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    Jul 28, 2012 | Allentown Morning Call
  1. Lounging with Lyle Lovett: Country maverick talks about career, new disc, more

    Lehigh Valley Music presents FESTBLOG
    In his 30-year career, Lyle Lovett has gotten pretty much whatever he wanted. He’s played with virtually any top artist he’s sought to – touring in recent years with visionary singer/songwriter John Hiatt. He’s had a half-dozen...
  2. Aug 8, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  3. Judith Crist dies at 90; film critic 'most hated by Hollywood'

    As one of America's most widely read and influential film critics from the 1960s through the '80s, Judith Crist was known for her often-caustic reviews that earned her a reputation as "the critic most hated by Hollywood."
    As one of America's most widely read and influential film critics from the 1960s through the '80s, Judith Crist was known for her often-caustic reviews that earned her a reputation as "the critic most hated by Hollywood." Director Billy Wilder once joked...

    Tags: New York City, Elizabeth Taylor, Manhattan (New York City), Radio City Music Hall, Steven Spielberg

  4. Aug 10, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  5. No walk in the park

    In 2008, when Malcolm Gladwell wrote a New Yorker essay called “Late Bloomers,” author Ben Fountain served as exhibit A. The story outlined how Fountain had given up a solid legal career to pursue writing. After 18 years — during which Fountain's wife, Sharon, supported their family with her own legal career — Fountain “took the literary world by storm,” as Gladwell put it, with his short story collection, “Brief Encounters with Che Guevara.” The book won a Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award and sold well. At the time, Fountain was 48. The core question Gladwell's essay sought to answer was “Why do we equate genius with precocity?”
    In 2008, when Malcolm Gladwell wrote a New Yorker essay called “Late Bloomers,” author Ben Fountain served as exhibit A. The story outlined how Fountain had given up a solid legal career to pursue writing. After 18 years — during which...

    Tags: Unrest, Conflicts and War, Fox News Channel (tv network), Skype, Malcolm Gladwell, Joseph Heller

  6. Jul 4, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  7. Ben Davidson dies at 72; Oakland Raider, fixture in beer commercials

    Ben Davidson, an iconic face of the 1960s-era Oakland Raiders and later a popular fixture in Miller Lite TV commercials, has died. He was 72.
    Ben Davidson, an iconic face of the 1960s-era Oakland Raiders and later a popular fixture in Miller Lite TV commercials, has died. He was 72. Davidson, who had been receiving treatment for prostate cancer, died Monday night, former Raiders coach John...

    Tags: Kansas City Chiefs, Al Davis, Green Bay Packers, Sports, Oakland Raiders

  8. May 18, 2012 |Story| WPIX-LTV
  9. Dr Steve Talks With Lynda Carter

    For info about Lynda, click <a href=&quot;http://www.lyndacarter.com/">HERE</a>.
    For info about Lynda, click HERE. To purchase her CD, click HERE.   About Lynda: Performed in a band during high school called 'Just Us', which consisted of a marimba, a congo drum, an acoustic guitar, and a stand-up bass played by another girl....

    Tags: Hotel and Accommodation Industry, Ronald McDonald House Charities, Lynda Carter, Music, Jill Ireland

  10. Feb 16, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  11. Police story charts a slide downhill for a rogue cop in 'Rampart' ✭✭✭ 1/2

    &quot;Rampart" patrols some familiar streets, but this jarringly intimate study of a dirty Los Angeles cop sliding, crazily, down the drain has a distinctive new-cliche smell, pungent and alive. The story, which is more about observation than propulsion, suits what interests the filmmakers most: the scary charisma and dazzling hubris of Officer Dave Brown, played with wholehearted ferocity by Woody Harrelson.
    "Rampart" patrols some familiar streets, but this jarringly intimate study of a dirty Los Angeles cop sliding, crazily, down the drain has a distinctive new-cliche smell, pungent and alive. The story, which is more about observation than propulsion, suits...

    Tags: Los Angeles Police Department, Ned Beatty, U.S. Army, Blackmail and Extortion, Cynthia Nixon

  12. Jan 13, 2012 |Story| Glendale News Press
  13. DVD Review: One of Stanley Kubrick's best gets better

    Stanley Kubrick's third feature was his first great film and remains to this day my favorite Kubrick movie (with the possible exception of “Dr. Strangelove”). It also captures the very essence of the film noir worldview, with only “...

    Tags: Blu-ray Discs, Movies, DVDs, Stanley Kubrick, Movies

  14. Jan 8, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. John Williams and Steven Spielberg mark 40 years of collaboration

    The quietest room in Hollywood may be the office where John Williams composes. In a bungalow on the Universal Studios lot, steps from the production company of his most frequent collaborator, director Steven Spielberg, Williams works alone at a 90-year-old Steinway grand piano, with fistfuls of pencils and stacks of composition paper nearby, and worn books of poetry by Robert Frost and William Wordsworth piled on the coffee table.
    The quietest room in Hollywood may be the office where John Williams composes. In a bungalow on the Universal Studios lot, steps from the production company of his most frequent collaborator, director Steven Spielberg, Williams works alone at a 90-year-...

    Tags: Sunday Night Football (tv program), Yo-Yo Ma, The Holocaust (1934-1945), Steven Spielberg, Arts and Culture

  16. Jan 24, 2012 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  17. Bingham Ray dies at 57; leading force in independent films

    Bingham Ray, the co-founder of October Films, one of the top independent film distribution companies of the 1990s, and a former president of United Artists who was a leading force in independent films for more than two decades, died Monday. He was 57.
    Bingham Ray, the co-founder of October Films, one of the top independent film distribution companies of the 1990s, and a former president of United Artists who was a leading force in independent films for more than two decades, died Monday. He was 57....

    Tags: Stroke, New York City, The New York Times, Michael Moore, Arts and Culture

  18. Dec 4, 2011 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. |Story
  20. Jan 24, 2012 |Column| Chicago Tribune
  21. Album review: Leonard Cohen, 'Old Ideas'

    <strong>3.5 stars (out of 4)</strong>
    3.5 stars (out of 4) It doesn’t seem possible, but Leonard Cohen’s voice sounds even deeper, darker, more foreboding than ever on his 12th studio album in 44 years, “Old Ideas” (Columbia). Cohen is 77, and he doesn’t...

    Tags: Sergio Leone, Kurt Cobain, Leonard Cohen, Johnny Cash, Music

  22. Dec 29, 2011 | Los Angeles Times
  23. Q+LA Julian Fellowes

    LA Times Magazine
    The reigning monarch of England’s storied past tells tales on his beloved Downton Abbey...
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