Archive: September 2009 (31-40 of 58)

Sep 14 2009 10:56 PM ET

Kanye West to Jay Leno: 'I'm ashamed, it was rude, I'm going to take some time off'

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A humbled Kanye West was interviewed by Jay Leno before performing on the first Jay Leno Show. West wanted to address his Taylor Swift insult at last night’s VMAs. West called Swift “a talented artist” and said it was “someone’s emotions I stepped on — it was rude.”

When Leno asked West what his late mother might have said about this controversy, West seemed either startled into speechlessness or too moved to speak. There was a long silence that became dramatic — you rarely hear such dead air on TV.

Finally, West said, “I’m ashamed” and that he wants to “take some time off and evaluate the future.” He was probably referring to his career.

Did you watch Kanye West on Jay Leno? What did you think?

Sep 14 2009 05:12 PM ET

Whitney Houston on 'Oprah': 'I was so weak': The power of love, drugs, rehab, relapse, and redemption

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Sometimes it takes a star to interview a star. It’s doubtful that Whitney Houston would have opened up as freely as she did on Monday’s season premiere of Oprah were she not being interviewed by Oprah Winfrey. There was an atmosphere of understanding and trust that allowed Houston to speak with little self-consciousness about her drug use, her tumultuous marriage to Bobby Brown, and the squandering of her musical gifts. “I was so weak,” she said simply, powerfully.

For a star who has many times in her career seemed regally aloof from the petty concerns of the world that you and I endure, Houston spoke to Oprah in the manner so many of the abused women that Winfrey has interviewed over the years have spoken. That she was “trying to please” an “emotionally abusive” husband. That “I would become a little girl” in his presence. That there was an element of masochism to the abuse: “I was very interested in having someone have control over me.”

When Houston spoke about the “allure, the passion, the crazy love” during her early days with Brown, you knew that feeling in your bones — the maddening power of unbridled romance. She acknowledged the “sweet, gentle tenderness” about Brown at first. But as Houston became a bigger star than Brown (she locates the period as occurring around the time of The Bodyguard), she claimed his insecurity and jealousy increased with hostility. “He spit on me,” she said with quiet vehemence, as though reliving the degrading moment.

And drug use. At one point, Houston tried to explain the combination of drugs she was taking during her worst times, and Oprah (and this was when Winfrey was not a star, but a stand-in for us, the confused audience) had her break it down. “Follow me here, Oprah,” said Houston was winning wryness. She explained she was “lacing marijuana… with rock cocaine.” “I wasn’t getting high by myself,” she said. “We were partners.”

And Oprah made a terrific connection that Houston seized upon. “Now I see… you took those [marriage] vows seriously.” Yes, Houston said, yes! With the warped logic of the addicted, she said she thought that even in those cocaine moments, “holy matrimony was very serious to me” — and proved it by quoting from the Bible marriage ceremony. (Houston, daughter of gospel singer Cissy Houston, knows her Bible very well indeed.)

The sad thing is that Houston seems to have been a victim of the same sort of macho sexism that too many women still suffer under. She has succumbed to the idea that it’s somehow natural for a man to be threatened by a woman’s success and that she could have avoided a lot of trouble by being more deferential: “Something happens to a man when a woman has that much fame… I tried to play it down… I used to say, ‘I’m Mrs. Brown, don’t call me Houston.’”

She spoke movingly of wanting “my joy back” and of (quoting the Bible) “the peace that passeth all understanding.” On this day, she looked a little closer to achieving that. The second part of Oprah’s interview will air tomorrow.

Did you watch? What did you think?

Sep 14 2009 01:59 PM ET

The Emmys this weekend: What show will win Best Comedy? Let's all guess

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The Emmys are this Sunday, so each day this week, I’ll make a prediction about who will win/who should win in some major categories. Today: Best comedy series.

Of the seven nominees — 30 Rock, The Office, Entourage, How I Met Your Mother, Family Guy, Weeds, and Flight of the Conchords — I’d say that the shocker of the night would be if Family Guy won (because it’s extremely rare for an animated show to put itself in this category, let alone win). And the odds favor 30 Rock.

But I’d also say that there’s a dark horse in this race: This could be How I Met Your Mother‘s breakthrough year with Emmy voters.

So rather than Will Win/Should Win picks today, I’ll do a Will Win/Could Win:

Could win: How I Met Your Mother

Will win: 30 Rock

What do you think? Who’ll win, and why?

Sep 14 2009 11:59 AM ET

Kate Gosselin co-hosting 'The View' this morning: Mocks Madonna, answers 'people who say just stop' filming 'Jon and Kate'

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Sitting in Barbara Walters’ usual chair, Kate Gosselin began the first of two days as a guest co-host on The View this morning. She dodged Sherri Shepherd’s blunt question, “How do you feel about [Jon] bringing that [girlfriend] around your children?” But she did address the people who tell her to, as she put it, “just stop” filming Jon & Kate Plus Eight.

At this point in life, she said, she can’t exist with “the lack of a paycheck… I need to be out there working hard.”

She took part in the “Hot Topics,” getting off a nice line about Madonna’s self-important Michael Jackson VMA speech, in which every fact Madonna recited about Jackson was followed with  ” … so did I.” Kate carried Madonna’s line of ego-reasoning a tad further, suggesting that the singer would probably say: “Michael Jackson passed away, but I haven’t.”

Kate also weighed in on her child-bearing cable-mates the Duggar family, now expecting a 19th child, calling upon her first career as a labor-and-delivery nurse. Gosselin expressed worry for Michelle Duggar’s health in giving birth to so many children. “For her, it’s scary,” she said, speaking knowledgably about the uterine wall. (Hey, it’s The View: women talk about these things among each other.)

All in all, no fireworks, but a quite creditable job.

Did you watch? What do you think?

Sep 13 2009 10:49 PM ET

'True Blood' season finale: A white wedding, a black heart, and a blood-red cliffhanger

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The truly grand finale of True Blood managed to tie up various subplots, pry open new ones, and cram a vast array of moods, jokes, horrors, and surprises into one hour. Beginning with Maryann wearing the white wedding dress of Sookie’s grandmother and ending with Sookie in a purple gown given to her by Bill (with a choice shot of Lafayette in drag as well), True Blood made good on most of the stories it told this season.

SPOILER ALERT! DON’T READ ANY FURTHER IF YOU DON’T WANT TO KNOW THE DETAILS OF TRUE BLOOD‘S SEASON FINALE.

The cliffhanger egg from two weeks ago was an ostrich egg, a fertility symbol, that completed what Andy would later refer to as the “giant statue of meat” that Maryann had built on Sookie’s lawn. Sam, as many of you thought, was indeed meant to be sacrificed (“the perfect wedding gift”) to Maryann’s god, Dionysus, who was to take the form of a white bull.

Instead of a white wedding, however, Maryann got her black heart gored and pulled out of her by a shape-shifted Sam. I was sorry to see Michelle Forbes go, but what a great performance she gave: her Maryann was scary, funny, and creepy, and the actress was able to go over-the-top and pull her performance back to human-scale. Her character’s death closed out the first half-hour with such finality (“It’s all over now,” said Sookie as Maryann lay in a heap and the townspeople came to their senses) that I thought, “Where do we go from here?”

Turns out, the last half of this True Blood became a beautifully ominous mood-piece. I suspect there might be one character some of you didn’t get enough of this night: Eric was relegated to one significant but early scene, playing Yahtzee with Sophie-Ann. When viewed in the same frame, Alexander Skarsgard’s sly subtlety only made Evan Rachel Wood’s archness seem more like over-acting, and the Yahtzee jokes (“We play to five million”) were strained this time around. Oh, well: More Eric next season, right?

As it was, writer Alexander Woo had his hands full mopping up the aftermath of Maryann’s mess in Bon Temps. Andy got his badge back, Eggs was compelled by guilt to own up to what he’d done under Maryann’s spell and paid for it with his life (Jason may have pulled the trigger, but Eggs in effect committed suicide, achieving the death he wanted), and Tara was left once again alone and in misery. Sam sought the truth about his real parents. And, oh yes: Woo worked a cameo of True Blood book author Charlaine Harris into a bar scene.

I must admit that at first I was bored by the scenes between Hoyt and his mother, but that proved to be a set-up for one of the night’s best moments: the sight of Jessica, set loose and hungry at a truck stop, feeding on a horny trucker to the strains of honky-tonk music by Buddy and Julie Miller.

Our next music cue was none other than the fine Southern boy Jerry Lee Lewis providing the dance soundtrack to Bill and Sookie’s date night. When Bill proposed to Sookie with only a few minutes to go, we kinda knew this was not going to be a fairy-tale ending, didn’t we? The shock-shot of Bill being garroted just as Sookie ran into the room saying, “Yes, Bill Compton!” was a fine way to leave us, and Bill, hanging.

It became clear with this finale that True Blood is a great pulp opera. Its initial use of anti-vampire sentiment as a metaphor for homophobia has combined with Alan Ball’s other ambitions: to take a cold, hard stare at romance; to show how you can make an audience catch its breath between laughter and violence; and to offer a much-needed critique of the entire pop-culture vampire craze, without being self-conscious or coy.

Did you watch? What did you think of the True Blood finale? Who do you think has, er, swept Bill off his feet?

Sep 11 2009 11:51 PM ET

Larry Gelbart: Appreciating a great comic writer

Larry Gelbart, who died on Friday at age 81, was a master comedy writer whose career spanned generations of humor. Starting out as a joke writer for Bob Hope and Danny Thomas, he was also part of the golden age of television, writing for the great sketch comic Sid Caesar, and ushered in the modern era of the sitcom with his adaptation of M*A*S*H for television. His work in the theater (A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum) and in film (Tootsie) will be duly noted, but it was in television that he made his greatest impact.

Gelbart thought funny — his casual conversation emerged with wordplay and puns. This brief clip from an interview gives you some idea of his sharpness and bracing lack of sentimentality:

Gelbart was also a stubborn cuss who fought for his material. In the recent, first-rate book And Here’s The Kicker, Mike Sacks’ excellent collection of interviews with comedy greats, Gelbart talked about how he battled with CBS to excise the laugh-track from M*A*S*H because he felt it marred both the humor and the mood he was trying to create. “We did not mean for people to be cackling throughout the show,” he said. “It becomes so much more cynical and heartbreaking without all that cheap, mechanical laughter.”

He concluded: “Some people in Hollywood treat me like I’m a monument… But I’d much rather have less of that type of respect and more of the other kind: the kind where they leave your work alone.”

Gelbart’s work will stand alone, incomparable, for a very long time.

Sep 11 2009 11:13 PM ET

La Toya Jackson's nutty interview about Michael: 'He was murdered... he was a god'

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Billed as “A Sister’s Story,” the 20/20 interview with La Toya Jackson conducted by Barbara Walters was crammed with nutty and, as Walters termed them, “inflammatory” charges and opinions about her brother, Michael Jackson. Of course, who knows the truth surrounding almost anything about so private and eccentric a figure as Michael, but, gathered together, La Toya’s assertions this evening were — well, you decide:

She said that Michael told her repeatedly, “La Toya, they’re going to murder me. If I die, they killed me.” Who “they” were, La Toya did not say.

She said the doctors caring for Michael were “hired by someone else,” not Michael. Walters described a “shadowy entourage” surrounding Michael, but she went no further down that path.

La Toya said of Michael, “He was murdered. I don’t know exactly who [did it]… this is just my opinion.”

La Toya said that their father Joe, alone among the family members “tried almost every week” to intervene in Michael’s use of drugs. This despite numerous interviews Michael himself gave asserting that he was terrified of and full of hatred for his father because of the beatings the elder man had inflicted upon Michael as a youth. (La Toya maintains Michael had “made amends” with Joe.)

The interview took a side-route into La Toya’s own life, so that she could tell us about how her ex-husband, Jack Gordon, used to lock her in a closet for eight hours at a time, and, said Walters, “forced her to pose for Playboy and several pornographic videos.”

La Toya said that, before Michael was buried, he “looked fabulous” and that his body was clothed in white with a “big gold belt like a prizefighter would wear.” Walters, with that uncanny knack of hers, asked the question we were all thinking: “Was he wearing one glove?”

Whaaat?? Oh, sorry: La Toya took this seriously. “No,” she said. “Two black leather gloves.”

La Toya said of her brother, “He was the closest to a god that I know.”

Oh, it was a fine night for investigative reporting over at 20/20. Is it any wonder John Stossel is jumping ship and swimming over to the shark-infested waters of Fox News?

Did you watch the La Toya Jackson interview? What did you think?

Sep 10 2009 10:37 PM ET

'Supernatural' season premiere: A 'give 'em hell attitude'

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Tense and tricky, the season premiere of Supernatural had a lot of action and emotion. It seems as though the series has been gone a long time, doesn’t it? Show creator Eric Kripke, who wrote the premiere, picked up right where he’d left off, with the aftermath of Sam having killed Lilith, the “final seal” that sets Lucifer loose upon the world.

SPOILER ALERT: DON’T READ FURTHER IF YOU DON’T WANT TO KNOW WHAT HAPPENED DURING SUPERNATURAL‘S SEASON PREMIERE.

Kripke front-loaded this opening episode with some terrific scenes with characters we wanted to see again, like the hack novelist Carver Edlund (“I have a molar in my hair — this has been a really stressful day”) as well as the grim angels Zachariah (to whom Dean said blithely, “Cram it with walnuts, ugly”) and Castiel. Yes, Castiel’s back… not that I fully understood how. Maybe you more hardcore-knowledgable fans will explain it to me?

As it was, I thoroughly enjoyed the cameo by bad, bad Meg and the entrance of a fan of Edlund’s books, Becky. She’s a ticklingly good creation by Kripke, hunched over her keyboard tapping out fan-fiction in which Sam and Dean are “husky-voiced” lovers. She also served as a messenger for some key information about “the sword of Michael,” Michael being the angel who “commands the heavenly host” and can help defeat Lucifer.

One consistent theme in Kripke’s vision for Supernatural is that his heroes aren’t just flesh-and-blood protagonists we can like or identify with; they’re also — a key term in Supernatural as well as Biblical lore — “vessels” who embody something more powerful than themselves. This season, it sounds as though Dean will prove to be the key vessel.

I’ll keep this brief, but will add one more thing. At the heart of the show now, there’s the betrayal Dean feels toward Sam, something the conclusion of tonight’s episode suggests is going to take a long time, maybe forever, to forgive. When Sam was led astray by Ruby and he killed Lilith instead of heeding Dean, it broke something inside Dean. “I don’t think we can ever be what we were,” said Dean. In Supernatural, as in all good fiction and television, characters and their relationships with each other change and shift.

They may be fighting external enemies, but the brothers also have demons within themselves to come to terms with as well.

Did you watch the season premiere of Supernatural? What did you think?

Sep 10 2009 09:18 PM ET

'Big Brother 11': 'The devil is gone, evil is gone'

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There were times recently when I thought, if I hadn’t put in so many hours watching Big Brother 11, I’d give up now, that I don’t really care very much whether Kevin, Natalie, or Jordan wins. But then something happens, as it did Thursday. It could be an endearing comment (the way Jordan said to Natalie, “You’re a little instigator!”), or an especially malicious thing Natalie said (exulting in Michele’s eviction: “The devil is gone, evil is gone; don’t you just feel rejuvenated?”), or a particularly honest observation by Kevin (“My word means nothing in this game” — thank goodness there’s still one person in the house who knows what’s up).

So… I can’t resist: I watch on. SPOILER ALERT: Don’t read on if you don’t want to know what happened Thursday night.

Julie Chen announced that the final HOH would be a three-parter, and that all three remaining contestants would go to finale night. (That is, Tuesday’s live, two-hour concluding installment.) Kevin won the first part of the HOH competition, the log-rolling endurance test. He sat out the second part, and Jordan won that one, a combo memory-test and ball-rolling competition. “I’m sweatin,’” she twanged, and so was I, a little bit. Jordan hasn’t been the greatest player by any means, but she’s certainly a charmer.

Jeff’s arrival at the jury house was just as he predicted: the jury members razzed him for a while, and then he settled right in.

The special visit by what were billed as four of the greatest BB players ever was a dull bust. Mike Boogie, Evel Dick, Danielle, and Janelle? All were subdued (well, Dick was merely smug — what else?) and Danielle was particularly inarticulate.

So except for the Jordan-Natalie competition, Thursday was pretty draggy, don’t you think?

At this point, I wish Jordan would perform a miracle and win, but good sense tells me Kevin will win, which will not disappoint me at all, either. The guy’s earned it. There’s no way Natalie can take it all, right?

Right? Is there something I’m not considering?

As for Sunday’s special hour of, as Chen put it, “hilarious and embarrassing moments”? No, thanks, Julie; I’ll be popping corn in preparation for the True Blood finale.

Oh, but do check out Lynette Rice’s rigorous interview with Michele right now.

Sep 10 2009 04:33 PM ET

It's 'True Blood on Twitter Thursday'!

Filed under: News and tagged: , , , ,

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Proving once again that True Blood and Twitter (and, well, EW.com) are taking over the culture, I take modest pride in informing you of “True Blood on Twitter Thursday.”

It’s a group of Blood fans who gather on Twitter and act out various characters and scenarios each week. This week, today, the “True Blood on Twitter Thursday” group will be performing, via Twitter, the winning entries of my Write Your Own True Blood Episode competition. Couldn’t be more proud. And congrats once again to the winners, “B.E.V.” and “TJ.”

You can check out the details and all the fun on True Blood on Twitter Thursday” here.

And keep getting ready for this Sunday’s season finale.

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