Categories
Alberta Ft Mac

Are There Cougars in Fort McMurray? Alberta Fish and Wildlife are Investigating Reported Sightings.

Recent cougar sightings within the Fort McMurray area have Alberta Fish and Wildlife officials investigating whether the cats are a threat in the area. So far sightings of cougars in the Fort McMurray vicinity have all been unconfirmed but it is possible given the remote location of the town and the natural habitat in the surrounding area that would provide everything the wild cats would need to thrive. The latest sighting about cougars was reported on Thursday in the afternoon, and the location of the sighting was a little disturbing. Apparently the cat was spotted close to the Thickwood Heights School on the Birchwood Trails. Residents have been warned to keep their guard up and to kep an eye out for any suspicious animals in the area but the sighting has not been confirmed by officials yet. When police responded there was no sign of any cougars in the area.

Alberta Fish and Wildlife spokesperson Brendan Cox discussed the Fort McMurray sightings of cougars and explained that “The cougar was reported to be on the playground that’s shared by Thickwood Heights and the adjacent school. The officer attended the scene, but did not find any sign of the cougar. Our officer is going to continue to monitor the situation, and if anyone does see a cougar please report it.” It is not unusual for cougars to be sighted in Northern Alberta. Brendan Cox said “In recent years we’ve seen cougars in a lot of places where they typically hadn’t been seen in years past. That would, I guess, indicate a healthy cougar population.”

Categories
Entertainment

Lisa Vanderpump Hates When People Are Negative About Kim Richards, Reached Out to Her After Ex's Death

Lisa Vanderpump, Kim Richards, RHOBH

Lisa Vanderpump, Kim Richards, RHOBHRodolfo Martinez/Bravo

During her interview, Vanderpump also talked about her other Bravo reality show, Vanderpump Rules, which focuses on her West Hollywood restaurant, SUR. Stassi Schroeder, a former server, recently made her return on the show.

When asked if she would ever hire her back, Vanderpump told Bromley, “No. No! No.”

She also said she did not regret paying money to

If you have anything bad to say about Kim Richards, you may have to answer to Lisa Vanderpump.

The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills star feels protective of her former co-star, who recently lost her ex-husband to cancer and previously underwent months of personal turmoil.

Monty Brinson, who was married to Kim for three years in the ’80s, passed away in January at age 58. The two are parents to daughter Brooke Brinson. Kim also has three children from other past relationships.

“I’ve texted her backwards and forwards and she’s been very sweet,” Vanderpump told E! News exclusively.

She said she and husband Ken Todd were invited to Brinson’s memorial service but were unable to attend.

“She’s so lovely and the problems that she’s kind of had, it’s been very difficult for her, I would imagine,” Vanderpump said about Kim. “But you know what, really, I hate? It’s now if I see the show and I see people being negative about her, I hate that.”

CLICK: Catch up on what happened on Stassi’s first episode back on Vanderpump Rules

Kim, who is no longer a Real Housewives cast member, had last year battled substance abuse and legal issues and spent time in rehab.

She said last October “everything is good” with her and her sister and co-star Kyle Richards told E! News last month, “Kim is doing really well.”

Vanderpump told E! News she is “1,000 percent sure” Richards remains sober.

Rodolfo Martinez/Bravo

During her interview, Vanderpump also talked about her other Bravo reality show, Vanderpump Rules, which focuses on her West Hollywood restaurant, SUR. Stassi Schroeder, a former server, recently made her return on the show.

When asked if she would ever hire her back, Vanderpump told Bromley, “No. No! No.”

She also said she did not regret paying money to stop a sex tape featuring Schroeder from being leaked.

“She’s a young girl and she made a mistake and that was disgusting and that was an incredible breach of loyalty,” Vanderpump said.

She also talked about bartender and Schroeder’s ex, Jax Taylor, who made headlines last summer when he was arrested for allegedly stealing a pair of sunglasses from a store in Hawaii.

“I think he’s learned a very, very valuable lesson,” Vanderpump said. “I think it was tough on him.”

The reality star signaled she isn’t worried about employees stealing from her restaurants.

“We’ve got very tight security…if I was chasing every single person who’s stolen half a bottle of wine behind the bar…” she said. “But all the money and that, no, no, no. I’ve got that figured out. I’ve had 29 restaurants.”

(E! and Bravo are part of the NBCUniversal family.)

CLICK: The Official Ranking of All the Real Housewives Fights

RELATED VIDEOS:

Source:: http://ca.eonline.com/news/741173/lisa-vanderpump-hates-when-people-are-negative-about-kim-richards-reached-out-to-her-after-ex-s-death?cmpid=rss-000000-rssfeed-365-topstories&utm_source=eonline&utm_medium=rssfeeds&utm_campaign=rss_topstories

      

Categories
Entertainment

Lisa Vanderpump Hates When People Are Negative About Kim Richards, Reached Out to Her After Ex's Death

Lisa Vanderpump, Kim Richards, RHOBH

Lisa Vanderpump, Kim Richards, RHOBHRodolfo Martinez/Bravo

During her interview, Vanderpump also talked about her other Bravo reality show, Vanderpump Rules, which focuses on her West Hollywood restaurant, SUR. Stassi Schroeder, a former server, recently made her return on the show.

When asked if she would ever hire her back, Vanderpump told Bromley, “No. No! No.”

She also said she did not regret paying money to

If you have anything bad to say about Kim Richards, you may have to answer to Lisa Vanderpump.

The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills star feels protective of her former co-star, who recently lost her ex-husband to cancer and previously underwent months of personal turmoil.

Monty Brinson, who was married to Kim for three years in the ’80s, passed away in January at age 58. The two are parents to daughter Brooke Brinson. Kim also has three children from other past relationships.

“I’ve texted her backwards and forwards and she’s been very sweet,” Vanderpump told E! News exclusively.

She said she and husband Ken Todd were invited to Brinson’s memorial service but were unable to attend.

“She’s so lovely and the problems that she’s kind of had, it’s been very difficult for her, I would imagine,” Vanderpump said about Kim. “But you know what, really, I hate? It’s now if I see the show and I see people being negative about her, I hate that.”

CLICK: Catch up on what happened on Stassi’s first episode back on Vanderpump Rules

Kim, who is no longer a Real Housewives cast member, had last year battled substance abuse and legal issues and spent time in rehab.

She said last October “everything is good” with her and her sister and co-star Kyle Richards told E! News last month, “Kim is doing really well.”

Vanderpump told E! News she is “1,000 percent sure” Richards remains sober.

Rodolfo Martinez/Bravo

During her interview, Vanderpump also talked about her other Bravo reality show, Vanderpump Rules, which focuses on her West Hollywood restaurant, SUR. Stassi Schroeder, a former server, recently made her return on the show.

When asked if she would ever hire her back, Vanderpump told Bromley, “No. No! No.”

She also said she did not regret paying money to stop a sex tape featuring Schroeder from being leaked.

“She’s a young girl and she made a mistake and that was disgusting and that was an incredible breach of loyalty,” Vanderpump said.

She also talked about bartender and Schroeder’s ex, Jax Taylor, who made headlines last summer when he was arrested for allegedly stealing a pair of sunglasses from a store in Hawaii.

“I think he’s learned a very, very valuable lesson,” Vanderpump said. “I think it was tough on him.”

The reality star signaled she isn’t worried about employees stealing from her restaurants.

“We’ve got very tight security…if I was chasing every single person who’s stolen half a bottle of wine behind the bar…” she said. “But all the money and that, no, no, no. I’ve got that figured out. I’ve had 29 restaurants.”

(E! and Bravo are part of the NBCUniversal family.)

CLICK: The Official Ranking of All the Real Housewives Fights

RELATED VIDEOS:

Source:: http://ca.eonline.com/news/741173/lisa-vanderpump-hates-when-people-are-negative-about-kim-richards-reached-out-to-her-after-ex-s-death?cmpid=rss-000000-rssfeed-365-topstories&utm_source=eonline&utm_medium=rssfeeds&utm_campaign=rss_topstories

      

Categories
TV & Movies

Thumbnails 2/17/16

1.

“Preston Sturges: how a master of daftness conquered Hollywood”: A great appreciation from The Guardian‘s Sarah Churchwell.

“Amid a generation of the finest writers in screen history, including Ben Hecht, George S Kaufman, Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder and Anita Loos, Sturges was distinguished by his willingness to push the story, or the joke, as far as it needed to go, and the fun he had shuffling through genres and registers, like a cardsharp riffling the deck. Taking comic language seriously, Sturges was a master of exposition, using what he called ‘hooks’ in dialogue to give his character, ‘like a trapeze artist, something to swing from on his way to another point of view,’ The pendulum swing between perspectives was Sturges’s specialty, resulting in a volatile density of language, reminding us that ‘ludic’ and ‘ludicrous’ share the same root. His comedy relies less on one-liners than on the cumulative effect of repartee, and the accelerating sense that everything might go entirely off the rails, a mounting unease entangled with his films’ satirical sense of mischief. Genre conventions safeguard the viewer, who stays confident the hero will survive, right will prevail, rules will be followed. Sturges offers no such assurances. His films often begin with endings. They also resist endings – or, put another way, gleefully carry on ending, piling up closures.”

2.

“‘Image overload’ is frying our brains and making us forgetful”: A frightening analysis from Rebecca Macmillan at Quartz.

“In the Rhetoric of Photography course that I’ve taught at the University of Texas at Austin over the past few years, image glut was a constant topic of discussion among my students. They repeatedly expressed feeling overrun by photographs, and addicted to posting images. They even waxed nostalgic about the clunky plastic cameras of their childhoods, wistfully recalling the days of limited exposures and a waiting period before seeing their developed prints. ‘Images are produced, commodified, made public and circulated on an unprecedented scale,’ sociologist Martin Hand writes in his book Ubiquitous Photography. Image overload hinges on feeling visually saturated—the sense that because there’s so much visual material to see, remembering an individual photograph becomes nearly impossible.For my students, this feeling was marked at times by general frustration, low-grade anxiety, and flat-out fatigue. Image overload also suggests a level of exhaustion with the process of monitoring and creating photo streams—surviving the pressure to digitally document one’s everyday life and to bear witness to others’ ever-growing image banks.”

3.

“South Korea’s Polarizing Film Market: Can Mid-Budget Genre Movies Survive?”: The Hollywood Reporter‘s Lee Hyo-won investigates.

“The South Korean film industry had another banner year in 2015, with the local box office reaching record heights and international sales. Revenue hit 1.72 trillion won ($1.42 billion) last year, up 3.1 percent from 2014 and setting a record for the sixth consecutive year, according to the Korean Film Council. The number of exported domestic films, meanwhile, shot up to 650 titles — the most ever. Last year’s three biggest movies — local titles ‘Veteran’ ($88.7 million) and ‘Assassination’ ($83.1 million), followed by ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’ ($74.7 million) — now rank among the top 15 films of all time at the Korean box office. But industry figures say the large numbers belie a more complicated picture of internal strife. Much like in Hollywood, the headline-making box-office records have come at the cost of intense polarization within the Korean theatrical market, with huge-budget blockbusters dominating screen counts and leaving increasingly low-budget indies to pick up the scraps. The result: Mid-budget dramas and genre pictures have virtually vacated the field. ‘On a given weekend, the top three box-office hits take up about three-quarters of the screens across Korea. This doesn’t give audiences much of a choice,’ says film critic Jeong Ji-ouk.”

4.

“Peggy Siegal, Best Hostess in a Supporting Role”: A profile by Alex Williams of The New York Times.

“Irrepressible, truncheon-blunt and forever pushing the boundaries between ‘no’ and ‘maybe,’ Ms. Siegal, 68, has employed sharp elbows and inexhaustible energy reservoirs to claim a unique social position in New York and the Hamptons: as a host for hire for clubby, insider-only film screenings and dinners for the influential, she stands at the crossroads of Hollywood power and New York society (or what’s left of it), functioning as a spin doctor, salonista, celebrity confidante and, occasionally, bouncer. Certainly, her business is changing, as studios pay closer attention to the bottom line and competitors look to siphon clients. Even so, after 30 years, Ms. Siegal remains Hollywood’s secret weapon in New York, particularly during the breathless sprint known as Oscar campaign season. It was a crisp afternoon in early January, and Ms. Siegal stood at the base of the stairs of Kappo Masa, the celestially expensive Japanese restaurant beneath the Gagosian Gallery on Madison Avenue. She wore a Chanel-inspired wool miniskirt and jumper, and her hair, once a spiky confection that veered into Joan Jett territory, had been trimmed into a floppy-banged wedge that recalled an English schoolboy. She was fulminating about the red carpet. Of her many tirades, it is among her favorites: ‘The red carpet has become nothing but a screaming match for, ‘Who are you wearing?’ I find that so intellectually insulting to these geniuses, the filmmakers. The girls are nothing more than fashion shills, and the men, too, are saying nothing more than, ‘I’m wearing Tom Ford,’ ‘I’m wearing Armani.’’ ‘You might as well have everyone march down the red carpet and go home,’ she said. ‘Who needs the movie?’”

5.

“A Court Ordered Apple to Hack the San Bernardino Shooter’s Phone. Read Tim Cook’s Defiant Response.”: Posted at Mother Jones.

“We were shocked and outraged by the deadly act of terrorism in San Bernardino last December. We mourn the loss of life and want justice for all those whose lives were affected. The FBI asked us for help in the days following the attack, and we have worked hard to support the government’s efforts to solve this horrible crime. We have no sympathy for terrorists. When the FBI has requested data that’s in our possession, we have provided it. Apple complies with valid subpoenas and search warrants, as we have in the San Bernardino case. We have also made Apple engineers available to advise the FBI, and we’ve offered our best ideas on a number of investigative options at their disposal. We have great respect for the professionals at the FBI, and we believe their intentions are good. Up to this point, we have done everything that is both within our power and within the law to help them. But now the U.S. government has asked us for something we simply do not have, and something we consider too dangerous to create. They have asked us to build a backdoor to the iPhone. Specifically, the FBI wants us to make a new version of the iPhone operating system, circumventing several important security features, and install it on an iPhone recovered during the investigation. In the wrong hands, this software — which does not exist today — would have the potential to unlock any iPhone in someone’s physical possession. The FBI may use different words to describe this tool, but make no mistake: Building a version of iOS that bypasses security in this way would undeniably create a backdoor. And while the government may argue that its use would be limited to this case, there is no way to guarantee such control.”

Image of the Day

Indiewire’s Anne Thompson chats with Quentin Tarantino about his collaboration with Oscar frontrunner Ennio Morricone on “The Hateful Eight.”

Video of the Day

Doug Walker, a.k.a. The Nostalgia Critic of ChannelAwesome.com, delivers an essential editorial on Fair Use and how YouTube is obstructing it.

Source:: http://www.rogerebert.com/thumbnails/thumbnails-21716

      

Categories
TV & Movies

Thumbnails 2/17/16

1.

“Preston Sturges: how a master of daftness conquered Hollywood”: A great appreciation from The Guardian‘s Sarah Churchwell.

“Amid a generation of the finest writers in screen history, including Ben Hecht, George S Kaufman, Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder and Anita Loos, Sturges was distinguished by his willingness to push the story, or the joke, as far as it needed to go, and the fun he had shuffling through genres and registers, like a cardsharp riffling the deck. Taking comic language seriously, Sturges was a master of exposition, using what he called ‘hooks’ in dialogue to give his character, ‘like a trapeze artist, something to swing from on his way to another point of view,’ The pendulum swing between perspectives was Sturges’s specialty, resulting in a volatile density of language, reminding us that ‘ludic’ and ‘ludicrous’ share the same root. His comedy relies less on one-liners than on the cumulative effect of repartee, and the accelerating sense that everything might go entirely off the rails, a mounting unease entangled with his films’ satirical sense of mischief. Genre conventions safeguard the viewer, who stays confident the hero will survive, right will prevail, rules will be followed. Sturges offers no such assurances. His films often begin with endings. They also resist endings – or, put another way, gleefully carry on ending, piling up closures.”

2.

“‘Image overload’ is frying our brains and making us forgetful”: A frightening analysis from Rebecca Macmillan at Quartz.

“In the Rhetoric of Photography course that I’ve taught at the University of Texas at Austin over the past few years, image glut was a constant topic of discussion among my students. They repeatedly expressed feeling overrun by photographs, and addicted to posting images. They even waxed nostalgic about the clunky plastic cameras of their childhoods, wistfully recalling the days of limited exposures and a waiting period before seeing their developed prints. ‘Images are produced, commodified, made public and circulated on an unprecedented scale,’ sociologist Martin Hand writes in his book Ubiquitous Photography. Image overload hinges on feeling visually saturated—the sense that because there’s so much visual material to see, remembering an individual photograph becomes nearly impossible.For my students, this feeling was marked at times by general frustration, low-grade anxiety, and flat-out fatigue. Image overload also suggests a level of exhaustion with the process of monitoring and creating photo streams—surviving the pressure to digitally document one’s everyday life and to bear witness to others’ ever-growing image banks.”

3.

“South Korea’s Polarizing Film Market: Can Mid-Budget Genre Movies Survive?”: The Hollywood Reporter‘s Lee Hyo-won investigates.

“The South Korean film industry had another banner year in 2015, with the local box office reaching record heights and international sales. Revenue hit 1.72 trillion won ($1.42 billion) last year, up 3.1 percent from 2014 and setting a record for the sixth consecutive year, according to the Korean Film Council. The number of exported domestic films, meanwhile, shot up to 650 titles — the most ever. Last year’s three biggest movies — local titles ‘Veteran’ ($88.7 million) and ‘Assassination’ ($83.1 million), followed by ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’ ($74.7 million) — now rank among the top 15 films of all time at the Korean box office. But industry figures say the large numbers belie a more complicated picture of internal strife. Much like in Hollywood, the headline-making box-office records have come at the cost of intense polarization within the Korean theatrical market, with huge-budget blockbusters dominating screen counts and leaving increasingly low-budget indies to pick up the scraps. The result: Mid-budget dramas and genre pictures have virtually vacated the field. ‘On a given weekend, the top three box-office hits take up about three-quarters of the screens across Korea. This doesn’t give audiences much of a choice,’ says film critic Jeong Ji-ouk.”

4.

“Peggy Siegal, Best Hostess in a Supporting Role”: A profile by Alex Williams of The New York Times.

“Irrepressible, truncheon-blunt and forever pushing the boundaries between ‘no’ and ‘maybe,’ Ms. Siegal, 68, has employed sharp elbows and inexhaustible energy reservoirs to claim a unique social position in New York and the Hamptons: as a host for hire for clubby, insider-only film screenings and dinners for the influential, she stands at the crossroads of Hollywood power and New York society (or what’s left of it), functioning as a spin doctor, salonista, celebrity confidante and, occasionally, bouncer. Certainly, her business is changing, as studios pay closer attention to the bottom line and competitors look to siphon clients. Even so, after 30 years, Ms. Siegal remains Hollywood’s secret weapon in New York, particularly during the breathless sprint known as Oscar campaign season. It was a crisp afternoon in early January, and Ms. Siegal stood at the base of the stairs of Kappo Masa, the celestially expensive Japanese restaurant beneath the Gagosian Gallery on Madison Avenue. She wore a Chanel-inspired wool miniskirt and jumper, and her hair, once a spiky confection that veered into Joan Jett territory, had been trimmed into a floppy-banged wedge that recalled an English schoolboy. She was fulminating about the red carpet. Of her many tirades, it is among her favorites: ‘The red carpet has become nothing but a screaming match for, ‘Who are you wearing?’ I find that so intellectually insulting to these geniuses, the filmmakers. The girls are nothing more than fashion shills, and the men, too, are saying nothing more than, ‘I’m wearing Tom Ford,’ ‘I’m wearing Armani.’’ ‘You might as well have everyone march down the red carpet and go home,’ she said. ‘Who needs the movie?’”

5.

“A Court Ordered Apple to Hack the San Bernardino Shooter’s Phone. Read Tim Cook’s Defiant Response.”: Posted at Mother Jones.

“We were shocked and outraged by the deadly act of terrorism in San Bernardino last December. We mourn the loss of life and want justice for all those whose lives were affected. The FBI asked us for help in the days following the attack, and we have worked hard to support the government’s efforts to solve this horrible crime. We have no sympathy for terrorists. When the FBI has requested data that’s in our possession, we have provided it. Apple complies with valid subpoenas and search warrants, as we have in the San Bernardino case. We have also made Apple engineers available to advise the FBI, and we’ve offered our best ideas on a number of investigative options at their disposal. We have great respect for the professionals at the FBI, and we believe their intentions are good. Up to this point, we have done everything that is both within our power and within the law to help them. But now the U.S. government has asked us for something we simply do not have, and something we consider too dangerous to create. They have asked us to build a backdoor to the iPhone. Specifically, the FBI wants us to make a new version of the iPhone operating system, circumventing several important security features, and install it on an iPhone recovered during the investigation. In the wrong hands, this software — which does not exist today — would have the potential to unlock any iPhone in someone’s physical possession. The FBI may use different words to describe this tool, but make no mistake: Building a version of iOS that bypasses security in this way would undeniably create a backdoor. And while the government may argue that its use would be limited to this case, there is no way to guarantee such control.”

Image of the Day

Indiewire’s Anne Thompson chats with Quentin Tarantino about his collaboration with Oscar frontrunner Ennio Morricone on “The Hateful Eight.”

Video of the Day

Doug Walker, a.k.a. The Nostalgia Critic of ChannelAwesome.com, delivers an essential editorial on Fair Use and how YouTube is obstructing it.

Source:: http://www.rogerebert.com/thumbnails/thumbnails-21716

      

Categories
TV & Movies

Thumbnails 2/17/16

1.

“Preston Sturges: how a master of daftness conquered Hollywood”: A great appreciation from The Guardian‘s Sarah Churchwell.

“Amid a generation of the finest writers in screen history, including Ben Hecht, George S Kaufman, Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder and Anita Loos, Sturges was distinguished by his willingness to push the story, or the joke, as far as it needed to go, and the fun he had shuffling through genres and registers, like a cardsharp riffling the deck. Taking comic language seriously, Sturges was a master of exposition, using what he called ‘hooks’ in dialogue to give his character, ‘like a trapeze artist, something to swing from on his way to another point of view,’ The pendulum swing between perspectives was Sturges’s specialty, resulting in a volatile density of language, reminding us that ‘ludic’ and ‘ludicrous’ share the same root. His comedy relies less on one-liners than on the cumulative effect of repartee, and the accelerating sense that everything might go entirely off the rails, a mounting unease entangled with his films’ satirical sense of mischief. Genre conventions safeguard the viewer, who stays confident the hero will survive, right will prevail, rules will be followed. Sturges offers no such assurances. His films often begin with endings. They also resist endings – or, put another way, gleefully carry on ending, piling up closures.”

2.

“‘Image overload’ is frying our brains and making us forgetful”: A frightening analysis from Rebecca Macmillan at Quartz.

“In the Rhetoric of Photography course that I’ve taught at the University of Texas at Austin over the past few years, image glut was a constant topic of discussion among my students. They repeatedly expressed feeling overrun by photographs, and addicted to posting images. They even waxed nostalgic about the clunky plastic cameras of their childhoods, wistfully recalling the days of limited exposures and a waiting period before seeing their developed prints. ‘Images are produced, commodified, made public and circulated on an unprecedented scale,’ sociologist Martin Hand writes in his book Ubiquitous Photography. Image overload hinges on feeling visually saturated—the sense that because there’s so much visual material to see, remembering an individual photograph becomes nearly impossible.For my students, this feeling was marked at times by general frustration, low-grade anxiety, and flat-out fatigue. Image overload also suggests a level of exhaustion with the process of monitoring and creating photo streams—surviving the pressure to digitally document one’s everyday life and to bear witness to others’ ever-growing image banks.”

3.

“South Korea’s Polarizing Film Market: Can Mid-Budget Genre Movies Survive?”: The Hollywood Reporter‘s Lee Hyo-won investigates.

“The South Korean film industry had another banner year in 2015, with the local box office reaching record heights and international sales. Revenue hit 1.72 trillion won ($1.42 billion) last year, up 3.1 percent from 2014 and setting a record for the sixth consecutive year, according to the Korean Film Council. The number of exported domestic films, meanwhile, shot up to 650 titles — the most ever. Last year’s three biggest movies — local titles ‘Veteran’ ($88.7 million) and ‘Assassination’ ($83.1 million), followed by ‘Avengers: Age of Ultron’ ($74.7 million) — now rank among the top 15 films of all time at the Korean box office. But industry figures say the large numbers belie a more complicated picture of internal strife. Much like in Hollywood, the headline-making box-office records have come at the cost of intense polarization within the Korean theatrical market, with huge-budget blockbusters dominating screen counts and leaving increasingly low-budget indies to pick up the scraps. The result: Mid-budget dramas and genre pictures have virtually vacated the field. ‘On a given weekend, the top three box-office hits take up about three-quarters of the screens across Korea. This doesn’t give audiences much of a choice,’ says film critic Jeong Ji-ouk.”

4.

“Peggy Siegal, Best Hostess in a Supporting Role”: A profile by Alex Williams of The New York Times.

“Irrepressible, truncheon-blunt and forever pushing the boundaries between ‘no’ and ‘maybe,’ Ms. Siegal, 68, has employed sharp elbows and inexhaustible energy reservoirs to claim a unique social position in New York and the Hamptons: as a host for hire for clubby, insider-only film screenings and dinners for the influential, she stands at the crossroads of Hollywood power and New York society (or what’s left of it), functioning as a spin doctor, salonista, celebrity confidante and, occasionally, bouncer. Certainly, her business is changing, as studios pay closer attention to the bottom line and competitors look to siphon clients. Even so, after 30 years, Ms. Siegal remains Hollywood’s secret weapon in New York, particularly during the breathless sprint known as Oscar campaign season. It was a crisp afternoon in early January, and Ms. Siegal stood at the base of the stairs of Kappo Masa, the celestially expensive Japanese restaurant beneath the Gagosian Gallery on Madison Avenue. She wore a Chanel-inspired wool miniskirt and jumper, and her hair, once a spiky confection that veered into Joan Jett territory, had been trimmed into a floppy-banged wedge that recalled an English schoolboy. She was fulminating about the red carpet. Of her many tirades, it is among her favorites: ‘The red carpet has become nothing but a screaming match for, ‘Who are you wearing?’ I find that so intellectually insulting to these geniuses, the filmmakers. The girls are nothing more than fashion shills, and the men, too, are saying nothing more than, ‘I’m wearing Tom Ford,’ ‘I’m wearing Armani.’’ ‘You might as well have everyone march down the red carpet and go home,’ she said. ‘Who needs the movie?’”

5.

“A Court Ordered Apple to Hack the San Bernardino Shooter’s Phone. Read Tim Cook’s Defiant Response.”: Posted at Mother Jones.

“We were shocked and outraged by the deadly act of terrorism in San Bernardino last December. We mourn the loss of life and want justice for all those whose lives were affected. The FBI asked us for help in the days following the attack, and we have worked hard to support the government’s efforts to solve this horrible crime. We have no sympathy for terrorists. When the FBI has requested data that’s in our possession, we have provided it. Apple complies with valid subpoenas and search warrants, as we have in the San Bernardino case. We have also made Apple engineers available to advise the FBI, and we’ve offered our best ideas on a number of investigative options at their disposal. We have great respect for the professionals at the FBI, and we believe their intentions are good. Up to this point, we have done everything that is both within our power and within the law to help them. But now the U.S. government has asked us for something we simply do not have, and something we consider too dangerous to create. They have asked us to build a backdoor to the iPhone. Specifically, the FBI wants us to make a new version of the iPhone operating system, circumventing several important security features, and install it on an iPhone recovered during the investigation. In the wrong hands, this software — which does not exist today — would have the potential to unlock any iPhone in someone’s physical possession. The FBI may use different words to describe this tool, but make no mistake: Building a version of iOS that bypasses security in this way would undeniably create a backdoor. And while the government may argue that its use would be limited to this case, there is no way to guarantee such control.”

Image of the Day

Indiewire’s Anne Thompson chats with Quentin Tarantino about his collaboration with Oscar frontrunner Ennio Morricone on “The Hateful Eight.”

Video of the Day

Doug Walker, a.k.a. The Nostalgia Critic of ChannelAwesome.com, delivers an essential editorial on Fair Use and how YouTube is obstructing it.

Source:: http://www.rogerebert.com/thumbnails/thumbnails-21716