37 Reasons Why Denmark Will Ruin You For Life

The best and most underrated European country.

4/15/2015   BuzzFeed   by

1. Let’s talk about Denmark, shall we?

Frederiksborg Castle

2. It may be a small European country, but it’s also seriously amazing.

Copenhagen

3. From the villages of Jutland…

Lønstrup

4. To the canals of Copenhagen.

5. Denmark is just gorgeous.

Odense

6. And often surreally beautiful.

The Øresund Bridge, between Copenhagen in Denmark and Malmö in Sweden

7. It is breathtaking in the winter…

8. (Even in a middle of a snowstorm.)

Copenhagen

9. In the summer…

Bornholm

10. And any other season.

Kongens Have, Copenhagen

11. The country has great castles.

Frederiksborg Castle

12. MANY great castles.

Egeskov Castle

13. Including Kronborg, of Hamlet fame.

It is known as Elsinore in the play.

14. But Denmark doesn’t live in the past.

The Black Diamond, the modern extension to the Royal Danish Library, in Copenhagen

15. It embraces and fosters contemporary art and architecture. Like in the ARoS museum in Århus.

16. Or buildings like the Gemini Residence in Copenhagen.

17. Denmark has beautiful wild beaches…

Near Skagen, Jutland

18. And quaint cottages.

Hellebæk

19. It also has amazing fauna.

Dyrehaven

20. No wonder then that the Danes are super eco-friendly!

21. They basically live on their bikes.

Copenhagen

22. No matter how many people they have to carry.

Copenhagen

23. Or how bad the weather is.

Or how bad the weather is.

Copenhagen

24. Denmark is also the birthplace of Lego AND the home to LEGOLAND!

In other words: If you don’t like Denmark, you don’t like fun.

25. Danes know how to have fun, and Denmark is home to the two oldest operating amusement parks in the world. This is Dyrehavsbakken, the oldest one, in a picture from 1901.

Danes know how to have fun, and Denmark is home to the two oldest operating amusement parks in the world. This is Dyrehavsbakken, the oldest one, in a picture from 1901.

26. And this is Tivoli, which has been the most delightful place on Earth since it opened in 1843.

And this is Tivoli, which has been the most delightful place on Earth since it opened in 1843.

It is also located right in the heart of Copenhagen.

27. The food is also delicious. Whether it’s high-end meals, like at Noma…

The food is also delicious. Whether it's high-end meals, like at Noma...

AKA the best restaurant in the world.

28. …or the always satisfying Smørrebrød.

29. But most importantly, Denmark is the birthplace of Carlsberg, probably the best beer in the world.

30. Can we take a few seconds to talk about how awesome Copenhagen is?

Can we take a few seconds to talk about how awesome Copenhagen is?

Nyhavn

31. It is beautiful.

It is beautiful.

Christiansborg Palace

32. Full of history.

Full of history.

Nyboder

33. And it strikes the perfect balance between traditional and contemporary, which is a rare and remarkable thing in Europe.

And it strikes the perfect balance between traditional and contemporary, which is a rare and remarkable thing in Europe.

34. The city is also home to Christiania, an amazing autonomous neighborhood that has welcomed alternative cultures since 1971.

35. So yeah, Denmark is pretty amazing.

So yeah, Denmark is pretty amazing.

Amagertorv Square, Copenhagen

36. And you can be sure of one thing…

And you can be sure of one thing...

Lolland

37. If you spend some time there, it will ruin you for any other place.

If you spend some time there, it will ruin you for any other place.

Rubjerg Knude lighthouse.

http://www.buzzfeed.com/marietelling/37-reasons-why-demark-will-ruin-you-for-life#.ku8xeE0em

Catholic Leaders Join MRC, FRC, and AFA in National Campaign to Boot Anti-Religious Bigot from New Prime Time Show

4/21/2015   MRC News Busters

Catholic leaders joined the Media Research Center (MRC), the Family Research Council (FRC), and the American Family Association (AFA) in a national campaign to educate the public about a Disney ABC sitcom pilot based on the life of anti-religious bigot Dan Savage. MRC and FRC sent a letter to Ben Sherwood, president of Disney/ABC Television Group, nearly four weeks ago urging him to pull the plug on the new show but have still not received a response.

Dan Savage’s vulgarity and violent rhetoric is well-documented. Savage is unapologetic in his promotion of filth masquerading as humor. His new show, “The Real O’Neals” is a platform he does not deserve. Even so, Disney ABC continues to remain silent as pro-family and pro-faith organizations call for it to reconsider its decision to promote this bigoted, hate-filled man.

“Disney ABC continues to circle the wagon and ignore the anti-religious bigot in their midst,” said MRC President Brent Bozell. “We will not relent in exposing Dan Savage for the vile hate he spews at conservatives, Catholics, and evangelicals. Disney ABC’s silence is shameful.”

STATEMENTS

“The most incredibly vicious anti-Catholic in America is Dan Savage. What he has said about Catholicism is so vile that Disney would never air it. To offer this malicious bigot a show is the height of irresponsibility.”

Bill Donohue

President, Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights

 

“Unfortunately, Dan Savage’s public persona is completely opposite to wholesome role model for kids.  His crass and even vitriolic disparaging of certain faiths and family values, and his aggressive agenda of promoting dangerous, deviant sexual experimentation couldn’t have escaped Disney’s or ABC’s attention.  To see the network that brought us Cinderella endorse a man like this should outrage every American who cares about our children and our culture.”

Lila Rose

President, Live Action

 

“Dan Savage recently made a lewd smear against Pope John Paul II on Twitter in which he accused him of being a child molester. This is sadly typical of Dan Savage, who has a history of making X-rated personal attacks. Why would Disney hire this man for one of their TV shows? And why would advertisers want to be associated with such vile attacks on Catholics?”

Brian Burch

President, CatholicVote.org

 

“These thugs will ‘savage’ Catholics for their religious beliefs, and then put on fundraisers to advocate tolerance for any other minority.  This hits a new low for an industry that has sunk to the depths of depravity and religious hatred.

The two halves of the First Amendment fit together.  Those who claim free speech for the news and entertainment media, yet freely discriminate against Catholics, forget that there is no authentic free speech if there is no freedom of religion.  The First Amendment will not stand in a society that has no respect for its citizens’ religious beliefs.”

Patrick J. Reilly

President, The Cardinal Newman Society

 

“Dan Savage has said some of the most vile and disgusting things about Christians that have ever been heard in America. He has publicly encouraged sexual violence against them and said they were deserving of death by torture. The fact that ABC would voluntarily work with such an extreme person to promote his immoral, hateful agenda is problematic in the extreme.”

John-Henry Westen

Co-Founder and Editor-in-Chief of LifeSiteNews

 

“Dan Savage is called a pro-gay activist but what I know of him is that he is against just about everything, including the family. Disney will likely feel its decision to base a show on his life where it hurts the most – in its deep pockets.”

Father Frank Pavone

President, Priests for Life

 

“Dan Savage’s hatred for those with whom he disagrees is a matter of public record, as are his many vile taunts and fantasies. If ABC does give him a platform from which to further spread his venom, then let this be the end of the claim that ‘neutral’ media such as ABC just want to promote tolerance. Anti-Christian bigotry is absolutely alright with ABC, so let’s do away with the pretense that this is just about entertainment.”

Stephen Phelan

Director of Mission CommunicationsHuman Life International

 

“The idea that the vulgar, insulting, outrageous Dan Savage would rate consideration for a sitcom on ABC Disney only confirms the obvious fact that, culturally, our nation is in a moral free fall.  What other reason could there be for partnering with a man who has spent much of his adult life insulting God, His followers, and His Church?

How low will society go before courageous Americans stand up and say enough? The time is now to raise our voices. Join us in opposing this most recent embrace of media bigotry that has no place in a civilized nation.”

Judie Brown

President, American Life League Inc.

 

“Disney sold out years ago, but to produce a show based on the life of a radical bigot like Dan Savage is a slap in the face to Catholics across the country.  The Lepanto Institute is more than happy to join in the campaign against this program.  Anti-Family propaganda like this must never see the light of day.”

Michael Hichborn

President, Lepanto Institute

 

“If ABC thinks Dan Savage is a worthwhile subject for a biography, one hopes, and I’m sure Mr. Savage would agree, that it be faithful to the truth. Of course a biography that is true to Mr. Savage’s life, with his endless stream of vile, profanity-laced, anti-religious hate speech would not pass FCC regulations, not to mention being an affront to common decency. But I doubt common decency is a factor in ABC’s calculations.”

Eva Muntean*

Co-Chair Walk for Life West Coast
Marketing Manager at Ignatius Press

 

There’s nothing funny about ABC’s outrageous decision to invest in a “sitcom” about an anti-Christian, anti-Catholic bigot. This decision should tell Disney ABC shareholders and advertisers that the network is in desperate need of new management.

Richard Viguerie*
Chairman, ConservativeHQ.com

Dan Savage has made numerous comments about conservatives, evangelicals, and Catholics that offend basic standards of decency. They include:

  • Proclaiming that he sometimes thinks about “fucking the shit out of” Senator Rick Santorum
  • Calling for Christians at a high school conference to “ignore the bullshit in the Bible”
  • Saying that “the only thing that stands between my dick and Brad Pitt’s mouth is a piece of paper” when expressing his feelings on Pope Benedict’s opposition to gay marriage
  • Promoting marital infidelity
  • Saying “Carl Romanelli should be dragged behind a pickup truck until there’s nothing left but the rope.”
  • Telling Bill Maher that he wished Republicans “were all fucking dead”
  • Telling Dr. Ben Carson to “suck my dick. Name the time and place and I’ll bring my dick and a camera crew and you can suck me off and win the argument.”

###

*Ms. Muntean and Mr. Viguerie were not on the initial statement but signed on after its publication.

 

http://newsbusters.org/blogs/nb-staff/2015/04/21/catholic-leaders-join-mrc-frc-and-afa-national-campaign-boot-anti

Fresh Off the Boat’s Nahnatchka Khan on the Show’s Impressive Ratings, Constance Wu, and How She’s Dealt With Eddie Huang’s Criticisms

4/21/2015   Vulture   By Josef Adalian

Before it premiered last month, Fresh Off the Boat was looking like it was going to be the latest in a long line of Critically Admired ABC Comedies With Suboptimal Nielsen Ratings, such as Happy Endings, Cougar Town, and Don’t Trust the B— in Apartment 23. The network slotted the show Tuesdays at 8 p.m., opposite ratings juggernauts The Voice and NCIS, and with no established comedies around it to attract audiences. And yet, thanks to those rave reviews and great marketing by ABC — the network aired two episodes on its top-rated Wednesday comedy block before it landed on Tuesday — Boat has more than managed to stay afloat. It’s averaging over 7 million viewers each week and is drawing solid ratings with younger viewers. Season two isn’t assured, but it’s looking more and more likely (despite the misgivings of the real Eddie Huang, whose memoir inspired the fictional Huangs). Vulture caught up with Boat creator/showrunner Nahnatchka Khan to talk about how the series has evolved, what might be in store for a season two, and how she’s been dealing with Huang’s criticisms.

So, it seems like you just premiered, and yet season one is about to wrap up. Looking back now, was there an arc to the season? Did you either go in or end up telling a specific story about this family over the course of season one?
Yeah, there was definitely a thing where we all felt like, Okay, we have 13 episodes, but we don’t know if we’re going to get any more beyond that. So if these are the only opportunities we get to tell stories, let’s do something that would feel satisfying to viewers that have watched this family from the beginning. Especially because we make such a point in the pilot of showing the Huangs struggling in Orlando (particularly Jessica and Eddie), we thought it made sense to check back in with them at the end of the first 13 to see how far they’ve come. Which led us to ask the question that we address in the finale: What happens if Jessica feels they’ve come too far?

In a lot of two-parent-family comedies, writers often tend to favor one parent over the other, even if slightly. With Fresh, Constance Wu’s Jessica is obviously the most forceful presence — and yet, I don’t know that the show favors her over Randall  Park and Louis. It seems like they’re really co-parenting these kids. 
Totally. Jessica and Louis are in this together: They each have a take and opinion on what’s happening. Whether it’s Louis giving Eddie advice on how to appeal to girls (treat them like a restaurant), or Jessica teaching Eddie not to date-rape (by pummeling him with a large stuffed rabbit), it’s very much a co-parent household.

Did your view of any of your characters evolve over the course of the writing and production of the first 13 episodes? 
Definitely. I think that happens often. When you’re writing a pilot, unless you already have an actor attached to the project, you’re writing it with all the voices sort of in your head. Once you actually cast it, the actors become the voices of the characters, and you start to write for them and their strengths. Constance revealed early on that she was an amazing singer, so we wrote that in for her. Randall has the ability to play single-minded enthusiasm so well, so we had him drive a lot of comedy that way.  And the boys were just amazing to watch, the way they kept improving every single day, getting stronger and stronger so that we were able to give them even more story to carry. It was great.

You seem to have been blessed with three exceptionally talented kids.
They honestly are like brothers! It was National Sibling Day recently, and they all posted pictures of themselves hugging each other on set, being like, “My brothers!” They have sleepovers at each other’s houses. It’s so sweet.

Hudson has a really tough job to do as Eddie, I’d argue. He’s playing a kid who’s trying to fit in, and he’s doing so by adopting the mentality of a young hip-hop artist — as seen through the eyes of a preteen. So he has to put off this air of not giving a damn all the time, and yet also be a vulnerable kid and a lovable co-lead of a show.
Hudson has done such an incredible job balancing that character. [He’s] a pre-teenage boy who identifies with, and loves, hip-hop music so much that he tries to emulate his idols without really understanding why, not having any other motivation than just, “I want to be like these guys.” The advantage of getting older is that you can look back and understand more of what hip-hop artists and rappers at that time were representing. But when you’re an 11-year-old kid, you’re just in it, you’re not looking for a deeper meaning. These guys are just your idols.

There’s a sweetness and innocence that Hudson brings to it, where you can tell he’s putting on a front and mimicking behavior he’s seen in videos and movies —  but he’s so genuine about it, he believes in it so much, that it gives you a nostalgic feeling, almost. You miss that time in your life where you just loved something purely, before you started to question it.

I also see a bit of teenage Darlene Conner from Roseanne in Eddie. Have you been inspired by any other past TV kids?
I never thought about the Darlene thing — that’s funny! I mean, I think inasmuch as you felt like Darlene didn’t think she belonged in her family and was as stubborn as her mother, which led to her and Roseanne butting heads in a way that made you feel like, Oh, these two are cut from the same cloth. I can see that in the way Eddie and Jessica relate to one another.  And I would also say a little Bart Simpson as well — the original/perpetual 10-year-old bad boy.

As a balance to Eddie, is it important to have his two brothers provide those more conventional warm and fuzzy comedy moments for us — especially Ian’s Evan? He literally makes everything cuter.
I think his brothers are so important because they show how unique Eddie’s struggle is to Eddie. Emery has no problems making friends; Evan is his mother’s son, always striving for perfection. These are both important because they cast Eddie into starker relief, and make his differences really stand out — in a good way.

Last week’s episode took advantage of the fact that you’re a single-camera show more than any previous one. And by that, I mean there were a lot of Scrubs-like visual jokes, flashbacks, and fantasies. What’s been the debate in the writers’ room, and maybe with ABC, over how much of this you want to do versus being more straight-ahead, à la Modern Family
I love using the single-camera format to help with storytelling and jokes. I think it’s a huge asset. In the writers’ room, the challenge is always to tell interesting stories in unexpected ways, so we try to never limit ourselves in how we accomplish that. Modern Family is unique in that it’s telling the story of three different families, which is a huge amount of characters to service. We’re able to play with the format because we have the luxury of only having one family to service. And ABC has been fully supportive, which is cool.

There was a feeling in the TV business before you launched that you might be in for a very rough time, ratings-wise, because ABC had scheduled you Tuesdays. Except for The Goldbergs, its track record for comedies on the night has been pretty awful over the past five years. And yet: You’ve done very well!  Have you been at least a little surprised?
Very much so! We joke that our lead-in is Wheel of Fortune, so at least Jessica’s mom would be happy, since she thinks that’s the best show on television. I mean, you love and believe in what you’re doing, but there are so many elements that go into finding and connecting with an audience, so you never really know if that’s going to happen. You hope, but you don’t know. And yes, Tuesdays at 8 p.m. has been a notoriously tough time slot for ABC comedies, and you’re up against brutal competition, so all of that certainly made us a little nervous. But ABC did such a fantastic job in promoting the show, so it was great to see people find us. The fact that we’ve done as well as we have there is pretty crazy to think about.

ABC doesn’t officially renew any of its shows, new or old, until just before it reveals its new schedule next month. But based on feedback you’re hearing from the network, are you hopeful?
I am cautiously optimistic, yes. I just walked into another room to knock on a wood table because there isn’t any wood in this room. I’m back now.

Last year, Adam Goldberg wasn’t shy about expressing how much he wanted to move his show, The Goldbergs, to Wednesdays. Do you share his love for the night?
For sure. ABC’s Wednesday-night comedy block is where you want to be if you’re a family sitcom, no doubt about it. Four great shows, just a really solid two hours of smart, funny comedies that people have come to rely on and look forward to.

Let’s assume the best and count on season two. What kinds of stories do you want to tell? How does the show move forward?
Oh, man, there are so many. At the end of the first season, we made a story file document in case we got an opportunity to make more — and there’s a lot of stuff in there that we didn’t get a chance to do in these first 13 episodes. The idea of dealing with success is always interesting to us: You spend so long struggling to make good, and then what happens when you finally do? It would be interesting to see Louis deal with that with the restaurant.  We actually touch on that theme in the finale episode as well. And just the evolution of the boys and of Jessica, the fight for independence that will inevitably ensue, and how she’ll deal with that. And we’d love to do an episode where the Huangs go back and visit their family in Washington, D.C.

Do you want to expand the universe of the show more — either by adding in new characters or diving deeper into others?
Definitely, both of those things. I think that’s what so great about television in general — you get to keep deepening and expanding this world you’ve created. That’s one of the things I’m really proud of as well, the additional characters we’ve introduced and developed in the first 13: Nicole, Honey and Marvin, Walter, the employees at Cattleman’s Ranch, Phillip Goldstein, Oscar Chow, Uncle Steve, and Aunt Connie. And, of course, Scottie Pippen.

Will we see anyone from Don’t Trust the B— in Apartment 23 stop by? Obviously not in character, but …
I would love it. I would love to have a pre–Dawson’s Creek James Van Der Beek come through, still playing himself, of course, with no idea that he’s just two years away from becoming a huge teen idol. I don’t know if James can still play an 18-year-old, but we’ll work on it.

Do you still miss those characters? Or are you too busy for grief?
I definitely do. I was working on a project with a friend, like, a good eight months after Apartment 23 was canceled, and I wound up writing a cold-open for Chloe and June! It just popped into my mind, and I had to pitch it to her. She was like, “Um, okay … definitely confused.” Being busy helps because you don’t have time to think about it, but then something will hit you, and you’ll suddenly be sighing and gazing out the window, playing Belle & Sebastian, thinking about what could have been. 

You paid homage to All-American Girl last week. Did you reach out to Margaret Cho before doing so, or hear from her after it aired?
We heard she retweeted the tag where we gave All-American Girl the shout-out, which was super cool. From the beginning of the season, we knew we wanted to acknowledge her show, because it was the first and only one that came before. And since our show is set during the same time that her show aired, we thought that would be a cool way to do it.

I’m wondering what your rules are regarding ’90s nostalgia. You’re not a show about the ’90s, so how do you decide what retro stuff makes the cut?
It really depends on the episode or the specific reference. Lots of times, a writer will have a personal connection to something (Hi-C Ecto-Coolers!), and other times it’ll just feel right for the characters —  like Eddie being desperate to get the Shaq Fu video-game.

So we should talk a little about Eddie Huang. Constance Wu said something on Twitter I found interesting. Somebody tweeted that he needed to “shut his mouth,” and she replied, “He shouldn’t be told to shut his mouth nor quiet his voice simply [because] it’s one of dissent.” Whenever he’s made his disagreements with the show public in the past, you’ve taken a similar tact as Constance. But I still have to imagine it hurts to have someone so closely associated with the show speak the way he has. Even if you respect his right to say what he wants, are you not impacted at all?
Eddie has had a complicated relationship with the show, something he’s been very clear and open about from the beginning. And he continues to have a complicated relationship with it. But something that we’ve been very clear and open about from the beginning is that the show is not a documentary or a biopic. The TV Huangs are fictionalized; they do and say things that the real Huangs never did or said. Regardless, we all wish Eddie well.

Even though Eddie’s comments generate lots of attention, you’ve also gotten some amazing support from the Asian-American community. People watch and tweet together. There’s the post-show webcast Fresh Off the Show. And, of course, you’re getting over 7 million viewers each week.
It’s been incredible. This show seems to hit people in a way that makes them almost feel all the emotions. They laugh, they relate, they cringe —sometimes because they relate, they feel nostalgic, they cry, they talk, they discuss … and I mean discuss down to the smallest of details. It’s been a very special thing to witness and be a part of.

 

http://www.vulture.com/2015/04/fotb-showrunner-on-the-shows-impressive-ratings.html?mid=twitter_vulture

Netflix Is Betting Its Future on Exclusive Programming

4/19/2015   The New York Times  

Reed Hastings, chief executive of Netflix, said his company’s rivalry with HBO will “be like the Yankees and the Red Sox.”

LOS GATOS, Calif. — It is April 9 just before midnight in the war room of Netflix’s headquarters here, where the smell of popcorn fills the air and a team of engineers, social media experts and other specialists starts counting down the seconds until the new “Daredevil” superhero series goes live on the streaming service.

At the stroke of 12, applause breaks out in the room. Flutes of Champagne are passed around as the Netflix team checks that the series is available for binge watching across devices in more than 50 countries around the world.

“Daredevil” is the 17th Netflix original series to make its debut this year, representing a bold bet by the company to significantly increase its investment in exclusive programming. Just three years after Netflix started streaming its first original series, “Lilyhammer,” the company is planning 320 hours of original programming in 2015. That is about three times what it offered last year.

Reed Hastings, Netflix’s chief executive, is a connoisseur of them all, though he admits some run more to his tastes than others. During an interview the next afternoon, he said that he had watched the first episode of “Daredevil,” but called it “too violent” for him.

“I can barely handle ‘House of Cards,’ ” he said, referring to the political drama starring Kevin Spacey that put Netflix on the map in 2013 as an outlet for innovative programming with high production quality. “When someone dies, I’m like ‘Wooooow turn it off.’ ”

Mr. Hastings called himself a fan of “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt,” the new Tina Fey comedy starring Ellie Kemper about the life of a Pollyanna-like woman after her escape from a cult after 15 years. He said that he intermixes the series with the dark family drama “Bloodline.”

“It’s the tension of ‘Bloodline’ versus the mirth of ‘Unbreakable,’ ” he said.

That expanding range of original programming available on Netflix signals how Mr. Hastings wants to position the company as the entertainment world undergoes a digital revolution.

Traditionally, television networks needed to stand for something to carve out an audience, he said, whereas the Internet allows brands to mean different things to different people because the service can be personalized for individual viewers.

That means that for a conservative Christian family, Netflix should stand for wholesome entertainment, and, for a 20-year-old New York college student, it should be much more on the edge, he said.

“We want the original content to be as broad as human experience,” he said.

The emphasis on original content is an extension of Netflix’s long-term view that the Internet is replacing television, that apps are replacing channels and that screens are proliferating, Mr. Hastings said.

“We’ve had 80 years of linear TV, and it’s been amazing, and in its day the fax machine was amazing,” he said. “The next 20 years will be this transformation from linear TV to Internet TV.”

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Netflix shares soared about 25 percent last week on news that it had added a record 4.9 million subscribers in the first quarter of 2015, bringing its total number of paid streaming subscribers to 59.6 million. The company beat expectations for growth and gave investors reason to believe that it still has much more room to grow.

“Think about the simplistic equation: More good content equals more viewing, more viewing means more subscribers, more subscribers means money to spend on more programming, which means more subscribers,” said Rich Greenfield, an analyst with BTIG Research. “It is a virtuous cycle.”

But some analysts have expressed concern about the company’s long-term prospects for more growth in the United States, where it is profitable. Another big concern is the increase in costs from paying for content, especially if Netflix cannot sustain the same hit level as its early efforts.

Global expansion, which is more costly and drags on profits, is also a concern. Netflix has said it would complete its international efforts in the next two years.

Netflix also faces a new wave of intense competition in the United States as a number of tech and media companies introduce streaming services. That includes HBO, which recently started HBO Now, which does not require a cable or satellite subscription.

Mr. Hastings said that he welcomed the new streaming entrants. Rather than a competitive threat, they represent the realization of the benefits of on-demand streaming television that allows people to watch shows on their own schedule and on the devices of their choosing, he said.

Mr. Hastings joked that people would know HBO is serious about streaming when it reverses the way it refers to its offerings and rebrands HBO Now as HBO. “They will take HBO linear and call it HBO Linear,” he said. “That is HBO if you really want to watch it on somebody else’s schedule.”

He added that people are likely to subscribe to more than one service because services offer different programs and that the rivalry will not only increase creativity but also provide a stronger alternative to traditional television.

“It will be like the Yankees and the Red Sox,” Mr. Hastings said. “I predict HBO will do the best creative work of their lives in the next 10 years because they are on war footing. They haven’t really had a challenge for a long time, and now they do. It’s going to spur us both on to incredible work.”

Richard Plepler, the chief executive of HBO, said in a recent interview that the increasing competition was forcing the network to focus even more intently on programming.

“People are going to take gibes,” he said. Pausing after each word for effect, he added; “Play our game. That is what we focus on. I can’t emphasize this enough: We cannot get distracted.”

Some television executives have started to worry that the rise in Netflix viewing — its members streamed 10 billion hours in the first quarter — is cutting into the time that people spend watching traditional, ad-supported television.

The fear is that advertisers will start cutting their spending on television, which captures about $70 billion in the United States each year, and shift to digital outlets. That has led to questions about whether television networks would reduce the amount of programming they sell to Netflix.

Mr. Hastings said that he does not view Netflix as a threat to ad spending because the service is commercial free. If the television networks stop selling shows, he said, the company has a game plan. “We just do more originals,” he said.

 

A version of this article appears in print on April 20, 2015, on page B1 of the New York edition with the headline: Netflix Bets Its Future on Shows All Its Own. http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/20/business/media/netflix-is-betting-its-future-on-exclusive-programming.html?smprod=nytcore-iphone&smid=nytcore-iphone-share

Cristela Alonzo Pens “Possible Goodbye” Letter to ‘Cristela’ Fans: “I Am Proud of What We’ve Done”

4/17/2015   The Hollywood Reporter   by Natalie Stone

In a blog post on Friday to “supporters of Cristela,” Cristela creator-writer-producer-star Cristela Alonzo wrote an emotional “possible goodbye” to fans prior to the show’s season one finale airing.

Alonzo told supporters via her website that she is uncertain if the ABC show will return for a second season and expressed to fans that she’s worried “not because I want to be on TV more. It worries me because I think this show gives a voice to people that haven’t been given a voice before.”

She thanked fans for their loyalty and support of the program and defended the show’s storyline against two major criticisms: “NOT ALL LATINO FAMILIES ARE LIKE THAT! ” and “THE MOM ON YOUR SHOW IS SO STEREOTYPICAL.”

The actress explained that the show was called Cristela and not “Every Latino Family” because it focused on “things that happened from my real life.” She explained that her life growing up was difficult, but she worked hard to get to where she is today. Alonzo further wrote “the thought that my show would have to represent Latinos everywhere is impossible.”

The second criticism Alonzo addressed was the “stereotypical” Latina mother. She asked critics, “Which mom are you talking about?” explaining that there are two mothers on the show (her mother, Natalia, and sister, Daniela) that represent two different generations of mothering.

She wrote that she enjoys addressing race on the show because it’s a topic she deals with frequently in her personal life and has shaped her into who she is today as a woman.

“This year, I became the first Latina to create, write, produce and star in her own network show.” the Cristela creator wrote, adding “If the show ends and tonight’s season finale is the last episode the world gets to see, just know that this show gave opportunities to Latino writers and actors that are hard to come by.”

 

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/cristela-alonzo-pens-goodbye-letter-789882?mobile_redirect=false

‘Black-ish’ Cast, Larry Wilmore Talk Breaking Down Barriers and Trevor Noah Controversy

4/18/2015   The Hollywood Reporter   by Liz Isenberg

“It feels great to be at the forefront,” Anderson told THR about television’s move towards more diverse content.

The cast and creator of the ABC comedy Black-ish gathered Friday night at a “For Your Consideration” event to celebrate the show’s freshman season. The night’s festivities included a panel moderated by Larry Wilmore (who helped develop and write the first half of the season before moving over to The Nightly Show), a screening of the April 22 episode, and a meet-and-greet with the cast, including leads Anthony Anderson and Tracee Ellis Ross

At the beginning of the panel, Wilmore asked creator and executive producer Kenya Barris about the inspiration behind the show’s unique title. “I looked at my kids and they were not the idea of what I thought ‘black’ was growing up. They’re a little bit filtered—they’re ‘black-ish’,” said Barris. “They skateboard and surf! They didn’t exactly follow my journey of what being ‘black’ was. All their friends are Asian, Jewish and Latino and they’re a little bit more black, so they’re also a version of ‘black-ish’. It’s an additive and a subtractive. That’s what our country is right now. We’re ‘Asian-ish’ and ‘Latino-ish’. We’re all in a melting pot.”

Ross—who had known Barris before joining Black-ish—talked about her reaction to the pilot. “The thing that was so compelling about this material was that it was the first time I really felt Kenya totally use his voice,” she said. “It was just him and it jumped off the page. It was so bold, but didn’t feel irreverent. It felt truthful.”

On the red carpet, Anderson and Barris talked about TV’s movement towards more diverse shows after the success of programs like Black-ish. “It feels great to be at the forefront,” Anderson told The Hollywood Reporter. “There were other shows ahead of ours that opened up the door for us and for us to be here right now breaking down more barriers and opening up the doors for more minorities and more diverse characters to be on television is something special to be a part of.”

Barris was cautiously optimistic. He told THR, “What I don’t want to be is a fad, because I think that we’ve all worked too hard. ABC has given us a great platform to create an amazing show that happens to have black characters and is absolutely about a black family. Sometimes you just have to kick the door open and you need one thing to start another thing, so I’m happy that we could be a part of that movement.”

Before the panel, Wilmore also spoke with THR about the recent Twitter controversy surrounding Jon Stewart’s successor, Trevor Noah. “I haven’t even met Trevor Noah yet, but I think he’s going to be fine,” Wilmore told THR. “All that is going to blow over. And like Jon said, people are either going to embrace him or they won’t. That’s how television works. He can really go out and prove himself even more now because it’s hard to follow Jon Stewart.”

Catch Black-ish on Wednesdays at 9:30 on ABC. 

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/black-ish-cast-larry-wilmore-789922?mobile_redirect=false

Second Wind for Michael Phelps, as a Swimmer and a Person

4/7/2015   The New York Times   By KAREN CROUSE

Michael Phelps returned to competition this week after a six-month suspension resulting from a second drunken-driving arrest.

MESA, Ariz. — As his life unraveled, the athlete rued that all he knew how to do was swim. “So I was just this little hole where a man should be,” he said.

The speaker, Danny Kelly, is a character in the recent novel “Barracuda,” by the Australian author Christos Tsiolkas, but his lament was echoed last week by the 18-time Olympic swimming champion Michael Phelps, who returned to competition after a six-month suspension resulting from a second drunken-driving arrest.

Phelps, 29, who spent 45 days at an alcohol rehabilitation center in Arizona about an hour’s drive from here, said that in the years after the 2000 Olympics, which he qualified for as a 15-year-old, he gradually distanced himself from his mother and two sisters. He rewarded their unconditional love by ignoring their phone calls and texts and aligned himself with people interested in drafting off his celebrity.

“A lot in the past I pushed away the people who really loved and cared about me,” Phelps said. “I know I’ve hurt a lot of people. It’s been terrible.”

In his first competition since the Pan Pacific Championships last August, Phelps, right, won the 100-meter butterfly, defeating his longtime rival Ryan Lochte.

Phelps said he felt like a new person, but the results were the same as usual when he raced at an Arena Pro Swim Series meet at Skyline Aquatics Center. In his first competition since the Pan Pacific Championships last August, Phelps won the 100-meter butterfly, defeating his longtime rival Ryan Lochte. It was the first of four individual events he was scheduled to swim.

No swimmer — not even the Olympians-turned-Hollywood-stars Johnny Weissmuller and Eleanor Holm — has achieved greater fame than Phelps, whose high profile saddled him with a public image of rectitude that was unsustainable. This was especially true as he navigated adolescence, a time when teenagers try on personas to see how they fit.

“My hat goes off to him,” said Lochte, a five-time Olympic medalist in 2012. He said his brush with celebrity after those London Games, including a starring role in a reality show, was instructive.

“It’s hard to get back to your normal routine of going to the pool, beating your body up,” Lochte said. “You get to sleep in, you don’t have to report to a coach, you get to meet famous people. It’s one of the hardest things to get back in shape.”

Phelps’s life since his second Olympics in 2004 has been a virtual reality show, with his every move scrutinized. Over the past six months, as part of his self-evaluation, an exercise Phelps described as brutal, he said he has learned to accept himself, hyperactivity and all.

“I’m perfectly imperfect,” Phelps said. “I’m a human being. If I have all this energy and I’m annoying, too bad. That’s who I am.”

He has returned to the water with a joy that he said he had not felt in a long time. “I smile in workouts,” Phelps said. “When I’m in training, I do feel like I’m back in high school.”

It is a telling admission. That was before swimming became his profession rather than simply his passion. It was also before Phelps and his sisters, Hilary and Whitney, drifted apart from their father, Fred, who was divorced from their mother, Debbie, when Phelps was in grade school.

Swimming started out as a sanctuary from the school bullies and his parents’ disintegrating marriage. After Phelps’s record performance of eight gold medals at the 2008 Olympics, it became a kind of prison, he said.

“I really only looked at myself as a swimmer,” Phelps said. “It’s sort of like for 15 years I was kind of living in a bubble. Swimming is what I did. That’s really all there was.”

So how does Phelps move forward in his life by returning to competitive swimming? He said he was coming back with a happier outlook.

“I’m looking at swimming a lot better,” he said. “The goals that I have are very lofty. I come into work with a purpose every day.”

During the years Phelps was rewriting the Olympic record books, said his longtime coach at the North Baltimore Aquatic Club, Bob Bowman, “There is no question he took out some frustrations in the pool.”

But Bowman, whose relationship with Phelps goes back almost 20 years, cautioned: “I don’t think you can say he just made swimming everything. The behaviors that led to our current situation, it’s pretty tough to draw a direct line to swimming.”

Tsiolkas, the novelist, said he read Phelps’s autobiography as part of his research for the character of Kelly, an aspiring Olympian whose modest background, debasement by bullies and struggles in the classroom call to mind some of the challenges faced by Phelps.

“If I am honest,” Tsiolkas said by email, “I think that I had a dislike for Phelps, initially. I hated his vehement triumphalism, the egoism of his success.”

As Tsiolkas delved deeper into the world of high-achieving swimmers, interviewing Australians who became Olympians and others who narrowly missed, he had a change of heart.

“I started ‘Barracuda’ envying the athletes and ended feeling compassion and tenderness toward them,” Tsiolkas said. “They are in a complex and cruel bind. Their training tells them that they have to strive, they have to believe in being the best, in winning, but their talents only have a finite life.”

He added: “We turn these young women and men into gods. Their image is on countless products, their stories and their image circulate endlessly on social media, and when they make a mistake, we turn on them cruelly.”

Phelps retired after the 2012 Olympics before returning to competition a year ago. Of the athletes to whom Tsiolkas spoke, the ones who fared best in their post-swimming lives, he said, were those who had a solid foundation “of an ethical life, of relationships, family.”

Tsiolkas suggested that Olympic-caliber athletes would benefit from postcareer mentoring. It is a topic that has been tossed around for years within USA Swimming. Customized professional career planning services have been considered, but no consensus has been reached on how to finance such a program or how to best serve all athletes.

Perhaps by example, Phelps will provide the blueprint for others whose lives have strayed off course.

“I, of course, would like to show everybody in the world that I am in a different place and I am much better than I ever have been,” Phelps said before the Mesa meet got underway. “I understand that’s going to take a lot of time for me to be able to prove to whoever I need to prove to that I am different, that I have changed. This week will be the first week that I can start that.”

http://mobile.nytimes.com/2015/04/19/sports/olympics/michael-phelps-the-person-is-back-not-just-the-swimmer.html?referrer=&_r=0

Book detailing Clinton White House drama is No. 1 on NYT best-seller list

4/15/2015   Politico   By Adam B. Lerner

A new book excoriating Hillary and Bill Clintons’ behavior in the White House debuted at No. 1 in its first week on The New York Times’ combined e-book/hardcover best-seller list for April 26, according to a source at the paper.

“The Residence: Inside the Private World of The White House,” by Kate Brower, includes a searing account of the Clinton family’s private drama during the scandal-plagued 1990s. Through the eyes of the White House staff, Brower catalogs the marital tension between Bill and Hillary over his sexual peccadilloes, including a four-month period in 1998 at the height of the Monica Lewinsky scandal when Bill was forced to sleep on a sofa in his private study.

According to Brower, though Hillary stood by her husband in public, behind the closed doors of the residence staff members frequently heard the Clintons shout at one another. At one point, a rumor circulated among staff that Hillary had thrown a lamp at Bill.

“They all felt the general gloom that hung over the second and third floors as the Lewinsky saga dragged on throughout 1998,” Brower writes. “The residence staff witnessed the fallout from the affair and the toll it took on Hillary Clinton.”

Brower worked for four years as a White House reporter for Bloomberg during the Obama administration, in addition to prior stints at CBS News and Fox News.

The book also includes accounts of presidents and their families dating back to John F. Kennedy. It was released on April 7.

 

http://www.politico.com/story/2015/04/bill-clinton-hillary-clinton-book-117016.html

GLAAD: Movie Biz “Out Of Touch” On LBGT Issues; Sony & Disney Get “Failing” Grades

4/15/2015   Deadline   by David Robb

The film industry did slightly better in its depiction of LBGT characters and issues last year than the year before, but it’s still way behind TV, according to GLAAD’s third annual Studio Responsibility Index. The LGBT media watchdog group released its annual report card today, and it gave Sony Pictures and Walt Disney Studios a “failing” grade.

“As television and streaming services continue to produce a remarkable breadth of diverse LGBT representations, we still struggle to find depictions anywhere near as authentic or meaningful in mainstream Hollywood film,” said GLAAD President and CEO Sarah Kate Ellis. “The industry continues to look increasingly out of touch by comparison and still doesn’t represent the full diversity of the American cultural fabric.”

Get HardOnly Warner Bros received a “good” rating from GLAAD for 2014 – this despite the fact that the group found the release Get Hard, which it called a “gay-panic exploiting comedy,” to be “one of the most problematic films we have seen in some time.” Paramount Pictures, 20th Century Fox, Lionsgate Entertainment and Universal Pictures all were deemed “adequate.”

 

GLAAD found that of the 114 films released by the major studios last year, 20 included characters identified as lesbian, gay or bisexual and that “there were zero depictions of transgender people in 2014, despite a historic year for transgender representation on television.” GLAAD said it also found “fewer overtly defamatory depictions in mainstream film” last year than the year before, “though offensive representations were by no means absent and were found in films such as Exodus: Gods And Kings and Horrible Bosses 2.”

“The most inclusive major studio tracked this year was Warner Bros, as seven of 22 films it released in 2014 (32%) were LGBT-inclusive,” GLAAD said in its report. “Paramount came next with three of 13 films (23%), followed by Universal with three of 14 films (21%), and Fox with three of 17 films (18%).  Two of Lionsgate’s 17 films were inclusive (12%), while Disney and Sony were last with one of 13 (8%) and one of 18 films (6%), respectively.”

Of the 20 major films released last year that included an identifiable LGBT character, GLAAD said that only 11 passed its test for authenticity and positive character portrayal. Even so, that was an improvement from the previous two years; only seven of 17 passed the test in 2013 and six out of 14 passed in 2012. “The numbers have improved somewhat in this regard,” GLAAD said, “and we hope they continue to do so.”

The group also found that the majority of the LGBT depictions in Hollywood film last year were minor characters or cameos, with less than five minutes of screen time.

“Hollywood must recognize that LGBT people are worthy of depictions crafted with care and humanity, and we should be part of the stories they tell,” Ellis said. “Doing so won’t simply demonstrate respect for a long-standing part of their audience, but it will align Hollywood film with other media in telling more authentic stories that represent the full diversity of our society and encourage greater understanding  Only then will we be able to say that America’s film industry is a full partner in accelerating acceptance.”

 

http://deadline.com/2015/04/glaad-film-industry-out-of-touch-on-lbgt-issues-sony-disney-get-failing-grades-1201410539/