Categories
TV & Movies

HBO’s Ambitious “Vinyl” Takes Its Time

Thumb_vinyl1

HBO’s “Vinyl” is about a man struggling to keep the
rapidly-deteriorating elements of his life from completely slipping through his
fingers. His marriage is in shambles, his cocaine addiction has dominated his
life, his business is being torn apart, a crime committed in the premiere will
hang over him, and the music scene in which he once seemed a major player is
zipping past him into a new era. It is not coincidental that the premiere,
directed by Martin Scorsese, opens and closes with the New York Dolls’ “Personality
Crisis.” Richie Finestra (Bobby Cannvale) is deep in one, and the show about
him flirts with some identity issues as well. At times, it’s a riveting
examination of a formative chapter in music history through the bloodshot eyes
of a major player in it, reminiscent of “Mad Men” in its period detail and even
recalling “The Sopranos” in its depiction of a man sometimes torn between
business and family. At other times, it feels unsure of itself, flitting from
character to character without grounding enough of the supporting ones to make
them memorable. It can sometimes be a collection of great scenes that don’t
quite coalesce into a great show, like an album with stand-out tracks that you don’t really want to listen to from first song to last. “Vinyl” is
undeniably interesting and worth watching, and could easily iron out its pacing
issues and inconsistencies, but only if viewers are willing to endure a
personality crisis or two.

Richie is the founder and president of American
Century Records. In the opening scene of Scorsese’s 113-minute premiere, he’s parked in an alley separating lines of cocaine with a
police officer’s business card he just ripped off his window. “Vinyl” flashes back to how Richie got here. It’s been a rough few
weeks. With his business partners, including Ray Romano’s Zak Yankovich,
Finestra is planning to sell American Century to a German company, but they
need to sign Led Zeppelin first. His marriage to Devon (Olivia Wilde), a former
model and player in Andy Warhol’s scene, is on the rocks. And he’s just trying
to find that spark that got him into music in the first place. He also recently
spotted a former client named Lester Grimes (Ato Essandoh), and memories of how
he stepped on the first artist with whom he fell in love to climb the corporate
ladder are haunting him. It’s time for drastic change in Richie’s life and at
his company. They’re going to find that spark again, possibly even in a new
punk band called The Nasty Bits, who have been discovered by a young assistant
named Jamie (Juno Temple).

The premiere of “Vinyl” really takes its time to set up its
characters, and, more importantly, the swirling mix of music of its era. At times, it can feel as if it’s frustratingly more about the scene than the people within it. “Vinyl”
jumps from punk to blues, spinning from Bo Diddley to New York Dolls to Led
Zeppelin and back again. It contains flashbacks within flashbacks, blending
music, drugs, sex, violence, etc. until you almost feel as high as Richie.
There are times when it feels like you’re watching a party instead of being
invited to one, but “Vinyl” is still one hell of a bash, and
Scorsese’s pilot is arguably the least accessible of the five episodes
available to the press (largely because of its demanding running time). Once the characters are introduced and the pace
tightened, “Vinyl” becomes a relatively straightforward, entertaining, behind-the-scenes show, and those looking
for Scorsese’s trademark brilliant use of music should know that the tunes become more familiar as the show goes along. By
the time you get to episode four, it’s practically a classic rock greatest hits
(I think they went from Janis Joplin, Pink Floyd, The Who in one five-minute stretch).

While “Vinyl” gets more accessible and interesting as we get
to know its characters, it’s still hard to shake two things. One, it falls
victim to romanticizing its darker edges. Sure, everything is falling apart,
but at least we still get to hang out with Alice Cooper and The Velvet Underground. Two,
the “anti-hero who finds his way” concept is getting undeniably worn out.
Cannavale is typically excellent but do we need another character like Tony
Soprano, Don Draper, Walter White, etc. in today’s TV landscape? And, right
now, Richie is a bit too much of a victim of his surroundings. Five episodes
in, I don’t feel like I really know him, even like I did a Nucky Thompson at
this point in HBO’s “Boardwalk Empire.” Again, the team behind “Vinyl,” including the
great Terence Winter, have never been known to rush things. They could be
playing a long game with Richie’s character development in a way that will make his arc deeply rewarding by the season finale; I can only comment on the thinness
and over-familiarity of the character based on what I’ve seen. It’s entertaining as hell but there’s a bit of a character vacuum, even at the center.

What happens when you live a life of excess and the money
starts to run out? What happens when you build your life around what’s new and
can no longer find the next big thing? “Vinyl” is about how much we take from
others, so it makes some sense that it takes from TV and music history,
stealing from legendary rock anecdotes about the behavior of people like Warhol
and Cooper and Plant, while also feeling familiar to fans of “The Sopranos” and
“Mad Men.” Great rock music doesn’t need to reinvent chord structure—it just
needs to find the right ones to play. After five episodes, “Vinyl” sometimes
feels like it’s still just warming up for the songs that will bring the house
down, but I’m not leaving this show any time soon.

Source:: http://www.rogerebert.com/demanders/hbos-ambitious-vinyl-takes-its-time

      

Categories
Sports

Depleted Vancouver Canucks hold on for 2-1 win against Arizona Coyotes and edge to within two points of playoff spot

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Sorry all you Team Tankers out there, it doesn’t look like the Vancouver Canucks are going to co-operate. The Canucks have moved themselves back into the National Hockey League playoff conversation after a perfect two-game road trip that concluded Wednesday with a 2-1 win over the Arizona Coyotes at Gila River Arena.

Playing without injured veterans Alex Edler and Brandon Sutter, the Canucks were outplayed and outshot, but managed to find a way to win.

They moved to within two points of a wild-card playoff spot and are now just three points out of third place in the Pacific Division.

If they keep this up, Auston Matthews or even a top-five pick at the draft table may be a pipe dream. That would anger a sizable contingent of Canuck supporters, who have been pleading for a tank job.

The Canucks clearly are not suffering from back-to-back blues this season. Wednesday’s win improved Vancouver’s record to 5-1-2 on the second night of back-to-backs. The Canucks opened the trip with a 3-1 win Tuesday over the Colorado Avalanche.

Jannik Hansen gave Vancouver a 2-1 lead at 15:13 of the second period when his shot from the left circle bounced off Arizona defenceman Oliver Ekman-Larsson and past goalie Louis Domingue.

The goal followed some “Sedinery” by Daniel, Henrik and friends as they hung on to the puck for what seemed like an eternity in the Arizona end. The goal was Hansen’s 16th of the season, matching a career high.

The Coyotes had tied the game early in the second period on a Martin Hanzal power-play goal.

Jared McCann wasn’t supposed to play, but he set up Vancouver’s first goal at 6:27 of the first period. McCann, who was inserted into the lineup when Derek Dorsett was a late scratch because of illness, pulled up on a rush and fed fellow rookie Jake Virtanen a perfect cross-ice pass.

Virtanen ripped a one-timer that beat Domingue high to the glove side for his third goal of the season.

The Coyotes thought they had tied the game at the 14:53 mark of the first when Klas Dahlbeck’s long shot got past Vancouver goalie Ryan Miller. But Vancouver coach Willie Desjardins challenged the play, saying the initial rush into the Vancouver zone was offside.

A video review confirmed that Hanzal was offside and the goal was waved off.

Vancouver improved to 22-20-12. The Coyotes, who have lost five straight, fell to 24-23-6.

ICE CHIPS: Miller is now 6-0-0 at Gila River Arena and 9-1-0 overall against the Coyotes … Vancouver captain Henrik Sedin tied Trevor Linden’s franchise record by playing in his 1,140th game as a Canuck on Wednesday … The Canucks and their moms chartered home after the game. The team gets the day off today, returns to practice on Friday and meets the Toronto Maple Leafs on Saturday (4 p.m. start) at Rogers Arena.

bziemer@postmedia.com

Twitter.com/bradziemer

Source:: http://www.canada.com/sports/hockey/depleted+vancouver+canucks+hold+against+arizona+coyotes+edge/11711588/story.html

      

Categories
Sports

Depleted Vancouver Canucks hold on for 2-1 win against Arizona Coyotes and edge to within two points of playoff spot

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Sorry all you Team Tankers out there, it doesn’t look like the Vancouver Canucks are going to co-operate. The Canucks have moved themselves back into the National Hockey League playoff conversation after a perfect two-game road trip that concluded Wednesday with a 2-1 win over the Arizona Coyotes at Gila River Arena.

Playing without injured veterans Alex Edler and Brandon Sutter, the Canucks were outplayed and outshot, but managed to find a way to win.

They moved to within two points of a wild-card playoff spot and are now just three points out of third place in the Pacific Division.

If they keep this up, Auston Matthews or even a top-five pick at the draft table may be a pipe dream. That would anger a sizable contingent of Canuck supporters, who have been pleading for a tank job.

The Canucks clearly are not suffering from back-to-back blues this season. Wednesday’s win improved Vancouver’s record to 5-1-2 on the second night of back-to-backs. The Canucks opened the trip with a 3-1 win Tuesday over the Colorado Avalanche.

Jannik Hansen gave Vancouver a 2-1 lead at 15:13 of the second period when his shot from the left circle bounced off Arizona defenceman Oliver Ekman-Larsson and past goalie Louis Domingue.

The goal followed some “Sedinery” by Daniel, Henrik and friends as they hung on to the puck for what seemed like an eternity in the Arizona end. The goal was Hansen’s 16th of the season, matching a career high.

The Coyotes had tied the game early in the second period on a Martin Hanzal power-play goal.

Jared McCann wasn’t supposed to play, but he set up Vancouver’s first goal at 6:27 of the first period. McCann, who was inserted into the lineup when Derek Dorsett was a late scratch because of illness, pulled up on a rush and fed fellow rookie Jake Virtanen a perfect cross-ice pass.

Virtanen ripped a one-timer that beat Domingue high to the glove side for his third goal of the season.

The Coyotes thought they had tied the game at the 14:53 mark of the first when Klas Dahlbeck’s long shot got past Vancouver goalie Ryan Miller. But Vancouver coach Willie Desjardins challenged the play, saying the initial rush into the Vancouver zone was offside.

A video review confirmed that Hanzal was offside and the goal was waved off.

Vancouver improved to 22-20-12. The Coyotes, who have lost five straight, fell to 24-23-6.

ICE CHIPS: Miller is now 6-0-0 at Gila River Arena and 9-1-0 overall against the Coyotes … Vancouver captain Henrik Sedin tied Trevor Linden’s franchise record by playing in his 1,140th game as a Canuck on Wednesday … The Canucks and their moms chartered home after the game. The team gets the day off today, returns to practice on Friday and meets the Toronto Maple Leafs on Saturday (4 p.m. start) at Rogers Arena.

bziemer@postmedia.com

Twitter.com/bradziemer

Source:: http://www.canada.com/sports/hockey/depleted+vancouver+canucks+hold+against+arizona+coyotes+edge/11711588/story.html

      

Categories
Sports

Depleted Vancouver Canucks hold on for 2-1 win against Arizona Coyotes and edge to within two points of playoff spot

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Sorry all you Team Tankers out there, it doesn’t look like the Vancouver Canucks are going to co-operate. The Canucks have moved themselves back into the National Hockey League playoff conversation after a perfect two-game road trip that concluded Wednesday with a 2-1 win over the Arizona Coyotes at Gila River Arena.

Playing without injured veterans Alex Edler and Brandon Sutter, the Canucks were outplayed and outshot, but managed to find a way to win.

They moved to within two points of a wild-card playoff spot and are now just three points out of third place in the Pacific Division.

If they keep this up, Auston Matthews or even a top-five pick at the draft table may be a pipe dream. That would anger a sizable contingent of Canuck supporters, who have been pleading for a tank job.

The Canucks clearly are not suffering from back-to-back blues this season. Wednesday’s win improved Vancouver’s record to 5-1-2 on the second night of back-to-backs. The Canucks opened the trip with a 3-1 win Tuesday over the Colorado Avalanche.

Jannik Hansen gave Vancouver a 2-1 lead at 15:13 of the second period when his shot from the left circle bounced off Arizona defenceman Oliver Ekman-Larsson and past goalie Louis Domingue.

The goal followed some “Sedinery” by Daniel, Henrik and friends as they hung on to the puck for what seemed like an eternity in the Arizona end. The goal was Hansen’s 16th of the season, matching a career high.

The Coyotes had tied the game early in the second period on a Martin Hanzal power-play goal.

Jared McCann wasn’t supposed to play, but he set up Vancouver’s first goal at 6:27 of the first period. McCann, who was inserted into the lineup when Derek Dorsett was a late scratch because of illness, pulled up on a rush and fed fellow rookie Jake Virtanen a perfect cross-ice pass.

Virtanen ripped a one-timer that beat Domingue high to the glove side for his third goal of the season.

The Coyotes thought they had tied the game at the 14:53 mark of the first when Klas Dahlbeck’s long shot got past Vancouver goalie Ryan Miller. But Vancouver coach Willie Desjardins challenged the play, saying the initial rush into the Vancouver zone was offside.

A video review confirmed that Hanzal was offside and the goal was waved off.

Vancouver improved to 22-20-12. The Coyotes, who have lost five straight, fell to 24-23-6.

ICE CHIPS: Miller is now 6-0-0 at Gila River Arena and 9-1-0 overall against the Coyotes … Vancouver captain Henrik Sedin tied Trevor Linden’s franchise record by playing in his 1,140th game as a Canuck on Wednesday … The Canucks and their moms chartered home after the game. The team gets the day off today, returns to practice on Friday and meets the Toronto Maple Leafs on Saturday (4 p.m. start) at Rogers Arena.

bziemer@postmedia.com

Twitter.com/bradziemer

Source:: http://www.canada.com/sports/hockey/depleted+vancouver+canucks+hold+against+arizona+coyotes+edge/11711588/story.html

      

Categories
Entertainment

#RichKids of Beverly Hills Returns This April With Morgan Stewart's Wedding & Even More Drama for Season 4

Morgan Stewart, Brendan Fitzpatrick, Rich Kids

E!

#RichKids of Beverly Hills is coming back for a dramatic new season!

Season four of the hit E! show returns on Sunday, April 17 and it’s going to be a wild ride!

On the upcoming eight-episode season we’ll see Morgan Stewart and fiancé Brendan Fitzpatrick start planning their wedding. Brendan proposed to his longtime girlfriend last season and now it’s time to see them plan their special day!

But will Morgan’s bridezilla tendencies put a wrench in the wedding preparations? We’ll have to watch and see what happens!

Hollywood Medium‘s Tyler Henry Connects #RichKids Star Morgan Stewart to Her Grandmother: Watch the Emotional Video Now!

While Morgan is busy making plans for her wedding, Dorothy Wang is making plans to get back in the dating game! We’ll see Dorothy explore the dating world this season and find out if she’s really seeing an NBA star.

What about the other #RichKids?

Well it’s an exciting time for EJ Johnson, who’s done with school and just lost a ton of weight! He’s ready to take on the world and is trying to decide what his next career move is.

Meanwhile after ending his relationship last season, Jonny Drubel is single and ready to mingle. This season we’ll see Jonny working on his career as a DJ and partying like a rock star. However, when the partying leads to a health scare, Jonny has to reevaluate his life.

Oh! And there is a new girl Bianca Weiser Espada who is DRAMA and has beef with several of the #RichKids.

Watch #RichKids of Beverly Hills when the show returns on Sunday, April 17 at 10 p.m., only on E!

PHOTOS: Brendan Fitzpatrick and Morgan Stewart’s Cutest Pics

RELATED VIDEOS:

Source:: http://ca.eonline.com/news/738833/richkids-of-beverly-hills-returns-this-april-with-morgan-stewart-s-wedding-even-more-drama-for-season-4?cmpid=rss-000000-rssfeed-365-topstories&utm_source=eonline&utm_medium=rssfeeds&utm_campaign=rss_topstories

      

Categories
Ft Mac

Changes to Mortgage Down Payment Rules

The Canadian government is concerned about the ‘escalating home prices in high-priced markets’ and is making a change to the down payment required for mortgages that are backed by the Canadian government.

The Government of Canada’s Finance Minister Bill Morneau announced on December 11, 2015 that there would be changes to the down payment required when purchasing property.

Morneau said “we recognize that, specifically in the Toronto and Vancouver markets, we have seen house prices that have been elevated, and we want to make sure we create an environment that protects the people buying homes so they have sufficient equity in their home.”

At the moment, homebuyers can finance principal properties at 95%, needing 5% down on purchases under one million dollars. The Finance minister has tightened those rules and has mandated properties between $500,000 and One Million dollars will require a larger down payment. The change could mean having to put down up to an additional 2.50% of the purchase price. Anyone buying property will need 5% down on the first $500,000 and 10% down on any amount over $500,000. What this means, in dollars and cents is, if you purchase a property for $700,000, you will have to come up with an additional $10,000 down; 5% on $500,000 being $25,000 and 10% on $200,000 being $20,000 for a total of $45,000.

Although the new rules won’t be in effect till February 15th, some lenders have set application submission deadlines 7 – 10 days earlier in order to get those applications processed before the deadline. Completion deadline for purchases submitted prior to February 15th is July 1st.

The Canadian Mortgage Professionals, a group who lobbies on behalf of the mortgage industry, opposes the change believing the move will reduce house sales – which is why it opposes the change.  Time will tell if this new rule will do anything to slow the escalating home prices in the higher-priced markets.

This change will have an impact on Fort McMurray’s market but I don’t think it will have a huge impact. Those who haven’t saved enough will continue to save until they do, entering the housing market a little later than they may have anticipated.

Head over to http://www.downpayment.ca/barb-pinsent where you’ll find a calculator that will do the down payment calculation based on the new rules. Simply enter the purchase price; the calculator will do everything else.

Barb Pinsent – Mortgage Architects

Ph: 780-370-1490

E: barb@barbpinsent.com

W: http://www.barbpinsent.com