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R.I.P.

Layne Staley Cause of Death Determined
The Seattle coroner’s office has determined that Alice in Chains lead singer Layne Staley died of an overdose caused by a speedball – a fatal mixture of heroin and cocaine. The drugs were self administered. Staley officially died on April 5, coincidentally the anniversary of Nirvana lead singer Kurt Cobain’s suicide. Staley’s body decomposed for two weeks before anyone found him.

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Movies

More Best Of Lists

IT SAYS “WIRED”, NOT “WIERD”
Blade Runner topping Wired magazine’s list of the top 20 sci-fi films ever made

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Movies

But what about “Zoolander”!?!?

HOORAY FOR HOLLY GOODHEAD
“Breakfast at Tiffany’s” was voted the Best New York Film in an online poll sponsored by the Tribeca Film Fest. The Audrey Hepburn classic, which beat out runners-up Taxi Driver and Annie Hall, will be screened on the final day of the festival, May 12 at 8 p.m.

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Music

From the “Who Gives A Rat’s Ass” file

Rolling Stones To Release ‘Best Of’ To Coincide With Tour
The Rolling Stones’ World Tour will support a forthcoming two-CD “best-of” collection, Stones frontman Mick Jagger revealed on Tuesday (May 7th).
“We just last night finished the negotiations with all the different parties to put out a best-of Rolling Stones CD, which is two CDs going from 1963 to the present day,” he said. “And there will be all the sort of hits and all the well-known songs, and there will also be some new songs on that. So that will be coming out.”
Jagger added that the new songs have been written, but the band has yet to enter into a studio to record them. The unnamed songs will be tracked later this month, and should be ready for release in the early fall. The band hopes the new set will be released as close to the September 5 tour opener as possible.

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Music

In case you’ve been wondering whatever happened to that kid from “The Fresh Prince Of Bel Air”…

…Will Smith Prepares To Release New Single And Album
Multiplatinum recording artist and actor Will Smith is preparing to release “Black Suits Comin'” as the first single from his new album “Born To Reign,” which is scheduled to be released on June 25.
On July 3, a week following the album’s release, Columbia Pictures will debut Men In Black 2, Smith and Tommy Lee Jones’s sequel to their 1997 film Men In Black. Barry Sonnenfeld directed both films.
Smith’s 1997 song “Men In Black” reached Number One on Billboard’s Hot 100 Airplay chart, and was featured on the Men In Black soundtrack, as well as Smith’s album Big Willie Style.

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Music

I voted for “Weer All Crazee Now” by Slade!

‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ is UK’s Favorite
“Bohemian Rhapsody,” the record-breaking hit by rock band Queen, is Britain’s favorite single of all time, according to a poll published Wednesday.
The song beat John Lennon’s ballad “Imagine” to claim the top slot in a poll by “British Hit Singles,” published by Guinness World Records.
Accepting the award with Queen drummer Roger Taylor at London’s Dominion Theater, guitarist Brian May said the hit song “has become a classic phenomenon and one which no one will ever allow us to forget.
“Thank you, people, for the memory.”
David Taylor, editor of “British Hit Singles,” said Queen “is a band whose achievements are legendary. No band, apart from ‘The Beatles,’ has had more top 10 hit singles.”
“Bohemian Rhapsody,” a six-minute epic that first topped the music charts in 1975, made it to No. 1 again in 1991 when it was rereleased to raise funds for charity following the death of the band’s lead singer, Freddie Mercury ó the first single to top the charts twice in the same version.
It is also the only song to have hit the No. 1 spot twice at Christmas.
In all, the song has spent a total of 14 weeks at the top of the charts. Because of its complex harmonies it was difficult to reproduce and the band were unable to perform it live.
Half the top 10 songs listed in the poll are by Lennon and The Beatles: “Hey Jude” (No. 3); “Penny Lane/Strawberry Fields Forever” (No. 7); “Yesterday” (No. 9) and “Let It Be” (No. 10) all made it.
The most recent single in the top 10 is Robbie Williams’ “Angels” at No. 6. Abba is at No. 4 with “Dancing Queen,” followed by Madonna’s “Like a Prayer” at No. 5. “Wannabe” by the Spice Girls is at No. 8.
Guinness questioned more than 31,000 people for the poll.

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Technology

It stars Dougie Howser and the girl who sang that song “Stay.”

MTV Plans Spider-Man Cartoon
Singer-songwriter Lisa Loeb will be the voice of Spider Man’s girlfriend, Mary Jane Watson, in a new cartoon series about the superhero on MTV.
Loeb came into the limelight in 1994 with her hit song “Stay (I Missed You)” off the “Reality Bites” soundtrack. Her latest album “Cake and Pie” came out this year.
Former “Doogie Howser” star Neil Patrick Harris will be the voice of Peter Parker, also known as Spider-Man.
The series will premiere next winter.
Spider-Man made a record $114 million during its first weekend in the box office. The movie stars Tobey Maguire and Kirsten Dunst.

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Movies

I get to see it on Wednesday!

‘Star Wars’ Is King of Film Franchises
Its last installment proved a critical disappointment. Once the trendsetter on visual effects, it lost out in that category to an edgy upstart at the Academy Awards the last time around. Surrounded by fresh-faced film serials, it no longer holds clear claim as the year’s most anticipated movie.
“Star Wars” may have rusted a bit in the 25 years since Luke, Han, Leia and Obi-Wan blasted into theaters. Yet as “Star Wars: Episode II ó Attack of the Clones” arrives next week, George Lucas’ creation remains the Cadillac of film franchises, the surest sure thing that a blockbuster-minded movie industry can deliver.
Its previous chapters account for four of the top 13 grossing movies of all-time domestically. Fans camp out at theaters a month or more before a “Star Wars” film opens to be first in line to see it.
And consider “Star Wars: Episode I ó The Phantom Menace.” After waiting 16 years for the first prequel to the original trilogy, audiences almost universally found something to deride in “Phantom Menace,” a critical dud that sacrificed story to special effects and introduced the loathed buffoon Jar Jar Binks.
What other film franchise could produce a mediocre movie that disappoints the most loyal fans yet still rakes in more than $900 million worldwide and $431 million in the United States and Canada alone?
“Sure, the last movie was not what people hoped it would be,” said Barrie Osborne, a producer on “The Lord of the Rings” franchise and executive producer on “The Matrix,” which beat “Phantom Menace” on visual effects and two other categories at the Oscars for 1999.
“But I think everyone will want to see the new `Star Wars.’ It’s something we all grew up with, and the whole body of work is more powerful than any one of the films. This powerful, mythic story George originated way back still captures the imagination, and people want to see what happens next.”
In the past, “Star Wars” sequels or prequels clearly were the film events of the year. Given the record opening of “Spider-Man” and anticipation for this fall’s “Harry Potter” and “Lord of the Rings” sequels, “Star Wars” now has heavy competition for the title of most hotly awaited movie.
Unlike the 3,000-theater-plus launches of today’s Hollywood, with its fixation on huge opening weekends, the original “Star Wars” premiered on just 32 screens on Wednesday, May 25, 1977. The procedure then often was to start slowly, letting positive buzz on a film spread as the release widened to more theaters.
It worked perfectly on “Star Wars,” which distributor 20th Century Fox expanded to 43 screens by that Friday, with the film grossing $1.55 million over the four-day Memorial Day weekend, according to box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc.
As it expanded, its total take during that initial run hit $221.3 million, the equivalent of about $560 million when the 1977 average ticket price of $2.23 is adjusted for inflation. “Star Wars” was such a phenomenon that it took in $101 million more in four reissues within just five years after its debut.
With the 1997 special-edition releases of the original trilogy, the first film ó officially called “Star Wars: Episode IV ó A New Hope” ó has totaled $461 million domestically, second to “Titanic” at $601 million.
Including all reissues, “Episode V ó The Empire Strikes Back” is No. 13 at $290 million, and “Episode VI ó Return of the Jedi” is No. 9 with $309 million.
With the hype on “Phantom Menace” as the first “Star Wars” chapter since 1983, some Hollywood analysts had thought it would do better than its $431 million haul. Many found the story weak and the characters and dialogue flat compared with the first three films.
“The other movies were about defeating the empire and overcoming evil and living for the greater good,” said Tariq Jalil, writer-director of “A Galaxy Far Far Away,” a documentary examining “Star Wars” fandom that hits video stores two days before “Attack of the Clones” opens on May 16.
“As far as I can tell, `Phantom Menace’ was about taxes, which doesn’t lend itself to great emotional attachment,” said Jalil, referring to that installment’s trade-war conflict.
For all the criticism, “Phantom Menace” obviously offered something that audiences wanted, said Rick McCallum, producer of the current “Star Wars” trilogy.
“When you look at the difference between films that gross $100 million and $200 million, once you’re over that $175-$200 million mark, people have to love your film. That is the only thing that drives it,” McCallum said. “I couldn’t be happier with our $431 million gross. It’s a major achievement.”
“`Star Wars’ is one of the surest bets there is,” said Bill Warren, a science-fiction expert whose books include “Keep Watching the Skies!: American Science Fiction Movies of the ’50s.” “Why do people go see John Wayne movies? They’ve got John Wayne in them. People see `Star Wars’ movies because they’re full of `Star Wars’ stuff. There’s a familiarity and affection for the material.
“All the new movie has to be is a little better than `Phantom Menace’ and people will go bananas.”

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Music

We wish her well (Or do we?).

Mariah Carey Gets Own Label in Deal
Mariah Carey, who received a $28 million buyout after delivering one flop album for Virgin Records, has signed a new deal with Island/Def Jam that includes her own label, it was announced Wednesday.
The multi-platinum star has been without a label since January, when EMI, Virgin’s parent company, dropped her contract after her only disc for the label, “Glitter,” was a poor seller.
Since the split, several companies were reportedly bidding to sign the Grammy-winning singer, one of the most successful artists of all time, with hits such as “Vision of Love,” “Hero,” “Fantasy” and “Emotions.”
“Despite offers from many of our competitors, we are delighted that Mariah has chosen Island as the place to begin the next phase of her unprecedented career,” said Lyor Cohen, president and CEO of Island/Def Jam.
The company is home to stars such as Jay-Z, Willie Nelson, Ryan Adams, Ja Rule and Ashanti. It is part of Universal Music Group, which is owned by the conglomerate Vivendi Universal.
Carey has already begun recording her new disc, said Jerry Blair, a former executive at Columbia Records who has worked with Carey since the inception of her career.
“The record she’s working on is going to be a real wide-appeal record,” Blair told The Associated Press. “There’s no artist who is as successful a global artist. There is no artist that has as wide range of commercial appeal.”
Blair declined to put a financial figure on the new deal. Carey’s spokeswoman said the singer would not be available to comment.
Carey, 32, was an immediate commercial success when she made her self-titled debut for Columbia Records in 1990. The album went multi-platinum, as did all her other albums on the label, a division of Sony.
However, Carey became disenchanted with Sony after her divorce from Sony Music President Tommy Mottola, who had guided her career as president of Columbia.
She left Columbia last year and signed with Virgin in a much-hyped multi-album deal reported to be worth as much as $100 million. Her first disc, “Glitter,” was to be the soundtrack of her film project of the same name, her first starring role.
However, her career took a disastrous turn: After displaying erratic behavior in public, Carey was hospitalized for an emotional breakdown in August. She dropped out of the public eye, and both her disc and the movie were commercial failures.
In January, EMI, Virgin’s parent company, paid $28 million to void her contract. Since she had received $21 million when she was signed, Carey got $49 million for delivering one album.
Blair said Carey was in good spirits and “doing just incredibly well.”
He said she was not concerned that her recent troubles would hurt her career. She has a new film with Oscar-winner Mira Sorvino, titled “Wise Girls.” The film debuted at the Sundance film festival, and will be shown in the fall on HBO, Blair said.
He said Carey’s new label, as yet unnamed, would focus on her, but would eventually include other artists. Carey has also created a media company to handle publishing, film production and other projects.
“Setting up this company for her is really guaranteeing her legacy,” Blair said.

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People

I got an email from Eddie Van Halen today!

Is Van Halen, The Band, Still Alive?
Even though they have no recording contract it looks as if we haven’t heard the last from Van Halen. Eddie sent me a message in an email this morning:
Message From Eddie
I know I promised I’d get back to you and I’m sorry for the delay but I wanted to let you all know that I’ve just gotten a 100% clean bill of health – from head to toe. I wanted to share the good news with you immediately. And of course, I thank you all for all your good wishes and prayers along the way. Now it’s time to really get back to the music and fun…..so party on and you’ll be hearing from us very soon.
All my love,
Eddie
Of course, he also posted the same message on his website, so perhaps it wasn’t intended specifically for me. But I’m saving it anyway!
Either way, I wait with baited breath for the return of Van Halen. Join me, won’t you?