Partially funded by Kickstarter and courtesy of Comic-Con here’s a sneak peek of the 2014 release starring Kristen Bell, James Franco, and Gaby Hoffman.
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Partially funded by Kickstarter and courtesy of Comic-Con here’s a sneak peek of the 2014 release starring Kristen Bell, James Franco, and Gaby Hoffman.
By William Keck
No wishy-washy “maybe” or “Give me time” from Kate Beckett. In the September 23 premiere of ABC’s Castle, the detective (Stana Katic) will give Richard Castle (Nathan Fillion) a definitive response to his marriage proposal.
Whatever her response — and whether she decides to stay in New York or move to Washington, D.C., for a new job — expect a romantic season that will include a birth, a new love interest for one character and possibly a wedding. “Regardless of her answer, it is going to significantly change their relationship,” promises executive producer Andrew Marlowe.
As for the lovebirds’ pals, Ryan (Seamus Dever) becomes a dad in a special episode, and Lanie (Tamala Jones) and Esposito (Jon Huertas) face more relationship complications.
Read More Keck’s Exclusives: First Look: Castle’s Season 6 Surprises – Today’s News: Our Take | TVGuide.com.
Backstage at The Heart Truth’s Red Dress Collection Fashion Show during New York Fashion Week. February 13, 2009 at Bryant Park. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
By Sadie Gennis
Amanda Bynes is currently hospitalized on a 5150 psychiatric hold after she started a small fire in someone’s driveway Monday night, The Ventura County Sheriff’s Office confirmed to TVGuide.com.
According to TMZ, the fire department responded to the home in the actress’ hometown of Thousand Oaks, Calif., and found Bynes standing in the driveway next to the fire. The sheriff’s department arrived on scene and questioned the actress about her actions and intentions. Based on her answers, they decided she needed to be hospitalized on a 5150 hold, which allows for involuntary hospitalization for mental evaluation for up to 72 hours.
TMZ also reports that Bynes was involved in an altercation with a cab driver outside of a retirement community the night before. Bynes had allegedly attempted to get into the center in Thousand Oaks, but management turned her away for being drunk and trespassing. The retirement community called her a cab, but when Bynes got in, she told the driver, “Get me the f— out of here. … I don’t have any money,” TMZ reports. Bynes was then reportedly kicked out from the cab and returned to the retirement community. The cops were then called, but there is no record of her getting arrest. However, that doesn’t exclude the possibility that Bynes was ticketed. The cab driver told the website that Bynes may have been attempting to visit a relative at the community.
Woody Allen’s new film arrives in cinemas on July 26, 2013. It’s the story of a woman who relocates to reconnect with her family. Blue Jasmine stars Cate Blanchett, Alec Baldwin, and Sally Hawkins.
By Nicole Sperling
Warner Bros. is about to bring together two of its most iconic heroes: Superman and Batman will unite in a new film, the follow-up to “Man of Steel,” set for release in 2015.
According to two sources with knowledge of the movie, Warner Bros. intends to announce the news at its Comic-Con International panel Saturday morning. Said a Warner Bros. spokesperson, “We don’t comment on rumors regarding these properties.”
“Man of Steel” director Zack Snyder is expected to reunite with screenwriter David S. Goyer and star Henry Cavill for the new film. It’s unlikely Christian Bale will step back into the bat suit, as the actor has indicated publicly that he has moved on from his days as Bruce Wayne.
*** The new name of the film is Lee Daniels’ The Butler, according to Businessweek! Support This film! ~ SB***
By Samantha Bookman
AT&T (NYSE: T) is opening two new retail locations in Miami and hiring 235 employees for locations between Key West and Vero Beach, the carrier announced Monday.
More than half of the openings are newly created jobs. Around 40 of those new positions were created specifically to staff the new Miami locations.
The carrier has been on a hiring spree in Florida since April, when it announced it would hire 650 employees, primarily in its call center and network organizations. Nearly 350 are newly created positions.
Florida is also a growth area for AT&T’s RBOC brother. Verizon (NYSE: VZ) has been bulking up its FiOS staff in the state, primarily in the Tampa area, where it announced in late June that it would add 100 customer representatives.
Marshall Criser, III, AT&T Florida’s president, credited the state’s majority-Republican legislature and governor for creating a “climate for investment” in the company’s announcement. “The investment we’re making in our wireless and wired networks is essential to spurring Florida’s economy and creating jobs,” he said. “In our wireless world, mobile and broadband networks create economic opportunities for health care, manufacturing, education, transportation and public safety, and virtually every other economic section.”
That corporate-friendly environment hasn’t seemed to extend to everyone. AT&T and Verizon’s upward growth in Florida sits in stark contrast to cable MSO Cablevision (NYSE: CVC), which reportedly is laying off employees at its OMGFAST subsidiary in South Florida. The wireless broadband provider delivers 50 Mbps Internet access to customers via a MVDDS (multichannel video and data distribution service) using microwave transmitters installed on rooftops and towers.
Positions will be posted on AT&T’s job site “as they become available.”
Read More AT&T hiring 200-plus employees in South Florida – FierceTelecom.
***Get in on this if you live in the area and need a job!!!! ~SB***
Aaron D Spears, Affion Crockett, Bill Duke, Brian Dobbins, David Oweloyo, Eriq LaSalle, Gary Dourdan, Isaiah Roberts, Jay Ellis, Marlon Wayans, Mo McRae, Omar Benson Miller, Omari Hardwick, Robbie Jones, Pastor Toure Roberts, Sugar Shane Mosely,Wesley Jonathan, and Wren Brown appear in this video dedicated to Trayvon Martin. The poem was written by Omari Hardwick. EXCELLENT MY BROTHERS!!!
By Kevin Zeese & Margaret Flowers
Stephen Shapiro describes Occupy as a “dandelion moment” in which the movement successfully dispersed seeds to float and root, thereby growing into a bigger movement. We would not limit the seeds to the US Occupy, but include the Arab Spring, the Indignados, the current revolts in Brazil and Turkey and the new phase of revolt in Egypt. All of these mass actions spread around the globe like seeds spurring more mass actions. In the US we certainly see ongoing activism around many issues and flowers of resistance growing.
Shapiro also describes the moment we are in as a potential pre-history moment, asking: “What if we are in a time akin to the early 60s and in a few years there is a May 1968 moment?” The actions around the country indicate a potential pre-history moment, a lot is bubbling around the country, not quite boiling but getting hotter.
This week the verdict in the George Zimmerman case caused strong reactions with thousands marching throughout the country, sometimes met with abusive police force like the LAPD shooting rubber bullets. While people were directly upset with the verdict, they also connected the decision to evidence of widespread racially unfair bias in the criminal justice system, white privilege, the long history of racism in the United States and the disregard for young black men. People are focusing on repealing “Stand Your Ground” laws that have been pushed by groups like ALEC and the NRA. In fact, Floridians have occupied Gov. Scott’s office for three days, here’s what you can do. But, they are also thinking more broadly about how to build a new civil rights movement and not allow the energy created by this verdict to dissipate, but continue to build. Florida has another Zimmerman-like case coming up, the Department of Justice is looking into civil rights charges, and given the much-too-common killings of African Americans by police and others, there will continue to be reasons for anger.
Remember the days after the 2012 election when it looked like Republicans would finally be persuaded, if only by self-interest, to support immigration reform? Brit Hume of Fox News blamed Mitt Romney’s loss on his abysmal showing among Latinos and his “hard-line position on immigration.” Hume’s colleague Sean Hannity came out in favor of a pathway to citizenship. “Yes, amnesty,” implored Charles Krauthammer. “Use the word.”
That panicked counsel proved to be the high point of GOP minority-outreach efforts. In Congress, as immigration reform went from cheap talk to real legislation, the hard-liners circled the wagons, pressuring Speaker John Boehner into declaring the measure “dead on arrival.” Now Hannity is opposed to reform because he thinks “it won’t help the GOP in future elections,” and Hume calls his own argument “baloney,” contending that the Latino vote is “not nearly as important” as the white vote. This is an example of what psychologists call “adaptive preference formation,” or as Aesop allegorized in “The Fox and the Grapes”: if you can’t get something, convince yourself it wasn’t very good in the first place.
The most insidious of these arguments—because it comes wrapped in the cool logic of charts lacking explicit racial animus—belongs to Sean Trende, an analyst with Real Clear Politics, who composed an influential four-part series purporting to show that Republicans can survive and indeed thrive as a de facto whites-only party. Simply by finding the 6 million “missing white voters” who sat out 2012, Republicans can roll Democrats in presidential elections 2016 to 2044 (sorry, Hillary!)—even in a worst-case scenario in which 90 percent of all minorities vote Democratic. As Ruy Teixeira and Alan Abramowitz point out at Think Progress, there’s a heavy dose of magical thinking in Trende’s math, which assumes a boost in turnout exclusively among whites instead of the electorate as a whole. Even more magical is Trende’s strategic advice to the GOP: court downscale, rural white voters by embracing the economic populism of Ross Perot, whose platform included higher taxes on the rich and universal healthcare. Good luck selling that to the Tea Party.
Read More Fortress White America | The Nation.