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Posts Tagged ‘Ernest’

2011 Screen Actors Guild Awards Complete List Of Winners

The King’s Speech won the top prize at the Screen Actors Guild Awards on Sunday, giving the film a major Oscar boost four weeks ahead of Hollywood’s biggest night. The British royals drama, which leads this year’s Oscar field with 12 nominations, scooped the Best Ensemble Cast prize (the SAG equivalent of Best Picture) just [...]

15 Actors Who Turned Down Great Roles

It’s not always easy for actors to tell which films are going to be a huge success before they’re made. Sometimes a lackluster script meets outrageous talent, stunning visuals, an epic soundtrack, and suddenly you have best-picture winner, Gladiator. Sometimes you have A-list talent and a director famous for churning out critical favorites, but something gets lost along the way and you end up with The Fountain.

10 Most Disturbing Christmas Movies Ever

Christmas is great, and anyone who says it isn’t is trying to be cool, has a heart of inadequate charcoal or has probably been involved in a Christmas story akin to some of the ludicrously mood-killing movies mentioned below. Yes, that’s right, it’s that time of year and we’ve decided to go ahead and list [...]

Bruce Willis escapes injury after escalator malfunction

Hollywood star Bruce Willis barely escaped injury when the escalator he was riding on suddenly sped out of control. Willis and his publicist Paul Bloch were at MoMA for Sunday night”s Cinema Society screening of ‘Red when, according to a source, the escalator sped and a scared woman happened to jump on Willis. “The escalator [...]

Ernest Borgnine Morgan Freeman “SNL” Sketch “What’s Up With That?”

With Kanye West dropping by with a festive interpretation of his single “Power,” this week’s Saturday Night Live saw some big names making guest appearances on the show. Legendary actors Ernest Borgnine and Morgan Freeman dropped by the set for the promotion of their latest film RED, but the sketch involving them created a bigger [...]

Aug. 13, 1913: Great Alloyed Victory for Stainless Steel

1913: English metallurgist Harry Brearley casts a steel alloy that’s resistant to acidity and weathering. Because his sponsor names it “stainless steel,” Brearley will often be credited as the inventor, but there are more metallurgists than metals in this story.
Even the hometown British Stainless Steel Association acknowledges that Brearley was not alone.
English and French researchers [...]

July 30, 1935: Penguins Invade Britain, Readers Rejoice

1935: Penguin publishes the first paperback books of substance, bringing the likes of Ernest Hemingway, André Maurois and Agatha Christie to the masses.
As Britain emerged from the worst of its Great Depression, and the storms of World War II gathered, some of the finest literature in the world was being produced. But it was [...]

Survey: Reading an Ebook Is Slower than a Standard Book

A study was conducted by the Nielsen Noram Group that revealed the following: reading an ebook is considerably slower compared to reading a standard paper version. A short story by Ernest Hemingway was given to people. It was found that those who were reading the story on the iPad were 6.2 percent slower in comparison [...]

5 Literary Geniuses Whose Lives Culminated in Grisly Suicide

Writers. Who’d be one? For the writer, life is hard. Life is much harder for the writer than life is for the non-writer. Writers have a monopoly on the hard life. Their esprit de corps is founded on finding life hard. Because life is so hard for the writer, a writer will sometimes end their [...]

April 7, 1933: King Kong Opens Wide

1933: Depression-era moviegoers hungry for escape line up outside theaters for the first nationwide screenings of King Kong.

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Photo Gallery:
Mega-Monsters Make Magnificent Movies

They emerged stunned by groundbreaking scenes crafted by visual effects wizard Willis O’Brien. The stop-motion pioneer transformed an 18-inch gorilla doll into a hulking monster that appears to swat airplanes atop [...]

Feb, 11, 1939: Lise Meitner, ‘Our Madame Curie’

1939: Austrian-born physicist Lise Meitner publishes her discovery that atomic nuclei split during some uranium reactions. Her research will be overlooked by the Nobel committee when it awards a prize for the work.
Meitner is a prominent example of a woman whose gender put her in the back seat when the top prize was given. [...]

Globe Telecom sees broadband users doubling, says CEO

Globe Telecom Inc (GLO.PS), the Philippines’ second-largest phone firm, expects its broadband subscriber numbers to double in each of the next few years, driving the company’s growth, a senior executive said today.

Globe, owned by Singapore Telecommunications (STEL.SI) and local conglomerate Ayala Corp (AC.PS), forecast its net profit would rise about 8–9% in 2009, said Ernest Cu, President and CEO of Globe Telecom.

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B.B. King | 12.29.09 | Colorado

Words by: Cassie Pence | Images by: Zach Mahone

B.B. King :: 12.29.09 :: Vilar Performing Arts Center :: Beaver Creek, CO

B.B. King :: 12.29 :: Colorado

A tall, handsome man dressed in a black, silky suit walks onto the Vilar Performing Arts Center stage carrying a black Gibson semi-hollow body guitar. What may have been the world’s classiest roadie gently sets the guitar in its stand and the crowd fades to a hush.

“There’s Lucille,” a man whispers, as if seeing the likes of Brad Pitt or a famous world leader.

One by one, the B.B. King Blues Band struts onstage, all clad in tuxedos, and another man in the audience whispers, “There he is.”

Although it was a man cradling a guitar, it wasn’t B.B. King. It was Charlie Dennis, a longtime player in the band.

And so it goes with a musical legend whose career spans about 60 years. Although we know B.B.’s music – and honestly are probably most familiar with the evolution of his music heard through rock ‘n’ roll greats like Eric Clapton, The Rolling Stones and Stevie Ray Vaughan – most of us probably had never seen the King of the Blues with our own two eyes.

There’s no mistaking him when he does appear, sauntering to his center-stage chair with the help of two escorts. He slides into his seat, and without a word, picks up Lucille like he’s picking up his own baby girl, his own flesh and blood, and begins to play. The minute the first note strikes, a smile releases across B.B.’s entire face, not just on his lips but evident through his eyes and gumball-like cheeks. At 84-years-old, B.B. is one happy man to still be rockin’ the blues.

He opened with “I Need You So,” explaining to the audience that the song is about as old as he is, giving a roll of the eyes. He complained to the audience that he was just getting over the flu and his voice was not at the level he hoped, but it was still velvety and regal and his guitar cried and wooed as he bent the individual strings. B.B. doesn’t play chords or slides, but is best known for his single-note solos.

B.B. King Blues Band :: 12.29 :: Colorado

With the big band-like backing of James Bolden on trumpet, Stanley Abernathy on trumpet, Melvin Jackson on sax, Walter King also on sax, Tony Coleman on drums, Ernest Vantrease on keyboards and Reggie Richards on bass, who B.B. joked was the youngster of the band at age 64, Blues Boy King jammed “Everyday I Have the Blues” and “When Loves Comes to Town” before saying goodbye to the swaying horn section and switching it up for a more intimate set.

Flanked by Dennis on guitar and Richards on bass, B.B. talked the blues in a quintessential “da-na-na-na-na” style, telling stories of getting old, taking Viagra, and how he’s never met a lady that wasn’t beautiful.

A lover – in fact, most of his songs revolve around relationships – B.B. did his best to help the audience get some action, too. We all sang a song for the women, “You Are My Sunshine,” and at the end of the tune, as the lights went bright, ladies were instructed to lean over and give their date a kiss. We all obliged.

It seemed that B.B. could roll on for hours, string-bending Lucille and singing the blues, but he ended with “The Thrill is Gone” – even though it’s obvious that the thrill hasn’t left this King of the Blues.

B.B. King tour dates available here.

Continue reading for more pics of B.B King in Colorado…

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Trivia With Cast Of “Jersey Shore” On “The Jay Leno Show”

Is it just me or does watching the cast of Jersey Shore on Leno make ya feel smarter? Three cast members from the hit MTV reality show; The Situation, Snooki, and Pauly D; continued making the late-nite show rounds this week with an appearance on Wednesday night’s special edition of Jay Leno’s “Jaywalking All-Stars.”
The [...]

Panettone season arrives: A piece of cake

How Italy’s bakers cope with seasonal demand

FLUFFY, dome-shaped, dotted with sultanas and candied citrus peel, panettone is an Italian Christmas cake. Italians will eat about 40m of them over the holiday season this year. They are becoming popular elsewhere too: an estimated 1m have crossed the Atlantic this autumn. Delia Smith, a celebrity chef, recently caused a surge in demand in Britain with a recipe for trifle made with panettone. That is great news for the big manufacturers of the Milanese speciality back in Italy. But catering to the growing and ever more dispersed appetite for panettone requires some deft industrial planning.

The grand cafes in Milan, such as Taveggia, Sant’Ambroeus and Cova, about which Ernest Hemingway wrote in “A Farewell to Arms”, simply squeeze a few batches of panettoni into their normal baking schedules as Christmas approaches. But for industrial producers such as Bauli, which will make 12m this season, that is not possible. Although Bauli is diversified into year-round products like croissants and biscuits, seasonal cakes account for over 50% of its turnover, which is expected to be €420m ($570m) this year. …

Tom Cruise Cameron Diaz “Knight & Day” Bull Run Shoot

Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz have arrived in the southern Spain village of Cadiz Sevilla to film scenes for the James Mangold-directed action comedy Knight & Day, Spanish media reported on Sunday.
The Hollywood stars have started shooting scenes that imitate the famous bull run held each year in northern Spain.
During The Pamplona Bull Run, crowds [...]

Nov. 5, 1955: A Flux of Genius

1955: A clock, a slippery toilet seat and a severe concussion lead to the invention of time travel.
Dr. Emmett Lathrop Brown is known for being a member (unverified) of the Manhattan Project, a physics professor at Hill Valley University, and a talented entrepreneur and handyman. But it’s his contribution to the field of temporal physics [...]

15 Celebs That Support Roman Polanski

A list of almost 200 celebs is circulating now, including writers, directors, actors, all petitioning for Polanski’s release and rallying against his extradition to the US.

Oct. 14, 1947: Yeager Machs the Sound Barrier

1947: Capt. Charles E. “Chuck” Yeager pilots the rocket-powered Bell X-1 to a speed of Mach 1.07, becoming the first person to fly faster than the speed of sound. In breaking the sound barrier, Yeager becomes the fastest man alive — and the legend of the X-Planes begins.

Photo Gallery:

Let the X-Planes Begin

As airplanes flew [...]

Lord Weidenfeld of Chelsea: The Diary: Traveling to Jerusalem

Returning from abroad, the atmosphere in Britain strikes one as bitter and confused and at times morose and elegiac.