lullaby," and there are hopes of new material at last from Amy Winehouse, whose troubled personal life has overshadowed the success of Grammy-winning 2006 hit "Back to Black."

The struggling rock genre is set to get a welcome shot in the arm in 2011 with the first album from The Strokes since 2006's "First Impressions of Earth."

The acclaimed New Yorkers tentatively titled "Angles" is due to hit stores on March 22, and, according to NME magazine's Jamie Fullerton "it's almost make or break time for Julian (Casablancas) and co. with album four" after so long away.



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Sunday, January 23, 2011

Fitness guru Jack LaLanne dies at 96 in California

LOS ANGELES | Sun Jan 23, 2011 10:34pm EST

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Jack LaLanne, a one-time sugar-holic who became a television fitness guru preaching exercise and healthy diet to a generation of American housewives, died on Sunday at age 96, his daughter said.

LaLanne, who became U.S. television fixture in his close-fitting jumpsuit starting in 1959 and came to be regarded as the father of the modern fitness movement, succumbed to pneumonia following a brief illness at his home in Morro Bay, along the California's central coast.

"He was surrounded by his family and passed very peacefully and in no distress ... and with the football game on Sunday, so everything was normal," Yvonne LaLanne, 66, told Reuters.

She said her father had remained active until a few months ago, including the taping of a recent public TV special.

Well into his 90s, LaLanne exercised for two hours a day. A typical workout would be 90 minutes of weightlifting and 30 minutes of swimming, changing his routine every 30 days.

He preached the gospel of exercise, raw vegetables and clean living long after his contemporaries had traded in their bicycles for nursing home beds.

"I can't die," LaLanne would say. "It would ruin my image."

LaLanne was born Francois Henri LaLanne on September 26, 1914, in San Francisco, the son of French immigrants. He said he grew into a "sugar-holic" who suffered terrible headaches, mood swings and depression.

In desperation when he was 14, LaLanne's mother took him to hear health lecturer Paul Bragg, who urged followers to exercise and eat unprocessed foods.

The young LaLanne swore off white flour, most fat and sugar and began eating more fruits and vegetables. By age 15, he had built a backyard gym of climbing ropes, chin-up bars, sit-up machines and weights.

Soon, LaLanne, who was only 5 feet, 6 inches tall, was playing high school football. He added weight-lifting to recover from a football injury and was hooked.

LaLanne opened the nation's first modern health club in Oakland, California, in 1936. It had a gym, juice bar and health food store. Soon there were 100 gyms nationwide.

Without bothering with patents, LaLanne designed his own exercise equipment, which he had built by a blacksmith. In 1951, he started using television to get the first generation of couch potatoes to try jumping jacks, push-ups and sit-ups.

"The Jack LaLanne Show," which went national in 1959, showed housewives how to work out and eat right, becoming a staple of U.S. daytime television during a 34-year run.

He also was known for a series of promotional fitness stunts. At age 45, in 1959, he did 1,000 push-ups and 1,000 chin-ups in 86 minutes. In 1984 a 70-year-old LaLanne had himself shackled and handcuffed and towed 70 boats 1.5 miles in Long Beach Harbor.

LaLanne said in 2007 his focus was always to help people the way Paul Bragg had helped him, adding, "Billy Graham is for the hereafter, I'm for the here and now!"

(Additional reporting by Diane Bartz; Editing by Bill Trott and Chris Wilson)



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