The most exciting part of watching the annual MTV Video Music Awards is not the awards themselves but undoubtedly the unscripted moments.
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/earshot/mtv-video-music-awards-alicia-keys-beyonce-357340
The most exciting part of watching the annual MTV Video Music Awards is not the awards themselves but undoubtedly the unscripted moments.
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/earshot/mtv-video-music-awards-alicia-keys-beyonce-357340
Billy Corben
VRP
Biography:
http://www.rakontur.com/journal/2008/7/1/billy-corben.html
Billy Corben was born in Florida and graduated with honors from the University of Miami where he majored in political science, screenwriting, and theater. As a young actor, Corben worked with Ron Howard, Roger Corman, Steve Martin, Hilary Swank, Cloris Leachman, Judd Hirsch, Corey Feldman, Alan Thicke, Joe Pantoliano and Christopher Meloni. He retired from acting at age 15 and began work on the other side of the camera. His feature documentary directorial debut, Raw Deal: A Question of Consent, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2001, making him one of the youngest directors in Sundance history. Examining the alleged rape of an exotic dancer at a fraternity house at the University of Florida, the film utilized extensive clips from videotape footage of the alleged assault. Considered by critics to be “one of the most controversial films of the modern day” and “one of the most compelling pieces of non-fiction ever produced,” (Film Threat Magazine), Raw Deal has been seen all over the world.
Following that success, Corben and producing partner Alfred Spellman founded rakontur, a Miami Beach-based content creation company, and took on another Florida true-crime story, this one closer to home. The New York Times called Cocaine Cowboys, “a hyperventilating account of the blood-drenched Miami drug culture in the 1970s and 1980s.” The film tells the story of how the drug trade built Corben’s native city of Miami through firsthand accounts of some of the most successful smugglers of the era and the deadliest hitman of the cocaine wars.
For Google Inc.’s YouTube it was a $150 million experiment: Seed dozens of new video “channels” on its Web service and see what works.
So far, Google likes what it sees from the eight-month effort. The company says it will put in another $200 million to market the channels as it attempts to upgrade its content from simple user-generated videos and to lure more viewers and advertising.
The site has launched nearly 100 new channels so far this year, attracting talent such as actor Amy Poehler to create or star in original episodes in an effort to draw new audiences—and blue-chip advertisers.
YouTube has secured commitments from advertisers to run more than $150 million of ads on the channels this year, according to a person with direct knowledge of the sales.
YouTube officials declined to comment on the figures.
http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB10000872396390444840104577549632241258356-lMyQjAxMTAyMDMwMTAzODE3Wj.html?mod=wsj_valetbottom_email
Wisconsin Representative JoCasta Zamarripa told reporters this week that she’s decided to come out as bisexual — doing so before her upcoming re-election bid. A Democrat (who faces one Democratic challenger in the upcoming primary election), Zamarripa is also the only Hispanic in the Wisconsin Legislature.
http://www.advocate.com/politics/politicians/2012/07/27/wisconsin-legislator-comes-out-bisexual
You know what happened to me this weekend? I watched a show on TV — a rerun of Glee, actually.
And suddenly, this weird feeling came over me. It started in my fingers, a kind of tingling sensation. It went up my arm and into my chest. Then, through my whole body. I felt like I was on fire. My heart started pounding and I began sweating all over. I felt terribly dizzy so I lay down to try and get a grip.
And then, suddenly, it stopped. As quickly as it began. I ran to the mirror and looked at my reflection staring back at me. And then I realized…
That TV show had turned me gay.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/evan-shapiro/tv-made-me-gay_b_1697643.html?utm_hp_ref=email_share
I’ve complained numerous times in this space about the endless claims from media pundits that “TV is dying.” Despite pronouncements by experts like David Carr and miscounted viewership by Nielsen, I can assure you, TV IS NOT DYING. That said, despite a current heyday of creativity and originality — Television does have something wrong with it.
Yes, as Carr pointed out and Nielsen reported, “traditional TV viewing” has eroded. However, it has not been replaced by something other than TV, it’s been replaced by more TV, just on other platforms. In some cases, those other platforms are legal; in other cases they are not. As Brian Stelter demonstrated last week, many twenty-somethings are using their parents’ HBO GO account to watch Girls, without a TV. As TorrentFreak points out, many others are simply stealing TV.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/evan-shapiro/tv-cord-cutters_b_1568919.html?utm_hp_ref=email_share
MIAMI— It won’t take long for Ray Allen to experience a reunion with the Boston Celtics.
While the complete NBA schedule will not be released until later, the Sun Sentinel has learned from a league source familiar with the planning that the Miami Heat will open the 2012-13 NBA regular season on Tuesday Oct. 30 at AmericanAirlines Arena against the Celtics.
http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/miami-heat/sfl-miami-heat-nba-schedule-s072312,0,4023075.story
APPARENTLY the big news following Anderson Cooper’s publicacknowledgment that he is gay is that it’s not news at all. “And the TV nation seemed to shrug,” in the words of one report on the noncontroversy.
Fifteen years ago, when the star of a popular TV comedy decided to come out of the closet, it was big news. Not just big: It was the cover of Time magazine; a major story on Oprah, Primetime Live, and CNN; and the subject of a New York Times editorial that took her to task for her ”ostentatious display of affection with her lover in front of President Clinton.” At the time, it scarcely mattered that Ellen DeGeneres protested that she’d ”never wanted to be the spokesperson for the gay community.” That role was automatically assigned — by both the news media and a gay population desperate for high-visibility representatives — to any famous person who took such a rare public step. It was not to be relinquished for months, or perhaps years. She’d be expected to weigh in on everything from civil unions to ”Don’t ask, don’t tell” until the next willing celebrity came along.
http://popwatch.ew.com/2012/07/02/anderson-cooper-new-art-of-coming-out/
Neil Smit, executive vice president of Comcast, joined Anne Sweeney, president, Disney/ABC Television Group, on stage at the Fortune Brainstorm Tech conference for a discussion about the future of television, moderated by Fortune’s Stephanie Mehta.
http://tech.fortune.cnn.com/2012/07/17/neil-smit-anne-sweeney-transcript/