RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘fred’

Daisy Whitney: Video: YouTube Getting $200K and More for Branded Channels

As the world’s second biggest search engine and the most popular video sharing site, YouTube has become a home for brands including “H&R Block,”…

Author Gordon Burn dies aged 61

Cancer kills celebrated explorer of the boundaries between fact and fiction

The writer and novelist Gordon Burn, whose work explored the boundaries between fact and fiction, has died aged 61, his publisher announced today. Burn died on Friday 17 July, having been suffering from cancer.

Burn examined the contemporary obsession with celebrity in a series of books spanning three decades, including an account of the Yorkshire Ripper, a study of Fred and Rosemary West and a Whitbread award-wininng novel which imagined an alternative life for the British singer Alma Cogan.

His editor at Faber, Lee Brackstone, hailed his work as “far ahead of the rest of the literary world”, and lamented the loss of “one of the great literary innovators of these times”.

“Gordon’s subject of choice was often trauma, spectacle and dysfunction,” Brackstone said. “He was drawn to the dark side of celebrity … his literature and impulse always represented to me an attempt to find comfort, meaning and compassion in the most appalling or baffling of events.”

For the author himself, the central role of fame and mortality in his own work was clear. “Almost everything I have written,” Burn said last year, “has been about celebrity, and how for most people celebrity is a kind of death.”

Born in Newcastle on 16 January 1948, Burn began work as a journalist, writing for publications such as the Guardian, Rolling Stone and Esquire and remained a prolific interviewer and feature writer, making a name in recent years as an expert on contemporary art. Deliberately following in the footsteps of In Cold Blood and The Executioner’s Song, his first book, Somebody’s Husband, Somebody’s Son, was an attempt to tell the story of the Yorkshire Ripper from the inside out; he spent three years getting to know Peter Sutcliffe’s family after the killer’s conviction in 1981, turning up night after night to hear stories of the murderer’s early life. He turned next to the world of professional snooker, at its zenith during the era of Steve Davies and Dennis Taylor, following the circus for a year to research Pocket Money, published in 1986.

His first novel, Alma Cogan, revisited questions of death and fame, entwining the case of the Moors murderer Myra Hindley with an imaginary post-celebrity existence for the popular singer, who died in 1966, in a meditation on artifice and obscurity which won the Whitbread first novel prize in 1992. Novels of Fleet Street and showbiz followed with 1995′s Fullalove and 2003′s The North of England Home Service, but it was with his most recent novel, 2008′s Born Yesterday, that Burn’s fiction reached its logical conclusion. Hatched in a discussion over dinner with the CEO of Faber, Stephen Page, the book was an attempt to bring the non-fiction novel into the era of 24-hour rolling news.

“The idea was to find a story, and the moment the news explosion happened to go there and write about it, turn it into a novel in the way that happens all the time through rolling news, newspapers, blogging,” Burns explained. “And to turn it around fast, so that the novel came out while the news coverage was still fresh in people’s minds.”

For Brackstone, Born Yesterday was “an experiment as brave as anything attempted by Pound, BS Johnson, or Foster Wallace”. “Having worked as a journalist with a sharp eye for a story in the 70s, Gordon understood, questioned and celebrated, more than any of his peers, the advent of 24-hour news on loop – the pornographic, compulsive intensity of it,” Brackstone said. Written in a burst of just over a month at the beginning of 2008, the novel shapes the extraordinary events of the summer of 2007, including the resignation of Tony Blair and the disappearance of Madeleine McCann, into the dream-like vision of an insomniac version of Burn himself. As a cast garnered from the blaring headlines of 24-hour breaking news – Kate Middleton, Carol Thatcher, Jacqui Smith – crosses the boundary between fact and fiction, Burn confronts the subject which governed his writing life: the limits imposed on fiction and non-fiction alike.

“The news is always holding out the promise that we will know more and more and more, but we don’t,” Burn said. “With the West case, I had everything: I had access to their belongings, to the police interviews – everything, basically, that you could possibly wish to get – and you spend three years writing a book, and you still don’t know what made these two people do the kind of things that they did.”

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Ashes live – England v Australia

Second Test, Lord’s, day five:

LATEST ACTION (all times BST)

By Tom Fordyce

e-mail tms@bbc.co.uk (with ‘For Tom Fordyce’ in the subject), text 81111 (with "CRICKET" as first word) or use606(Not all comments can be used)

AUSTRALIA SECOND INNINGS

BBC Sport’s Oliver Brett on Twitter:"Phone call overheard on 274 bus: ‘If anyone at work asks where I am, just say I’m sick’"From Steve in Manchester, TMS inbox: "When England were playing the Windies at Old Trafford several years ago, I had the pleasure of sitting at a table in an Indian restaurant next to Mike Gatting, Graham Gooch and John Emburey. I can confirm that Gatting does indeed eat dessert. And he also eats about 30 onion bhajis and 42 popadoms."1042: Talk around me turns to England’s tactics. Consensus is settling on an in-out field, with the bowlers preferring all-out attack (four slips, gully, fly slip) and the batsmen blaming bowlers in general for failing to knock over 10 wickets for less than 500.From Russell in Nottingham, TMS inbox: "After a nightmare Sunday, including two people you hoped you’d never have to see again inviting themselve round for dinner and insisting on watching the golf over the cricket (flippin’ cheek) glad to be back at ‘work’ ready for the quick, stress-free end to the Test match."From James in London, TMS inbox: "Getting married on Thursday but the nerves about that are nowhere near how nervous I am about today. No fingernails left to chew already and we haven’t had a single delivery yet…"1034: On the other hand, no-one has ever successfully chased more than 418 to win a Test. Haddin got lucky a few times on Sunday evening, Hauritz is protecting a dodgy digit and Fred roared in like Frank Tyson. Gulp….1031: Let’s do the sums. Over 130 runs were scored in the final session on Sunday. 209 more are needed. On that basis, if Australia are still batting come tea, they’ll have won.1021: They said it couldn’t be done. For as long as anyone could remember, a target like that was considered out of reach. Many great men had tried and failed. On 20 July, it finally happened. Still – enough of the Moon landings – do we think Australia will chase down 522 to snatch this from England’s grasp1015: Gnawing of nails, pulling out of hair, covering face with hands. All these and more may be needed as the nervefest that is Manic Monday begins to unfold. Anxious Does Mike Gatting eat dessert


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Ashes live – England v Australia

Second Test, Lord’s, day five:

LATEST ACTION (all times BST)

By Tom Fordyce

e-mail tms@bbc.co.uk (with ‘For Tom Fordyce’ in the subject), text 81111 (with "CRICKET" as first word) or use606(Not all comments can be used)

AUSTRALIA SECOND INNINGS

BBC Sport’s Oliver Brett on Twitter:"Phone call overheard on 274 bus: ‘If anyone at work asks where I am, just say I’m sick’"From Steve in Manchester, TMS inbox: "When England were playing the Windies at Old Trafford several years ago, I had the pleasure of sitting at a table in an Indian restaurant next to Mike Gatting, Graham Gooch and John Emburey. I can confirm that Gatting does indeed eat dessert. And he also eats about 30 onion bhajis and 42 popadoms."1042: Talk around me turns to England’s tactics. Consensus is settling on an in-out field, with the bowlers preferring all-out attack (four slips, gully, fly slip) and the batsmen blaming bowlers in general for failing to knock over 10 wickets for less than 500.From Russell in Nottingham, TMS inbox: "After a nightmare Sunday, including two people you hoped you’d never have to see again inviting themselve round for dinner and insisting on watching the golf over the cricket (flippin’ cheek) glad to be back at ‘work’ ready for the quick, stress-free end to the Test match."From James in London, TMS inbox: "Getting married on Thursday but the nerves about that are nowhere near how nervous I am about today. No fingernails left to chew already and we haven’t had a single delivery yet…"1034: On the other hand, no-one has ever successfully chased more than 418 to win a Test. Haddin got lucky a few times on Sunday evening, Hauritz is protecting a dodgy digit and Fred roared in like Frank Tyson. Gulp….1031: Let’s do the sums. Over 130 runs were scored in the final session on Sunday. 209 more are needed. On that basis, if Australia are still batting come tea, they’ll have won.1021: They said it couldn’t be done. For as long as anyone could remember, a target like that was considered out of reach. Many great men had tried and failed. On 20 July, it finally happened. Still – enough of the Moon landings – do we think Australia will chase down 522 to snatch this from England’s grasp1015: Gnawing of nails, pulling out of hair, covering face with hands. All these and more may be needed as the nervefest that is Manic Monday begins to unfold. Anxious Does Mike Gatting eat dessert


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Fred Goldring: Reflections of a Would-Be Astronaut, 40 Years Later

For those that say reaching for the stars is a waste of time and money, I beg to differ. There is nothing more important than inspiring young people to think big and believe that they can do anything

Fred Karger: First Anniversary of Boycott Against Doug Manchester

The gay and lesbian community is in the fight of our life, and we are not going to take it anymore. We want the world to know who supports us and who opposes us.

Tallulah Morehead: Big Brother 11: Deride the Wild Surfer

Good grief. It’s only my second Big Brother posting, and already I have had to break my vow to base this column only on what…

Russell Brand to play the Easter Bunny

Actor will provide the voice of the mythical character, for family-friendly film I Hop

With his bright eyes, excitable demeanour and enormous appetite for sexual conquests, it looks like the perfect role: Russell Brand, court jester of British comedy and Hollywood ingenue, has been cast as the Easter Bunny.

Brand will provide the voice of the chocolate egg-bearing rabbit in a new family comedy based on a mix of live-action and CGI, titled I Hop. The story centres on a jobless slacker who runs over the Easter Bunny while driving home late, Variety reports. With the creature unable to fulfil his usual duties due to a broken leg, the man is forced into action to help save Easter. As they get to know each other while going about their work, it turns out the new comrades are both running from adulthood.

Tim Hill, who shot similar fare with last year’s hugely successful Alvin and the Chipmunks, will direct for Universal and Illumination Entertainment.

Producer Chris Meledandri said: “Russell showed me that he’s got a wonderful ability not only to be funny in his own body, but he can create humour vocally, which is the distinction we need for these movies,” Meledandri said. “This gives us an opportunity to re-mythologise the holiday around an Easter Bunny character that is as dynamic and irreverent as Russell is.”

The script is by Cinco Paul and Ken Daurio, who worked on another Illumination project, Despicable Me, which is in cinemas on 9 July in the US. Brand is part of a voice cast which includes Steve Carell, Jason Segel, Kristen Wiig and Julie Andrews.

The former TV presenter is currently lining up a number of Hollywood projects, including Judd Apatow’s Get Him to the Greek, in which he reprises his role as British rocker Aldous Snow from last year’s Forgetting Sarah Marshall, and remakes of Drop Dead Fred, and Oscar-winning comedy Arthur.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Pick Harmison – Lord’s groundsman

• Mick Hunt backs the Durham fast bowler to thrive
• Andrew Flintoff’s knee keeps England sweating

England’s selectors have been urged to play Steve Harmison in the second Test against Australia tomorrow by the man who knows the pitch best.

The Lord’s groundsman, Mick Hunt, believes the Durham fast bowler has the pace and bounce to get the best out of the wicket, just as he did in 2005. “This pitch has a nice coverage of grass and maybe more pace and carry than we’ve sometimes had,” he said. “Harmison gave [Ricky] Ponting and [Justin] Langer a bit of a going over four years ago, so why not play him here? The pitch really looks the part and it may do a bit in the first session. It is also the same pitch that we used against Australia in 2005.” England lost the Ashes opener here four years ago but Harmison drew first blood, quite literally, when he struck Ponting on the cheek. He also hit the openers Langer and Matthew Hayden in a fiery burst in the opening session.

The England selectors are still sweating on the fitness of Andrew Flintoff, who batted both outdoors and indoors yesterday but did not bowl as he gave his sore right knee a chance to heal. “Fred saw his surgeon yesterday and he is quite optimistic about him playing in this Test,” England’s coach, Andy Flower, said yesterday. “He had an injection yesterday and we’re letting it settle down today, so he won’t bowl and just bat. But he will bowl tomorrow and we’ll see how he is and make a decision from there. Fred knows he body quite well now and he will know after training in the next couple of days whether he will be able to make a contribution to this Test.”

The player does not look quite the force he was in the 2005 series but even a reduced Flintoff would give England more balance. “He seems vulnerable a lot of the time,” Flower added. “But he’s a hell of a player and we want him in our side when he’s fit.”

If he is less than fully fit, however, and with a long summer ahead, it seems doubtful that he would be risked. He bowled 35 overs in Australia’s innings in the first Test, once again ridiculing suggestions that he would be used more selectively, in short bursts.

The third and fourth Tests in this series are also back-to-back and it is hard to see a player of his fragile tendencies playing a full part in the summer.

If Flintoff does not play tomorrow, Harmison surely will. “He is a like for like replacement for Fred,” Flower said. “They are both tall, quick bowlers. Steve is a very good fast bowler, he’s got a good record for England and he’s in form.” Ideally both Harmison and Flintoff will be charging in on Thursdaytomorrow but that looks doubtful.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Fred Karger: Is the Mormon Church Funding the National Organization for Marriage?

Let’s determine whether or not the Mormon Church set up NOM as a front group, just like it has previously set up other front groups to oppose same-sex marriage around the country.

Fred Silberberg: Broadcast Journalism Has Reached a New Low

In the past two weeks, American soldiers continue to die in Iraq. Economic issues continue to plague our country. Thousands of Americans havlost their jobs, their homes, and their health insurance coverage.

WordPress & SocialVibe: Blogging Gone Good

New York venture capitalist Fred Wilson is one of the most prolific and renown bloggers on the web.  And if you go his blog, avc.com, you’ll notice that (like most blogs) he runs advertising to generate revenues.  But what many of you may not know is that all the proceeds Fred generates through his blog [...]