I've finally achieved consistency in my life. Any person of average or above intelligence can predict what I will say next with unerring accuracy. And what I say will always be wrong.

Saturday, July 21, 2007

[CanYoAssDigIt] more on Ishtar the Musical

He is joking... but maybe the more the idea is in the air...

Stupid NYT reviewer maybe doesn't know the Times initially gave Isthar
a good review... as they should have.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/22/arts/22ishe.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

Playgoers, Beware the 'Ishtar' Invasion

By CHARLES ISHERWOOD
Published: July 22, 2007

BROADWAY has recently been diligent, even tireless, in the pursuit of
refitting successful movie musicals from the 1980s (and the 1970s) for
the stage. Almost without exception the results have been dire. The
synthetic stage version of "Saturday Night Fever" took itself way too
seriously; "Footloose" was bland and witless; "Urban Cowboy" had all
the down-home grit of a barbecued marshmallow. The odious stage
version of "Fame" never made it to Broadway — a small mercy — but it
was an inexplicable hit in the West End of London. Next up: a stage
"Flashdance," being developed by the company that brought us the dud
Earth, Wind and Fire jukebox musical "Hot Feet." Prognosis: scary.
Skip to next paragraph
Enlarge This Image
Columbia Pictures/Everett Collection

"Ishtar" starred Dustin Hoffman and Warren Beatty.
Enlarge This Image
Columbia Pictures/Everett Collection

Jamie Lee Curtis in "Perfect."

Now, with the improbably delightful "Xanadu" blazing a neon path
forward, perhaps it is time for Broadway to forge ahead in adapting
some of the truly awful movie offerings of the decade for the stage.
Maybe only in acknowledged cinematic badness does the promise of stage
greatness lie.

Herewith my fantasy (and, I hope I need hardly add, facetious)
suggestions for potential resurrection. You'll notice that my
definition of the 1980s is a little bit loose here. The 1980s were the
years in which the quality of American moviemaking truly began to
decline precipitously, but a few '70s titles were so bad that I've
decided to include them as honorary '80s movies. And, to narrow the
competition, I concentrated on movies that are either musicals or were
associated with hit songs or soundtracks. ("Mommie Dearest," a natural
choice, is thus disqualified, although it could make a great opera.)

'EYES OF LAURA MARS: THE MUSICAL'

This 1978 thriller was not, strictly speaking, a musical, but it
spawned a big hit for Barbra Streisand in "Prisoner (Love Theme From
'Eyes of Laura Mars')," and its soundtrack also includes the familiar
disco number "Let's All Chant," by the
never-heard-from-before-or-since Michael Zager Band.

Nor is it truly terrible, although its chichi fashion-world setting
and the presence of Faye Dunaway in the title role firmly classify it
as camp. Ms. Dunaway is fiercely entertaining as a demanding,
perfectionist, Helmut Newton-style fashion photographer who is stalked
both psychically and literally by a killer who plants ice picks in his
victims' eyes.

Who but the demanding, perfectionist Donna Murphy could fill Ms.
Dunaway's leather boots onstage? Denis O'Hare would be brilliant as
the snippy gay sidekick played by Rene Auberjonois. A dance medley on
the soundtrack also includes "(Shake Shake Shake) Shake Your Booty"
from KC and the Sunshine Band, which means the stage version could
shoehorn in a few more of that group's undying dance hits with
impunity, although it is hard to picture Ms. Murphy delivering any of
them. Perhaps she could tone up the proceedings by singing "I'm Your
Boogie Man" with a German accent?

'A STAR IS BORN '76: THE MUSICAL'

Andrew Lloyd Webber's production company was once rumored to be
mounting a stage version of the beloved 1954 "Star Is Born," which
starred Judy Garland and James Mason and featured songs by Harold
Arlen and Ira Gershwin. Far more fruitful for pure kitsch purposes is
the unbeloved, resplendently bad 1970s version that helped send Barbra
Streisand's movie career into an aesthetic swoon from which it never
truly recovered.

I envision Idina Menzel in the lead role, center stage at the climax
in a nimbus of light emphasizing the supersized faux-'fro that Ms.
Streisand sported in the movie. (Remember, these were the Jon Peters
years.) Ms. Menzel certainly has both the vocal chops and, as an
alumna of "Rent," the rock (or rock-ish) background to play Esther
Hoffman, the pop rocker on the rise whose marriage to that
star-on-the-skids John Norman Howard ends tempestuously and
tragically.

Harder to cast, perhaps, would be the Howard role, played by Kris
Kristofferson in the movie, looking vaguely nauseated throughout.
Perhaps Ms. Menzel's co-star in "Rent," Adam Pascal, could be talked
into growing a scraggly beard and grumbling his way through Mr.
Kristofferson's songs?

A metatheatrical twist could interpolate the backstage drama on the
movie. Ms. Streisand's megalomania had begun to spiral out of control
by this point. She and Mr. Kristofferson reportedly loathed each
other; hence, perhaps, his terminally disgusted look. Incidentally,
Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne shared screenplay credit. Would Ms.
Didion be interested in another crack at Broadway, refashioning her
work for a stage sendup? I rather doubt it.

'GREASE 2: THE MUSICAL'

Sequelitis, the bane of Hollywood for at least a quarter-century, has
somehow failed to infect Broadway. Maybe the doomed attempts to
manufacture a hit follow-up to "Annie" had a vaccinationlike effect on
even the more crass producers. But it's never too late to start.

How many show queens recall that the super-flop sequel to one of the
biggest movie musicals of all time was directed by Patricia Birch,
better known as a Broadway choreographer and frequent collaborator of
Harold Prince? Ms. Birch choreographed the smash-hit "Grease" for both
stage and film and was rewarded with the director's chair on "Grease
2."

Sadly, her moviemaking debut didn't fare much better than Mr. Prince's
moribund film version of the Stephen Sondheim musical "A Little Night
Music." Perhaps a second crack at the material, with tongue in cheek,
would be more fruitful. (More theater-related "Grease 2" trivia: Peter
Frechette, a well-known New York actor, plays one of the not-so-tough
toughs in the bland, sugary sequel to an already toxically innocuous
movie.)

I see Leslie Kritzer, now on Broadway as Elle's chief sidekick in
"Legally Blonde," in the Lorna Luft role (and Ms. Luft in the Eve
Arden role). Perhaps Kerry Butler could move smoothly from "Xanadu" to
the lead, played by Michelle Pfeiffer, who was perhaps the only one
involved in "Grease 2" to emerge unscathed.

'ISHTAR: THE KARAOKE MUSICAL'

Another popular trend Broadway has been slow to capitalize on is
karaoke. Maybe the time has come to acknowledge that today, as amateur
hours spread across the television spectrum like a variety-show virus,
half the people in a Broadway audience secretly yearn for stardom, or
at least a shining moment in the public spotlight. The rest have
learned to be voyeurs and contest judges, happy to snicker as fellow
audience members make utter fools of themselves.

So the legendarily unamusing 1987 comedy starring Dustin Hoffman and
Warren Beatty as talentless singer-songwriters could be adapted to
give audience members a chance to play would-be pop idols themselves,
sharing the stage with the stars of the Broadway sendup, Norbert Leo
Butz and Brian d'Arcy James. Before taking your seat, you check off
your repertory from a wide list of hits of the past few decades. Lucky
winners get a chance to sing their favorite or share a duet with Mr.
Butz or Mr. James.

Thus laughs, so peculiarly absent in Elaine May's movie, can be
effortlessly ushered into the stage adaptation. Also, Jackie Hoffman
and Mary Testa repeat their scene-stealing chores from "Xanadu" here,
playing both ends of a wisecracking camel.

'PERFECT'

This 1985 clunker was undoubtedly the worst movie ever made about the
aerobics craze — also the only one I fondly hope — and possibly also
the worst movie ever made about journalism. The chemistry between
Jamie Lee Curtis, as a grumpy, manic, trampy workout instructor, and
John Travolta, playing a reporter for Rolling Stone, was about as
intoxicating as a gallon of Gatorade. Some egregiously bad dialogue
didn't help. The immortally awful aperçu "You're a sphincter muscle!"
is virtually a leitmotif, for example, spoken both in bitterness and
in tendresse.

To avoid having to use any of that un-lampoonably dreary dialogue,
"Perfect" becomes Broadway's next all-dance musical, a zippy 90
minutes choreographed by Twyla Tharp (she already did jogging in
"Movin' Out") and reuniting two of the electrifying dancers from that
show, Elizabeth Parkinson (in Ms. Curtis's asymmetrical shag) and John
Selya.

Their pelvic-thrusting pas de deux are performed to the music of the
Pointer Sisters, whose single "All Systems Go" appears on the
soundtrack, thus making it logical to include a bunch of their other
infectious hits from the decade, like "Jump (for My Love)," "I'm So
Excited" and "Automatic," all uncannily apropos for a show set in a
stylized dream of a sports club. Other kitschy fun redolent of the
'80s: a scene set in a Chippendales-type bar full of hysterical
bachelorettes, and a chorus line of Boy George impersonators
serenading their trainer with "Do You Really Want to Hurt Me?"
(Weirdly, a bunch of Boy George look-alikes actually make cameo
appearances in the movie.)

'THE BRAT PACK LIVE! ON BROADWAY'

This tribute to the sentimental filmic youthquake of the decade
reunites all the stars of the John Hughes pictures (and tributary
movies like "St. Elmo's Fire") who are not currently working in film.
Which is to say, most of them.

In a semi-satiric nostalgia fest the likes of Molly Ringwald, Ally
Sheedy, Judd Nelson, Andrew McCarthy and Anthony Michael Hall recreate
memorable scenes from the movies that made them, all too briefly and
at a painfully tender age, famous. Altered hairlines and paunches add
a postmodernist twist to scenes of teenagers battling and bonding. A
poignant finale finds the cast leading a sing-along version of the big
hit from "The Breakfast Club," Simple Minds' "Don't You (Forget About
Me)."

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[CanYoAssDigIt] Fwd: !!Meet Sexy/Hot girls living with Herpes or HPV to start a romance dating!

Hey Malty,

If I were on the market for romance (which I'm not), all things considered, I'd probably first go to a website that offered to introduce me to girls who do not have STDs.  But that's just me, maybe I'm weird...

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: maltly <maltly@yahoo.com>
Date: Jul 16, 2007 7:46 AM
Subject: !!Meet Sexy/Hot girls living with Herpes or HPV to start a romance dating!
To: Anti-1MatthewFord@yahoogroups.com

Meet sexy/hot single girls living with Herpes,HPV or other STD without
being objected in your area!
http://www.aboutme.com/users/ldssingles/freestddating.htm

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Friday, July 20, 2007

[CanYoAssDigIt] mattlove1 sent you a video!

YouTube  Broadcast Yourself™

mattlove1 wants to share a video with you

Video Description

Amo-te mana

Personal Message

Is it just me, or is there a near total disconnect between the visuals of this vid, and the song:

Silverstein - My Heroine

The drugs begin to peak
A smile of joy arrives in me
But sedation changes to panic and nausea
And breath starts to shorten
And heartbeats pass softer

You won't try to save me
You just want to break me, and leave me desperate

You taught my heart a sense I never knew I had
I can't forget the times that I was lost and depressed from the awful truth
How do you do it?
You're my heroine

You won't leave me alone
Chisel my heart out of stone
I give in everytime.

You taught my heart a sense I never knew I had
I can't forget the times that I was lost and depressed from the awful truth
How do you do it?
You're my heroine

I bet you laugh at the thought of me thinking for myself
I bet you believe that I'm better off with you than someone else

Your face arrives again, all hope I had becomes surreal
But under your cover's more torture than pleasure
And just past your lips, there's mores anger than laughter
Not now or forever will I ever change you
I know that to go on, I'll break you my habit

You taught my heart a sense I never knew I had
I can't forget the times that I was lost and depressed from the awful truth
How do you do it?
You're my heroine

I will save myself

To accept my friend request, click here.

To respond to mattlove1, click here.

Thanks,
mattlove1

Using YouTube

YouTube Help
Check the Help Center for answers to common questions.
Your Account Settings
To change your preferences, settings, or personal info, go to the 'My Account' section.
Email Notifications
To change or cancel email notifications from YouTube, go to the Email Options section of your Profile.

Copyright © 2007 YouTube, Inc.

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[CanYoAssDigIt] This time, next year...

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Wednesday, July 18, 2007

[CanYoAssDigIt] Re: [Bizarro_UltraZine] Victoria Beckham -- a fish-in-Evian water

I don't know why this stupid Reaganite sourpuss is so unhappy about the media.. we've never had more Posh Spice and Paris Hilton coverage than we are having now. Things have never been better...

July 18, 2007

It's Far Beyond a Few Judith Millers

A Free Press or a Ministry of Truth?

By PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS

In his novel 1984, George Orwell portrayed a future time in which the explanations of recent events and earlier history are continually changed to meet Big Brother's latest purpose. Previous explanations disappear down "the memory hole."

Sound familiar? Any American who pays attention can observe the identical phenomenon occurring in the US today.

Think about the Bush Regime's changing explanations for the failed US occupation of Iraq. Shortly after Bush's May 2003 announcement of "mission accomplished," the mission revealed itself to be very much unaccomplished. Americans were told that the cause of the snafu was a small Sunni insurgency of two or three thousand at the most inspired by "die-hard Baath party remnants. Remember the propagandistic deck of cards identifying the most wanted down to the less wanted? Americans were assured that once Saddam Hussein and his relatives and henchmen were rounded up, our troops would be pelted with the promised flowers instead of roadside bombs.

When the roundups, trials, and executions failed to fix the problem, the "die-hard" explanation disappeared. A new explanation, with no continuity to the old, took its place.

The new explanation was that Syria was allowing foreigners to cross its border into Iraq to commit jihad against the American troops. This explanation lasted until it became all too clear, despite the propaganda, that the "foreign fighters" were remarkably well accepted by, and concealed within, the Iraqi communities that were suffering all the collateral damage of the conflict.

When it came time for the US to create an Iraqi government, it was evident that it would be one dominated by Shi'ites. Then, for a limited time, it was permissible to recognize that the insurgency was popularly based in the Sunnis.

As the insurgency evolved into what the Iraq Study Group described as a Sunni-Shi'ite civil war with US troops unclear on which side they stood, the Bush Regime and the captive media began blaming Al Qaeda for the escalating violence. Americans were assured by the Ministry of Truth that there wasn't a civil war, just outsiders stirring up conflict. This enabled Big Brother to deny that there was a civil war and to revive fear of terrorist attacks in the US and UK, the new Oceania.

The Al Qaeda explanation was soon discarded into the memory hole. The explanation implied that Oceania's invasion of Iraq had greatly expanded the ranks and strength of Al Qaeda, thus contradicting big Brother's claim that his war in Iraq was making Oceanians safe by stamping out terrorism. The Al Qaeda explanation had to depart for another reason as well. Cheney, Israel, and the neocons, the rulers of the new Oceania, plan to attack Iran, and so the insurgency in Iraq is now being blamed on Iran.

The Ministry of Truth has accommodated the latest explanation, just as it did all others before, without remarking on the funeral of the previous explanation. All of a sudden, a new explanation appears and is repeated until it, too, goes down the memory hole.

The American and British media work the same way as the Ministry of Truth in Oceania. A day arrives when the "truth" no longer serves the empire or hegemonic power or center of moral purpose in the world, or for short, the regime. When that day arrives, a new explanation appears and is repeated until it, too, is discarded down the memory hole.

In recent weeks Americans have been fed a series of reports from official sources that Iran is arming both Iraqi insurgents and the Taliban in Afghanistan. Experts, both within the government and without, who have been made more attentive by the Bush Regime's false charges of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, have disputed the news reports.

But the reports keep on coming. As I write, the latest story is that the US military "discovered a field of rocket launchers near a US army base south of Baghdad armed with 34 Iranian-made missiles." Can you imagine? The insurgents went to the trouble of lugging powerful missiles within striking distance of a US base and just left them there unfired to be discovered by the Americans. To further serve Cheney's plan to attack Iran, the media report states: "Earlier this month, US commanders stepped up the charges [against Iran], claiming that senior leaders of Iran's special forces and of the Lebanese Shiite Hezbollah militia have trained Iraqi fighters and provided other support."

Notice that none of the explanations fed to Americans over the years have ever mentioned, even as a faint possibility, that the US invasion and occupation of Iraq might be the cause of the violence in Iraq.

Allegedly, the US is a free and open country with a free press and a government accountable to the people. Yet, the information fed to the American people is as thoroughly false as that fed to the citizens of Oceania by Big Brother through the Ministry of Truth in Orwell's famous novel.

In Orwell's novel, despite the totalitarian power of the government, nothing happens to people as long as they accept the government's intrusive monitoring of their lives and do not become interested in truth or facts.. In such a world, truth and individuality pass out of human consciousness and become unimportant. Citizens survive by accepting Big Brother's ever-changing reality.

This is what the mainstream media in the US and UK are enabling the new Oceania to accomplish. It is pointless to complain about a few Judith Millers here and there at the New York Times, or the obvious warmongers at the Weekly Standard, Fox "News," and Wall Street Journal editorial page. The entire corporate media is behaving as a Ministry of Truth.

Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and Contributing Editor of National Review. He is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions.He can be reached at: PaulCraigRoberts@yahoo.com




On 7/18/07, kdhaisch@aol.com <kdhaisch@aol.com> wrote:

Posh Spice Reality Show Big Hit for NBC

Victoria Beckham's Bid to Charm America
Reuters
LOS ANGELES (July 17) - Victoria Beckham's bid to woo Americans was a big hit with raving reviews of a reality TV show that she hoped would overturn her image here as a sour-faced diva.

The New York Post called Monday night's show "an orgy of self-indulgence" and described Victoria as "absolutely fabulous."
Victoria Beckham, 33, wife of British soccer legend David Beckham, arrived in Los Angeles last week in a media blitz promoting the couple as style icons and mega-celebrities both on and off the soccer field.

David Beckham has signed a $250 million contract over five years with the Los Angeles Galaxy soccer team.

Victoria -- Posh in the 1990s British girl band The Spice Girls -- had hoped Monday's prime-time reality special "Victoria Beckham: Coming to America" would showcase her humor and personality to a nation which has heard much but knows little of her outside pictures.
W magazine / AP

While David "Becks" and Victoria "Posh" Beckham are wildly famous in England, their names are not well known in the states. They hoped this eye-popping spread and the July 16, one-hour NBC special "Victoria Beckham: Coming to America" would change that.

-----

"I think people will really get to see what I'm really like. I'm just a normal girl from London. People can have preconceptions because of the photographs they see of me and the stories they read," she told reporters last week.

The New York Times said that such reality shows "rely on a fish-out-of-water conceit but in Beverly Hills she is a fish-in-Evian water, one rich, blonde, spray tanned wife-of among many."

Viewing figures released on Tuesday showed that the NBC program documenting Beckham's house-hunting, attempts to get a U.S. driving license and lessons on surviving an earthquake was the third-most watched show in its time slot on Monday.  Some 4.9 million people tuned in.

Victoria, who is constantly posing even in her own home, offers insights about how major a certain purse is, or how her new phone has changed her life," wrote The New York Post.

Victoria, who plans to push her jeans, sunglasses and perfume lines in the United States, said last week she hoped Americans would appreciate her dry, British sense of humor.

"If people like it, that's great. If they don't, I'm not losing any sleep over it," she said of the TV special.

And we'd all like to sleep with Posh.

Copyright 2007 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.

 

.





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