Categories
James Bond

Fingers crossed!!

Next James Bond Skedded For Nov. 2012?
There’s still no official word. But Iím hearing from 007 insiders that production should start on the next James Bond movie — “Bond 23” — towards the end of next year for release November 2012. Makes sense since MGM’s future is now sorting itself out what with the pre-packaged bankruptcy getting approval, and Spyglass taking over studio filmmaking, and star Daniel Craig finishing his film commitments. The actor began work on the Hollywood remake of the Swedish original The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo as soon as he completed shooting Cowboys and Aliens in a nifty bit of schedule coordination between two studios and James Bond rights holders Barbara Broccoli and Michael Wilson. Adding to the mix is that yet another James Bond videogame which had been held up because of the uncertainty recently got the go-ahead. Meanwhile, the latest 007 vidgame is for sale this Christmas.
It’s still not clear who will distribute the next bond. Deadline’s Mike Fleming reported last month that, if MGM isn’t a distributor, the next installment of James Bond will be “a jump ball”. Expect Sony (which distributed Casino Royale) to battle it out with Warner Bros and Fox, but Paramount could emerge in the thick of it because of its close relationship with Spyglass over the film reboot of Star Trek and sequel.
The British newspapers also indicate Bond 23 may now be casting. Todayís Daily Mail reports that 007 producer Barbara Broccoli has been to see actor Russell Beale twice in his current West End play Deathtrap. Also, the Shakespearean actor is starring as King Lear for Bond 23 director Sam Mendes in a National Theatre production in 2012. And heís exec producing Shakespeareís History Plays for a new BBC TV season that Mendes is also overseeing. Beale told UK newspaper The Independent earlier this year that he’d already dropped a hint to Mendes that ìEvery actor wants to be in Bond. I’d love to be a baddie.”

Categories
People

Just imagine had he lived!!!

Lennonís last moments revealed
NEW YORK CITY — He held John Lennon’s heart in his hands in a vain attempt to massage it back to life. He broke the tragic news to Lennon’s disbelieving wife, Yoko Ono.
Thirty years after the assassination of former Beatle John Lennon, Dr. Stephan Lynn recalls the singer-songwriter’s final moments. He’s convinced that even today’s advanced medical techniques could not have saved Lennon from a killer’s bullets.
Incredibly, Lynn is the first member of the emergency room staff at Manhattan’s Roosevelt Hospital ever to speak publicly about the evening of Dec. 8, 1980.
Lynn, now 63, recalls the details with a surgeon’s precision. He had just completed his residency and was already head of the ER at the tender age of 33.
I met him at the same spot where Lennon was brought in on a policeman’s shoulder just before 11 p.m., suffering from four bullet wounds. Lynn had just returned home after a 13-hour shift when the hospital called him. He rushed back to work to find Lennon mortally wounded.
“I know that he was dead on arrival when he was brought to the emergency room,” said Lynn, who still works at Roosevelt Hospital. “He had no blood pressure, no pulse, he was not responsive.”
Lynn says the patient “looked nothing like John Lennon,” and he didn’t immediately realize that he was treating one of the most famous men on the planet. Reality only sunk in when Lynn saw Lennon’s ID cards in his wallet, and any lingering doubts were dashed when the unmistakable Yoko Ono rushed into the ER in a panic.
Duty and training kicked in and he did his best to save his famous patient.
“It all happened in 15 minutes,” he recalled. “We opened his chest, we found that his left chest was filled with almost half of the blood in his body. It had infinite numbers of holes.
“There was no way to repair all these blood vessels. We did transfuse blood and I held his heart in my hand to massage it with no results.”
Lennon was pronounced dead at 11:15 p.m. and a heavy silence descended over the emergency room.
Media circus
Meanwhile, 300 journalists and hundreds of fans gathered outside the hospital, Lynn ordered all medical instruments, sheets and blood-stained clothing to be destroyed. The medical file was sealed in a vault where it remains to this day.
Dr. Lynn is convinced that disgruntled fan Mark David Chapman’s bullets would have been deadly under any circumstances.
“I even think that if this patient would have been shot standing outside an operating room with cardiac surgeons and modern machines ready to go, nothing could have been done to resuscitate him,” said Lynn.
The bullets had caused irreparable damage, and Lynn says the fact that it was police, not paramedics, who carried Lennon into the emergency room, would have made no difference. The doctor said Lennon likely died in front of the Dakota, the apartment he shared with Ono.
“The police said he said a few words in the car, I always doubted that.”
Lynn’s next task was to tell Ono what had happened.
Denial
“She refused to accept her husband was dead for nearly five minutes,” Lynn recalled. “She was saying, ‘No it’s not possible, I was with him, you’re lying to me, it’s not true.’ I put my hands behind her head because I was scared she was going to (faint),” Lynn added.
She only accepted the truth when she was brought Lennon’s wedding band.
Ono requested that Lynn delay the death announcement for 30 minutes so that she could return home to break the news to their five-year-old son Sean.
Lynn’s encounter with John and Yoko on that fateful night had not been his first. He lived in the same neighbourhood as the couple and their children attended the same school. But he says he hasn’t seen Ono since the shooting.
“I don’t know what I would say to her,” Lynn said. “I’m not … a high point in her life.”
Lynn’s life was changed forever on that December evening. He recalls walking home at 3 a.m. the following morning, terrified that Chapman might not be the only crazed Lennon fan in New York.
“What if someone ran up to me and said, ‘You’re the doctor who didn’t save Lennon’?
“I felt threatened for a second. Today, I can’t help but think the world would have been a better place had he lived.”

Categories
People

I used to love this guy, but I am starting to love more and more respect for him. Smarten up, Kevin!!!

Kevin Smith lashes out at airline
Filmmaker Kevin Smith has lashed out at Virgin America airline staff after he was banned from a flight because he arrived late at a boarding gate.
The Clerks director checked in for his flight at New York’s John F. Kennedy Airport on Monday morning, accompanied by his wife Jennifer Schwalbach Smith and his pal Jason Mewes.
But they lost track of time and claim they failed to hear a public announcement calling the trio to the gate, arriving just eight minutes before the plane was due to take off.
The Virgin America representative, named as Manny, refused to hold the aircraft to allow them onboard – prompting Smith to blast the staff member and the airline’s customer service personnel for their lack of help.
In a rant on his website, Smith writes, “We pleaded with Manny (the unfriendly face of Virgin America JFK working the gate), pointing out the remaining time (there were still 8 minutes before scheduled departure), and pointing out that the jetway was still attached to the plane.
“As we tried to get Manny to realize our bags were under the plane and we’d been checked in for an hour, the jetway stayed in place. The plane wouldn’t pull back from the gate for another 15 minutes.”
Smith also cast doubt on whether their names were actually announced over the loudspeaker system.
He adds, “He (Manny) said he’d called for us over the p.a. system, but my wife’s name is SCHWALBACH – you say a name THAT distinctive over a loudspeaker, at least two people in an airport are gonna turn their heads: me & Jen Schwalbach. Well, without calling anybody a liar, it’s just REALLY hard to believe that p.a. call was actually made.”
Smith encountered further problems when he requested their bags be removed from the plane – insisting his wife needed medication that had been stored in the check-in luggage.
Staff were unable to help with his request and could only place the party on another, later Virgin America flight.
But the director’s angry missive soon caught the attention of Virgin America bosses – prompting them to offer him a full refund and three new tickets for his future travels.
Smith hit the headlines earlier this year, when he encountered flight trouble and was booted off a Southwest airlines plane because of his large size.

Categories
Awards

There have been more than a few movie tunes this year!!

A look at the year’s Oscar-contending movie songs
Oscar’s best song category sometimes feels like the field that gets no respect. Two years ago, only three songs were nominated, and the prior year much of the music recognized by the academy came from one film, Disney’s “Enchanted.” And this year, a long-standing tradition was done away with, as the contenders for best song did not perform on the telecast.
But what feels like a lack of attention from the academy isn’t reflected in the films themselves. The likes of Randy Newman, Christina Aguilera, Cher, Carrie Underwood and John Legend are among the many who have lent their vocals and musical talents to films this year. Below is a small sampling of some of this year’s contenders.
The Disney factor
Alan Menken is a veteran when it comes to delivering music to Disney films, but for “Tangled,” he had to retrain himself. A snappy digital update of the classic princess fairy tale “Rapunzel,” “Tangled” is a musical that isn’t song-driven. That meant few long expository songs with grand landscapes and colorful characters.
“Marrying the contemporary tone of the book to a classic Disney fairy-tale score was a challenge,” Menken says. “There was a tendency to want to put the kitchen sink in every song.”
With eight Oscars to his name, including awards for “Beauty and the Beast” and “Aladdin,” Menken is one of the company’s most decorated musicians. “Tangled” shows off his more stripped-down side, as Menken turned to folk heroes of the likes of Joni Mitchell and Jackson Browne for opening number “When Will My Life Begin.” “Tangled’s” younger fans can be forgiven, though, for hearing more Taylor Swift than Mitchell in the peppy acoustic guitar number.
“I wrote five numbers for the opening scene,” Menken says. “The one we used established a song reality, but it was compatible with the scene. It didn’t carry the scene. On a gut level, ’60s folk rock felt like a fresh, interesting place to go to.”
The meditative one
A.R. Rahman can do celebratory. American audiences saw a glimpse of his talents with “Slumdog Millionaire’s” “Jai Ho,” a festive and rousing Bollywood number. Working with director Danny Boyle once more for “127 Hours,” the Indian superstar was again called upon to marry song with a moment of triumph. Although his “If I Rise,” a collaboration with English pop artist Dido, strikes a more meditative tone this time.
As a character on the verge of falling victim to the elements, James Franco’s Aron Ralston summons a final burst of courage, turning recent memories of new acquaintances into dreams of better days to come. “Somebody was offering him something of a future,” Rahman says. “That gave him a hope and the energy to liberate himself.”
Light and ambient, “If I Rise” builds delicately, with Dido’s soft voice lending an angelic presence. With layer upon layer of guitar, the song has a magical feel, as it’s grounded in real instrumentation but not exactly organic, either.
Boyle, says Rahman, had one request.
“Danny said, ‘I want your voice too,’ so I had to put my voice on it,” Rahman says. “I initially wanted it to be just Dido, but the main character is a male voice. It’s a very simple tune, very innocent, very much from the heart.”
The unexpected anthem
Icelandic artist JÛn fiÛr Birgisson (stage name: JÛnsi) likely wouldn’t be thought of as the go-to-guy for a major animated film. Known best for his work in Sigur RÛs, JÛnsi has long been an architect of dreamy, technology-enhanced orchestral pop. In short, they’re compositions more fit for a serious score than a children’s film.
His solo work, however, has taken a more melodic approach, and that’s what Dean DeBlois, a Disney vet who co-directed Dreamworks’ “How to Train Your Dragon,” had in mind when he tapped the artist to write a song for the film. Of course, DeBlois had also directed the Sigur RÛs documentary, “Heima,” and no doubt had a sense that JÛnsi could pull off a magically uplifting rocker.
The cut, “Sticks and Stones,” was recorded largely by JÛnsi and his partner, Alex Somers, on an iMac in JÛnsi’s kitchen in Iceland. It’s an adrenalin rush of rhythms and digital textures — a stop-and-start four-minute workout that ends “How to Train Your Dragon” with an optimistic exclamation point.
“I saw the movie at a London screening, and I really liked it,” JÛnsi says. “I thought it would be more for kids, but I really enjoyed it and became excited. Then they needed the song quite quickly.”
JÛnsi, who says 2011 will be spent working on the next Sigur RÛs album, wrote most of the lyrics while watching the film, jotting down notes in the darkened screening room. “I knew the energy the song should be after seeing the movie,” JÛnsi says. “I recorded the melody for the song on my iPhone at the airport. I wanted to convey a feeling of freedom and relief. I wanted it to be a burst of energy.”
JÛnsi pauses and adds, ìThat sounds really cheesy.î
The star
If Davis Guggenheim’s education documentary “Waiting for ‘Superman’ ” didn’t exist, R&B crooner John Legend likely would have created it. In the midst of recording “Wake Up!” with hip-hop act the Roots, a project that sees the artists re-interpreting civil-rights era protest songs from the likes of Donny Hathaway and Bill Withers, among others, Legend wanted a documentary to accompany the album.
“The idea was to take all the artists that we covered from this album, ‘Wake Up!,’ and then go back to the cities where they grew up and the schools they went to,” Legend says. “We wanted to see what state the schools were in at this point.”
The artist’s manager met with Guggenheim to see whether he’d be interested in taking on such a film, discovering that Guggenheim already was working on a documentary that addressed issues facing today’s public school system. Legend asked to participate.
Legend cut the prayer-like “Shine” after seeing a rough cut of the film. It’s an unadorned ballad with an intricate piano arrangement, and it is topped with an impassioned vocal performance from Legend. By song’s end, Legend has practically sung himself hoarse.
“You are weeping by the point the song comes on,” Legend says. “It’s right at the end, and it’s somewhat hopeful, but it’s melancholy. That was on purpose. I didn’t want a rah-rah song. The chords are more optimistic, but the verses are more melancholy.”
The country heartbreaker
There’s a reason Gwyneth Paltrow promoted “Country Strong” by singing the title track at the Country Music Assn. Awards last month. Not only is it an uplifting, guitar-driven cut, but it’s also one that doesn’t contain any spoilers.
Coming later in the film is the more downbeat “Coming Home,” a glistening, bring-the-audience-to-its-knees Nashville ballad. The song is also sung by Paltrow’s character, Kelly Canter.
“There was a moment within the script where they were specifically asking for a song with the title ‘Coming Home,’ ” says Hillary Lindsey, one of four credited songwriters on the cut. “It was really interesting for me, since Gwyneth’s character is pretty dark and twisted, yet she’s also honest, raw and real. The song had to have quite a few layers to it.”
Bob DiPiero, Tom Douglas and Troy Verges round out the A-list songwriting team on “Coming Home.” Separately, the four have written for the likes of Faith Hill, Carrie Underwood, Swift and Tim McGraw, among others. “Coming Home” is a song that starts innocently enough but one that takes a wide-angle view toward heartbreak.
“We wanted a movie within the song,” Douglas says. “The song has a thematic arc. It starts at 35,000 feet, and then gets narrower and narrower and more specific…. We did want to start targeting a little the tragedy that was going to be awaiting Kelly. There’s a lot of heartache in this song.”
The legend
Diane Warren estimates she’s written about 20 songs for Cher. She counts “You Haven’t Seen the Last of Me,” a hearty rock ballad for “Burlesque,” among the strongest. Think of it, Warren says, as a bookend to the 1989 Cher-sung, Warren-penned hit, “If I Could Turn Back Time.”
“That moment in ‘Burlesque,’ when they’re about to take the club away, she’s defiant,” Warren says. “But I wanted to write something that was also Cher. We never see the last of Cher. She does the farewell tour that goes on 10 years, and we wouldn’t want it any other way. Cher is eternal.”
Much has been written about “Burlesque” being a vehicle for pop star Christina Aguilera, but it’s Cher, arguably, who sings the film’s heftiest number. “You Haven’t Seen the Last of Me” starts with just Cher and a piano but follows the vocalist as she reaches heights no one older than 60 has any business hitting.
“That’s Cher,” Warren says. “She’ll be 100 years old and in a wheelchair and still be better than all the 20-year-olds.”
The never-lose-hope, never-give-up anthem was written early for “Burlesque” but was almost cut from the film. Lobbying from Cher, says Warren, helped get it back in.
“She’s singing better now than she was when I worked with her back in the day,” Warren says. “This song is her truth. I think I tapped into who she is and where she is in her life. Also, a lot of people are going through really tough times right now. I think this is the kind of song that will resonate.”
The one that never had a shot
First off, the songs for Edgar Wright’s comic-book adaption “Scott Pilgrim vs. the World” were supposed to stink. Then the rock ‘n’ roll action-romance, though critically lauded, was a commercial disappointment. Awards recognition, therefore, is slim to none, yet one would still be hard-pressed to find a film this year that has given music a bigger role than “Scott Pilgrim.”
Local hero Beck was called upon by Radiohead producer Nigel Godrich to compose the songs for the film’s fictional garage band, Sex Bob-Omb. His mission, according to the artist: “We talked about bands where the sound was so distorted, and the mix was washed out with noise, where you canít really hear whatís going on … I’ve always had a fondness for the idea of rock ‘ní roll taken to an absurd extreme. Itís that sound you have in your head when youíre a kid and pick up a guitar.”
Early in the film, Beck’s “Garbage Truck” gets a showcase slot. The minute-and-a-half self-deprecating punk rock tune is seen in its near-entirety. It’s a cut that opens with a swampy sludge, and then gradually builds, walking the line between brilliance and trash.
Of course, Beck isn’t one to brag. “The lyrics to this were improvised on the microphone,” Beck says. “There was no time to sit and think and write things, so most of these songs were just improvised. I thought this was a throwaway song, to be honest. I was surprised they picked it.”
Sure to be overlooked
With LCD Soundsystem’s 2010 release “This is Happening,” James Murphy composed a set of expertly detailed dance pop that seemed to be anticipating a midlife crisis. Miscommunication and a lonely sense of nostalgia manage to worm their way into even the most revelrous of tracks. With Noah Baumbach’s “Greenberg,” Murphy was asked to score a film in which the main character is seemingly always on the verge of a nervous breakdown.
The cut, “Please Don’t Follow Me,” appears twice in the film, with the fully produced edition closing the movie. Even more fleshed out, “Please Don’t Follow Me” is a melancholy piano tune, with Murphy tapping his most vulnerable falsetto. The song eventually builds to a more uplifting, horn-enhanced trot, but almost peters out at first. Baumbach used a rough of the song earlier in the film, one that simply featured Murphy humming the melody. “It sounds noncommittal,” the director says of the demo.
“That was the first piece he wrote for the movie, and it was partially cut, so he was going off of instinct,” the director continues. “I kept trying that track in different spots, and it fit a later part of the movie when he’s mailing letters and doing errands. Thereís a jaunty sort of sadness to it.”
Also of note: Randy Newman gave his “You’ve Got a Friend in Me” an energetic rewrite for “Toy Story 3” with “We Belong Together,” Underwood has the ballad “There Is a Place for Us” in the latest Narnia flick, Janet Jackson has “Nothing” in Tyler Perry’s “Why Did I Get Married Too?” and John Hawkes’ ìBred and Butteredî wowed in “Winter’s Bone.”

Categories
Music

It is actually a very good collection of music.

Dave Grohl drums on Michael Jackson’s ‘new’ album
Foo Fighters’ Dave Grohl has been confirmed as the drummer on a song on Michael Jackson’s posthumous album.
Grohl plays drums on ‘(I Can’t Make It) Another Day’, which also features Lenny Kravitz on guitar, reports Musicweek.com. Other guests on ‘Michael’, which is released on Monday (December 13), include 50 Cent and Akon.
The album is made up of tracks from various recording sessions Jackson had started in the run-up to his death in June 2009. Closing track ‘Much Too Soon’ was written around the time of Jackson’s ‘Thriller’ album, but never used.
The tracklisting of ‘Michael’ is:
‘Hold My Hand’
‘Hollywood Tonight’
‘Keep Your Head Up’
‘(I Like) The Way You Love Me’
‘Monster’
‘Best Of Joy’
‘Breaking News’
‘(I Canít Make It) Another Day’
‘Behind The Mask’
‘Much Too Soon’

Categories
People

May he rest in peace!!

Mark Dailey of Citytv dies of cancer
Mark Dailey, Citytv’s longtime news anchor and the much-revered voice of the Toronto station, died Monday afternoon after battling cancer.
Citytv reported that Dailey died at Sunnybrook hospital. He was 57.
Dailey announced in the fall that he was suffering from kidney cancer, which ultimately spread to his lungs.
Known for his baritone delivery, Dailey’s voice was featured heavily in station promos and made him one of the most recognizable broadcast personalities in Toronto.
Born in Ohio on Aug. 1, 1953, Dailey worked as a police officer there before taking up journalism and joining CityPulse in 1979, where he produced and assigned news stories, the station said. Dailey also worked on the crime beat for a decade.
He had previously undergone a six-year fight with prostate cancer. In September, he revealed on air that he had been diagnosed with kidney cancer.
Dailey is survived by his wife, Kim, and his daughter, Nicole.

Categories
The Simpsons

Katy rocks!!

Katy Perry Gets Raunchy on “The Simpsons”
NEW YORK (Billboard) ñ Earlier this fall concerned parents considered singer Katy Perry’s play-date re-make of “Hot and Cold” with Elmo too risque to air on “Sesame Street.”
Well, if any of those parents saw Perry’s guest spot on last the December 5 episode of “The Simpsons,” the pop star may never set foot on “Sesame Street” again.
Perry guest-starred in a live action sequence of “The Simpsons” holiday episode Monday night as Moe the Bartender’s girlfriend.
The singer appeared in a skimpy red latex dress with cleavage galore and Simpsons characters’ faces plastered on her torso.
In the short scene, Perry delivers a sensual hug to Mr. Burns to improve his usual grumpy mood, after which he says, “I kissed a girl and I liked it,” referencing Perry’s breakout single.
The whole thing ended in a “Simpsons” take on the “12 Days of Christmas.”
While Perry’s usual demographic is accustomed to the singer’s revealing wardrobe choices, things got even racier as the show’s credits rolled. Puppet-sized Moe attempts to kiss human-sized Katy on the mouth but can’t reach. Instead he settles for her belly button, but apparently that was too far as well. “That’s not my belly button” says Perry with feigned shock as Moe buries his face between her legs, “but I didn’t say stop!”
We can only hope Elmo was in bed before this aired.

Categories
Awards

Congrats to them all!!

‘The King’s Speech’ wins 5 British Independent Film Awards including Best Picture
The 2010 British Independent Film Awards were handed out Sunday evening in London and Tom Hooper’s “The King’s Speech” dominated the night with five wins. The Oscar contender for best picture won best british independent film, best screenplay, best actor (Colin Firth), best supporting actress (Helena Bonham Carter) and best supporting actor (Geoffrey Rush).
Other notable winners included best actress recipient Carey Mulligan for “Never Let Me Go,” foreign film honoree “A Prophet” and three wins for Gareth Edwards’ indie genre flick “Monsters” including best director.
Carter and Liam Neeson were also given honorary awards at the ceremony.
Here’s a full list of the night’s winners:
Best British Independent Film: “The King’s Speech”
Best Foreign Independent Film: “A Prophet”
Best Director: Gareth Edwards, “Monsters”
Best Actress: Carey Mulligan, “Never Let Me Go”
Best Actor: Colin Firth, “The King’s Speech”
Best Supporting Actress: Helena Bonham Carter, “The King’s Speech”
Best Supporting Actor: Geoffrey Rush, “The King’s Speech”
Best Screenplay: David Seidler, “The King’s Speech”
Douglas Hickox Debut Director Award: Clio Barnard, “The Arbor”
Most Promising Newcomer: Joanne Froggatt, “In Our Name”
Best Documentary: “Enemies of the People”
Raindance Award: “Son of Babylon”
Best Achievement in Production: “Monsters”
Best Technical Achievement: “Monsters,” Visual Effects ñ Gareth Edwards
Best British Short: “Baby”
Special Jury Prize: “Jenne Casarotto”
Richard Harris Award: “Helena Bonham Carter”
Variety Award: “Liam Neeson”

Categories
Technology

Noooooooo!!!! not more changes!!!

Facebook’s new facelift plays up photos, friends
NEW YORK ñ Facebook is redesigning the profile pages of its 500 million-plus users to make it more of a reflection of their real lives and emphasize one of the site’s most popular features, photos.
Facebook said in a blog post Sunday the changes are meant to make it easier for users to tell their story ó who they are, where they work, their life philosophy and the most important people in their lives. The changes place a bigger emphasis on visuals, from photos to images of users’ interests.
A new biography section includes not just who you are and where you live but a set of the most recent photos that your friends have “tagged” you in. Previously users had to click on a tab to see the latest photos on a profile. Users can also feature important friends in their profile, while previously only random selection appeared. And in addition to listing their job, users can now add the projects they worked on. It’s all a move toward curating a more complete picture of a person, something that will likely appeal to Facebook’s advertisers. The company did not make any changes to its privacy policy as part of the redesign.
Facebook unveiled the changes ahead of an appearance on 60 Minutes by CEO Mark Zuckerberg Sunday evening. Zuckerberg, 26, talked about the profile page redesign, Facebook’s hard-working culture of all-night coding sessions, as well as his take on “The Social Network,” the movie about Facebook’s beginning that doesn’t cast him in a very flattering light.
“I think that they got every single T-shirt that they had the Mark Zuckerberg character wearing right. I think I actually own those T-shirts,” Zuckerberg told 60 Minutes’ Lesley Stahl in the interview.
“But I mean, there are hugely basic things that they got wrong, too,” he added. “(They) made it seem like my whole motivation for building Facebook was so I could get girls, right? And they completely left out the fact that my girlfriend, I’ve been dating since before I started Facebook.”
Asked about a Facebook IPO, Zuckerberg said “You know, maybe.”
“A lot of people who I think build start-ups or companies think that selling the company or going public is this endpoint,” he said. “Right, it’s like you win when you go public. And that’s just not how I see it.”
On Facebook, even small changes to users’ home pages tend to meet with protests from a small but vocal fraction of users who want things to stay the way they are. In an attempt to pre-empt this, Facebook is rolling out the changes slowly, letting users ó for the time being ó decide whether they want to display the new profile layout or the old one. The new layout will be available to all users by early next year, the company said.
The latest changes come as Facebook intensifies its competition with online search leader Google Inc. as the primary destination for anyone using the Internet. The changes streamline users profile pages so it’s easier to see the things that matter the most, rather than a chronological stream of the latest wall posts, links and photos they posted. Users can also see how their Facebook lives intertwine with their friends by clicking on a “See Friendship” link on the top right hand page of their friends’ profiles.
“You can see all the things that you have in common with that person,” Zuckerberg said. “And it’s just like, it gives you this amazing connection with that person in a way that the current version of the profile that we have today just doesn’t do.”

Categories
Movies

I saw “Black Swan” and it is very, very good!!!

Hairy vs. Harry: ‘Tangled’ wins weekend box office
LOS ANGELES ñ Hair has won out over Harry Potter at the weekend box office.
Mandy Moore’s animated musical “Tangled,” a new take on long-haired fairy-tale princess Rapunzel, sewed up the No. 1 spot with $21.5 million in its second weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday. That raised the Disney release’s domestic total to $96.5 million.
“Tangled” had debuted in second-place over Thanksgiving behind “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1,” which had been at the top of the box office the two previous weekends.
“Harry Potter” slipped to No. 2 this weekend with $16.7 million. The next-to-last chapter in the Warner Bros. franchise about the teen wizard lifted its domestic haul to $244.2 million.
Playing largely to family crowds, “Tangled” should hold on well through the holidays, said Chuck Viane, head of distribution for Disney.
“It’s not very often the second week of a movie that it ends up the No. 1 movie,” Viane said. “This will be one of those leggy movies that just keeps playing and playing.”
Business was off sharply after a brisk Thanksgiving weekend, which is one of the busiest periods of the year at movie theaters.
With just $88 million in overall receipts, this was Hollywood’s second-worst weekend of the year, behind the meager $81.8 million haul the weekend after Labor Day, according to box-office tracker Hollywood.com.
“It was a bad weekend,” said Paul Dergarabedian, analyst for Hollywood.com. “It just shows that people got a lot of their movie-going out of the way over that five-day Thanksgiving weekend, and this weekend, they went, `Ahh, we’ve seen it.'”
Overall revenues also were down from last year. The $88 million in revenue was off 11.5 percent compared to the same weekend in 2009, when “The Blind Side” led the box office with $20 million, according to Hollywood.com.
The weekend’s only new wide release, Rogue Pictures’ action tale “The Warrior’s Way,” was a dud with just $3.1 million. Playing in 1,622 theaters, “The Warrior’s Way” averaged a weak $1,881 a cinema, compared to $5,967 in 3,603 cinemas for “Tangled.”
Starring Kate Bosworth, “The Warrior’s Way” is a martial-arts adventure about an assassin hiding out in the Old West.
Natalie Portman’s ballet drama “Black Swan” had a huge debut in limited release, taking in $1.4 million in just 18 theaters, for a whopping average of $77,459 a theater.
Released by Fox Searchlight, “Black Swan” stars Portman as a dancer who begins to lose herself in delusion amid the pressures of preparing for the lead in Swan Lake. The film gradually expands into nationwide release through Christmas week.
Also in limited release, Jim Carrey and Ewan McGregor’s gay romance “I Love You Phillip Morris” opened solidly with $113,200 in six theaters, averaging $18,886.
Carrey stars as a scam artist who finds the love of his life (McGregor) in state prison. The movie gradually expands into wide release through early January.
Here are the estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Hollywood.com. Final figures will be released Monday.
1. “Tangled,” $21.5 million.
2. “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1,” $16.7 million.
3 (tie). “Burlesque,” $6.1 million.
3 (tie). “Unstoppable,” $6.1 million.
5. “Love & Other Drugs,” $5.7 million.
6. “Megamind,” $5 million.
7. “Due Date,” $4.2 million.
8. “Faster,” $3.8 million.
9. “The Warrior’s Way,” $3.1 million.
10. “The Next Three Days,” $2.7 million.