Category Archives: Style

Liz and Dick: The Ultimate Celebrity Couple | VF Daily | Vanity Fair

Now these two were Movie Stars!

Who the hell cares about Lindsey Lohan and today’s whiney, tacky wannabes?

Well, Brad and Angelina are probably the real thing…And George Clooney.  Maybe a couple of more…but very, very few can live up to the standards of the Stars of the earlier years…

Before Brangelina, before TomKat, before … Speidi … there was Liz and Dick—that is, Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, the super-couple who set the standard all others can only aspire to in terms of modern celebrity. What other couple has been condemned both by the Vatican and on the floor of the House of Representatives? What other couple lived as decadently, as opulently, and as passionately? What other couple could conquer both Hollywood and Broadway the way these two did over a span of two decades?

More:  Liz and Dick: The Ultimate Celebrity Couple | VF Daily | Vanity Fair.

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Jack LaLanne Dead: Fitness Guru Dies At 96

A man who was ahead of his time…

Until the times finally caught up with him…

He had a fascinating life.  Click the link at the bottom of this excerpt for the full story.

LOS ANGELES — Jack LaLanne, the fitness guru who inspired television viewers to trim down, eat well and pump iron for decades before diet and exercise became a national obsession, died Sunday. He was 96.

LaLanne died of respiratory failure due to pneumonia Sunday afternoon at his home in Morro Bay on California’s central coast, his longtime agent Rick Hersh said.

Lalanne ate healthy and exercised every day of his life up until the end, Hersh said.

“I have not only lost my husband and a great American icon, but the best friend and most loving partner anyone could ever hope for,” Elaine LaLanne, Lalanne’s wife of 51 years and a frequent partner in his television appearances, said in a written statement.

Just before he had heart valve surgery in 2009 at age 95, Jack Lalanne told his family that dying would wreck his image, his publicist Ariel Hankin said at the time.

“He was amazing,” said 87-year-old former “Price is Right” host Bob Barker, who credited LaLanne’s encouragement with helping him to start exercising often.

“He never lost enthusiasm for life and physical fitness,” Barker told The Associated Press on Sunday. “I saw him in about 2007 and he still looked remarkably good. He still looked like the same enthusiastic guy that he always was.”

LaLanne (pronounced lah-LAYN’) credited a sudden interest in fitness with transforming his life as a teen, and he worked tirelessly over the next eight decades to transform others’ lives, too.

“The only way you can hurt the body is not use it,” LaLanne said. “Inactivity is the killer and, remember, it’s never too late.”

MORE:   Jack LaLanne Dead: Fitness Guru Dies At 96.

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Gay “Jersey Shore”: Reality show focuses on Atlantic City gay community

Oh, god….

Doesn’t the Gay Community have enough negative press without this?  This is just what we do NOT need.  A gay version of all those trashy “Jersey Shore” people…

Well, at least it’s not set in the South…they usually come to us to abuse stereotypes…Glad to see some other regions are getting their chance.

ATLANTIC CITY, NJ (NBC) – “Jersey Shore” fans wishing there was a gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender “Situation” going on are about to get their wish.

Under the Boardwalk Productions is holding an open casting call for the GLBT community for a new reality show pilot described as at “GLBT” Jersey Shore.

A source from the production company says the new show will be similar to the Jersey Shore but with a gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender cast.

The pilot for Under the Boardwalk (the show’s title for now) will be shot this spring and if the show is picked up then cast members will live in a beach house in Atlantic City, Ventnor or Margate for the summer.

“I think it will be fascinating,” said producer Kim Friedman.

The tryout requires no line reading. The only thing the casting directors need is a videotaped interview to figure out whether you’re the next Snooki, Paulie D or Situation.

via Reality show focuses on Atlantic City gay community – Live, Local, Late Breaking news, weather, and sports.

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Don’t Worry – Your Zodiac Sign is Not Wrong | Daily Astrology & Adventure by Eric Francis

People seem to be freaking out over a report that the Zodiac signs are changing…

Eric Francis, from Planet Waves, explains this isn’t the case….

In a lot more detail than I, at least, need to know…

I wish I could put out a press release announcing that the world is flat, and send astronomers scrambling — to return the favor for when an astronomer sends out a press release announcing that your zodiac sign is wrong. That’s what happened this week when the following went viral faster than the dude who got rich dancing around like a dork in 34 countries:

Astronomer Parke Kunkle says that due to changes in the Earth’s alignment the dates of many zodiac signs have changed, according to NBC. In addition, there may be a 13th Zodiac sign: Ophiuchus. Kunkle says that as the Earth and Sun slowly move the signs gradually change, as expected. The change didn’t happen over night either. The 12 signs were designated to different periods of the year almost 3,000 years ago, when astrology began, and since then the Earth’s position in relation to the sun has changed.

Either this is a joke or Parke Kunkle is truly ignorant of his own science. It’s probably a bit of both.

The tropical zodiac is in the inner wheel, the sidereal zodiac is in the outer wheel. Notice how they are ‘out of alignment’ by about one whole sign — to be exact, 23 degrees. This is due to precessional movement, which shifts the two zodiacs by one degree every 70 years.

There are two zodiacs in common use. Kunkle is describing what is called the sidreal zodiac: the backdrop of the stars. It’s not the zodiac used by most Western astrologers; it’s the one used by Vedic astrologers, the kind in India, and a few in our part of the world. The two zodiacs are offset by about 23 degrees. I’ll explain why in a moment.

Here in the West, we use a zodiac that follows the seasons. It’s called the tropical zodiac. It’s based on the position of the Sun’s rays and the tropics — that’s why it’s called tropical. There is another one, based on the positions of the stars. It’s called the sidereal zodiac. If Kunkle doesn’t know this, it’s like a race car driver not understanding the concept of a tire. If so, he also doesn’t understand a long list of other concepts that must make it very difficult for him to do his work. Well, that’s what grad students are for.

via Astrology, Horoscopes, Monthly Horoscopes, Weekly Horoscopes, Daily Astrology Blog, | Don’t Worry – Your Zodiac Sign is Not Wrong | Daily Astrology & Adventure by Eric Francis.

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Pleated Pants: The Dialogue Continues…

Everyone knows I consider wearing pleated pants the greatest style crime of the 21st Century.

Wearing them is just a horrible thing for a man to do to himself.  If you see anyone wearing them, please encourage them to get help fast before Stacy and Clinton find  them and forcefully put them on “What Not to Wear.”  There are few things in life worse than being forced onto a show on the same network that did “Sarah Palin’s Alaska”.

Just in case you still have questions, here is a great video that explains the issue…

 

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Michael G. Messner – Olmsted’s ideals could help solve our real estate mess

This is great thinking…

Take empty stores and buildings, tear them down and build parks.  This would put people to work, reduce urban blight and have land available for use by new businesses near the parks as the economy turns around.

Makes sense to me…

From The Washington Post…

More than 150 years ago, America’s greatest landscape architect, Frederick Law Olmsted, created Central Park and changed New York forever. He went on to transform dozens more cities, leaving a priceless legacy of vibrant, beautiful cityscapes. And, in the process, he increased property values.

Olmsted discovered this himself when he tracked the value of land around Central Park and found that the city’s $13 million investment had led to an astounding $209 million increase in just 17 years. The architect recognized what many planners still fail to grasp: Parks and managed green space are vital pieces of urban infrastructure that not only improve the quality of life for millions of people but also drive economic growth.

Today we must act again to transform our cities. The commercial real estate binge of the past decade and the growth of online shopping as an alternative to brick-and-mortar stores have left more than 200,000 acres of vacant retail, office and industrial space. Residential real estate is a massive problem as well. Distressed properties are a drag on our communities and the economy and threaten to topple even more banks that hold mortgages on these “toxic assets.”

We need to move these toxic assets off the banks’ books, reduce the surplus of commercial space and create jobs, all while revitalizing our cities. This brings us back to Olmsted.

Olmsted designed transformative parks, campuses and greenways; his firm completed an amazing 6,000 commissions and launched a green wave across 19th-century America. The same kind of wave could help resolve the 21st-century real estate mess.

We don’t have the luxury of vacant land that Olmsted often started with, so we must bulldoze underperforming and underused property, put people to work creating parks on some of the land and “bank” the rest until the economy recovers.

More:   Michael G. Messner – Olmsted’s ideals could help solve our real estate mess.

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Wine at Walmart

This is bouncing around the web in various forms….

And, yes, it is a hoax….

Since I haven’t been in a Wal-Mart in at least 10 years, I wouldn’t know what they carry.  It could have fooled me.

Still, I liked it….

BENTONVILLE, ARKANSAS:

Wal-Mart announced that they will soon be offering customers a new discount item: Wal-Mart’s own brand of wine. The world’s largest retail chain is teaming up with E&J Gallo Winery of California to produce the spirits at an affordable price, in the $2-$5 range.

Wine connoisseurs may not be inclined to throw a bottle of Wal-Mart brand into their shopping carts, but “there is a market for cheap wine”, said Kathy Micken, VP of Marketing. She said, “But the right name is important.”

Customer surveys were conducted to determine the most attractive name for the Wal-Mart brand. The top surveyed names in order of popularity are:

10. Chateau Traileur Parc

9. White Trashfindel

8. Big Red Gulp

7. World Championship Riesling

6. NASCARbernet

5. Chef Boyardeaux

4. Peanut Noir

3. I Can’t Believe It’s Not Vinegar!

2. Grape Expectations

And the Number One name for Wal-Mart wine:

1. Nasti Spumante

via Wine at Walmart – Wine Forum – GardenWeb.

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Remembering Blake Edwards’s Last Bow

Nice article  by Walter Mirisch on Blake Edwards from “Vanity Fair”:

On the evening of September 30, 2010, I participated in a program at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences called “An Evening with Blake Edwards.” Blake and I were seated side by side on the stage of the Samuel Goldwyn Theater before an enthusiastic audience of approximately 1,000, to discuss his life and career.

Our relationship had started a long time before that night. In 1960, Blake was one of the earliest targets of the newly formed Mirisch Company’s campaign to add the services of the industry’s most talented directors to our roster of Billy Wilder, John Sturges, William Wyler, and Robert Wise. I had met Blake in 1948, when we were both beginning our careers at the little Monogram Studios, but our careers—his as a writer-director, mine as a producer—had gone in different directions by the time we reconnected and made a four-picture writing, producing, and directing deal. He had already directed Operation Petticoat (1959) with Cary Grant, Breakfast at Tiffany’s (1961) with Audrey Hepburn, Experiment in Terror (1962) with Glenn Ford, and Days of Wine and Roses (1962) with Jack Lemmon, among others.

His place in the pantheon of such great writer-producer-directors as Preston Sturges and Billy Wilder was already assured. However, he ascended to the level of the immortals with the first film we worked on together, The Pink Panther. His collaboration with the actor Peter Sellers, which began on this film, would produce some of the most uproarious minutes ever captured on film. This movie and its successor, A Shot In The Dark, and the ensuing long list of Inspector Clouseau’s continuing adventures have entertained audiences for nearly half a century, and there is no reason to believe that succeeding generations of film audiences will not continue to roar with laughter at the combined comedic genius of Blake Edwards and Peter Sellers. Blake and I later collaborated on What Did You Do In The War, Daddy? and The Party, again with Peter Sellers.

On that evening at the Academy only seven short weeks ago, Blake and I talked for nearly two hours. He was obviously failing and physically straining, but he made an extraordinary effort to reveal as much of himself as he could to his hugely appreciative audience. When our conversation concluded, the entire assemblage of the theater rose to give a standing ovation to Blake. He was sitting in a wheel chair, and I watched him make a herculean effort to rise and acknowledge the applause of his audience one last time. He said to me quietly, “I must stand up for them.” Holding my arm for support, he waved his other arm in a fond farewell.

via Remembering Blake Edwards’s Last Bow | Little Gold Men | Vanity Fair.

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Blake Edwards Obituary

Blake Edwards, the director of many fine films including on of my favorites, “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” died today.  He was also Julie Andrews’ husband of 42 years and directed her in several films…

More:

LOS ANGELES (AP) – Blake Edwards, the director and writer known for clever dialogue, poignance and occasional belly-laugh sight gags in “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” “10” and the “Pink Panther” farces, is dead at age 88.

Edwards died from complications of pneumonia late Wednesday at St. John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, said publicist Gene Schwam. Blake’s wife, Julie Andrews, and other family members were at his side. He had been hospitalized for about two weeks.

“He was the most unique man I have ever known-and he was my mate,” Andrews said in a statement Thursday. “He will be missed beyond words, and will forever be in my heart.”

Edwards had knee problems, had undergone unsuccessful procedures and was “pretty much confined to a wheelchair for the last year-and-a-half or two,” Schwam said. That may have contributed to his condition, he added.

At the time of his death, Edwards was working on two Broadway musicals, one based on the “Pink Panther” movies. The other, “Big Rosemary,” was to be an original comedy set during Prohibition, Schwam said.

“His heart was as big as his talent. He was an Academy Award winner in all respects,” said Schwam, who knew him for 40 years.

A third-generation filmmaker, Edwards was praised for evoking classic performances from Jack Lemmon, Audrey Hepburn, Peter Sellers, Dudley Moore, Lee Remick and Andrews, his wife of 42 years.

Actor Robert Wagner credits Edwards with giving him some of the greatest opportunities of his career.

“There won’t be anybody passing by like him again. He was a genius,” Wagner said Thursday. “Personally, we were so very close friends and he was so kind to me throughout my entire life.”

via Blake Edwards Obituary: View Blake Edwards’s Obituary by Danville and Rockingham County.

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Elizabeth Edwards: The link between who we are and who we could be | National | Independent Weekly

Great tribute from the Independent Weekly:

The day after she died, someone posted a newspaper article about Elizabeth Edwards on a progressive political blog and added this one-sentence introduction: “When all is said and done, she was one of us.”

Whatever “us” he had in mind, it seemed a perfect epitaph.

Was he thinking that she was a passionate advocate—and blogger—for social and economic justice? She was.

Was he thinking she was authentically, even brilliantly representative of the generation of Americans born after World War II? She was that, too.

Or he may have been thinking that the indomitable spirit with which she endured tragedy and continued to seek purpose in her life made her human in the fullest sense of the word. Because she was, millions of Americans—especially, but not exclusively, women—loved Elizabeth Edwards and mourned her passing last week.

It’s easy to see that Elizabeth and her husband, John Edwards, reached for the political heavens, and they came to grief. The Greeks would understand. But if this was hubris, surely it was more the gods’ fault than hers, or even his. After the death of their son, in a nation and world yearning for uplift, was it arrogant to think they were called to serve their country? Say instead that it was audacious and that Elizabeth’s efforts were, as the Edwards’ longtime friend Glenn Bergenfield said at her memorial service, never fueled by ego but rather by duty—and a sense that it was time someone of her generation tried for greatness.

 

MORE:   Elizabeth Edwards: The link between who we are and who we could be | National | Independent Weekly.

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