Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Simon Cowell offered $144 mil a year to stay on American Idol

Simon Cowell offered $144 mil a year to stay on "American Idol". EARLY salary figures from Simon Cowell's "American Idol" contract negotiations are leaking out and they're eye-popping.

Cowell, who reportedly made $36 million last year for judging the hit competition show, has been offered three or four times that amount -- between $100 million and $144 million per year -- by co-producers Fox and 19 Entertainment to stick with "Idol" when his contract expires next May, according to The Guardian, a London newpaper.

Fox declined yesterday to comment about the salary negotiations.

While $36 million may seem like a lot of money for five months worth of snarky comments and eye-rolls, it's only a fraction of the estimated $900 million that "Idol" rakes in a year. As the lynchpin of the show -- without him there would be no one to hate and no dramatic tension with Paula Abdul-- Cowell believes he's due for a raise.

To get more of the pie, he's been leaning on long-time friend and UK retail multibillionaire Sir Philip Green -- who owns hot fashion franchise Top Shop -- for help negotiating the terms of what would be a new "Idol" contract, reports say. Green is said to be lobbying hard for an increase in Cowell's appearance fee on the show.

Sources close to the two friends say that this is just the first step to the creation of an international TV production, talent management and merchandising company, which would put Cowell in a position to actually make money off his ideas and the talent he discovers, not just reap a salary for having his mug on screen.

"This is about properly owning himself, Brand Cowell, everything he does, new formats and new programs, not just the ones starring him," a source close to Green told The Guardian.

Entertainment wiz Cowell, who signed international "popera" act Il Divo, is likely to run the creative end while Green, Britain's ninth wealthiest person, will focus on financial issues.

"Idol" is only one of Cowell's TV contracts which are on the verge of expiring. His three-year deal, which spawned hits "Britain's Got Talent" and "The X-Factor," with UK's ITV, ends this year.

Sources: nypost

Michael Jackson's last video

Michael Jackson's last video. Two weeks before he died, Michael Jackson wrapped up work on an elaborate production dubbed the "Dome Project" that could be the final finished video piece overseen by the King of Pop, The Associated Press has learned.

Details on the project are scarce. Two people with knowledge of the project confirmed its existence Monday to the AP on condition they not be identified because they signed confidentiality agreements.

They said it was a five-week project filmed at Culver Studios, which 70 years ago was the set for the classic film "Gone With the Wind." Four sets were constructed for Jackson's production, including a cemetery recalling his 1983 "Thriller" video.

Shooting for the project lasted from June 1-9, with Jackson on the set most days. Now in post-production, the project is expected to be completed next month.

Producer Robb Wagner, founder of music-video company Stimulated Inc., did not immediately return a message seeking comment on the project.

Michael Roth, a spokesman for Jackson's Los Angeles-based promoter AEG Live, said he hadn't heard about the production but did not rule that it could be part of the company's contract with the entertainer.

In this handout photo provided by AEG, pop star Michael Jackson rehearses at the Staples Center in Los Angeles on Tuesday, June 23, 2009. (AP Photo/ Kevin Mazur, AEG/Getty Images)

According to one of the people with knowledge of the project, a willow-thin, pallid Jackson left a memorable impression on the crew, arriving in a caravan of SUVs with hulking security guards in tow. The person said Jackson introduced himself to workers on the set and walked with a spring in his step but at one point needed assistance as he descended steps off a stage.

Besides the cemetery, one set was draped in black with an oversized portrait of Jackson in his "Thriller" werewolf costume. Another set was designed to simulate a lush jungle, and a fourth was built to replicate a construction site, with a screen in the back to allow projection of different backgrounds.

Taping took place in marathon sessions ending early in the morning. One scene filmed on the construction site set included scantily clad male dancers wearing carpenter's belts.

It's unclear what final form or forms the video project will take.

According to Stimulated's Web site, the company was hired to produce screen content for Jackson's planned comeback concerts in London. Stimulated has worked with Def Leppard and the Pussycat Dolls, and produced content for the Academy Awards and the Emmys.

___

Associated Press writers David Germain and Ryan Nakashima contributed to this report

Sources: huffingtonpost

Akon pop singer, postponed his concerts in the Philippines because of swine flu fears

Akon pop singer, postponed his concerts in the Philippines because of swine flu fears. Pop singer Akon has postponed his concerts in the Philippines, China and Malaysia until later this year because of concerns over swine flu, organizers said Tuesday.

The Senegalese-American performer will tour Asia from Oct. 23 to Nov. 7 starting in Manila, said Luke Pasiliao, managing director of Winning Touch, one of the local sponsors.

The concert in Manila was originally scheduled for July 4.

Malaysian and Chinese organizers requested a postponement because of concerns over swine flu, Teresa Ventosa of ALV Productions told The Associated Press.

In a taped message aired on ABS-CBN television Tuesday, Akon apologized saying the postponement was because of "unforeseen circumstances." He said tickets earlier purchased will be valid for the rescheduled concerts.

Akon, whose given name is Aliaune Thiam, did not mention swine flu.

The virus has infected hundreds of people in all three countries. The World Health Organization has reported more than 70,000 swine flu cases in more than 100 countries and 311 virus-related deaths.

Sarah Jessica Parkers and Matthew Broderick's, sharing the first photo of their twin daughters

Sarah Jessica Parkers and Matthew Broderick, sharing the first photo of their twin daughters. Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick are sharing the first photo of their twin daughters.

The baby girls _ Marion Loretta Elwell Broderick and Tabitha Hodge Broderick _ were born last Monday at an Ohio hospital to a surrogate mother.

The photo, taken Monday in New York, shows a happy family: Parker and Broderick are smiling, each holding a twin. Their 6-year-old son, James Wilkie Broderick, stands in between mom and dad, gazing down at one of his little sisters.

In this first official photo of twin daughters provided by Robin Layton, actors Matthew Broderick, right, Sarah Jessica Parker, left, and their son James Wilkie Broderick pose with their new daughters Marion Loretta Elwell Broderick, left, and Tabitha Hodge Broderick on Monday, June 29, 2009, in New York. The girls were born Monday June 22, 2009. (AP Photo/Robin Layton)

Sources: huffingtonpost

Yemenia airliners had crashed off the Indian Ocean archipelago of the Comoros with 153 people aboard

Yemenia airliners had crashed off the Indian Ocean archipelago of the Comoros with 153 people aboard. An airliner with 150 people on board belonging to Yemeni state carrier Yemenia crashed in the Indian Ocean archipelago of Comoros Tuesday, a senior government official said.

"We don't know if there are any survivors among the 150 people on the plane," Comoros vice-president Idi Nadhoim told Reuters from the airport at the main island's capital Moroni.

Nadhoim said the accident happened in the early hours of Tuesday, but could not give any more details.

"There is a crash, there is a crash in the sea," said an unnamed official who answered the phone in the Yemenia office in Moroni. He declined further comment.

An airline official in Yemen declined to comment.

Yemenia, which is 51 percent owned by the Yemeni government and 49 percent owned by the Saudi Arabian government, flies to Moroni, according to flight schedules on its Web site.

File photo shows a fleet of Yemenia airliners on the tarmac of Sanaa airport. Yemen's national carrier confirmed that an Airbus passenger jet had crashed off the Indian Ocean archipelago of the Comoros with 153 people aboard. (AFP/File/Khaled Fazaa)

Map showing Yemen and Comoros. Yemen's national carrier confirmed that an Airbus passenger jet had crashed off the Indian Ocean archipelago of the Comoros with 153 people aboard.

1996 CRASH

Yemenia's fleet includes two Airbus 330-200s, four Airbus 310-300s and four Boeing 737-800s, according to the site.

The location of the crash was not immediately known, but a medical worker in the town of Mitsamiouli, on the main island Grande Comore, said he had been called into the local hospital.

"They have just called me to come to the hospital. They said a plane had crashed," he told Reuters.

A Comoran police source said the plane was believed to have come down in the sea. "We really have no sea rescue capabilities," he said.

The Comoros covers three small volcanic islands, Grande Comore, Anjouan and Moheli, in the Mozambique channel, 300 km northwest of Madagascar and a similar distance east of the African mainland.

A hijacked Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 767 crashed into the sea off the Comoros islands in 1996, killing 125 of 175 passengers and crew.

Sources: Reuters

Monday, June 29, 2009

TV pitchman Billy Mays dies (with videos)

TV pitchman Billy Mays dies (with videos)

FILE - In this Dec. 6, 2002 file photo,TV pitchman Billy Mays poses with some of his cleaning products at his Palm Harbor, Fla., home. Tampa police say Mays, the television pitchman known for his boisterous hawking of products such as Orange Glo and OxiClean, has died. He was 50. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara, File)

Justify Full

Boys Over Flowers Cast Photo Galleries, Images and Photos

Boys Over Flowers Cast Photo Galleries, Images and Photos















































Kang Hee Soo



*Choi Jin Hee / Ginger
*Park Sun Ja / Sunny
*Lee Mi Sook / Miranda

Oh Min Ji


Lee Min Ha / Min Jae Ha



Nemesis


*Min Seo Hyun



Friends


Family

*Geum Il Bong (Jan Di's father)
*Na Gong Joo (Jan Di's mother)
*Geum Kang San (Jan Di's younger brother)


Goon Jun-pyo


Yun Ji-Hoo










Farrah Fawcett dies at 62 (Photos, Images and Photo Gallery)

Farrah Fawcett dies at 62 (Photos, Images and Photo Gallery)


In this publicity image released by ABC, Barbara Walters, right, and Alana Stewart, friend of the late Farrah fawcett, are shown. ABC's '20/20' will air a Barbara Walters Special, 'Farrah's Love,' Thursday, June 25, 2009, at 10 p.m. EDT. (AP Photo/ABC, Craig Sjodin)

Actress Farrah Fawcett releases a live Monarch butterfly in commemoration of comedian Rodney Dangerfield's one year anniversary death at the comedian's home in West Hollywood, California on October 5, 2005. REUTERS/Staff

A poster of Farrah Fawcett is shown for sale in a tourist shop as Andrea Diaz looks at posters in the Hollywood section of Los Angeles, Thursday, June 25, 2009. Fawcett died Thursday after battling cancer. She was 62. (AP Photo/Nick Ut)

FILE-This 1978 file photo shows Farrah Fawcett-Majors,left, and Cheryl Ladd, right in a scene from 'Charlie's Angels'. One swath of your adoring public isn't talking about The Poster so much. Gen-X women are talking about Jill Munroe, the character you played on 'Charlie's Angels,' and how you taught us to kick butt. For an entire generation of girls, that was your legacy. (AP Photo/ABC,File)

FILE - This 1977 file photo originally provided by ABC shows actresses, from left, Kate Jackson, Jaclyn Smith and Farrah Fawcett as private investigators in the television series 'Charlie's Angels.' One swath of your adoring public isn't talking about The Poster so much. Gen-X women are talking about Jill Munroe, the character you played on 'Charlie's Angels,' and how you taught us to kick butt. For an entire generation of girls, that was your legacy. (AP Photo/ABC)

Actress Farrah Fawcett poses backstage after she was named the Favorite "Fan"-tastic Phenomenon for "Charlies Angels" during a taping of the second annual TV Land Awards in Hollywood in this March 7, 2004 file photo. Fawcett died on June 25, 2009 after a long battle with anal cancer, her spokesman said. She was 62. Picture taken March 7, 2004. REUTERS/Jim Ruymen/Files

Cebu Dancing Inmate's Michael Jackson Tribute and "Thriller" tribute performance (with video)

Cebu Dancing Inmate's Michael Jackson Tribute and "Thriller" tribute performance (with video). Earlier today, the 1,500 orange-jumpsuit-clad inmates of the Cebu Provincial Detention & Rehabilitation Center on the east coast of Cebu Island in the Philippines reprised their phenomenally popular 2007 viral performance of Michael Jackson's "Thriller" to honor the King Of Pop, who died Thursday. After that, they performed this touching new tribute:



The original four-minute Web-smash video, you may recall, stemmed from an experimental program started by local security consultant Byron Garcia, which added synchronized dancing to the prison's exercise programs in the hopes of spurring better attendance and more involved participation. And judging by the results, it was certainly a success, as Garcia's post of the convicts' conga lines cavorting a la Jackson and his legion of undulating undead became an immediate phenomenon, drawing over 24 million hits--a million of them in the 24-hour period following the news of Jackson's death.



Of course, "hit" would seem to be an especially appropriate word when discussing criminals--though judging from the, er, résumés of many of the thespic inmates at Cebu prison, drug-related offenses do seems to be up there in shared "credits."

Were these guys and gals troupers? After getting the OK to proceed with the tribute performance, the 1,500 guys and gals of the Cebu company practiced virtually around the clock under the watchful eyes of not only their built-in audience of armed prison guards but also a professional choreographer hired by the prison to whip the company into "Thriller"-appropriate lurching shape.

And bless their paying-their-debts-to-society heads, the Cebu inmates have once again done their warden, the country, and, yes, the entire planet proud. As Michael Jackson, the fallen idol whose music helped these unlikely people gain international recognition, once noted, it doesn't matter if you're black or white, or living as a free person in society or inside a detention and rehab center in the Philippines. We're all people--and we are the world.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Iran, Tens of thousands of supporters of defeated Iranian presidential candidate


Iran, Tens of thousands of supporters of defeated Iranian presidential candidate.
Tens of thousands of supporters of defeated Iranian presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi demonstrated for a sixth straight day on Thursday, keeping up the pressure on the Islamic regime over the disputed vote, witnesses told AFP.

The rally came as the electoral watchdog, the Guardians Council, said it was investigating a total of 646 complaints of irregularities in the conduct of the poll from Mousavi and the other two losing candidates.

It said it had invited the trio to set out their grievances on Saturday, with a decision on Sunday about any possible recount in the June 12 election, which returned hardline incumbent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to power.

Mousavi himself joined the crowds, most of whom were dressed in black as a mark of mourning for demonstrators killed in clashes during the protests, which have been banned by the authorities, witnesses said.

The crowds began to quietly disperse after about five hours, the witnesses said, and there were no reports of any incidents.

A picture released by the Iranian Mehr News Agency shows thousands of Iranians taking part in a massive rally supporting Iranian opposition leader, Mir Hossein Mousavi, in Karimkhan Zand street in Tehran on June 17, 2009. Tens of thousands of supporters of Mousavi demonstrated for a sixth straight day, keeping up the pressure on the Islamic regime over the disputed vote, witnesses told AFP. (AFP/MEHR NEWS)

State radio has reported seven deaths since the protests started.

Foreign journalists have been barred from attending all rallies or other events without express authority.

The protesters carried pictures of Mousavi and placards bearing slogans such as "We have not had people killed to compromise and accept a doctored ballot box," one witness said.

Another placard said: "My martyred brother, I will get back your vote."

Mousavi appeared despite warnings from the hardline Basij militia, which has been at the forefront of action against protests, for defeated candidates to dissociate themselves from the "rioters."

Facing their biggest crisis since the 1979 revolution against the shah, Iran's Islamic rulers have gone on the offensive. They have arrested protesters and prominent reformists, tightened their grip on the media and lashed out at "meddling" by foreign foes, including the United States.

Besides the seven reported deaths, many more people have been wounded in the worst violence for at least a decade, with protests reported in provincial cities as well as Tehran.

Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said he would consider a partial recount after Ahmadinejad's defeated challengers lodged formal complaints of vote-rigging.

But Mousavi is insisting that what has described as a "shameful fraud" be annulled and a new election called.

World powers have raised concern about the situation in Iran, particularly the violence and widespread arrests, with some European leaders publicly speaking of fraud and irregularities.

The Iranian mission to the European Union hit back on Thursday saying that foreign support for the opposition demonstrators "cannot be justified."

On Wednesday, Iran summoned the Swiss ambassador, who represents US interests in Iran, to protest at what it called "interfering remarks" by US officials.

Warning they would crush any "velvet revolution," the authorities have rounded up scores of people, including prominent reformists and even former government officials.

In the latest sweep, Iran on Wednesday arrested Ebrahim Yazdi and Mohammad Tavasoli, veteran revolutionaries and leaders of Iran's Liberation Movement, the Etemad Melli newspaper reported.

And state television reported that a plot with "extensive ties" to unnamed foreign interests had been uncovered to carry out bombings in Tehran on election day.

In a sign of cracks emerging within the Iranian elite, a number of influential clerics have spoken out about the election results and the subsequent crackdowns.

Ayatollah Mehdi Hadavi Tehrani called on Thursday for Interior Minister Sadeq Mahouli to be impeached.

The combative Ahmadinejad -- who set Iran on a collision course with the West during his first four-year term -- has remained defiant, saying his victory showed faith in his government of "honesty and service to the people."

In a rare move, Khamenei is due to lead the main weekly Muslim prayers in Tehran on Friday, in the presence of the Basij militia.

Mousavi and reformist former president Mohammad Khatami, who was succeeded by Ahmadinejad in 2005, issued a joint letter on Wednesday urging authorities to release those arrested and to halt the violence.

"We ask you to take all the necessary measures to put an end to today's worrying situation, to stop the violent actions against people and to free those arrested," said the letter, published on Mousavi's website.

Meanwhile, the Fars news agency reported that a daughter and son of another former president who has been a prominent Mousavi supporter -- Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani -- have been barred from leaving the country over their alleged role in disturbances since the election.

On Wednesday, state television showed footage of Rafsanjani's chador-clad daughter Faezeh talking animatedly among protesters in Tehran. The former president's son, Mehdi Hashemi, was also the target of mudslinging by Ahmadinejad during the election campaign.

In new measures against the media, the elite Revolutionary Guards told websites to delete material that "creates tensions" or face legal action, and the foreign ministry issued a new warning to the foreign media, accusing some outlets of becoming the "mouthpiece of the rioters' movement."

Pictures, videos and updates from the streets of Iran continue to pour in to social-networking and image-sharing websites such as Twitter, Facebook and YouTube despite Iranian efforts to cut off mobile phones and the Internet.

Sometimes jumpy footage broadcast on the Internet from amateur videos has shown chaotic and sometimes brutal scenes of violence, with police beating protesters and one image purportedly showing a protester shot dead during massive street protests on Monday.

British Royal Family (with Photos)

British Royal Family (with Photos)

Prince Harry stands during an official naming of the British Garden at Hanover Square in New York Friday, May 29, 2009. (AP Photo/Chris Hondros, Pool)

Britain's Prince Harry smiles as he helps plant a tree during an official naming of the British Garden at Hanover Square in New York, May 29, 2009. Prince Harry is on a whistle-stop 36 hour official trip to New York City ending on Saturday afternoon. He is spending today on official duties, paying his respects at Ground Zero, visiting a veteran's hospital and naming the British Gardens. Tomorrow he will take part in a polo match supporting his charity Sentebale. The Prince is visiting the States for only the second time as the first was a private visit when he was a child. REUTERS/Chris Hondros/Pool (UNITED STATES POLITICS ENTERTAINMENT ROYALS)

Britain's Prince Harry (R) speaks with Captain Joseph McHugh (C) and firefighter Anthony Henry, both of the New York City Fire Department's Ladder 10/Engine 10, after visiting the site of the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City, May 29, 2009. REUTERS/Stephen Chernin/Pool

The Queen inspects officers including Prince William (far R) at the Sandhurst army academy southwest of London. An Afghan stowaway was discovered in the elite training college after hiding on an army coach that arrived from the European continent, the Ministry of Defence admitted Thursday. (AFP/File/Adrian Dennis)

Britain's Princess Eugenie, the daughter of Sarah Ferguson and her former husband, Britain's Prince Andrew, arrives at the parade ring in an open horse drawn carriage on the third day, Ladies' Day, of the Royal Ascot horse racing meeting at Ascot near Windsor, Thursday, June 18, 2009. (AP Photo/Sang Tan)

Queen Elizabeth smiles during the third day of the Royal Ascot race meeting June 18, 2009. REUTERS/ Eddie Keogh (BRITAIN SPORT HORSE RACING ROYALS)

Queen Elizabeth (L) and Prince Andrew attend the third day of the Royal Ascot race meeting June 18, 2009. REUTERS/ Eddie Keogh (BRITAIN SPORT HORSE RACING ROYALS)