Gwyneth Paltrow has revealed that when she was trying to get her first break in Hollywood an unnamed film executive propositioned her. The Oscar-winning actress, 38, revealed that she was left stunned by the offer, which she promptly refused. “When I was just starting out, someone suggested that we finish a meeting in the bedroom, [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Peter Pan’
When Gwyneth Paltrow was propositioned on Hollywoodâ€s casting couch
Samantha Ronson vs. Joan Rivers!
The last time Samantha Ronson’s name made headlines, the Peter Pan doppleganger was accusing ex-girlfriend Lindsay Lohan of hurling a shot glass at her in the middle of a crowded nightclub. What a difference a few months make. Today, the DJ is jumping to the star’s defense — and quite likely raising the ire of stiff-faced [...]
Pammie to revive her genie role in panto ‘Aladdin’
Pamela Anderson is all set to revive her genie role in pantomime ‘Aladdin’ in Liverpool.
The Baywatch beauty will work her magic as the Genie of the Lamp, a role she had already played in Wimbledon, South London, last year.
“I had a fantastic time performing in my first pantomime last year,†the Sun quoted Pammie as [...]
Joslyn James, Tiger Woods Mistress, Launching Sexting Website
Boy — That Tiger Woods really knows how to pick ‘em.
It took a while, but Joslyn James — the Peter Pan stunt double who publicly weeped over the cad in a press conference last month — will launch SextingJoslynJames.com on Thursday. This just about solidifies the ex-porn star’s place as the skankiest trollop on [...]
Girls | 12.05 | Hollywood
Words by: Ryan Torok
Girls :: 12.05.09 :: The Troubadour :: West Hollywood, CA
Girls by Sandy Kim |
Beautiful, reckless-seeming, tragic-appearing and probably heartbroken, Christopher Owens probably doesn’t give a shit, but his band Girls are fucking hot right now.
They have just wrapped up the first leg of their U.S. tour. Since November, they’ve been packing clubs around the U.S. in support of their debut album, the creatively and awesomely titled, Album.
The five-piece band from San Francisco probably doesn’t even agree, but they could be seen as gay hipster rock (in a really great way, think David Bowie back in the day). Near the conclusion of Girls’ 70-minute set at The Troubadour in West Hollywood, somebody in the largely young, stylish and homosexual audience yelled out to Owens, “You blow my mind!”
“Yeah, you blow my mind,” responded Owens, smiling. “Let’s all blow each other.”
Then Owens and his four merrily deranged bandmates launched into “Lust for Life,” the catchiest and most upbeat song off their debut (check the racy video here). If any Girls song ever achieves radio-play, it will be “Lust for Life.” For now, the garage rock sing-along was a show highlight. “I wish I had a boyfriend,” sang Owens in a vocal style that is reminiscent of Elvis Costello and Robert Smith from The Cure – except, Owens rocks much harder than both of them. While Costello’s brightness is irritating and Smith is just too much of a fucking mope, Owens is simultaneously ratty, snarling and sunny.
The longhaired Owens also showed off his awesome wardrobe sense. He was wearing an oversized ’90s Bush tour t-shirt that hung off his lanky, emaciated frame, and red leggings tucked into white sneakers. His tights were shiny as stars. Owens looked like Peter Pan, like a Lost Boy. He looked like a Hanson brother. Girls’ guitarist Ryan Lynch also looked like a Hanson brother. He was wearing a Hawaiian shirt the color of fruit punch.
The crowd was bobbing, thrashing around and letting inhibitions float away with the harmonies. Midway through the punchy, two-and-a-half-minute “Lust For Life,” Owens jumped in the air. Electric guitar dangling from his neck, he did a front-kick, ninja-style.
Owens’ schizo stage persona and lovesick lyrics reek of damaged goods. This is partially what made him so compelling to watch. If his back-story is true, he should be commended for not being worse off than he is.
Apparently, he was raised in a cult.
Apparently, his father was M.I.A.
Apparently, this cult forced Owens’s mother to prostitute herself.
Apparently, Owens became a homeless kid in Texas.
Apparently, a Texas millionaire took Owens in.
Girls by Kayceman |
If all this is indeed how it happened, Owens deserves a shit ton of praise for his optimism. Even if it’s not all true, his lyrics still resonate. They convey a suffering soul that isn’t ready to give up on life, and isn’t that the case with most of us? During the translucent, mid-tempo “Hellhole Ratrace,” over Girls co-founder Chet JR White‘s mellow and intricate bass-work, Owen sang, “I don’t want to die… So come on, come on, come on, come on, dance with me.”
The nearly seven-minute bedroom-pop epic was the first song anybody heard by Girls. Before Album was released, “Ratrace” caught fire in the blogosphere. It demonstrates Owens’ knack for clever songwriting, which translated live.
The emotional core of the set, “Ratrace” built up to a hazy and dramatic conclusion before crash-landing into a cyclone of duel-psychedelic guitars, heavy bass, and tumbling tom drums. Without stopping, the band segued into “Morning Light.” It was their first noise-rock number of the night. Rash, angry, aggressive, bolstered by Garett Godard‘s rapid drum rolls and pounding of the snare, the tune recalled Sonic Youth and Kevin Drew of Broken Social Scene. Owens fed off his band’s and the audience’s energy. He climbed onto his PA and knocked over his microphone stand.
The remainder of the night, Owens traded off between electric and acoustic guitar. Only during the final song of the set did he play anything else. During “Solitude,” which isn’t on Album, he played harmonica. He played well enough to make for a poignant moment.
Girls |
The audience demanded an encore. Not two minutes later, they got one. It didn’t seem like the band had planned for it, which of course made it more special.
“We don’t know what we’re going to play,” Owens said.
For not knowing, they did a pretty damn good job. They broke out into a concise, rollicking and spunky rendition of their surf-rocker “Big Bad Mean Motherfucker.” The Beach Boys would’ve been proud.
Afterward, the band left Owens alone. It was just Owens and the transfixed audience. It was pretty cool. It was like he was just hanging out.
“I have more songs, but I just have to figure out how to play them,” Owens said, sheepishly.
All eyes were on him – they had been all night. It was the perfect send-off.
My friend Showghy accompanied me to the show. Drunk to the point of being blacked out, he became a part of the show, frequently talking to Owens from his place in the crowd. He gave Owens a high-five. He told Owens not to worry about the one instance of rude assholes talking in the crowd.
“Yeah, I know,” said Owens, grinning at Showghy.
During a small window of time, Showghy and Owens became buddies. Maybe it was Showghy’s sleazy mustache that attracted Owens. Maybe they were just feeling each other’s vibe.
One thing is for sure: Everybody was feeling Owens’s vibe. Everybody.
Girls tour dates available here.
JamBase | Hollywood Nights
Go See Live Music!
Gomez | 10.22 | Sydney
Words & Images by: Alex Anastas
Gomez :: 10.20.09 :: Metro Theatre :: Sydney, Australia
Gomez :: 10.20 :: Australia |
Performing their slinky blend of indie-Brit-pop and soothing folk harmonies since first forming at Sheffield University in 1996, British troubadours Gomez have nine solid albums under their belt (including compilations and live releases), most recently releasing A New Tide (JamBase review). Gomez successfully blend the electronic stylings of 21st century effects and layered guitar runs with traditional stage arrangement harmonies and thumping acoustic guitar thrown in for good measure. I’m not quite sure if they’ve ever shared the stage with jam band veterans moe., but having seen the upstate New York act play numerous times, these two bands share a unique symbiotic similarity in sound and stage presence. Gomez also employ rapid-fire instrumentation switch-ups from song to song, an impressive high-wire act of stage-handery to behold. On this warm spring evening, many of their road-tested toys would be utilized.
Gomez opened the first of their two sold out shows at Sydney’s Metro Theatre with one of their most mellowed sing-along ditties, an extended “Revolutionary Kind,” slowly easing the late work-week crowd into what would turn out to be a marathon of fan favorites. Multi-instrumentalist and crowd fire-plug Tom Gray (vocals/rhythm guitar/melodica) brought out his melodica early to assist on the philosophical “Hamoa Beach.” Knowing exactly how to keep their fans on a yo-yo emotional roller coaster, Gomez let their hair down a bit with a rocking version of the stop-start electro-funk number “Silence,” perhaps the highlight of the night, immediately contrasted tastefully by Ian Ball‘s (vocals/keys/guitar) introverted acoustic plucking on “Mix.” This would be the pattern set throughout the night – one rocker, one ballad, repeat. Band spokesman Gray cemented this game plan by stating, “We’re not going to repeat ANY of these songs tomorrow night, so for those of you who are coming to both shows, enjoy it while you can.”
Gomez :: 10.20 :: Australia |
Reaching deep into their surprisingly large catalogue on the barbershop harmonized “Sounds of Sounds,” the poppy bass walk by Paul Blackburn on “If I Ask You Nicely,” and the solitary calls of Ben Ottewell (vocals/lead guitar) on “Tijuana Lady,” Gomez then really warmed the smiling faces of the Metro crowd. Starting with the synth-fueled “Ping One Down” into “Other Plans,” Gomez closed their triple threat run with the rollicking sing-along “Bron-Y-Aur Stomp” with Gray proudly proclaiming, “We’re going to play one by Led Zeppelin ’cause why the fuck not?”
The British crooners threw out one more new number off A New Tide, “Little Pieces,” and already the crowd seemed to know every word of this catchy little tune. Before closing their set with the harmonica-led favorite “Whippin’ Piccadilly” (off their first official release Bring It On), Gomez’s stage manager brought out a cake adorned with the number one for the bashful drummer Olly Peacock, promptly inducing a little “Happy Birthday” serenade by the crowd.
After a quick duck back stage, an appreciative Gomez came back to a stomping Sydney hoard anxious for more. The band did not let us down with an extended percussive-driven “Sunset Gates” and the energetic house-boogie breakdown of “Detroit Swing 66.” These Peter Pan boys who never want to leave the Neverland that is the touring life seem to capture perfectly the essence of youthful exuberance and desire to “see the world” through the dirty, road-weary windshield of an “Airstream Driver.” Given the raucous response to this show and the devoted knowledge of the joyous fans in attendance, Australian audiences will be waiting with patient ears.
Gomez :: 10.20.09 :: Metro Theatre :: Sydney, Australia
Revolutionary Kind, Hamoa Beach, Silence, Mix, See the World, Sound of Sounds, Do’s and Don’ts, If I Ask You Nicely, Rhythm And Blues Alibi, Tijuana Lady, Airstream Driver, Ping One Down, Other Plans, Bron-Y-Aur Stomp (Led Zeppelin), Love Is Better Than A Warm Trombone, Little Pieces, Whippin’ Piccadilly
Encore: Sunset Gates, Detroit Swing 66
Gomez is on tour now; dates available here.
Continue reading for more pics of Gomez in Australia…
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JamBase | Australia
Go See Live Music!
Tinkerbell Makeover
Sheesh — imagine going for more than 50 years without a new outfit! Well, Dora The Explorer and Strawberry Shortcake aren’t the only classic animated stars getting a facelift for the 21st century.
Disney’s Tinkerbell has undergone an extreme makeover for her new straight-to-DVD feature. The petite fairy is ditching the skimpy green frock she’s been [...]




Girls by Sandy Kim
Girls by Kayceman
Girls
Gomez :: 10.20 :: Australia
Gomez :: 10.20 :: Australia