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To be or not to be ...

Posts tagged with "ENTERTAINMENT"

HAPPY NEW YEAR 2008

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Some Great BMW's pix!!!

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How do you feel this album, friends? and would you like 2 have new one?:smile: :D Are you a fan of BMW? :rolleyes: with me BMW is the best!!!!:hat:


My Public Shoebox

Commentary: Sex? Explicitness? ......

NEW YORK (AP) -- Well, you think you've seen everything on TV. Then along comes HBO with "Tell Me You Love Me" to open your eyes.
On this spare-no-feelings drama about human relationships, brace yourself to see plenty -- including yourself, reflected in ways that may feel painfully familiar and register more forcefully than you bargained for. My response after watching the full 10-episode season in just three sittings: "I am SO busted."

I make no prediction how others will receive "Tell Me," and in what numbers. But I see it as the most important drama HBO has introduced since "The Sopranos."

Early reports about the series (premiering Sunday at 9 p.m. EDT) have dwelled on its graphic sex scenes. But the sex only underlines what "Tell Me" is really about. For most of each hour, the characters engage in an even more intense brand of explicitness: Their beyond-the-flesh
struggle to preserve, or recover, some measure of intimacy with the partner each of them is committed to.

Which is to say there's lots of talk going on, set against the relatably ordinary lives these people lead:


Jamie, a 20-something restaurant chef (Michelle Borth), is betrothed to Hugo, a schoolteacher (Luke Kirby). Sexually, they can't get enough of each other. But their squabbling takes over when they're not in bed.

"Sex ruins everything," pouts Jamie, blending insight with pettishness. "Good sex just hides everything that's bad about a relationship."


Carolyn, a mid-30s on-the-fast-track lawyer (Sonya Walger), and her real-estate investor husband, Palek (Adam Scott), seem accomplished in everything they touch, including each other. Except, for a year, they've been trying unsuccessfully to get pregnant. Growing pressure and resentment will push their marriage to the brink.


Katie, a 40-ish stay-at-home mom (Ally Walker), and Dave, her salesman husband (Tim DeKay), are terrific parents of two sweet kids. But they've stopped having sex. Neither of them is eager to explore why. Dave doesn't even want to acknowledge any problem.

"I love you," he tells Katie. "Too bad that's not enough."

All six characters find their way to couples counseling with a wise, reassuring therapist, Dr. May Foster (Jane Alexander). Well into her 60s, she enjoys a lusty sex life with her devoted husband (David Selby). Here, too, viewers are made privy.

That's the series in a nutshell, which only does it a disservice by implying some sort of pat formula propels it. On the contrary, "Tell Me" is nothing if not finely wrought and nuanced, shifting between its parallel narratives (each couple seeing Dr. Foster has minimal contact or awareness of the others in this Southern California community) as the universal issues at the series' heart unfold at their natural pace.

But what are those universal issues? With one couple going hot and heavy in the front seat of their car in broad daylight ... another couple hugging the opposite sides of their bed every night ... just what do the characters on "Tell Me" have in common?

To begin with, each of them is healthy, bright, attractive. Each is demonstrably loved.

Partners who may or may not belong together, they are united by a goal that, at times, seems cruelly beyond their reach: fulfillment in monogamy. These are upper-middle-class Americans; we're not talking Darfur-level misery. And yet the series grants them permission to experience fear and pain from the deprivation they feel. (By extension, it grants the viewer similar permission, which helps explain its dramatic punch.)

"Tell Me You Love Me": The imploring title says a mouthful, setting the stage for doubt, disappointment, cross-purposes, disruption. Just note how Dave can tell his wife he loves her, then add defensively, "Too bad that's not enough."

Created by Cynthia Mort, a screenwriter with the sitcoms "Roseanne" and "Will & Grace" among her credits, "Tell Me" gives vivid expression to the plight of characters misreading themselves and the people they're closest to. It charts a struggle viewers will identify with, amid their fascination and unease. (Be careful who you watch this series with, by the way. Any given episode could spark a conversation that goes unexpected, unwanted places.)

"The one thing a therapist can do, in times of darkness, is turn a light on," says Dr. Foster, words that could also be a mission statement for the series. "The trick now is not to be so stunned by the glare that you want to turn it back off."

Watching "Tell Me You Love Me," see how you react when a light turns on.

Top ten beauties of Miss Vietnam Global 2007

Miss Vietnam Global 2007 pageant closed on September 2 in Nha Trang City, Khanh Hoa Province with Ngo Phuong Lan crowned as Beauty Queen. VietNamNet Bridge brings you photos of the top ten beauties of this contest.

(Source: VIETNAMNET.VN)

SWEET PIX OF Maggie Gyllenhaal

Date of Birth:16 November 1977, Lower East Side, New York, New York, USA more Mini Biography:Maggie Gyllenhaal made her debut in her father Stephen's film _Waterland:Attended the Bradley Bayou/Halston Fall 2003 Collection -- LA Launch. Awards:Nominated for 2 Golden Globes. Another 11 wins & 11 nominations.

Ngo Phuong Lan crowned Miss Vietnam World

Ngo Phuong Lan, a twenty-year-old Vietnamese student studying in Switzerland, won in the Miss Vietnam World contest on Vietnam’s National Day.
The first and second runners-up were Teressa Sam from the UK and Dang Minh Thu, a Vietnamese student from northern province of Nam Dinh, respectively.

Organizers offered the queen US$20,000 and a tour of Vietnam.

The first and second runners-up got $8,000 and $5,000 each.

The three winners of the Miss Photogenic, Miss Tourism, and Miss Beach competitions held August 24-28 - Nguyen Cao Thu Van from the US, Nguyen Kang Wun Ching from Germany and Nguyen Thi Van Anh from Ukraine respectively – each received 2,000 dollars.

The competition’s top-prize winner Lan has studied in Switzerland since 2002 and had ironically taken second place to Teressa Sam in the Miss Vietnam UK contest in London on July 4.

Before studying in Switzerland, Lan stayed and studied in New York while her father, Ambassador Ngo Quang Xuan, acted as the chief of the Vietnamese Mission to the United Nations.

Miss Vietnam World’s 37 final contestants were the winners of 7 regional beauty contests held in Vietnam, the US, Germany, The UK, Canada and former Soviet Republics.

Held at the Vinpearl Land Resort on an island in Nha Trang Bay, the pageant attracted more than 5,000 audience members.

Launched in April, the campaign attracted over 2,000 applicants of Vietnamese origin from around the world.

(Source:thanhnienNews.com)

Fights, slurs, sex: 'Big Brother's' crazy summer

NEW YORK (AP) -- It's just another summer in the "Big Brother" house. Or is it?
Bloggers have condemned scandalous remarks about incest, race, ethnicity, sex and sexual orientation made by contestants. Message board posters have debated about a physical altercation involving two participants and a lit cigarette. And thousands of YouTube watchers have eavesdropped on one contestant's unfiltered thoughts about Jewish people.
broadcast in different countries, the made-for-TV claustrophobia has proven endlessly fascinating across the globe -- and so has its voyeuristic peep show.
December 2009
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