Categories
Entertainment

Inside Beyoncé's $10,000-a-Night Super Bowl Airbnb Hideaway

Beyonce

Patrick Smith/Getty Images

Before she stood in “formation” on the stage of the Super Bowl 50 halftime show, Beyoncé prepared for the imminent spotlight in a California hideaway perfectly fit for the reigning queen of music. 

The 34-year-old mom shelled out a pretty penny for a $10,000-a-night 12-acre estate in the Los Altos Hills of Calif. with sweeping views of the entire San Francisco Bay Area.

It was a flawless set up for the Carter family and their posse. Outfitted with five bedrooms and more than eight bathrooms, the property also boasted an outdoor fireplace, vanished edge pool and spa. 

While we’re sure rehearsals were enough to keep the songstress sweating, if anyone wanted to work out, they could just turn to the in-house fitness center. 

READ: Beyoncé, Coldplay and Bruno Mars Play Super Bowl Halftime Show, Replay Past Iconic Performances

No need to give up privacy by leaving the house for dinner, either. The state-of-the-art kitchen featured five ovens, a steam oven and three dishwashers. As for fresh produce, any member of the family could simply step out into the adjoining orchard with 60 fruit trees, rooftop vegetable garden and on-property chickens for a freshly-hatched egg. 

To top it all off, the home featured the one necessary tool for any Grammy-winning performer: a piano. Queen Bey was more than set. 

READ: Super Bowl 2016 Debate: Did Beyoncé Almost Fall During Her Halftime Performance?

When it finally came time for the star to leave her retreat and publicly return to the football stage, she did not disappoint, wowing the crowd with the first live performance of her surprise track “Formation.”

“I wanted people to feel proud,” Beyonce told Entertainment Tonight of the fresh song, “and have love for themselves.”

Bey certainly had love for her superstar digs. The singer shared a photo of herself on Instagram cozying up by the house’s outdoor fire pit. 

“It was a Super weekend Airbnb,” she wrote.

The company returned the sentiment while responding, “We’re huge fans of Beyoncé and we’re thrilled to see her Facebook post and hope she was crazy in love with her Airbnb listing.” 

We see what you did there, Airbnb!

READ: Celebrity Mega Mansions

RELATED VIDEOS:

Source:: http://ca.eonline.com/news/737990/inside-beyonce-s-10-000-a-night-super-bowl-airbnb-hideaway?cmpid=rss-000000-rssfeed-365-topstories&utm_source=eonline&utm_medium=rssfeeds&utm_campaign=rss_topstories

      

Categories
Entertainment

Inside Beyoncé's $10,000-a-Night Super Bowl Airbnb Hideaway

Beyonce

Patrick Smith/Getty Images

Before she stood in “formation” on the stage of the Super Bowl 50 halftime show, Beyoncé prepared for the imminent spotlight in a California hideaway perfectly fit for the reigning queen of music. 

The 34-year-old mom shelled out a pretty penny for a $10,000-a-night 12-acre estate in the Los Altos Hills of Calif. with sweeping views of the entire San Francisco Bay Area.

It was a flawless set up for the Carter family and their posse. Outfitted with five bedrooms and more than eight bathrooms, the property also boasted an outdoor fireplace, vanished edge pool and spa. 

While we’re sure rehearsals were enough to keep the songstress sweating, if anyone wanted to work out, they could just turn to the in-house fitness center. 

READ: Beyoncé, Coldplay and Bruno Mars Play Super Bowl Halftime Show, Replay Past Iconic Performances

No need to give up privacy by leaving the house for dinner, either. The state-of-the-art kitchen featured five ovens, a steam oven and three dishwashers. As for fresh produce, any member of the family could simply step out into the adjoining orchard with 60 fruit trees, rooftop vegetable garden and on-property chickens for a freshly-hatched egg. 

To top it all off, the home featured the one necessary tool for any Grammy-winning performer: a piano. Queen Bey was more than set. 

READ: Super Bowl 2016 Debate: Did Beyoncé Almost Fall During Her Halftime Performance?

When it finally came time for the star to leave her retreat and publicly return to the football stage, she did not disappoint, wowing the crowd with the first live performance of her surprise track “Formation.”

“I wanted people to feel proud,” Beyonce told Entertainment Tonight of the fresh song, “and have love for themselves.”

Bey certainly had love for her superstar digs. The singer shared a photo of herself on Instagram cozying up by the house’s outdoor fire pit. 

“It was a Super weekend Airbnb,” she wrote.

The company returned the sentiment while responding, “We’re huge fans of Beyoncé and we’re thrilled to see her Facebook post and hope she was crazy in love with her Airbnb listing.” 

We see what you did there, Airbnb!

READ: Celebrity Mega Mansions

RELATED VIDEOS:

Source:: http://ca.eonline.com/news/737990/inside-beyonce-s-10-000-a-night-super-bowl-airbnb-hideaway?cmpid=rss-000000-rssfeed-365-topstories&utm_source=eonline&utm_medium=rssfeeds&utm_campaign=rss_topstories

      

Categories
Entertainment

Inside Beyoncé's $10,000-a-Night Super Bowl Airbnb Hideaway

Beyonce

Patrick Smith/Getty Images

Before she stood in “formation” on the stage of the Super Bowl 50 halftime show, Beyoncé prepared for the imminent spotlight in a California hideaway perfectly fit for the reigning queen of music. 

The 34-year-old mom shelled out a pretty penny for a $10,000-a-night 12-acre estate in the Los Altos Hills of Calif. with sweeping views of the entire San Francisco Bay Area.

It was a flawless set up for the Carter family and their posse. Outfitted with five bedrooms and more than eight bathrooms, the property also boasted an outdoor fireplace, vanished edge pool and spa. 

While we’re sure rehearsals were enough to keep the songstress sweating, if anyone wanted to work out, they could just turn to the in-house fitness center. 

READ: Beyoncé, Coldplay and Bruno Mars Play Super Bowl Halftime Show, Replay Past Iconic Performances

No need to give up privacy by leaving the house for dinner, either. The state-of-the-art kitchen featured five ovens, a steam oven and three dishwashers. As for fresh produce, any member of the family could simply step out into the adjoining orchard with 60 fruit trees, rooftop vegetable garden and on-property chickens for a freshly-hatched egg. 

To top it all off, the home featured the one necessary tool for any Grammy-winning performer: a piano. Queen Bey was more than set. 

READ: Super Bowl 2016 Debate: Did Beyoncé Almost Fall During Her Halftime Performance?

When it finally came time for the star to leave her retreat and publicly return to the football stage, she did not disappoint, wowing the crowd with the first live performance of her surprise track “Formation.”

“I wanted people to feel proud,” Beyonce told Entertainment Tonight of the fresh song, “and have love for themselves.”

Bey certainly had love for her superstar digs. The singer shared a photo of herself on Instagram cozying up by the house’s outdoor fire pit. 

“It was a Super weekend Airbnb,” she wrote.

The company returned the sentiment while responding, “We’re huge fans of Beyoncé and we’re thrilled to see her Facebook post and hope she was crazy in love with her Airbnb listing.” 

We see what you did there, Airbnb!

READ: Celebrity Mega Mansions

RELATED VIDEOS:

Source:: http://ca.eonline.com/news/737990/inside-beyonce-s-10-000-a-night-super-bowl-airbnb-hideaway?cmpid=rss-000000-rssfeed-365-topstories&utm_source=eonline&utm_medium=rssfeeds&utm_campaign=rss_topstories

      

Categories
TV & Movies

30 Minutes on: “The Swimmer”

Thumb_image

I showed “The Swimmer” at The Roxie Theater recently as part of a “Mad Men”-inspired film series, and was struck once again by the fact that such a strange movie could ever have been made within the Hollywood studio system, much less been bankrolled rather comfortably and star Burt Lancaster, one of the most popular leading men of his day. It’s a lush, bleak, ostentatiously allegorical film about a man named Ned Merrill (Lancaster) who decides to “swim” home through his wealthy Connecticut suburb by dipping into a succession of swimming pools. (Another character correctly notes that this entails more hiking than swimming.)

The result feels like a Death of the American Dream cousin of “The Odyssey.” Each stop on Ned’s journey has biographical and metaphorical significance. We learn about him as he walks, swims, hikes and talks to neighbors, and we piece together the sad reality of his existence: he lost his job, his wife, and his daughters, and is now experiencing what amounts to a psychotic break—though one that’s perhaps just a more extreme version of the blinkered materialist fantasies experienced by many of the neighbors that he wronged, and who still bear grudges against him, or who are merely indifferent to his troubles.

The film is based on John Cheever’s best known short story and sticks fairly close to it, although it does invent dialogue and details to flesh out scenes, in the process creating dramatic effects that are perhaps a bit too “big” to convey the deadpan and rather delicate satire the story pulled off. There are moments of great pain and pointed social satire and sometimes shocking violence in Cheever, but in such moments he tends to compress the action into a few terse lines, which makes it all more horrifying and somehow more believable. In a feature-length film, some of these same actions are drawn out or rather self-consciously embraced, which makes the moments of extreme contrivance or artificiality (such as in the scene with the two smug nudists, which verges on TV sketch comedy) more jarring.

Somehow, though, the missteps only occasionally harm “The Swimmer,” a film that’s overdone and overdetermined in some scenes and exquisitely right in others. Lancaster’s performance, Marvin Hamlisch’s orchestral score (his first for Hollywood), and the photography and editing all share these tendencies. But as my friend Sam Fragoso pointed out, the schism seems to reflect the chaotic interior of Ned, who veers between seeming quite sure of himself (Lancaster sends up his own toothy messianic tendencies beautifully) and abjectly fearful. Moments of hamfisted obviousness are followed by moments that could scarcely be better, as when Ned cries out to the heavens, “You LOVED IT!”, then seems to slowly sink into the deep end of his ex-girlfriend’s swimming pool as if enacting a suicide wish; a reverse angle shows Ned in closeup, blank-faced with despair, his open mouth seeming to skim the water like the pool cleaning apparatus praised by neighbors in an early scene.

Frank Perry directed the movie a few years after his Oscar-nominated breakthrough feature “David and Lisa,” and it bears many of his characteristic tells, including handheld camerawork, promiscuous use of the zoom lens, and jumbled cutting that is presumably aiming for a poetic or disorienting effect but often seems pointlessly busy. (This was the fashion at the time; “Mad Men” even made fun of this tendency in a season five episode that saw ad copywriter Peggy Olsen salvaging a dull Heinz baked beans account by using slow motion to choreograph a “bean ballet.”) Lancaster brought in his friend Sidney Pollack for extensive reshoots, and while an exact, detective-style account of who shot what is probably impossible at this point, it seems likely that the quieter, more concentrated, performance-driven moments are Pollack’s.

Lancaster, a paragon of virility past his 50th birthday (four years before the release of “The Swimmer”), puts his ebbing physicality on display, allowing Ned to be injured, insulted, emasculated, condescended to, even knocked around. He spends much of the film in an emotional defensive crouch. Even when he is bragging or making grand plans there is something pathetic about Ned. It seems a stretch to describe a man with such a spectacular physique as “vulnerable,” but the word really does apply to Lancaster here. Like Clint Eastwood in “Unforgiven,” you get the sense that his entire career has been leading to this.

However you parse the film’s high and low points you have to admit that there is not now, nor has there ever been, anything quite like it. The last scene is cornball (Hamlisch’s score seems to be screaming, and the rain is obviously an optical effect) but also freakishly powerful. We seem to be experiencing Ned’s final collapse from inside his own mind. He’s Willy Loman and Miss Havisham put together, in swim trunks, and the wind and water just keep scourging the ivy-covered walls of what used to be his home. He is the author of his misfortune, but at the same time, no one deserves this.

Source:: http://www.rogerebert.com/mzs/30-minutes-on-the-swimmer

      

Categories
TV & Movies

30 Minutes on: “The Swimmer”

Thumb_image

I showed “The Swimmer” at The Roxie Theater recently as part of a “Mad Men”-inspired film series, and was struck once again by the fact that such a strange movie could ever have been made within the Hollywood studio system, much less been bankrolled rather comfortably and star Burt Lancaster, one of the most popular leading men of his day. It’s a lush, bleak, ostentatiously allegorical film about a man named Ned Merrill (Lancaster) who decides to “swim” home through his wealthy Connecticut suburb by dipping into a succession of swimming pools. (Another character correctly notes that this entails more hiking than swimming.)

The result feels like a Death of the American Dream cousin of “The Odyssey.” Each stop on Ned’s journey has biographical and metaphorical significance. We learn about him as he walks, swims, hikes and talks to neighbors, and we piece together the sad reality of his existence: he lost his job, his wife, and his daughters, and is now experiencing what amounts to a psychotic break—though one that’s perhaps just a more extreme version of the blinkered materialist fantasies experienced by many of the neighbors that he wronged, and who still bear grudges against him, or who are merely indifferent to his troubles.

The film is based on John Cheever’s best known short story and sticks fairly close to it, although it does invent dialogue and details to flesh out scenes, in the process creating dramatic effects that are perhaps a bit too “big” to convey the deadpan and rather delicate satire the story pulled off. There are moments of great pain and pointed social satire and sometimes shocking violence in Cheever, but in such moments he tends to compress the action into a few terse lines, which makes it all more horrifying and somehow more believable. In a feature-length film, some of these same actions are drawn out or rather self-consciously embraced, which makes the moments of extreme contrivance or artificiality (such as in the scene with the two smug nudists, which verges on TV sketch comedy) more jarring.

Somehow, though, the missteps only occasionally harm “The Swimmer,” a film that’s overdone and overdetermined in some scenes and exquisitely right in others. Lancaster’s performance, Marvin Hamlisch’s orchestral score (his first for Hollywood), and the photography and editing all share these tendencies. But as my friend Sam Fragoso pointed out, the schism seems to reflect the chaotic interior of Ned, who veers between seeming quite sure of himself (Lancaster sends up his own toothy messianic tendencies beautifully) and abjectly fearful. Moments of hamfisted obviousness are followed by moments that could scarcely be better, as when Ned cries out to the heavens, “You LOVED IT!”, then seems to slowly sink into the deep end of his ex-girlfriend’s swimming pool as if enacting a suicide wish; a reverse angle shows Ned in closeup, blank-faced with despair, his open mouth seeming to skim the water like the pool cleaning apparatus praised by neighbors in an early scene.

Frank Perry directed the movie a few years after his Oscar-nominated breakthrough feature “David and Lisa,” and it bears many of his characteristic tells, including handheld camerawork, promiscuous use of the zoom lens, and jumbled cutting that is presumably aiming for a poetic or disorienting effect but often seems pointlessly busy. (This was the fashion at the time; “Mad Men” even made fun of this tendency in a season five episode that saw ad copywriter Peggy Olsen salvaging a dull Heinz baked beans account by using slow motion to choreograph a “bean ballet.”) Lancaster brought in his friend Sidney Pollack for extensive reshoots, and while an exact, detective-style account of who shot what is probably impossible at this point, it seems likely that the quieter, more concentrated, performance-driven moments are Pollack’s.

Lancaster, a paragon of virility past his 50th birthday (four years before the release of “The Swimmer”), puts his ebbing physicality on display, allowing Ned to be injured, insulted, emasculated, condescended to, even knocked around. He spends much of the film in an emotional defensive crouch. Even when he is bragging or making grand plans there is something pathetic about Ned. It seems a stretch to describe a man with such a spectacular physique as “vulnerable,” but the word really does apply to Lancaster here. Like Clint Eastwood in “Unforgiven,” you get the sense that his entire career has been leading to this.

However you parse the film’s high and low points you have to admit that there is not now, nor has there ever been, anything quite like it. The last scene is cornball (Hamlisch’s score seems to be screaming, and the rain is obviously an optical effect) but also freakishly powerful. We seem to be experiencing Ned’s final collapse from inside his own mind. He’s Willy Loman and Miss Havisham put together, in swim trunks, and the wind and water just keep scourging the ivy-covered walls of what used to be his home. He is the author of his misfortune, but at the same time, no one deserves this.

Source:: http://www.rogerebert.com/mzs/30-minutes-on-the-swimmer

      

Categories
Alberta Economic Ft Mac

Close to 73% of Canadian Oil Sands Shares have Been Acquired by Suncor

Suncor has made an announcement that the company has acquired almost 73% of the Canadian Oil Sands shares, giving Suncor the accompanying rights that the energy company has been seeking n the last few months. After trying to acquire COS shares with two separate offers Suncor made a hostile takeover bid for Canadian Oil Sands. This led to months of disagreements and negative statements on both sides. Suncor needed to have two thirds of the COS stock tendered by shareholders in order to be successful in their goal, otherwise the offer worth $4.3 billion would fall through. A Friday announcement alerted the public that Suncor will have the ability t acquire the rest of the COS shares needed and ensure the acquisition transaction goes as planned.

In January Canadian Oil Sands accepted the takeover offer made by Suncor, and management approval was secured. Originally Suncor was offering COS shareholders an exchange of 1 COS share for 0.25 Suncor share. This offer was increased to 0.28 share of Suncor stock for every share of COS stock. This is good news for stockholders who offered their shares. Suncor president and CEO Steve Williams gave a statement that read in part “We’re pleased with the strong level of support from COS shareholders. From the outset, we’ve spoken about the excellent value this offer creates for both COS and Suncor shareholders and I’m looking forward to delivering on that commitment.” With the low oil prices and recent cuts made by almost every company in the energy sector the acquisition could be good news for everyone involved.