Lindsay Lohan has posed for a raunchy photo shoot inspired by Kate Moss and Johnny Depp’’s fiery relationship.
The ‘Mean Girls’ star posed in bed with handsome male model Petey Wright, and then invited sultry dancer Sofia Boutella to join the party during the new menage a trois magazine photo shoot at LA’’s Chateau Marmont.
Lohan poses [...]
Posts Tagged ‘Sofia’
Lindsay Lohan poses for Kate Moss-Johnny Depp inspired photo shoot
Kosovo to open embassy in Sofia
Kosovo President Fatmir Sejdiu said that Priština will soon be opening its diplomatic headquarters in Sofia. “I have already signed an act for sending a Kosovo ambassador to Bulgaria and I expect that it will soon take effect,†Sejdiu told the Bulgarian national radio station.
Sofia Vergara Rape Joke Prompts Laughter On “The Viewâ€
The ladies of The View could use a lesson in sensitivity….and perhaps an educational field trip to their local Rape Crisis Center. Sofia Vergara — who plays Ed O’Neill’s Colombian trophy wife on ABC’s new hit show Modern Family — was on The View this morning, where she cracked a tacky joke about rape to [...]
Monsters of Folk: Video Madness
“SAY PLEASE” VIDEO UNVEILED, VIDEO CONTEST FOR “DEAR GOD (SINCERELY M.O.F.)”
Monsters of Folk |
Following a first-ever U.S. fall tour and unabashed praise for their self-titled debut album, Monsters of Folk (Conor Oberst, Jim James, M. Ward, Mike Mogis) are moving full-steam ahead with the unveiling of their new video for their brilliant single, “Say Please.”
Shot by acclaimed cinematographer Lance Acord, renowned for his work on celebrated films by directors Sofia Coppola and Spike Jonze, the video features a frontier town, World War II soldiers, and roller-skating. The gorgeous video can be seen now here. Additionally, the broadcast premiere of the “Say Please” video will air November 17, on the Independent Film Channel at 9 p.m. EST/PST. It can also be seen here.
In other video news, Monsters of Folk have announced an incredible “make-our-video” contest for the song “Dear God (Sincerely M.O.F.),” a stand-out track from the album. Sponsored by Apple/Quicktime and Death + Taxes Magazine, Monsters of Folk are inviting their fans to create their very own visual interpretation for “Dear God.” The winning video will be chosen from a list of finalists, and will be posted on the homepages of the Monsters of Folk, Apple/Quicktime, and Death + Taxes Magazine web sites. The contest winner will also receive $5000, a Gibson guitar signed by the band, and a copy of the new Final Cut Studio software. Five runners-up will receive a signed vinyl album. For more information, please go here.
Monsters of Folk – “Say Please”
Praise for Monsters of Folk:
“…a folky, harmony-ridden gem.” – Rolling Stone
“…the harmonies are groundbreaking. Goosebump territory. The amalgam of their voices mixed with the musical breathing room creates an intimacy not heard since Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. It’s a stunning record – cohesive and consistent and ambitious for how much ground it covers.” – Esquire
“…rich with details that feel worn-in like the corners of a beloved book.” – Los Angeles Times
Monsters of Folk are currently on tour in Europe; dates available here.
Serbia accepted to SEDM
Serbia has been admitted to fully-fledged membership of the South-East Europe Defense Ministerial, having previously held observer status.
State Secretary Dušan Spasojević, the head of the Defense Ministry delegation at the conference in Sofia, said that fully-fledged membership in the South-East Europe Defense Ministerial showed that the ministry and the Serbian military had been recognized as strong and reliable partners in strengthening peace and stability in the region.
Phoenix/Passion Pit | 09.26 | Central Park
Words by: Dan Ettinger | Images from: myspace.com/wearephoenix
Phoenix & Passion Pit :: 09.26.09 :: Central Park SummerStage :: New York, NY
Phoenix |
Perhaps it was the magic of an early fall night in the Big Apple, or the mysticism of Central Park, or the intimate, wooded enclave offered by the Central Park SummerStage, or the fact that Phoenix lead singer Thomas Mars has a child with Sofia Coppola that had me thinking about the themes in Lost in Translation. Coppola’s movie is so human, in that it portrays a confused and alienated Bill Murray and a vulnerable Scarlett Johansson struggling to identify with their loneliness. The film suggests that some of us consistently experience a sort of existential ennui that can only be overcome through personal connections.
Having recently started a new job in a new city (unfortunately NOT New York City), I was trying to forget any alienation or loneliness that was going on in my own life and enjoy the second night of Phoenix and Passion Pit‘s recent sold out shows. With some tickets selling on StubHub for upwards of $300, I was curious to see whether or not the two bands could live up to the accruing hype.
The Emerson graduates that comprise Passion Pit are a classic example of social networking wildfire. Just two years young, the group skyrocketed to success on the heels of lead singer-songwriter Michael Angelakos‘ Valentine’s Day present-turned-2008-EP Chunk of Change. After cracking a few obligatory Red Sox/Yankees jokes that can accompany any musical group from Boston playing in New York, Pit proceeded to wind through their frenetic, poppy, and concise songs with notable joy.
Laurent Brancowitz – Phoenix |
As the area continued to fill with eager Phoenix fans, Passion Pit burst into their gem of the night, “Moth’s Wings” > “Sleepyhead,” which highlighted the band’s incredibly hectic breakdowns, their impressive handle on indie-pop-snyth rock sound, and most of all, Angelakos’ helium-balloon falsetto. Closing with “The Reeling,” the group posed an introspective question to the young crowd that seemed especially pertinent considering my earlier Lost in Translation musings: “Look at me, oh look at me/ Is this the way I’ll always be/ Now I pray that somebody will quickly come and kidnap me/ Everyday I lie awake and pray to God today’s the day/ Here I am, here I am/ When will someone understand?”
Before I had too much time to get carried away with any sort of metaphysical inner dialogue, Phoenix had already quietly ascended to the stage; their backdrop was a simple banner of the Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix bomb shaped artwork. The band that has recently appeared on Saturday Night Live, Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, a Cadillac commercial, The Late Show with David Letterman, and most recently The Tonight Show with Conan O’Brien had plenty of reasons to be cocky. But for such widespread recent recognition, their stage presence was humble and Mars warmly thanked the audience multiple times both in English and in French for making it to the show. They were impressive in their ability to connect with the crowd and draw in any doubters.
Phoenix |
Any skeptics listening to the recorded versions of these songs and wondering how they would translate live would be blown away. In fact, one of the most enjoyable and surprising elements about Phoenix’s set was how flawlessly they integrated their well rehearsed, in-studio tightness with the necessary expansion that accompanies any talented band’s live show. There were moments where I wasn’t sure if I was seeing some sort of Radiohead/Animal Collective/Pink Floyd prototype; their lengthier songs such as “Love Like a Sunset” and “Funky Squaredance” possessed the intensity of Thom Yorke and co., the ambience of Animal Collective, and the “x-factor” that so often accompanied Floyd’s jams (think “Have a Cigar,” but without as many shearing Gilmour solos).
Powered by Mars’ smooth vocal delivery and Thomas Hedlund‘s acrobatic drumming, Phoenix was energetic to say the least. A well-orchestrated light show deftly accented everything from the band’s lightest, sauntering tunes (“If I Ever Feel Better” and “Girlfriend”) to their dance party, Daft Punk-like electronica influenced (“Rome” and “1901″) moments during the hour and a half set.
Another notable moment – which fully convinced me Phoenix is ready for superstardom – came when Mars and guitarist Laurent Brancowitz played the first two songs of the encore acoustic, including a conglomerate of spotlights focused on the lead singer’s head that created a halo effect.
As the last notes of “1901″ resonated into the City that Never Sleeps, I was again drawn back to those aforementioned Lost in Translation themes. Roger Ebert described the film in his 2003 Chicago Sun-Times article as “sweet and sad at the same time as it is sardonic and funny.” These comparisons can just as easily apply to many of Phoenix’s songs, which can be lyrically introspective and melancholy, yet musically vibrant. Just as Bill Murray and Scarlett Johansson found a little solace in each other, Phoenix seemed to offer solace that everything really will work out because it’s all predetermined anyways: “Past and present they don’t matter… Now the future’s sorted out.”
Isn’t that escape and distraction music offers part of its inherent beauty?
Passion Pit Setlist:
I’ve Got Your Number, Eyes As Candles, Make Light, Let Your Love Grow Tall, Little Secrets, To Kingdom Come, Folds In Your Hands, Moth’s Wings > Sleepyhead, Smile Upon Me, Better Things, The Reeling
Phoenix Setlist:
Lisztomania, Long Distance Call, Lasso, Run Run Run, Fences, Girlfriend, Armistice, Love Like a Sunset, Too Young, Rally
Consolation Prizes, Rome >Funky Squaredance >Rome
E: Everything is Everything (acoustic; Thomas and Laurent), Playground Love (acoustic; Thomas and Laurent), If I Ever Feel Better, 1901
Phoenix is on tour now; dates available here.
JamBase | Bittersweet
Go See Live Music!
Madonna to be sued by Bulgarian sports stadium bosses
Madonna will reportedly be taken to court by sports stadium chiefs in Sofia, Bulgaria, who claim fans at her concert ruined their national stadium pitch.
The Queen of Pop performed at the Vasil Levski National Stadium on August 29 as part of her ‘Sticky & Sweet’ world tour.
Stadium chiefs were allegedly fuming over the ground that [...]
Exhausted Madonna ‘collapses twice during Bulgaria gig’
Madonna reportedly collapsed twice during her performance in Sofia, Bulgaria on August 29.
The Queen of Pop, who has been hopping the globe for her ‘Sticky & Sweet’ tour, was said to have lost consciousness as she sang ‘Holiday’.
The singer had to be held up by a dancer before she passed out and fell over as [...]
Bulgaria: Church against Madonna
The Bulgarian Orthodox Church has voiced its opposition to American pop star Madonna’s concert. The show is scheduled to take place in Sofia on August 26.
Battle of Britain commences early
Meeting Bulgaria’s new Mr Big
In Sofia, Nick Higham meets former bodyguard and newly-elected Prime Minister Boiko Borisov, the man many Bulgarians are counting on to rid the country of corruption.

Boiko Borisov is an intimidating man.
He has the shaved head, thick neck and massive shoulders of a wrestler, which is what he was, long ago.
He was also a fireman, karate coach, bodyguard and top policeman.
Today he is a highly successful politician.
On the day we interviewed him he had just accepted an invitation to become Bulgaria’s next prime minister in a brief ceremony at the country’s Communist-era presidential palace – all marble pillars, grandiose staircases and chandeliers the size of trees – but we met in his office at Sofia’s scruffy City Hall.
We waited in the ante-room with other supplicants – the man in charge of building the city’s metro, a senior Spanish policeman – while a succession of political henchmen came and went through the door to the main office.
Fighting organised crime
When we finally got inside, Borisov rebuffed my attempts at political small talk with a curt "stop chatting and get on with it".
He made me distinctly nervous and he had an even more unsettling effect on my Bulgarian producer and translator, who told me she was physically sick after the interview.
This formidable physical presence no doubt served him well when, in the early 1990s, he offered his services as bodyguard to the deposed communist dictator, Todor Zhivkov.

A decade later he did the same for Bulgaria’s former king, Simeon Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, who returned from nearly half a century of exile to run for parliament and become prime minister. Borisov so impressed the king that he gave him a government job.
For our interview Borisov sat in an armchair in front of a cascade of silver cups, trophies and medals from his days as a sportsman.
When we were finished, he insisted on showing me the photos on his walls. There were pictures of him with top cops from Britain, the US and Europe and framed testimonials from the likes of the FBI and Europol, praising his efforts in the fight against organised crime. At the time, General Borisov was the chief secretary at the interior ministry and Bulgaria’s most senior policeman.
This was not idle boasting. The testimonials are evidence that he really is serious when he promises to clean up his country.
He was prepared, he said, to do whatever it took.
Bulgaria’s politicians are notorious for being on the take, but he told me he was not prepared to shield anyone, even a minister or deputy minister, who engaged in corruption.
"We need 100% trust from Brussels," he said.
"We’re going to do everything Brussels asks of us. For a country as poor as Bulgaria, it’s vital to get the money from Brussels flowing again."
Cash for licences
Bulgarian corruption takes many forms.
At one extreme there are the mobsters, known as "mutri" or "thick-necks", many of them ex-wrestlers, who made their fortunes in the post-Communist anarchy of the early 1990s, running protection rackets thinly disguised as security firms or insurance companies.
His political opponents sometimes accuse Boiko Borisov of being one of them, though one Bulgarian political analyst told me no-one had ever produced any evidence to show that he was.
"Bulgarians have turned to Boiko Borisov to get them out of this mess"
At the other extreme is the day-to-day corruption involving underpaid public officials.
Health workers who agree to speed up treatment or traffic policemen who turn a blind eye to speeding in return for cash.
In between comes cronyism, influence-peddling, embezzlement, fraud, rigged tenders for public contracts, and outright bribery.
I met an investigative television journalist who told me of a case he had recently looked into, in which a driving instructor and an examiner had taken a bribe to give a licence to a man who had never even driven a car. The price: 300 leva (around £130/$80).
Bulgarians have turned to Boiko Borisov to get them out of this mess.
In the recent general election around 40% of voters backed his political party, known as Gerb, which has adapted one of Barack Obama’s slogans. Its glossy television adverts end with Borisov himself, speaking straight to camera: "Let’s show them Bulgaria can," he says.
Waiting game
After our interview, we filmed the prime minister visiting a rebuilt school.

Amid a mob of cameramen he patted children’s heads, chatted up their mothers, embraced their grandmothers.
There is no doubt he is popular, but so was a previous prime minister, the king.
Simeon successfully steered Bulgaria towards accession to the European Union, but he could not get rid of corruption, despite General Borisov’s best efforts.
In the most recent election the king’s party was wiped out, and Simeon himself resigned as its leader.
Bulgarians now wait to see whether Boiko Borisov’s career goes the same way or whether, as he promises, he really can fix Bulgaria’s problems.
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PM says Belgrade cheapest; daily claims otherwise
Belgrade is the priciest capital city in the region, writes daily Blic, and says it can refute PM Mirko Cvetković’s claim to the contrary. “Serbia’s market is fully supplied, while the prices of basic products are the lowest in Belgrade compared to Ljubljana, Zagreb, Sarajevo, Budapest, Podgorica, Bucharest and Sofia,” the premier was quoted as saying recently, as he marked his first year in office.
Bulgaria to open embassy in Kosovo
The Bulgarian Liaison Office in PriÅ¡tina is to become an embassy, the Foreign Ministry in Sofia has announced. “The outgoing Bulgarian government has decided to raise the Bulgarian Liaison Office in PriÅ¡tina to the level of an embassy. Ambassadorial duties will for now be discharged by the current office director, Ivo Ivanov,“ PriÅ¡tina media report.




Monsters of Folk
Phoenix
Laurent Brancowitz – Phoenix
Phoenix